13 by Blur
When sold by .com, this product will be manufactured on demand
using CD-R recordable media. .com's standard return policy will
apply.
BBC Review
----------
Following the blatant reaction to the Britpop hangover in the
Essex band's previous album Blur, which saw the four-piece adopt
the style of an American lo-fi act, 13 was perhaps the band's
most experimental effort. With ambient housemeister, William
Orbit, in the producer's chair, the sonic landscape came very
much from the mind of guitarist Graham Coxon.
Again it was America that provided the template, mixed in with a
y dose of Krautrock (Trimm Trabb) and electronica. Tender
is mutant gospel that lifts you up while remaining quite cynical.
The only thing on offer that really sounded like the band of old
was Coffee And TV.
through with the bleatings of a newly-bereft Damon Albarn,
nursing a broken heart after his split with Justine Frischman of
Elastica, songs like 1992, Caramel or No Distance Left To Run
dripped weary disaffection. This was a band now completely out of
love with pop.
With hind it's easy to see how a greatest hits tour after
this could only place a strain on the band that they'd never
weather. 13 is the sound of young minds fracturing under the
weight of expectation and their own desire to do more than just
create three-minute smashes. As Albarn whispers on Caramel,
''I've gotta get better, I've gotta find genius''. But by this
time it was too late. Luckily for us the sound of a genius band
disintegrating still equals genius. Combined with a tasteful and
intricate prioduction job, 13 may one day, be classed as their
greatest work. --Dennis O'Dell
Find more music at the BBC ( http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/syn//albumreviews/-/music/ ) This link
will take you off in a new window
P.when('A').execute(function(A) {
A.on('a:expander:toggle_description:toggle:collapse',
function(data) {
window.scroll(0, data.expander.$expander[0].offsetTop-100);
});
});
.co.uk
------
It all begins with a music-box noise, not entirely unlike the
beginning of Trumpton (you know, the kids' programme with the
curiously named firemen). Welcome to yet another new identity for
Blur. Gone are the caricatures of bed-and-breakfast owners and
bankers, the cockernee knees-ups, football and pub laddisms. 13
is the starkest, most personal Blur album ever, going further in
the direction the previous self-titled album hinted at. Dealing,
for the most part, with frontman Damon Albarn's broken
relationship with Elastica (
/exec/obidos/artist-search/Elastica/%24%7B0%7D )'s Justine
Frischmann, it's as if Blur have ripped their heart out and left
the bloody mess for all to see. "Tender", with its repetitive
cycle of a tune and gorgeous gospel choir, must surely remind you
of someone special, while "No Distance Left to Run" is pure,
unashamed heartbreak. comes in the form of the sweet,
Graham Coxon-penned "Coffee and TV" and "B.L.U.R.E.M.I", which
recalls their punkier days. Oh, and "Bugman" appears to have
utilised the previously untapped musical properties of a vacuum
cleaner. "Country House" this is not. --Emma Johnston
See more ( javascript:void(0) )