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Wire Magazine honored this 2006 release - ''one of the best of the year.'' This first album on Kode9's Hyperdub label comes from the mysterious Burial. On this stunning self-titled CD debut, Burial carves out a sound which sends the dormant slinky syncopations of UK garage, via radio interference, into a padded cell of cushioned, muffled bass, passing through the best of Pole's Berlin crackle dub. Burial explores a tangential, parallel dimension of the growing sound of dubstep. Burial's parallel dimension sounds set in a near future South London underwater. You can never tell if the crackle is the burning static off pirate radio transmissions, or the tropical downpour of the submerged city outside the window. In their sometimes suffocating melancholy, most of these tracks seem to yearn for drowned lovers. The smouldering desire of "Distant Lights" is cooled only by the percussive ice sharp slicing of blades and jets of hot air blowing from the bass. Listen also for a fleeting appearance from Hyperdub's resident vocalist, the Spaceape unravelling his crypto-biography. In its loud quietness, Burial takes his kitchen crackle aesthetic neither from the digital glitch nor merely from a nostalgia for vinyl's materiality. Instead, as "Pirates" suggests, Burial's crackle mutates the tactile surplus value of pirate radio transmissions. Burial's mix is haunted. Echoed voices breeze in and out, on road to another time. Pirate signals from other frequencies stream in. This is a tidal wave of noise submerging all but the crispest syncopations. The noise is not violent, but caressing, tickling, exciting the ends of your nerves. Utterly seductive.
Burial is the first great dubstep album, legitimizing a style -- a generally dark, emotive, and faceless dub offshoot of 2-step -- that had thus far been confined to 12" vinyl and the underground club scene. Even though a couple of the tracks ("Southern Comfort," "Broken Home") had been previously released on the South London Boroughs EP (2005), Burial doesn't sound like a compilation of one-off productions to date, as is often the case with music of this kind. It's a true album, a unified collection of songs similar in style as well as mood yet also distinct enough from one another to remain engaging over the course of 13 tracks in 51 minutes. As if it were a well-selected mix album, Burial flows well from one track to the next; the exception is "Spaceape," the only song featuring a vocalist (and unfortunately sequenced third, disrupting the flow just as it begins). While some tracks stand out ("Distant Lights," "Southern Comfort," "Gutted," "Broken Home"), they're interspersed by low-key tracks such as "Night Bus" and "Forgive" that enhance the overall mood and space out the highlights. As the hazy, mostly black cover art of the album (a nighttime aerial photograph of South London) suggests, the mood of Burial is dim, distant, and rather dreary; from a subjective standpoint, one might characterize it as the sound of 3:00 a.m., a time of reflection and perhaps remorse, of being alone after the party's come to an end. There is an emotional aspect at work that is key to this mood, a sullen sense of despair especially evident in the ambient interludes, communicated also in the ghostly vocal samples. The technical aspect of Burial is remarkable, too. The album's subterranean basslines and skittering rhythms, along with its array of found sounds and production effects, are simple yet inventive, austere yet evocative. Other dubstep producers have crafted a similar style, make no mistake, but Burial is the first to craft it on the scale of a full-length album so effectively. ~ Jason Birchmeier
Q (p.117) - Ranked #77 in Q Magazine's "100 Greatest Albums of 2006." The Wire (p.48) - "Burial debut EP is a brooding journey through South London urban dread....The BURIAL album mixes this brand of rolling, itinerant beats with disarmingly poignant Ambient interludes..." Burial Review
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Purchase Burial CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Gun Club Miami CD (1982)
Burial album
$11.15 While the Gun Club's debut, FIRE OF LOVE, was a masterpiece of untamed punk blues, follow-up album MIAMI, produced by Blondie's Chris Stein, achieves a fuller sound and a more varied stylistic palette without sacrificing any of its predecessor's intensity. The revved-up blues of yore are still here ("Devil in the Woods," "Fire of Love"), but wild-child singer Jeffrey Lee Pierce and company also tackle everything from Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Run Through the Jungle" (in a surprisingly faithful version) to the atmospheric, somewhat Doors-y "Watermelon Man" (not the Herbie Hancock tune), mixing rock, blues, country, and folk with post-punk energy and Pierce's trademark sense of near-manic urgency. MIAMI doesn't top FIRE OF LOVE, but it runs a close second.
Audio ...
| | Field From Here We Go Sublime CD (2007) (Import) Germany
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$14.79 On 2007's FROM HERE WE GO SUBLIME, Axel Willner's first full-length Kompakt outing under the moniker of the Field, the Swedish electronica artist presents a mesmerizing set of minimalist techno that garnered international raves. Sometimes working in the same dreamy vein as fellow Europeans Ulrich Schnauss ...
| | Battles Mirrored CD (2007)
Burial music CDs
$12.25 If modern day indie music appears to consist of an endless queue of groups that are either bland emo retreads or glitzy disco punkers, it is then that much more refreshing to encounter a band like Battles. With a lineage that consists of some of indie rock's most accomplished musicians, Battles is a veritable neo-prog supergroup, though one that embraces the possibilities of technology used in tandem with instrumental virtuosity.
MIRRORED, the band's debut full-length makes its intent clear from the onset--to ingest 50 years of rock history and regurgitate it as fractilized micro-symphonies. Rhythms bounce whimsically from motorik krautrock beats to glammed up T. Rex shuffles; such stop-on-a-dime surprises seem to be offered up at every turn. Tyondai Braxton's bizarre vocal gibberish--pitched up and looped in real-time--recalls similar experiments by the Animal Collective, while simple, repetitive note progressions give way to full-on guitar bombast (courtesy of ...
| | Burial Untrue CD (2007)
Burial songs
$13.75 If most musical projects aim for at least a measure of popular notoriety, the clandestine U.K. producer known as Burial seems to thrive on self-imposed anonymity. In interviews, the London-based dubstep artist explains his willful obscurity as an effort to draw a formal boundary between underground and pop--to effectively become "untrackable, unreadable, just a distant light." Whether this is pure hype-sheet driven strategy or a bona fide lob at the music business's cult of personality makes little difference; the immersive, emotive music found on his second album, UNTRUE, evinces a true perfectionist's touch. Drawing upon the euphoric "feminine pressure" vocals of 2-step garage and the malevolent bass rumble of darkside drum & bass, UNTRUE both elaborates upon and conflates genre clichés with a mix of irreverent deconstruction and reverential homage.
As in his eponymous debut, UNTRUE is daubed in a grainy, lo-fi ambience that casts a sinister fog over the rhythmic foreground. Ominous creaks, pops, and drizzles lurch furtively from some void, creating crackly accents or yawning, metallic squeaks. On "Ghost Hardware" the staccato syncopations of garage are either distended into growling bass undertow, or crumpled into shards of asymmetrical flourish. Against the metronomic clack of a woodblock-like rimshot, female voices coo seductively like spectral sirens. While much of the vocals are undoubtedly sourced from R&B samples, they are manipulated to the point that they become another ...
| | Autechre Quaristice CD (2008)
Burial album
$12.65 Among detractors, electronic music is often criticized for wanting some undefined quality, most often related to some perception of a lack of "warmth" or "soul." The music of U.K. electronic pioneers Autechre makes no such easy concessions to what might be considered pedestrian concerns. Since the early 90s, Sean Booth and Rob Brown have been generating a parallel universe of sound--a sound that has pushed at the boundaries of musical abstraction by exploring the multiplicities and infinite variations offered by technology.
On their ninth album, QUARISTICE, Autechre's technology-driven imperative is as uncompromising as ever. But rather than construct a maze of refracted, endlessly variegated sound, they choose to break up the set into shorter sonic vignettes, each delving into a specific, focused area of exploration with more subtle gradients and variation. The spectral, pulsing drones of "Altibzz," the album's opener, represents a return to the pastoral ambient electronica of the ...
| | R E M Murmur CDs (1983) Anniversary Edition; Remastered; Deluxe Edition; Digipak
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$19.79 R.E.M.'s full-length debut is a landmark album that set the standard for the next 10 years of indie rock. The Athens quartet combined Byrdsy, folk-rock guitar jangle with obscurantist lyrics and a post-punk compositional sensibility to create a vibrant new sound that would soon be imitated by every high-school poet with a Rickenbacker guitar. R.E.M. was also one of the first bands to make the long, hard journey from college radio (when it was still college radio) to mainstream acceptance, and managed the difficult task of maintaining its integrity at every step along the way.
MURMUR, far from an embryonic debut, shows a fully-formed unit with a strong artistic vision. (It was preceded by two legendary underground releases: The "Radio Free Europe" single--which was re-recorded for MURMUR--and the CHRONIC TOWN EP.) Producers Mitch Easter and Don Dixon's lofty reputations would have remained intact even if they had never worked on another record after this one. The gentle-but-insistent arrangements and glorious pop hooks of songs like "Catapult" and "Talk About The Passion" provide the perfect contrast to Michael Stipe's earnest, moody vocal style. Drummer Bill Berry's breathless effervescence provides ...
| | Lee Wiley Back Home Again CD (1995)
Burial music CDs
$12.09 Fourteen years after her last record, singer Lee Wiley came back for one final studio recording. Although she does a good job on "Indiana" and "I'm Coming, Virginia" and the backup band (which includes trumpeter Rusty Dedrick, clarinetist Johnny Mince, trombonist Buddy Morrow, and pianist Dick Hyman) is excellent, in general this is a disappointing LP. Wiley's voice was no longer ...
| | Big Hate You're Soaking In It CD (1998)
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$10.49
| | Shlomo Artzi Restless Night CD (2006)
Burial album
$14.29
| | Cedarmont Kids 100 Singalong Songs For Kids CDs (2007) Box Set
Burial CD music
$8.15 Track Listing of songs: DISC 1: Wheels on the Bus, The; Do Your Ears Hang Low?; Joshua Fought the Battle of Jericho; Wise Man and the Foolish Man; Alphabet Song, The; Polly, Put the Kettle On; Rocka My Soul; Skinny Marinky Dinky Dink; Eensy, Weensy Spider; Dry Bones; More We Get Together, The; Polly Wolly Doodle; If You're Happy and You Know It; Who Did; Six Little Ducks; Fingers, Nose and Toes; Baa, Baa, Black Sheep; Michael Finnigan; Bear Went Over the Mountain, The; Roll Over; S-M-I-L-E; Jack and Jill; Who Built the Ark?; Bingo; John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt; Get on Board; This Old Man; Mary Had a Little Lamb; Deep and Wide; Here We Go 'Round the Mulberry Bush; Swing Low, Sweet Chariot; Old MacDonald Had a Farm; Looby Loo; There's a Hole in the Bucket; DISC 2: Bluebird, Bluebird; School Days; He's Got the Whole World in His Hands; I Bought Me a Cat; Shoo, Fly Don't Bother Me!; Little David; She'll Be Coming 'Round the Mountain; Sarasponda; America, The Beautiful; One Little Brown Bird; Down by the Riverside; Farmer in the Dell, The; I've Got Peace Like a River; Paw-Paw Patch; Are You Sleeping?; Oats, Peas, Beans and Barley Grow; Hinges; Michael, Row the Boat Ashore; Ants Go Marching, The; Oh, Where, Oh Where Has My Little Dog Gone?; The Grand Old Duke Of York / A Hunting We Will Go; Oh Dear! What Can the Matter Be?; Where Is Thumbkin?; Pop! Goes the Weasel; Down by the Station; London Bridge; Ring Around the Rosy; Muffin Man, The; Skip to My Lou; Row, Row, Row Your Boat; Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes; Old Gray Mare, The; Be Kind to You Web Footed Friends; DISC 3: Yankee Doodle; Baby Bumblebee; Ezekial Saw the Wheel; When the Saints Go Marching In; Animal Fair; Bill Grogan's Goat; Star Spangled Banner, The; My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean; I've Been Working on the Railroad; Clap Your Hands; Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star; I Shall Not Be Moved; There's a Hole in the Bottom of the Sea; Lazy Mary Will You Get up?; I Love ...
| | Andy Alberts Lifs & Land CD (2007) (Import)
Burial music CDs
$29.99
| | Uli Jon Roth Under A Dark Sky CD (2008)
Burial songs
$14.35 Hard rock, heavy metal, and pop-metal fans still associate the name Uli Jon Roth with the Scorpions, which is certainly understandable when you consider how popular they were in the 1970s and '80s. Back in rock's pre-Nevermind era, the German band reigned supreme as one of Europe's top headbanger attractions, and even though Roth actually left the Scorpions before 1980s smashes such as "No One Like You" and "Rock You Like a Hurricane," his name continues to be preceded by the phrase "former Scorpions guitarist." But Roth's solo output has by no means been an exact replica of his work with the Scorpions; Under a Dark Sky, in fact, has very little in common with Roth's former band stylistically. This 2008 release clearly falls into the progressive rock category -- not hard rock, not heavy metal, not pop-metal or even progressive metal, but progressive rock. Roth (who is heard on guitar, keyboards, bass, and some of the lead vocals) draws on influences like Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Asia, and Kansas, and elements of European classical music and European church music are used prominently. Under a Dark Sky is as grandiose and self-indulgent musically as it is lyrically; instead of downplaying prog rock's excesses, Roth celebrates them. And that is a big part of the album's charm. Someone who has a casual interest in prog rock but is critical of its excesses -- for example, someone who likes a certain amount of Pink Floyd and Yes but cites ELP's excesses as a perfect example of why the Sex Pistols, the Clash, and the Ramones were absolutely necessary -- might find Under a Dark Sky to be pretentious and dated. But for the die-hard prog rock enthusiast who finds those excesses endearing, this album definitely ...
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