Portishead Album: “Dummy”
Album Information : |
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Release Date:1994-10-01
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Type:Unknown
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Genre:Mood Swing, 1990s Alternative
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Label:Go! Discs/London
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Explicit Lyrics:Yes
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UPC:042282855329
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73 of 76 people found the following review helpful:
- A perennially fresh sounding album..
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" (from the superhit "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 blow. 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. A definite keeper.
51 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
- Review from an extrip-hop nut
I am a recovering trip-hop addict. For about a 4 years I ate up just about anything with the words trip-hop or downbeat attached to it. Sure there was a lot of quality albums there from groups like Massive Attack, Portishead, and the first Tricky album, but there was also a lot of [stuff] like the Sneaker Pimps and every other Tricky album. Now I know better. Just because somethings slow and dark doesn't necessarily mean its brilliant.
Portishead is different though. Beth Gibbons backs up the dark music and lyrical gloom with the most beuatifully raspy alto I've ever heard. There are more samples than I can possibly count but they all seem to blend together so tightly that you could swear that this album was recorded by studio musicians (I meant that as a compliment). Theyre self titled album is great too, but i dont think that it or any other album in the genre could ever surpass Dummy.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
- This CD is no Dummy
I purchased Dummy after reading all of the glowing reviews, so my expectations were pretty high. I was shocked by the depth of the feelings this CD produced. It is an absolute gem. I am pretty versed in the "Trip-Hop" (I hate that name! btw) movement. Getting started with Massive and Tricky and then expanding into Morcheeba, Lamb, Hoover etc. I am actually kind of glad I waited to check out Portishead. While I highly recommend all of the aforementioned, Portishead seems a little smarter to me. A bit more on the edge. Dummy combines supurb hooks with pulverizing bass and incredible vocals. If you like smart music, sounds that inspire emotion and thought, Dummy is a must buy! Enjoy.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
- 4 years later, still in my top 5 of all time...
Beth Gibbons vocals are stunning. I have have had this CD for over 4 years now, I still actively enjoy it, and many of the tunes still give me the chills just as strongly as at first listen. This CD is one of my top 5 of all time, and I like to think I have pretty eclectic tastes. It's also the only CD I have ever ordered from amazon as a gift for a friend (she loved it, so I sent her their second album last week). This isn't necessarily listen-to-in-your-car music, I tend to listen to it during quiet moments at home. Some find it a little ominous or dark even, I just find it very relaxing - the tunes just draw me in.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
- Essential electronic album.
What can be said that already hasn't been said? I don't think there's much. This must have REALLY seemed ground-breaking at the time: Backbeats that sometimes recall hip-hop elements and some real soaring, soulful vocals from Beth Gibbons. There's not a single bad song on here, and it's most famous for the awesome "Sour Times," which sounds at times like a James Bond theme with certain elements. Then there's "Numb" which is probably my favorite song on the album, real soulful vocals there. You get more blues-rockin' moments like on the record's closer "Glory Box." There's occasional samples which rule and sound neat like everything else. If you haven't heard "Dummy" yet you are in for a real treat. Pretty much everyone who owns it can tell you that it's well worth the hype. It is beautiful and proves electronic music CAN BE full of emotion. Even today, it doesn't sound dated at all. I like the follow-up album too, but advise this as your start.
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