- Audio CD (Oct 25 2001)
- Number of Discs: 1
- Format: Import
- Label: Drag City
- ASIN: B00005Q7N8
- In-Print Editions: Audio CD
- Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
Product Details
|
| 1. All Downhill from Here |
| 2. Insignificance |
| 3. Therefore, I Am |
| 4. Memory Lame |
| 5. Good Times |
| 6. Get a Room |
| 7. Life Goes Off |
Tag this product(What's this?)Think of a tag as a keyword or label you consider is strongly related to this product.
Tags will help all customers organize and find favorite items. |
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most helpful customer reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars
Insignificance,
By mrbishope (Auckland New Zealand) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Insignifcance (Audio CD)
I wanted to like this album, I really did. I am a huge fan of avant-garde outfit Gastr Del Sol (of which O'Rourke was one half) and my expectations were high. Charmed by Mimiyo Tomozawa's cover art I slipped the cd into my stereo to discover ... what I can only describe as almost commercial pop rock. I kid you not friends. Gone are Gastr's wonderful soundscapes and fascinating tape effects. Instead we have 4/4 signature pop rock coupled with O'Rourke's downbeat vocals. Now don't get me wrong: the lyrics are just as witty as ever and there are some nice snatches of melody here and there (particularly in the standout track of the album, 'Get a Room'). Perhaps my expectations are too high. After all, Gastr is no more and O'Rourke has a right to develop as an artist in any way he chooses - pop sensibilities were clearly signalled in the last Gastr album 'Camofleur' (which is a fine album by the way). Pop has a place and if you want pop then this will do just fine, but my chief reaction to the album is a feeling of disappointment. An artist of O'Rourke's calibre is surely capable of more.
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is a great album,
By C. Randall "Dylan61" (Grand Rapids, MI United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Insignifcance (Audio CD)
I purchased this album without really knowing what I was buying. I got it because it came up in the "people who purchased this item also purchased..." page when I bought the Loose Fur album, which also features O'Rourke.I absolutely love it. I've now listened to Sonic Youth and Loose Fur and have decided that O'Rourke is at his best when he's solo. I bought this CD not really knowing much about Jim O'Rourke, but now I'm a big fan.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Kelly Jones should be whooping with childish glee,
By Stanley B. (Beachy Head, England) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Insignifcance (Audio CD)
If it's true about stereophonical Kelly Jones bizarrely claiming Dylan's vitriolic 'Positively 4th Street' as his all-time favourite song (bizarre in-part because it's minor Dylan) then he should whooping with childish glee at Jim's wide array of barbed lyrical put-downs on 'Insignificance', O'Rourke's second 'straight' solo album. "listening to you reminds me of a motor's endless drone/and how the deaf are so damn lucky" from 'Memory Lame', "I've travelled round the world/why am I talking to you", from another.That the album is being touted as a "southern-fried rock album" is confusing. It's Jim's rock album in the same way that Lifes Rich Pageant was REM's rock album; both labelled by their opening tracks. Only three songs rock and even then the lyrics are delivered in that familiar sardonic, unfazed manner, with the tunes themselves morphing restlessly into beatific rural melodies. The title track even appears like some High Llamas before it quickly tires of the comparison and shifts into something more exciting. The tag with this album is not the rock as such but the employment of a live band (Jeff Tweedy wouldn't really arrive on any album with "RAWK!" emblazoned on his shirt collar). Jim wanted the album fresher, more immediate. His previous album, the densely arranged cycling 'Eureka', sounded like the result of several months alone, cocooned in a studio. But even though 'Insignificance' is sparser, more simplistic, it's still exquisitely crafted. There are no loose jams.... And it's the craft that makes this album a wonder to behold. Those ever shifting melodies, the effortless jumps from 'Cold Blooded Old Times' stylie two chord Velvet rock to brass inflected pastoral folk, the multitude of ideas on each song, each greedily cast aside for the next. These are the things Mr Jones should be paying greater attention to. The short length of the album may irk but it's all the more astonishing for the ground covered. The Stereophonics, after all their tedious and long-winded years of song, are still fumbling with the needle at the end of side one. Nevertheless if these taut superlative thirty-odd minutes still leave you blissfully unaware of the perverse charms of Jim O'Rourke then you only need to look in baffled wonder at the brightly coloured sleeve. It features an octopus 'entertaining' a Japanese man-baby.
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Want to see more reviews on this item?
|
Most recent customer reviews |
|