General
Article 1
Article 2
Article 3
Article 4
Article 5
Article 6
Article 7
Article 8
Article 9
Dummy
Article 1
Article 2
Article 3
Article 4
Article 5
Article 6
Article 7
Article 8
Portishead (album)
Article 1
Article 2
Article 3
Article 4
Article 5
Article 6
Article 7
Article 8
Article 9
Article 10
Article 11
Live
Article 1
Article 2
Article 3
Article 4
Article 5
Article 6
Article 7
Article 8
Article 9
Article 10
Article 11
Article 12
Article 13
Article 14
Article 15
Article 16
Article 17
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ink blot magazine
If it wasn't for Portishead's vocalist Beth Gibbons, you could listen
to Dummy all of the time. With tight, fresh hip-hop beats and
a subtle jazz flavor, most of Dummy is danceable, although the
band do have a knack for creating an especially eerie mood with
moaning organs and swelling strings. But when Gibbons enters the
scene, her clear delicate vibrato casts a shadow of isolation
and absolute melancholy over the whole album.
Portishead easily draw you into their lonely world, and their ambient trip-hop
entices you to stay. Songs like "Numb" and "Biscuit"
are dark trances enduced by the combination of hip-hop, mellow
guitars, and a variety of samples coated by Gibbon's desperate
pleas for salvation. Hearing her cry, "Nobody loves me, it's
true" during the hit "Sour Times" is enough to
tear at anyone's heart. On "Roads" - a track already
enveloped in sorrowful elegant strings - Gibbon's soprano trembles
with pain. However, the twisted lounge acts, "Strangers"
and "Pedestal" feature very soulful and powerful vocals
accompanied by some excellent jazz performances.
The last track, "Glory Box", is Portishead in full effect.
Over a sample from Isaac Hayes' "Ike's Rap III" and
a slinky blues guitar, Gibbons duels with herself as she tries
to justify a relationship. She first comes off as a contemptuous
Billie
Holiday and then switches back to her sweet, sad self as she
pleads, "Give me a reason to love you/ I just want to be
a woman."
By all means, Dummy is an essential album for trip-hop fans and beginners.
And try not to worry if you feel depressed; Portishead are that
way so you don't have to be.
Lori Latimer
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