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To Bring You My Love
 
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To Bring You My Love

P.J. Harvey Audio CD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (85 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 15.66 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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To Bring You My Love + Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea + Is This Desire?
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Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought


Product Details


1. To Bring You My Love
2. Meet Ze Monsta
3. Working For The Man
4. C'Mon Billy
5. Teclo
6. Long Snake Moan
7. Down By The Water
8. I Think I'm A Mother
9. Send His Love To Me
10. The Dancer

Product Description

From Amazon.co.uk

After fumbling around with hardcore iconoclast producer Steve Albini on Rid of Me (1993) and signing with U2 manager Paul McGuinness, Polly Jean Harvey is ready to live up to her lethal early promise at last. With its growling bass tones, "Meet Ze Monsta" sets the stage early on as Harvey explores her feminine psyche with an intensity and raw power unheard since Patti Smith's heyday. Unlike the terminally inconsistent Smith, however, Harvey plots a brilliant course through slippery laments ("Working For The Man"), corrosive testifying ("Long Snake Moan") and fuzz-toned menace ("Down By The Water"). Sceptics who think Harvey can't outgrow her art-punk base are advised to cue up the flamenco-inflected, string-caressed "Send His Love to Me". --Jeff Bateman

Amazon.com essential recording

After fumbling around with producer-from-hell Steve Albini on Rid of Me (1993) and signing with U2 manager Paul McGuinness, Polly Jean Harvey is ready to live up to her lethal early promise at last. With its growling bass tones, "Meet Ze Monsta" sets the stage early on as Harvey explores her feminine psyche with an intensity and raw power unheard since Patti Smith's heyday. Unlike the terminally inconsistent Smith, however, Harvey plots a brilliant course through slippery laments ("Working for the Man"), corrosive testifying ("Long Snake Moan"), and fuzz-toned menace ("Down by the Water"). Skeptics who think Harvey can't outgrow her art-punk base are advised to cue up the flamenco-inflected, string-caressed "Send His Love to Me." --Jeff Bateman

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Customer Reviews

85 Reviews
5 star:
 (65)
4 star:
 (13)
3 star:
 (4)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (85 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars From the soul, April 3 2007
By 
This review is from: To Bring You My Love (Audio CD)
`To bring you my love' was a CD I bought when it was first realised. The tune "Down by the water" was the reason and I found my self only listening to this song. Shelving the CD for 10 years and then deciding to give it another try.

"C'mon Billy" can make my heart wake up from a winter sleep. "I remember lovers play the corn was golden we lay in it for days". With a steel guitar and a sultry pained voice I felt every word. "Working for the man" took a bit of play till I felt good about it. Now it's a favourite.

I now have 4 PJ CD's. I've realized one thing from this woman, though happy, I'm sure, with her money and glory, she makes music because she loves to. By feeding her pleasure she has earned my glory. Mario
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4.0 out of 5 stars Woman-Size, Jun 25 2004
By 
bharring (Living Under A Rock) - See all my reviews
This review is from: To Bring You My Love (Audio CD)
After splitting from her partners Rob Ellis and Steve Vaughn, Polly Jean Harvey spent two years making a CD which would recreate her image. She traded in her heavy combat boots and jeans and tank tops from the men's department for striking brightly-colored dresses. She grew her curly black hair down her back and painted her face with slashes of bright red lipstick and black eyeliner. Essentially, she transformed from a starkly militant asexual performer to a theatrical epitome of femininity. However, as the record proves, this transformation was completely on her terms.

1. To Bring You My Love--A kind of slow, heavy metal song. A real tension builder complete with an organ. Harvey really throws herself into this song with throaty vocals and dramatic lyrics. "And I'd travel over the dry earth and floods; Hell and Highwater to bring you my love. To bring you my love..."

2. Meet Ze Monsta--A song with growling and snarling guitars that crunch and stomp. This is kind of a fun song, probably one of the faster ones on the album. "Yeah, I'm read to meet ze monster tonight."

3. Working for the Man--This one is interesting. It's has a nice beat but it is so quiet that you can barely hear the lyrics. It's worth trying to find them on-line because they are interesting. The song could easily be about a nun or a prostitute. I've heard claims that it is actually about God. It is eerie though to hear Polly Harvey insisting acquiescently, "I'm just working... for the man," as one gets the impression that Harvey would never let herself be subdued thus.

4. C'mon Billy--This is probably the closest PJ Harvey has ever come to producing a folk/country song. It is very pretty and the premise is probably one of the less complex for a PJ Harvey song--a woman who has given birth to an illegitimate child pleads for her lover to return to see the child he deserted. Harvey sounds heartfelt and affectionately subservient as she begs, "Come home, is my plea, your home now is here with me."

5. Teclo--Probably one of the more interesting tracks on the album. It begins with what sounds like ice being shaken in a glass and then dark, eerie guitar chords kick in. I have no idea what this song is about, but it seems to involve darkness being redeemed by dignity. "I've learned to beg, I've learned to pray, send me his love... Let me rise, let me rise, let me ride on his grace for a while."

6. Long Snake Moan--My personal favorite. Probably the most intense song on the album. It begins with a sort of moan and then guitars just slam in and the song practically explodes. The song almost seems to be daring the listener to enter a personal hell. "You ought to hear my long snake moan." Special sound-effects include the noise of a whip cracking in the background. Who can resist Harvey asking of the listener: "Is my voodoo working?"

7. Down By the Water--My second favorite song and probably the most well-known. This song kind of ambles eerily along, mingling a sense of parental protection with lost innocence. Reportedly the refrain is taken from a Captain Beefheart song, "Little fish, big fish, swimming in the water/ Come back here and bring me my daughter.

8. I Think I'm A Mother--Another dark song with a tension-building guitar opening. The kind of song you could imagine playing on a dark and stormy night. Again, it's a little bit hard to understand what Harvey is saying. Ostensibly, the song seems to be about abortion, but in an interview, Harvey claims she was writing about herself.

9. Send His Love To Me--Another folksy song. Although it's lyrics describe being kept prisoner in a desert away from one's love, the song itself seems almost lighthearted in tone. Reminiscent of C'mon Billy, but good.

10. The Dancer--Frankly, I didn't like this one much. It's supposed to be Flamenco-tinged, but I couldn't tell. It is kind of in the same vein as C'mon Billy and Send His Love To Me, but I did not like it as much. The bird calls in the middle struck me as kind of weird and I didn't know what they were as first. Probably the worst track on the album, but still mediocre.

Overall, this album is extraordinary and quite a departure from DRY and RID OF ME. Many people consider this to be Harvey's finest work and it seemed to pave the way for her later albums, most especially my personal favorite, IS THIS DESIRE? Polly Jean Harvey proved that not only could she retain the name of her trio and bring it to new heights, but that she could metamorphose and change herself and her image, while still retaining her edgy, won't-go-quietly roots. Apparently, the strain of this album was too much for Harvey as she suffered a nervous breakdown after this album came out. Fortunately for us, she recovered and managed to use the depth of her pain as fodder for her next album. In the meanwhile, she seems to have found a renewed and permanent happiness.

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5.0 out of 5 stars a prized treasure, Jun 23 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: To Bring You My Love (Audio CD)
i am a huge fan of " rid of me", so i was a bit suprised that i liked this cd. In fact, the only song on this cd that retains the raw power of PJ Harvey's earlier works, is the title track. That may be because this track displays her characteristically new barbed-wire voice more than any other track on this cd. While listening to this song, you can imagine a deranged psychotic woman, walking from the dust of the desert to the front of your tv screen, with saliva oozing down her mouth, and her eyes bloodshoot, and no, shes not on weed. Despite all the creepiness, this title track is catchy and captivating, thanks, in part to the organ and e-bow.
however, the fun does not end there. throughout all the tracks, harvey displays an excellent sense of imagery that was never diplayed in her earlier works. " I think im a mother" has to be one of the creeepiest tracks in memory.
Although to bring you my love may not be " rid of me", the beauty of the tracks makes this cd a winner in its own right.
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