I doan wanna stream it though I want a copy! How to shot. Maybe is available at shops.
― Trayce, Wednesday, 11 July 2007 09:59 (eighteen years ago)
God the intarwebs have made me lazy. I'm all "oh god, do I have to go to a SHOP to buy this? I am already in my pyjamas!"
― Trayce, Wednesday, 11 July 2007 10:00 (eighteen years ago)
hahaha, i was looking through the new releases at work monday night and came across this! i forgot it was coming out! then i got pissed off because the manager wouldn't let me buy it after we closed because it was still before midnight. i had put aside the new album of nick drake demos too.
you know what medusa sounds like? CURVE!
― f. hazel, Wednesday, 11 July 2007 10:13 (eighteen years ago)
how do i shot curve
― Just got offed, Wednesday, 11 July 2007 10:15 (eighteen years ago)
No it doesn't. It's just a bit... "meh". It's nice, but it's not mind-blowing or earthshattering or anything.
And the rest of the album is kind of a let-down by comparison.
― Masonic Boom, Wednesday, 11 July 2007 10:16 (eighteen years ago)
oh like you don't wish every night that ulrich schnauss will do a remix of die like a dog or ten little girls.
― f. hazel, Wednesday, 11 July 2007 10:16 (eighteen years ago)
both of you!
Curve eh? Hmmm.
― Trayce, Wednesday, 11 July 2007 10:17 (eighteen years ago)
i like how medusa has the echo-y choir at the end, it will make it easy to segue into the clientele on my super awesome mix tape.
― f. hazel, Wednesday, 11 July 2007 10:19 (eighteen years ago)
i want ulrich schnauss to remix 'so' by working for a nuclear free city
― Just got offed, Wednesday, 11 July 2007 10:22 (eighteen years ago)
Some of the tones he uses reminds me of soap opera theme songs from the 80s or something.
I don't see how anyone could get super passionate about his older work. I liked Between Us and Them from Far Away Trains, but most of his stuff seems like futuristic elevator music. There's no teeth.
― rockapads, Thursday, 12 July 2007 02:17 (eighteen years ago)
I first found out about Ulrich Schnauss on boomkat, I believe, and the reviewer had such an orgasm over this album that I had no choice but to seek it out. On paper Ulrich Schnauss is right up my alley, so when I finally tracked down ASIP and sonically it sounded close enough to how it was described, I think I forced myself to be more passionate about it than I really was. Plus I liked the idea of being a fan of something obscure and German :) But what folks above have been said about it being elevator music is probably what I've felt to a degree since the beginning. I think it'd be a perfect choice for music to play during a slideshow at a wedding or reunion or something, though.
― Wookie Rookie, Friday, 13 July 2007 15:17 (eighteen years ago)
I could see that might be true of the first album, but ASIP and the new one work so well when cranked up. It's music that's 'designed' to be played really loud, I think. It's sounded really good whenever I've played bits of ASIP (On My Own in particular, and Medusa too, I suspect) in clubs.
― flowersdie, Friday, 13 July 2007 15:25 (eighteen years ago)
You people.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 13 July 2007 15:26 (eighteen years ago)
You love it.
― flowersdie, Friday, 13 July 2007 15:40 (eighteen years ago)
Actually I've been thinking about shoegaze and electronic variants in general lately and for me the form isn't about surprise but comfort food. As a result it's not going to give me anything revelatory anytime soon -- hoping for 'the new MBV' in my brain is a bit like an earlier version of me hoping for 'the new Tolkien.' Ain't gonna happen, both because of the specific circumstances of its creation and also how my own interests and foci have shifted. Perhaps extending the cooking metaphor a bit but the creation of a really good dish (for instance a new tomato soup recipe I tried last night) has more of an immediate emotional hold on my brain right now than chasing after another sonic revelation, partially because there's more room for honest surprise. (On this level I'm kinda glad for my piece on Loveless in Marooned in that it is a good summation of things for now, not a final word per se but I don't think I need to actively consider a lot of what's talked in there at present -- the future may yet bring a reconsideration, but Schnauss isn't the one to do it for me anymore than M83 was.)
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 13 July 2007 15:46 (eighteen years ago)
Everything I though that Ulrich Schnauss was gonna be and wasn't, A Sunny Day In Glasgow turned out to be.
It's weird that. People describe bands to me, and I get this idea in my head of what they should sound like, and then they just don't. And then a few years later, another band comes along that sounds just like that mental picture in my head.
― Klaus M. Flanger, Friday, 13 July 2007 15:48 (eighteen years ago)
I was just listening to this via the Realplayer BBC link, and Shine started up with this lovely little gamelan style intro, and I thought "hey, what an unusual and interesting departure". Then this guy with a boring voice started singing over the top, then the gamelan faded and the standard Schnaussisms started up and I was disappointed.
Then I realised the gamelan was from iTunes which had been playing in the background... :( or maybe :)
― ledge, Sunday, 15 July 2007 10:32 (eighteen years ago)
It's sounded really good whenever I've played bits of ASIP (On My Own in particular, and Medusa too, I suspect) in clubs.
His two best songs, and the direction I sincerely hope he goes in. You have no idea how much I want this kind of sound and production in dance music.
― Just got offed, Sunday, 15 July 2007 10:38 (eighteen years ago)
You have no idea how much I want gamelan sound and production in dance music.
― ledge, Sunday, 15 July 2007 10:41 (eighteen years ago)
that would also be good, maybe we should collaborate
― Just got offed, Sunday, 15 July 2007 10:44 (eighteen years ago)
Ok let me first go on a five year fully immersive retreat to Indonesia in order to truly understand my source material.
― ledge, Sunday, 15 July 2007 10:47 (eighteen years ago)
after which time you will have renounced all cultural 'entertainment', very sneaky. take a portable disco, however, and you have my blessing.
― Just got offed, Sunday, 15 July 2007 10:50 (eighteen years ago)
I don't understand why people find Ulrich's stuff boring ;_;
I've been listening to "Goodbye" a lot since it came out and it is just gorgeous. "Shine" is just so uplifting and beautiful, like Slowdive, like taking off in a plane, like a high.
― Trayce, Thursday, 26 July 2007 04:50 (eighteen years ago)
Because he more or less has a one-trick-pony thing going on. It's a good one, but I can see how it'd get predictable.
― Curt1s Stephens, Thursday, 26 July 2007 14:01 (eighteen years ago)
Which is why tracks like 'Medusa' are his best, because they take his one trick and add unexpected curveballs to it. I sincerely hope he takes his music into a more dance-oriented format now. Either that, or he goes all progressive on us. :-D
― Just got offed, Thursday, 26 July 2007 14:05 (eighteen years ago)
I think "Stars" is the best thing he's done so far, it's the perfection of his current formula & takes it to a new level of intensity. But I dunno if I'd be quite satisfied with another album of sugar-crystal drum machines and all-consuming synth washes and predictable dynamics. Dude has a great ear, so hopefully he'll move onto something different next album and it'll be fantastic.
― Curt1s Stephens, Thursday, 26 July 2007 17:30 (eighteen years ago)
If he goes too far in that Kraftwerky Medusa direction I am not so sure I'd like it. But who's to say.
― Trayce, Friday, 27 July 2007 00:38 (eighteen years ago)
listening to this album loud on fancy speakers is pretty amazing. it has so much depth! bits of lush, xymox, vangelis floating up and receding... i absolutely love it.
― f. hazel, Friday, 27 July 2007 07:01 (eighteen years ago)
I'm still angry that the title-track "Goodbye" kicks off with just about the most killer chord-progression imaginable, keeps it up for two or three minutes, but then devolves into crass, substanceless emotional manipulation during the outro. He could have done so much more with that track.
― Just got offed, Wednesday, 8 August 2007 15:31 (eighteen years ago)
Medusa (album version) might, objectively, be the song of 2007, even though I have a couple of personal preferences above it. It's absolutely unfuckable-with.
― Just got offed, Sunday, 23 December 2007 22:17 (eighteen years ago)
No such thing as objectivity, dude.
― Scik Mouthy, Tuesday, 25 December 2007 10:10 (eighteen years ago)
Dammit you have a point. There's a meaning I'm searching for. This song, then, appeals to me as a construction, as a work of art, more than any other, even if I get a bigger personal reaction out of a few others.
― Just got offed, Tuesday, 25 December 2007 15:24 (eighteen years ago)
Formalist!
― Scik Mouthy, Wednesday, 26 December 2007 16:18 (eighteen years ago)
"the formalist Geir"
Well, riffing on a certain theme has done certain posters no harm. You're compression, Geir's melody, I can be formalism! Not that I really want to be squeezed into a box but hey, what can you do?
― Just got offed, Wednesday, 26 December 2007 16:30 (eighteen years ago)
"Stars" is properly awesome, yeah!
Medusa>>On My Own>>Clear Day>>Stars>>the rest of ASIP>>the rest of Goodbye
― Just got offed, Monday, 31 December 2007 00:01 (eighteen years ago)
lol early 2007 me
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 31 December 2007 00:34 (eighteen years ago)
not to get all LJ about the matter
― Just got offed, Monday, 31 December 2007 00:39 (eighteen years ago)
There was a thread at the end of '03 where everyone was asked to recommend a single track to download from an album they felt deserved more attention. I picked "Blumenthal" from ASIP, and I still think it's my favorite song off any of his albums. Don't know if it's a bias I have for all things Cocteau (it can't be, I love shoegaze just as much), but that track is just perfect to me. The second and third chorus repeats still light me up after hundreds of listens.
― turkey, Monday, 31 December 2007 06:55 (eighteen years ago)
Had 'In all the Wrong Places' on a loop for the last hour.
Am I A) Depressed B) On Crack C) Pissed D) Mentally ill E) In love with the song
It's actually all eight!
When it pulses at around three minutes - search it you music loving freaks
― Fer Ark, Saturday, 8 March 2008 01:28 (eighteen years ago)
Congratulations, "On My Own", you just became the first song in my iTunes collection to make it to 100 completed plays!!! :D
― Just got offed, Friday, 4 July 2008 20:46 (seventeen years ago)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^quite possibly, song of the fucking decade
Mark my words, A Strangely Isolated Place will be understood as the seminal work of absolute genius that it is perhaps 10-15 years from now.― libcrypt, Saturday, 7 April 2007 18:30 (1 year ago)
― libcrypt, Saturday, 7 April 2007 18:30 (1 year ago)
this post basically justifies everything libcrypt has said or done on ILX
― I want sprinkles (country matters), Tuesday, 24 February 2009 01:00 (seventeen years ago)
Imagine ASIP *with* Stars, Medusa and Goodbye on it
just imagine
oh shit
― I want sprinkles (country matters), Tuesday, 24 February 2009 01:07 (seventeen years ago)
ok, have created a playlist
it is ASIP in its entirety with "Stars" inserted after "Letter From Home" and "Medusa" inserted after "Blumenthal"
"Goodbye" couldn't be included thanks to time constraints, and although I was tempted to sub it in for "Monday - Paracetamol", this would have damaged the album's flow, and created sequencing issues near the end, and besides it's not THAT brilliant, so it stayed off
it is a musical monolith
not that ASIP isn't anyway
― I want sprinkles (country matters), Tuesday, 24 February 2009 01:37 (seventeen years ago)
hmm but I'm having second thoughts now. "Monday - Paracetamol" is the pretty, slightly Xanaxed de-stresser which soothes the listener's brain after the sheer emotional wrangle of "Letter From Home"...shoving a flat-out shoegaze pop song, even a totally brilliant one, in between kinda ruins the flow
am less concerned with "Medusa"'s position, but some things are probably best left as they were intended. as a last resort i'm pushing "Stars" up between "On My Own" and "Letter". but deep down, I know that ASIP's perfectly-sequenced entirety rules supreme
anyway I'm Bimbling, time for bed
― I want sprinkles (country matters), Tuesday, 24 February 2009 01:45 (seventeen years ago)
You know, I've really gone off this guy, which is odd.
Kind of like eating too many lollies. Very awesome, but made me sick on the gorging too quick.
― one art, please (Trayce), Tuesday, 24 February 2009 02:32 (seventeen years ago)
I think "Goodbye" is like the best song ever written ever whenever I listen to it.
― f. hazel, Tuesday, 24 February 2009 06:04 (seventeen years ago)
It took me a long time to love Goodbye (the album) compared to his first two and bits of it still never get anything but skipped, especially the godawful Shine. The good tracks are up there with his very best though, esp. Goodbye, Never Be The Same and Medusa.
Any love here for the Guthrie remixes on the Quicksand Memory ep? I like the way that he tries to outgun Ulrich's wall of synths with his own wall of guitars and very nearly succeeds.
Assuming he's working on some new stuff it would be good to hear him step back a bit from the more-is-more approach of Goodbye and revisit the simplicity of ...Trains.
― Bill A, Tuesday, 24 February 2009 09:44 (seventeen years ago)
Used to like, but started hating once he became, well, OMNIPRESENT.
I think that the three most PH34RED words in the nu-gaze canon are:
ULRICH. SCHNAUSS. REMIX.
This should be my perfect music, synthesis of shoegaze textures and ambient Germanic electronica, but it just leaves me cold. He just seems to drain the life out of things. Too much midrange.
― Baby, Your Phasing Is Bad (Masonic Boom), Tuesday, 24 February 2009 11:02 (seventeen years ago)
I'm not a stan of his remixes in general, and I can see where you are with the midrange crit, but his takes on Justin Robertson and I'm Not A Gun are both awesome.
My main worry with ol' Uli is that he's painted himself into a bit of a corner with this maximalism approach ("more tracks! all playing at once! sonic cathedrals!") and it's at odds with the unshowy melodicism of his earlier stuff.
― Bill A, Tuesday, 24 February 2009 11:14 (seventeen years ago)