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Yes, the old lounge lizard is back with Frantic - his eleventh solo album. And the title is surely ironic: Bryan Ferry could be called many things but frantic isn't one of them. That said, this album gets off to a pretty sparky start. He's on familiar territory, covering a Bob Dylan song ... Read review
Franticis hardly an appropriate choice of album title for Bryan Ferry, a man seemingly ... more
disinclined towards unfettered bursts of outward emotional spontaneity and the epitome of unflustered, cucumber-cool decorum.Frantic, his first album to feature orig...
Postage & Packaging: £1.21 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Frantic is hardly an appropriate choice of album title for Bryan Ferry, a man seemingly ... more
disinclined towards unfettered bursts of outward emotional spontaneity and the epitome of unflustered, cucumber-cool decorum. Frantic, his first album to feature or...
Postage & Packaging: Free! Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours...
Franticis hardly an appropriate choice of album title for Bryan Ferry, a man seemingly ... more
disinclined towards unfettered bursts of outward emotional spontaneity and the epitome of unflustered, cucumber-cool decorum.Frantic, his first album to feature orig...
Postage & Packaging: £1.21 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Frantic is hardly an appropriate choice of album title for Bryan Ferry, a man seemingly ... more
disinclined towards unfettered bursts of outward emotional spontaneity and the epitome of unflustered, cucumber-cool decorum. Frantic, his first album to feature original material since Mamouna, has been simmering away on the back burner for all of eight years. And it's all the tastier for it. The ingredients are just right--another cowritten song (their second and their best) with former Roxy Music partner Brian Eno; songs about models, movies, amour and large houses; a guest appearance from Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood on "Hiroshima" (this is Ferry reclaiming his stolen clothes from the New Romantics' wardrobe); four fine new tunes copenned in the 1990s with the Eurythmics' Dave Stewart; contributions from guitarists of the calibre of Chris Spedding and Mick Green; backing vocalists of the calibre of Lucy Laplansky and Alison Goldfrapp; a little bit of Medieval; a little bit of Leadbelly and a little bit of Dylan (while no one artist rules the roost when it comes to covering Dylan, Ferry is the only one truly capable of ruffling the Byrds' feathers). Stylistically, despite the pursuit of so many different musical genres Frantic is as homogenous as it is disparate. It's often the case that the involvement of so many external contributors can mean too many cooks spoiling the broth, but not so here--compliments need to be extended to the chef. This being a Bryan Ferry album, you can still play it at dinner parties, but the sensual ardour put into Frantic suggests Ferry had blood, sweat and tears trickling down his tuxedo. This is a fantastic album. --Kevin Maidment
Postage & Packaging:Free! Availability:Usually dispatched within 24 hours...
Franticis hardly an appropriate choice of album title for Bryan Ferry, a man seemingly ... more
disinclined towards unfettered bursts of outward emotional spontaneity and the epitome of unflustered, cucumber-cool decorum.Frantic, his first album to feature original material sinceMamouna, has been simmering away on the back burner for all of eight years. And it's all the tastier for it. The ingredients are just right--another cowritten song (their second and their best) with former Roxy Music partner Brian Eno; songs about models, movies, amour and large houses; a guest appearance from Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood on "Hiroshima" (this is Ferry reclaiming his stolen clothes from the New Romantics' wardrobe); four fine new tunes copenned in the 1990s with the Eurythmics' Dave Stewart; contributions from guitarists of the calibre of Chris Spedding and Mick Green; backing vocalists of the calibre of Lucy Laplansky and Alison Goldfrapp; a little bit of Medieval; a little bit of Leadbelly and a little bit of Dylan (while no one artist rules the roost when it comes to covering Dylan, Ferry is the only one truly capable of ruffling the Byrds' feathers). Stylistically, despite the pursuit of so many different musical genresFranticis as homogenous as it is disparate. It's often the case that the involvement of so many external contributors can mean too many cooks spoiling the broth, but not so here--compliments need to be extended to the chef. This being a Bryan Ferry album, you can still play it at dinner parties, but the sensual ardour put intoFranticsuggests Ferry had blood, sweat and tears trickling down his tuxedo. This is a fantastic album.--Kevin Maidment
Postage & Packaging:£1.21 Availability:Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Franticis hardly an appropriate choice of album title for Bryan Ferry, a man seemingly ... more
disinclined towards unfettered bursts of outward emotional spontaneity and the epitome of unflustered, cucumber-cool decorum.Frantic, his first album to feature original material sinceMamouna, has been simmering away on the back burner for all of eight years. And it's all the tastier for it. The ingredients are just right--another cowritten song (their second and their best) with former Roxy Music partner Brian Eno; songs about models, movies, amour and large houses; a guest appearance from Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood on "Hiroshima" (this is Ferry reclaiming his stolen clothes from the New Romantics' wardrobe); four fine new tunes copenned in the 1990s with the Eurythmics' Dave Stewart; contributions from guitarists of the calibre of Chris Spedding and Mick Green; backing vocalists of the calibre of Lucy Laplansky and Alison Goldfrapp; a little bit of Medieval; a little bit of Leadbelly and a little bit of Dylan (while no one artist rules the roost when it comes to covering Dylan, Ferry is the only one truly capable of ruffling the Byrds' feathers). Stylistically, despite the pursuit of so many different musical genresFranticis as homogenous as it is disparate. It's often the case that the involvement of so many external contributors can mean too many cooks spoiling the broth, but not so here--compliments need to be extended to the chef. This being a Bryan Ferry album, you can still play it at dinner parties, but the sensual ardour put intoFranticsuggests Ferry had blood, sweat and tears trickling down his tuxedo. This is a fantastic album.--Kevin Maidment
Postage & Packaging:£1.21 Availability:Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Advantages: Velvety vocals, pristine production Disadvantages: Mix of covers and originals doesn't quite come off
...lounge lizard is back with Frantic - his eleventh solo album. And the title is surely ironic: Bryan Ferry could be called many things but frantic isn't one of them. That said, this album gets off to a pretty sparky start. He's on familiar territory, covering a Bob Dylan song - 'It's all Over Now, Baby Blue'. It's something he does with aplomb - he produced the definitive version of Bob's A Hard Rain's a Gonna Fall in 1973. This version is nearly ... ...of covers and originals on Frantic doesn't quite come off. If anything the album is too varied. His covers albums and his original collections are very different and probably appeal to distinct sets of listeners. He's takes quite a risk in trying to meld the more idiosyncratic materials with his own trademark slinky groove. In the end he doesn't quite pull it off well enough to produce a perfect album.
... more
Smooth, full-bodied and sophisticated. Enjoy it on your own or with friends. The exquisite taste of... Bryan Ferry.
Yes, the old lounge lizard is back with Frantic - his eleventh solo album. And the title is surely ironic: Bryan Ferry could be called many things but frantic isn't one of them. That said, this album gets off to a pretty sparky start. He's on familiar territory, covering a Bob Dylan song - 'It's all Over Now, Baby Blue'. It's something he does with aplomb - he produced the definitive version of Bob's A Hard Rain's a Gonna Fall in 1973. This version is nearly as good: driven by a string quartet and Dylanesque harmonica, with Ferry putting in the emotion that Dylan's voice sometimes misses. This is one of a pair of Dylan covers. 'Don't Think Twice, It's Alright' gets a low-key treatment on the album, with Ferry's quavering rendition backed only by piano and harmonica.
This is a hybrid Ferry record: almost evenly split between Ferry originals (some of which are collaborations with Eurythmic Dave Stewart), and cover versions. He's well known and respected for his covers albums - 1999’s ‘As Time Goes By’ was devoted to his versions of the standards of the classic strand of popular music of which you could say Ferry is the greatest modern practitioner. The originals - mainly co-written - are in the established Ferry solo vein familiar from albums like 'Boys and Girls' and 'Mamouna'.
'Cruel', a Dave Stewart co-production, is typically multi-layered, with guitar contributions from longtime sideman Chris Spedding. The song tells the classic Ferry tale of love-lorn outsiders, While Ferry despairs at the cruelty of love: "Nobody Know the trouble I see/Nobody cares, nobody but me". Love and its embodiments provide the staple fare for Ferry's compositions on Frantic. 'Goddess of Love' is something you almost think you've heard him sing before. Apparently addressed to Marilyn Monroe, it features Bryan again claiming "Nobody cares like I do" against a Roxy disco-era soundtrack which teams him up once more with his onetime estranged bandmate Brian Eno and former Roxy drummer Paul Thompson.
Love, being as we all know, Bryan's drug of choice, comes in for some pretty close analysis on this disc. He's a 'Fool for Love' on Frantic's highlight track. This brilliantly segues from a medieval soprano rendition of a Richard Coeur de Lion (I kid you not!) lyric complete with crumhorn, into a classic tremulous vocal telling the old, old tale of lost romance against the usual silky production.
This is followed, bravely, by a Ferry-isation of the old Leadbelly song 'Goodnight Irene'. With a cajun-style fiddle and accordion backing, it's like a shot of bootleg hooch after the Bailey's Irish Cream of the rest of the album. Then it's back to a chillingly dramatic 'Hiroshima' complete with all-star musical cast including Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood, guitarist Robin Trower, bassist Marcus Miller and Brian Eno.
Ferry's renowned musical perfectionism is evident on this track, and on most of the album. He risks producing things to death, but on the whole he gets the desired effect - just as well really considering the time and money that go into every Ferry album. Some would say Ferry's no longer relevant; that other 70s survivors like Bowie are more vital. I'd disagree. Ferry does what he does impeccably well. He's still trying new things. Dismiss him as some kind of tuxedo-ed dinosaur and you ignore the fact that no-one does quite what he does: to make polished, atmospheric gems of world weary romanticism.
That said, I think the mix of covers and originals on Frantic doesn't quite come off. If anything the album is too varied. His covers albums and his original collections are very different and probably appeal to distinct sets of listeners. He's takes quite a risk in trying to meld the more idiosyncratic materials with his own trademark slinky groove. In the end he doesn't quite pull it off well enough to produce a perfect album.
Advantages: 45 Roxy & Bryan Ferry tracks Disadvantages: Another Compilation
I bought this album as a point of principle. The point and the princliple being the same - I've bought every other Roxy Music album to date, every BryanFerry album, plus some from fellow Roxy members Phil Manzanera & Andy MacKay.
If you're thinking you've probably got a copy of all the tracks already, you'd be right.
If you're thinking you've got more money than sense, you'd probably be right again - my wife has already told me this!
OK, so what about the album?
I'm not going to give you a review of all the tracks - suffice to say there are 45 spread over three CDs.
So what can I tell you?
This is, for my money, the definitive collection. It spans a period of over 30 years. From albums Roxy Music to Frantic with highlights from everything in between. This is the very best of Roxy Music & BryanFerry.
For those ...
Personnel includes: Bryan Ferry (vocals, harmonica, keyboards); David Williams (guitar, bass); Dave Stewart, Chris Spedding, Adam Lamprell (guitar); Lucy Wilkins, Natalia Bonner, Lucy Theo, Rosie Wetters (strings); Keith Thompson (recorder, crumhorn, curtal); Colin Good (piano, virginal); Brian Eno (keyboards, background vocals); Paul Taylor, Terry Disley (keyboards); Zev Katz (bass); Paul Thompson, Andy Newmark, Bobby Irwin (drums); Sarah Brown, Audrey Wheeler, Stevie De Granville, Nicole Blumberg (background vocals). Producers include: Rhett Davies, Bryan Ferry, Colin Good, Robin Trower, Dave Stewart. Recorded at RAK Studios and Studio One, London, England. Fresh off the 2001 Roxy Music reunion tour, lounge lizard extraordinaire Bryan Ferry offers his eleventh solo outing, the guitar-driven FRANTIC. Aiding Ferry on this surprisingly lively, not un-Roxy-sounding outing is an impressive array of sideman including English guitar hero Chris Spedding, former bandmate Brian Eno, Eurythmic Dave Stewart, and Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood. Helmed by AVALON producer Rhett Davies, this rich-sounding disc benefits from Ferry's penchant for unconventional covers. These range from a pair of stellar Dylan ventures (the rollicking "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" and the piano-driven "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right") to a Leadbelly classic featuring accompaniment by Cajun musicians ("Goodnight Irene"). Equally impressive are Ferry originalsm including his swirling tribute to Marilyn Monroe ("Goddess of Love"), an ethereal tale of romantic woe ("Fool For Love"), and a touch of futurism influenced by French cinema and packed with swooshing synths and airy female vocals ("Hiroshima"). Most exciting is "I Thought," a laid-back Eno/Ferry collaboration that uses a lush bed of keyboards and casually strummed guitar to steadily build up into a righteous closing cut.
Album Reviews
Uncut (1/03, p.96) - Ranked #37 in Uncut's "100 Best Albums of the Year" - "...His most lively, inventive solo set in a decade..." Rolling Stone (5/23/02, p.84) - 3.5 out of 5 stars - "...On FRANTIC, Ferry coaxes the work of Bob Dylan, Marilyn Monroe, Leadbelly, Richard the Lionheart, Orson Welles, Alain Resnais and others into one great, silvery song..." Mojo (5/02, p.104) - "...It'll remind regular listeners of his old measured-but-passionate incarnation....a similar mix of moody originals and lovingly mutated covers, and sharing THE BRIDE STRIPPED BARE album's willfully dry, nicely bruised humility..." Entertainment Weekly (5/31/02, p.108) - "Any fan of Ferry's Roxy work will find FRANTIC music to their ears..." - Rating: B+ CMJ (5/27/02, p.11) - "...Sleek and focused..."
Titles on disc 1
1.
It's All Over Now Baby Blue
2.
Cruel
3.
Going Down
4.
Goddess Of Love
5.
Don't Think Twice It's Alright
6.
Nobody Loves Me
7.
Ja Nun Hons Pris
8.
Fool For Love
9.
Goodnight Irene
10.
Hiroshima (Ash Howes mix)
11.
San Simeon
12.
One Way Love
13.
I Thought
Ciao
Listed on Ciao since
27/10/2002
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