| 1. Father Cannot Yell |
| 2. Mary, Mary So Contrary |
| 3. Outside My Door |
| 4. Yoo Doo Right |
Editorial Reviews
Digitally Remastered Edition from the Original Master Tapes, Personally Overseen and Attended by Original Members Holger Czukay, Irmin Schmidt and Jono Podmore, So that the Sound Presented Here is Ultimately the Best Possible and as it was Originally Intended During the Recording of the Album. The Disc also Includes Exclusive Unseen Photos from the Time Period around the Original Release and Newly Penned Sleeve Notes.
Monster Movie,The Can,EMI Int'l,Electronic,Experimental,Experimental Rock,Kraut Rock,Pop,Prog-Rock/Art Rock,Rock
Average customer rating:
|
Monster Movie
The Can Manufacturer: Mute U.S. ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000654Z1O Release Date: 2004-11-16 |
Tracks:
- Father Cannot Yell
- Mary, Mary So Contrary
- Outside My Door
- Yoo Doo Right
Customer Reviews:
A hint of what's to come.......2007-01-05
Oh Can, you made a believer out of me!.......2006-05-10
Can - 'Monster Movie' (Mute).......2005-12-02
Smoke a Haiku Cigarette with Can.......2005-10-18
Mooney shared the same offbeat concept of lead vocals as his successor, Damo Suzuki. The big difference is that Mooney was an expatriate American and spoke English as a first language, meaning you can actually make out what he's "singing" (reciting might be more apt!) Don't get me wrong, I absolutely love Damo Suzuki's work with the band, but it's cool to hear the vocals so upfront and lyrically discernable on a Can CD. Mooney tosses off terrific little poetic non-sequiters like the one I used in my review title all over this album.
Elsewhere, guitarist Michael Karoli, keyboard player Irmin Schmidt and bassist Holger Czukay were playing a lot rougher and more psychedelic than later albums, while Jaki Liebezeit was his usual precision-controlled monster self on drums. This was a sound that the band would continue through tracks like "Mother Sky" and the Tago Mago extravaganza, before abandoning it for a more ambient direction.
"Father Cannot Yell" is a perfect encapsulation of this early style, with Mooney ranting about fathers who haven't been born yet while the band kicks up a storm that could rival the great "Mother Sky" for intensity. Can's twisted take on the "Mary Mary" nursery rhyme culminates with Mooney's hoarse repetition of the title repeated until it becomes an incantation, while the band swirls and pounds. The real sleeper here is "Outside My Door," a terrific psychedelic nugget with some nice (uncredited) harmonica that was unique in the Can lexicon. By the way, my copy shows this song as being 7:22 for some reason. It's actually 4:05.
The epic, side-long "Yoo Doo Right" was alleged to have been edited from a 12-hour(!) jam session that could rival the Grateful Dead's of the time. It is a mammoth stew of everything that made this inaguaral edition of Can so great, with every member getting a chance to shine before it's finished knocking you out of your seat. "Yoo Doo Right" is worth the price of admission on it's own in the same way that "Mother Sky" was on Soundtracks, but like that album, we can only count our blessings that the surrounding tracks are so great.
This latest remaster, a hybrid this time, improves tremendously over the original vinyl album but not very much over the last remastered edition of this CD. There is a color booklet with some historic pictures and liner notes. My only slight gripe is that some bonus tracks from the Mooney era would have been nice, such as "Connection" and "The Empress & The Ukraine King." But this is a classic 5-star record in it's own right, as was virtually everything this band recorded up to and including Landed.
Can's Psychadelic debut.......2005-05-04
Average customer rating:
|
Daikaiju
Daikaiju Manufacturer: Reptile ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0007GAER6 Release Date: 2005-03-08 |
Tracks:
- Daikaiju Die!
- Attack of the Crab Women
- The Trouble with those Mothra Girls
- Sharkakhan
- Showdown in Shinjuku
- The Daikaiju who Loved Me
- Son of Daikaiju
- Incognito
- Super X-9
- Farewell to Monster Island
Customer Reviews:
Large. Apparition. Beast........2006-04-19
Pitchforkmedia.com reviews Daikaiju!!.......2006-01-30
Rating: 7.8
Somewhere along the line, surf music ceased to have anything to do with actual surfing and migrated to kitsch. Dick Dale had "Pipeline", the Surfaris had "Wipe-Out!", and Man...or Astroman? had..."You Can't Get Good Riblets in Space". But although shuddering tremolo bars fit the image of a guy in floral print trunks, the music is mostly instrumental and as such essentially abstract, so you can make it mean anything you want it to. Even early surf rockers like the Ventures and the Tornados realized this and began to incorporate the astronautical, lounge, and kitsch elements that color most efforts in the genre these days.
So the term "surf" as it relates to music today basically just refers to music with lots of reverb and crazy guitar playing, which is fine-- you can acknowledge the roots without trying to turn them into branches. I can say pretty categorically that Croatia's Bambi Molesters are the best surf band in the world today, but given Man...or Astroman?'s long silence, Daikaiju certainly have a claim to the #2 spot. Much like fellow modern surf-rockers Los Straightjackets, the men of Daikaiju keep their identities secret, each represented by a mask in the band's press releases, which also feature a lot of fake Japanese-to-English translations like "Kabuki men deliver most high rocket impact!"
Students of Godzilla, Mothra, and Gamera know that Daikaiju is Japanese for "giant monster," and the Huntsville, Ala., quartet are obviously enamored with the most conspicuous aspects of Japanese popular culture, though they refrain from sticking soundclips from Mechagodzilla sequels all over their albums the way so many other surf groups recently have. They instead opt to let the music speak for itself, and when it does, it's impressive, to say the least. Though their sound is closer to Man...or Astroman? than anything else (it's of course possible that there are members of that band hiding out in their ranks) there's a certain degree of prog muscle behind all that reverbed shredding.
Surf is one of those funny genres where a fan basically knows what to expect and enjoyment comes from hearing it done really well, and Daikaiju delivers on that score, but there is one monumental surprise lurking in this mix in the form of album closer "Farewell to Monster Island". At almost nine minutes long it's nearly four times longer than the average surf instrumental and in place of the manic snare and ride cymbal of a surf beat, the band rides a skanking dub riddim, marrying two genres that in retrospect were born to love each other. The e-bowed interlude is something to hear, but even more impressive is the simple fact that the guitarists hiding behind these masks have a jazz-like sense of how to phrase a solo. The song is the kind of jam that bands just don't do any more, and it sort of makes me wish more would.
So in the end, Daikaiju is an impressive full-length debut for a band that's clearly got more up its sleeve than a few Trashmen 45s and tablature print-outs for "Rabble Rouser". The thing with the masks and stage names like Secret Asian Man and Brain Conflict is frankly little more than a distracting sideshow to the main event, which is of course the band's massive wave of prime surf. Grab your board.
-Joe Tangari, August 31, 2005
[...]
HybridMagazine Review.......2005-09-01
Daikaiju's eponymous release is full to the brim with twanging and boinging guitars, blistering tom rolls, and throbbing basslines. From the very first notes of "Daikaiju Die!" the album is a rollicking good time ride through the world of surf rock. Most tracks on the album clock in at right around three and a half minutes, which makes the album pass by so quickly that there will be an immediate need to hit the play button again. None of the tracks are sleepers (Take that, other surf bands!) and every track has it's own unique character, which makes this one of the finest surf albums of all time. Standouts include the brilliant tremolo swoops on "Incognito" and the stuttering machine gun guitars of "Super X-9". The jazzy cymbal wash of "The Trouble With Those Mothra Girls" makes perfect counterpoint to the deliberate bass walks and chiming guitars. The Van Halen-esque rhythm guitars on the intro to "Sharkakhan" give way to a fast paced racing song that would fit right at home in any good spy movie, especially during a chase scene.
No sleeper tracks. Distinctly different feels melodies in each song. Amazing guitar, bass and drum tones. Musicianship of the highest caliber. Those are the things you will find on this release, Daikaiju. And really, beyond that, the only thing you need to know about Daikaiju is that one of the guys goes by the moniker Secret Asian Man. And who can't stand behind that?
-L. Keane
Much more than a surf band.......2005-03-09
Easy, but not really fair, and certainly not accurate.
Daikaiju blends the instrumental surf rock genre with all sorts of other influences. Super-heavy riffs worthy of any hard rock outfit ("Daikaiju Die!"), beautifully intricate melodies (see "Farewell to Monster Island", and hints of reggae, jazz, and even some jamband-esque elements makes for an album that is very distinctive and interesting, never getting repetitive or tiresome at all.
I reccommend this record not only to surf fans, but to lovers of great, unique, instrumental music in general. Buy this record now and experience "the soundtrack to the greatest monster movie never made"
Oh, and for god's sake...seek out their first CD "The Phasing Spider Menace". It's out-of-print, but it's worth any price you might pay just for "Rising Up From the Depths of Time".
Average customer rating:
|
Movie Monster
Sound Team Manufacturer: Capitol ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000FILW90 Release Date: 2006-06-06 |
Tracks:
- get out
- born to please
- no more birthdays
- "movie monster"
- tv torso
- back in town
- your eyes are liars
- afterglow years
- shattered glass
- you've never lived a day
- handful of billions
Customer Reviews:
A slow burner.......2007-01-11
So glad I picked this album up. .......2006-12-27
Team-work.......2006-10-02
The results: Their full-length debut "Movie Monster," which has a few freshman stumbles, but overall is composed of pure rock'n'roll wit, like Spoon or the Walkmen. The vibrant sound and skilled instrumentation whirl up into a solid, intriguing debut that gets better every time you listen to it. One of the most unique rock albums of the year.
One of those freshman stumbles is the first two songs of the album -- they should have been switched. The shimmering "Get Out" kicks off the album, but the undulating synth over a soft guitar just isn't very compelling. That's left to the stunning "Born To Please," an urgent, grimy rocker with buzzing guitars and ominous waves of synth. "Do you remember the one who/who took the place/in the sun from you?/I know you do!" Matt Oliver wails.
For a few songs after that, they divide themselves between the synthier songs and the rock-ier songs. The title track is a dark, slightly creepy synth song, but then it switches to the intensely catchy, hard-rock "TV Torso." From there on, the band tries out a variety of styles that are all connected by two things -- their tight riffs, and their undertones of synth. Melodic rock, fuzz-rock, hard rock and finishing up with the energetic "Handful of Billions."
The closest comparison I can make to Sound Team's sound is Spoon -- both of them have tight, often catchy melodies and solid instrumentation. It's rock, with no pretentions. But don't think that this is simple guitar pop -- on the first listen, you're wrapped up in the tight melodies. But after listening for awhile, the hidden layers in each song start to pop out at the listener.
Guitar is the most prominent instrument here -- fuzzing, buzzing and cycling in tight, sleek riffs, or else bouncing along in mellow loops in "Your Eyes Are Liars." It's dark and gritty, and is paired with equally dark (but less gritty) synth that softens the angular edges without being too overpowering. And the whole thing is backed by sharp drumming and the occasional tambourine shake.
Oliver has a voice that takes a little getting used to, especially since he is often overpowered by the music. Personally I had a rough time understanding a word he said at times But his vocals grow on you, especially during "Born to Please," and pretty soon you won't notice the rough edges. Especially if you CAN make out the lyrics -- they're a bit bizarre, but worth it. ("When there's nine thousand neckties/and a swarm all around you...")
Unpretentious but musically astounding, the Sound Team make a tight, solid debut in "Movie Monster." If they get the attention they deserve, then they'll be the next big thing.
major band.......2006-09-25
Another mediocre band.......2006-09-09
Average customer rating: |
To The Moon
Monster Movie Manufacturer: Clairecords ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000A39L6G Release Date: 2007-07-16 |
Tracks:
- Sweet Lemonade
- Dream About You
- Beautiful Arctic Star
- From A Distance
- Don't Know Why
- Colder Days
- Good Grief
- Memento
- Out Of Touch
- Nobody Sees
- 1950da
Album Description
"To the Moon is about the blithe optimism found in sunrises and open highways, of the uplifting power of carefree pop. When the sun hits, it sounds like this." - SPLENDIDWhen the UK's Monster Movie graced us with their first full-length, Last Night Something Happened, one critic dubbed them "hideous boymen with a very secret but very beautiful plan for this world." Two years later, this plan continues to develop and unfold to glorious effect via their second album, To the Moon. The heady yields of Christian Savill and Sean Hewson's working relationship prove that vital songwriting duos are alive and well in contemporary rock `n' roll. Having ended a frustrating yearlong delay caused by an ill-timed artwork-related imbroglio, To the Moon is poised for takeoff. An album of celestial wonder and expanse, To the Moon soars to stratospheric altitudes via volcanic bursts of guitar distortion and delay. Darkly introspective lyrics, whose scope encompasses everything from arctic stars to ellipsis, reveal rare emotional depth and candor. As Pitchfork's Christopher Dare summarized, "It's clear that the album's meant to be a traveler's diversion, so maybe you'll enjoy it as a detour from your next trip to Souvlaki Space Station."
Average customer rating: |
Journey to the Stars
Manufacturer: Polygram Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0000041CG Release Date: 1995-06-20 |
Tracks:
- Aniara: Start: Vintergatan
- The Day The Earth Stood Still: Outer Space
- Star Trek V: The Final Frontier: Main Theme/March of the Klingons
- Forbidden Planet: Once Around Altair
- The Bride Of Frankenstein: Creation of the Female Monster/The Tower Explodes
- Forbidden Planet: A Shangri-La in the Desert/Garden with Cuddly Tiger
- Altered States: Love Theme
- Also Sprach Zarathustra: Prelude
- Atmospheres
- 2001: A Space Odyssey: Fanfare
- The Witches Of Eastwick: The Devil's Dance
- Forbidden Planet: Robby Arranges Flowers, Zaps Monkey
- Edward Scissorhands: Main Title/Ice Dance
- Things To Come: Main Title/War Montage/Pestilence/Happy March/The Building of the New World...
- Forbidden Planet: The Homecoming
- Star Wars: Throne Room/Finale
- Aniara: Kristal
Average customer rating: |
All Lost
Monster Movie Manufacturer: Artoffact Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000FILKC4 Release Date: 2006-05-16 |
Tracks:
- behm
- Vanishing Act
- The Stars That Surround You
- Return To Yesterday
- Hope I Find The Moon
- Driving Through The Red Lights
- The Impossible
- 3#
- No One Can Know
- Run To The Heart Of The Sun
- Vertical Planes
- Falling Into The Sun
Average customer rating:
|
Transistor
Monster Movie Manufacturer: Graveface ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00085ETSG Release Date: 2005-03-15 |
Tracks:
- The Collapse
- Chances Are High
- Left
- Letting You Know (Full download)
- Transistor
- Summer Is a Coming In
- The Family Plot
Product Description
This is transistor. This is the sound of our souls..... Thus the robotic whisper introduces Monster Movie's fifth release and third full length. And what do the souls of Christian Savill and Sean Hewson sound like? Harmonica, keyboard, guitar, and a drum machine ushering in the death of autumn. But before we all go pulling our hoods over our heads and gazing mournfully at our shoes, let us remember that these are the guys that draw hearts in snow drifts, bring light through black forest trees, and show little girls bursting from fallen apples.Customer Reviews:
lovely Lo-Fi shoegaze space folk.......2005-06-09
Recommended for fans of Lo-Fi, introspective indie, shoegaze
Average customer rating:
|
Last Night Something Happened
Monster Movie Manufacturer: Clairecords ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005Y0SG Release Date: 2007-07-16 |
Tracks:
- First Trip to the City
- Shortwave
- Home
- Waiting
- Sleeping on a Train
- Star City
- 4th and Pine
- Take Me Away
- Ooby
- Winter is Coming
Album Description
The debut album from Monster Movie has hatched and is ready to walk around a bit. Written, performed & produced by Christian Savill & Sean Hewson, it is a landmark follow-up to their self-titled debut EP from 2001. The album, recorded between March and August 2001 at The White House studio in Weston-Super-Mare with Martin Nichols engineering (also the birthplace of their debut EP as well as Slowdive's `Souvlaki'), shows a move away from the layered guitars and strong vocals of the EP to a more somber, subdued & warm sound. Here the vocals are more often layered with Martin Wheeler & Louise Hewson, adding their vocals to those of the band, to create a ghostly, disembodied effect. The instrumentation is more varied here as well, with cheap keyboards and acoustic guitars mixing with radios, feedback & broken effects pedals to create a warm hum. As with the EP, the songwriting is still a strong point but Monster Movie have moved forwards, investigating instrumental so! ngs (witness the cinematic 'Star City') and structure (a la the Faust-like sudden change in 'Winter Is Coming'). Everything on here has a great tune even when it is layers of noise, but the most obvious pop songs are 'Waiting', 'Shortwave', 'Take Me Away', '4th & Pine' & 'Home' with 'Sleeping On A Train' providing a change of pace & some rock action. Monster Movie are known to be collectively fond of Grandaddy, Air, Yo La Tengo & the Super Furry Animals. They are also more likely to be influenced by their intense and occasionally psychotic dislike of most other rock music. Their individual tastes are not considered 'sexy' enough to be listed.Customer Reviews:
the perfect rainy day cd.......2005-06-08
fave. tracks = 4th & pine, waiting, and shortwave
Better than Slowdive!.......2004-07-26
HIGHLY recommended for fans of Slowdive, Mahogany, Ride and Chapterhouse!
Excellent to the last note.......2004-04-09
Every song is great, and best of all it withstands repeated listenings beautifully. I never get tired of it.
Hauntingly beautiful music..........2004-01-13
Eerie but beautiful.......2002-03-12
realises the early promise and then goes beyond expectation
Monster movie feature ex members of Slowdive. There
are some similarities, but whereas Slowdive were
blissed out on life's youthful possibilities, Monster
movie seem blissed off, kind of weary. Slowdive's
landscape was soft and serene, Monster movie's is
bleak and wintery. The mood of the album seems dark,
confused even. Monster Movie deliver their
despondency with sometimes beautiful melodies
("shortwave" and "home") and sometimes with catchy
guitar pop ("waiting" and "Ooby").
Average customer rating:
|
Monster Movie
The Can Manufacturer: Mute U.S. ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000003Z6Y Release Date: 1995-05-09 |
Tracks:
- Father Cannot Yell
- Mary, Mary So Contrary
- Outside My Door
- Yoo Doo Right
Customer Reviews:
perfect.......2005-01-06
an impressive beginning.......2004-12-30
The Band That Started it All.......2004-01-19
Raw and powerful.......2003-10-19
The opening track Father Cannot Yell is a real stunner that reminds me of the Velvet Underground on tracks like European Son or White Light/White Heat with its raw pulsating bass, insistent keyboard and stuttering vocals.
Mary Mary So Contrary is a slow rock excursion with bluesy vocals, whilst Outside My Door is a powerful piece of acid rock psychedelia, not too dissimilar from Big Brother And The Holding Company's masterpieces like Piece Of My Heart or Combination Of The Two.
The long winding track You Doo Right is a 20 minute tour de force of impressive instrumental textures and varied vocals that captures many moods. It includes tribal drumming and veers from bluesy rock to world music to psychedelic textures.
Monster Movie certainly exerted a profound influence on post-punk music of the late seventies and eighties - Talking Heads and Public Image Limited being only two of the groups that come to mind. It remains a classic of brilliant power and has stood the test of time very well.
Here's where it all starts "mary, oh mary so quite contrary".......2002-12-11
Average customer rating: |
All Lost
Monster Movie Manufacturer: Graveface Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000JU7HXE Release Date: 2006-04-11 |
Tracks:
- Behm
- Vanishing Act
- Stars That Surround You
- Return to Yesterday
- Hope I Find the Moon
- Driving Through the Red Lights
- Impossible
- 3#
- No One Can Know
- Run to the Heart of the Sunrise
- Vertical Planes
- Falling into the Sun
Product Description
Welcome to Monster Movie's latest album, All Lost. The third full-length offering from Christian Savill and Sean Hewson, All Lost features supremely melodic and ethereal pop laden with distortion, otherworldly effects and strangely radiant drone. Vocals are clear and serene, and include meltingly lovely contributions from Rachel Staggs (Experimental Aircraft, Eau Claire). With twelve tracks of dreamy, crystalline music spun out of faraway starlight and falling shadows, this album will wrap your heart up in its pale blue shimmer and keep you forever.Rock Music:
