| | Portishead CD Portishead Discography of CDs
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Portishead: Beth Gibbons (vocals); Adrian Utley (guitar, piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Moog synthesizer, bass); Geoff Barrow (drums). Additional personnel includes: John Baggot (samples); Sean Atkins (background vocals). Personnel: S. Atkins (vocals); Adrian Utley (guitar, piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Moog synthesizer); Steve Cooper (violin); John Cornick (trombone, horns); A. Hague, B. Waghorn (horns); John Baggot (piano, organ); Geoff Barrow, Clive Deamer (drums); Hookers & Gin, Ken Thorne (sampler). Audio Mixer: Trevor Curwen. Recording information: AIR Studios; Moles; Ridge Farm. Portishead's debut album, Dummy, popularized trip-hop, making its slow, narcotic rhythms, hypnotic samples, and film noir production commonplace among sophisticated, self-consciously "mature" pop fans. The group recoiled from such widespread acclaim and influence, taking three years to deliver its eponymous second album. On the surface, Portishead isn't all that dissimilar from Dummy, but its haunting, foreboding sonic textures make it clear that the group isn't interested in the crossover success of such fellow travelers as Sneaker Pimps. Upon repeated plays, the subtle differences between the two albums become clear. Geoff Barrow and Adrian Utley recorded original music that they later sampled for the backing tracks on the album, giving the record a hazy, dreamlike quality that shares many of the same signatures of Dummy, but is darker and more adventurous. Beth Gibbons has taken the opportunity to play up her tortured diva role to the hilt, emoting wildly over the tracks. Her voice is electronically phased on most of the tracks, adding layers to the claustrophobic menace of the music. The sonics on Portishead would make it an impressive follow-up, but what seals its success is the remarkable songwriting. Throughout the album, the group crafts impeccable modern-day torch songs, from the frightening, repetitive "Cowboys" to the horn-punctuated "All Mine," which justify the detailed, engrossing production. The end result is an album that reveals more with each listen and becomes more captivating and haunting each time it's played. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine Like Soul II Soul a few years before them, Portishead spearheaded a revolution in both pop and dance music by introducing a distinctive new groove. Portishead was at the vanguard of the '90s trip-hop onslaught, and after a three-year respite, they return with a self-titled second album to reclaim the trip-hop crown. Beth Gibbons is on her way to becoming the Billie Holiday of electronica, retaining a stoic, laconic tone while recounting tales of despair and emotional upheaval. The lazy, spacious beats that are the band's trademark provide just the right combination of urgency and tranquility to underscore the emotional contradictions at the core of Portishead's music. Adrian Utley's delightfully creepy guitar and keyboard work adorns the proceedings tastefully and effectively. On tunes like "Cowboys" and "All Mine" Portishead makes it plain that when it comes to arresting, unsettling electronic dance-pop, nobody does it better.Rolling Stone (10/2/97, p.56) - 3 Stars (out of 5) - "...the group easily re-establishes its mastery of the genre now known as trip-hop....Geoff Barrow and Adrian Utley have refined their sound to an instantly identifiable essence..." Spin (1/98, p.86) - Ranked #6 on Spin's list of the "Top 20 Albums Of The Year." Spin (11/97, p.142) - 9 (out of 10) - "...Like every brilliantly dismal act from Screamin' Jay Hawkins to the Wu-Tang Clan, Portishead tiptope across a ledge where utter seriousness is one false move away from tragic self-parody. They manage the high-wire act with brittle grace, bitter poise. And they sound as if they could break at any second..." Entertainment Weekly (10/03/97, p.84) - "...This sophomore spook-athon from chilly U.K. combo Portishead clanks across the attic, via Geoff Barrow's skeletal samples and funereal keyboards. Beth Gibbons' surgical-steel voices slices into her partner's scraps of musical meat, for an effect that's hypnotic, bloodless, and addictive..." - Rating: A Q (1/98, p.114) - Included in Q Magazine's "50 Best Albums of 1997." Vibe (11/97, p.152) - "...Beth Gibbons shows off stark vocal mood swings as she croons and claws under a bitter moon. A 30-piece orchestra keeps you strung out on drama, while producers/bandmates Adrian Utley and Geoff Barrow snap out the beats..." The Source (11/97, p.174) - "...crafted with care and eloquence, and somehow articulating the space that exists between the emotional and the physical....Portishead succeed with aplomb on their eponymously-titled follow-up album..." Melody Maker (12/20-27/97, pp.66-67) - Ranked #18 on Melody Maker's list of 1997's "Albums Of The Year." Melody Maker (10/4/97, p.50) - "...deep fried, delightful doom music....they're still...the original flames, the instigators, the innovators and still the only sure soundtrack to the future." Musician (11/97, p.86) - "...Gibbons' extraordinary voice has grown darker, nastier, and more spine-tingling, while the new songs vary from grim...to serene....PORTISHEAD looks over the cliff, then dives headlong into the abyss..." Village Voice (2/24/98) - Ranked #14 in the Village Voice's 1997 Pazz & Jop Critics' Poll. NME (Magazine) (12/20-27/97, pp.78-79) - Ranked #32 in NME's 1997 Critics' Poll. NME (Magazine) (9/27/97, p.57) - 8 (out of 10) - "...if DUMMY was smoky film noir material, this is a choking Hammer Horror ho-ho-free hoedown....wavering, painfully sensitive choruses, desperately distorted soundscapes and good old-fashioned tunes..." Portishead Music | List Price | $13.95 (You save $3.50) | | Category | Rock Albums, Electronica CDs, Alternative, Rock/Pop, Trip Hop | | Label | London | | Orig Year | 1997 | | All Time Sales Rank | 439  | | CD Universe Part number | 1160491 | | Catalog number | 539189 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Sep 30, 1997 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Portishead; Dave McDonald | | Engineer | Dave McDonald | | Personnel | Beth Gibbons - vocals Adrian Utley - guitar, piano, Fender Rhodes piano, Moog synthesizer, bass Geoff Barrow - drums
Also: John Baggot, Sean Atkins |
Portishead Music Review Average Rating: (4.8 out of 5 stars)   Just great Jazzy, electronic, great voice. A must have for any album collection! Submitted by JROCK (Eugene, OR) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Experimental Trip-Hop With a Golden Voice Beth Gibbons has a voice that can be so damned sultry it would make you wither, and then next song it's glassy, high and pushed in it's upper registers. She reminds me of Julee Cruise on intravenous caffeine! Together with electronically altered voice, and some wonderfully off-the-wall electronica backing her up, and zingo! you have a fantastic journey into her outer space! The songwriting is great, the lyrics strange, but meaningful, and the little edge of digital sound adds to the overall effect...I even hear ticks and pops to mimic LP! Wonderful recording for anyone slightly interested in a different approach to sound and singing. Highly recommended. Submitted by Poppynogood (Iowa City, Iowa) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
exellent the hip-hop beats that this dj produces for this a+ singer in this TRIP-hop group master the east coast hip hop sound just as good if not better than the djs' who create music for the top hip-hop groups in the industry like, The Notorious B.I.G., or the Wu Tang Clan, or Nas. if you take the lyrics out of portisheads tracks, you can rap to their beats as well as she can sing to them. Submitted by Dustin (st. george, UT) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
they produce again!!!! a local band to me producing excellent music for a second album - blimey!! this self-titled release from portishead is every bit as good as the first album "dummy" with excellent atmospheric songs to send you into another world of music. every song is good on here but there are a few that really stand out, especially the first track "cowboys" that is superb - it is this albums answer to "sour times" from "dummy" which was the best song on that. other excellent songs on here are "all mine", "only you" and "humming" Submitted by josemorrisinio (Bristol, England) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
INCREDIBLE Nothing I type will do this album justice. I I don't know what to say- Submitted by a reviewer (Chicago, IL USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 0 of 1 found this helpful.
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Purchase Portishead CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Verve Urban Hymns CD (1997)
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$8.65 The Tubes: Fee Waybill (vocals); Roger Steen, Prairie Prince, Gary Cambra, Rick Anderson, Dave Medd Trey Sabatelli, Lesley Paton. Recorded between 1975 & 2001. Stop drooling over the track listing, this isn't the great Tubes' compilation you've been waiting for. Although it may look like the collection that finally marries the early years with the later ones, Then and Now takes half of its tunes from Tubes World Tour, and half from the demo-filled Dawn of the Tubes, with one track from the first album ...
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| | Backstreet Boys Never Gone CD (2005)
Portishead
$8.99 Backstreet Boys: Howie Dorough, Kevin Richardson, Nick Carter, Brian Littrell, AJ McLean (vocals). It's been nearly five years since the Backstreet Boys have released a new album, but as the all-too-literal title of 2005's Never Gone makes clear, they don't want you to call their fourth LP a comeback -- in their mind, they've been here for years. That's not strictly true, since all five members have disappeared from the charts, if not the tabloid headlines, since their 2000 flop, Black & Blue. While fellow teen pop icons like Justin Timberlake and Christina Aguilera had successful transitions into adulthood, while Jessica Simpson turned reality TV star and Mandy Moore turned genuine actress (for pity's sake, we will ignore Britney Spears' horrifying descent into white trash abyss), Kevin Richardson, Howie Dorough, and Brian Littrell all faded away as A.J. McLean suffered a very public addiction to various substances. Nick Carter also suffered at the hands of the tabloids, in large part due to a very stormy relationship with Paris Hilton, but he also had the distinction of being the only Backstreet Boy to deliver a solo album -- Now or Never in 2002 -- which meant that he was the only BSB with an ignoble flop to his credit, as well. Now or Never had the distinction of being an old-school teen pop album being delivered too far after the craze. Carter's peers were changing their stripes, but he stuck to the tried and true BSB formula and was punished by the fickle public accordingly. Given that public humiliation, it shouldn't come as a surprise that Carter and the other Boys are wise enough to try something new on Never Gone: they've abandoned the teen pop of the late '90s for anthemic adult contemporary that sounds a bit like Bryan Adams circa 1990. It's not a reinvention as much as a lateral move, shifting from one kind of pop that's not selling to another that's not selling, but ...
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| | Venter Realize CD (2007)
Portishead
$5.99 I was kicking around a bunch of names in my head for a while and I was about to just say "fuck it" and self title the CD (or call it Fuck It) when I went back into my lyrics sheets and saw the working title of the track "No Fare." I've got a little bit of a fascination with the word "realize" because of its multiple definitions. Since none of the other track names seemed to make a good album name, I decided to look up the word "realize" on dictionary.com and see just what they had to say about the word to double check all of its definitions. Here's what they had to say:re·al·ize [ree-uh-lahyz] , -ized, -iz·ing.–verb (used with object)1.to grasp or understand clearly.2.to make real; give reality to (a hope, fear, plan, etc.).3.to bring vividly to the mind.4.to convert into cash or money: to realize securities.5.to obtain as a profit or income for oneself by trade, labor, or investment.6.to bring as proceeds, as from a sale: The goods realized $1000.7.Music. to sight-read on a keyboard instrument or write out in notation the full harmony and ornamentation indicated by (a figured bass).8.Linguistics. to serve as an instance, representation, or embodiment of (an abstract linguistic element or category): In "Jack tripped," the subject is realized by "Jack," the predicate by "tripped," and the past tense by "-ed."–verb (used without object)9. to convert property or goods into cash or money.Now, I wasn't aware (you thought I'd say "I didn't realize," didn't you) of the last few definitions. I guess you learn something new every day, but I am most interested in good old definitions 1, 2, and 3. Number 2, in particular. That seems to sum up what I wanted to do with this whole project. I wanted to make something very real and sometimes imperfect out of the songs I've been writing and singing in my bedroom; so I recorded them live in my bedroom between 3:15 and 4:15 on June 29, 2007. All the songs were played in the order you hear them and all were done in one take (except for the last song {I confess, I really screwed up the last line of that one and did a second take}). I've cut out sections of me tuning my guitar, drinking water, and mumbling to myself, but I'll put out the raw tape at some point if anyone really wants to hear it.But back to the name. Does recording something make it real? Is it merely a reproduction of an original something that started out as real? We seem to think that real, legitimate music goes on CDs and is bought and anything else is really just someone's amateur junk. But I'd venture to say that putting those thoughts into notes and lyrics is the real moment of realization in more than one sense of the word. Sometimes I sing nonsense words before I write my lyrics just to get my melodies working, but, in reality, the words that come out are merely a realization of what I have to say without mediation. And that's how songs like "I Don't Need You" and "We're Going" get written. These moments ...
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