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Disco de The Fall: “Words of Expectation”
| Información del disco : |
| Título: |
Words of Expectation |
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Fecha de Publicación:2003-05-20
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Tipo:Desconocido
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Género:Rock, New Wave, Old School Punk Rock
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Sello Discográfico:Castle
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Letras Explícitas:Si
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UPC:766482066643
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| Lista de temas : |
| 1 -
1 |
Rebellious Jukebox Video |
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| 1 -
2 |
Mother-Sister! |
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| 1 -
3 |
Industrial Estate Video |
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| 1 -
4 |
Futures and Pasts |
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| 1 -
5 |
Put Away |
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| 1 -
6 |
MESS OF MY |
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| 1 -
7 |
No Xmas for John Quays Video |
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| 1 -
8 |
Like to Blow |
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| 1 -
9 |
Container Drivers |
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| 1 -
10 |
Jawbone and the Air-Rifle |
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| 1 -
11 |
New Puritan |
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| 1 -
12 |
New Face in Hell |
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| 2 -
13 |
Middle Mass Video |
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| 2 -
14 |
Lie Dream Of A Casino Soul Video |
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| 2 -
15 |
Hip Priest Video |
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| 2 -
16 |
C 'N' C/Hassle Schmuck |
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| 2 -
17 |
Deer Park |
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| 2 -
18 |
Know Look |
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| 2 -
19 |
Winter |
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| 2 -
20 |
Who Makes the Nazis? Video |
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| 2 -
21 |
He Pep! |
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| 2 -
22 |
Oleano |
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| 2 -
23 |
Chillinist |
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| 2 -
24 |
City Never Sleeps |
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| 2 -
25 |
D.I.Y. Meat |
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| 2 -
26 |
Spinetrak |
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| 2 -
27 |
Spencer |
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| 2 -
28 |
Beatle Bones 'N' Smokin' Stones |
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Análisis (en inglés) - :
As if your wallet could handle another {$Fall} compilation, here comes {^Words of Expectation} and its collection of {@BBC} sessions. While 1999's {^Peel Sessions} picked here and there from the group's appearances on the Beeb, {^Words of Expectation} includes whole sessions, but it jumps from 1981 to 1995 for some bizarre reason. Plenty happened to {$the Fall} in that time; heck, they even made a mad bid for {\pop} stardom. It's even a more perverse move since the discs are laid out chronologically. Listening to the whole thing at once makes you feel like you fell asleep in the middle of a movie and woke up wondering what you missed. But the music is great. Disc one is the daring and ramshackle {$Fall}, simple and {\punk} one moment and a cerebral endurance test the next. The versions of {&"Rebellious Jukebox,"} {&"Put Away,"} and {&"New Puritan"} included here top the ones more readily available, and {&"Container Drivers"} comes off as the great amphetamine truck-driving anthem it always aspired to be. The short glimpse of early {$Fall} that kicks off disc two is particularly stunning. The version of {&"Lie Dream of a Casino Soul"} is far more driven than the one on {@Rough Trade}, and {&"Hip Priest"} is as stunning as ever. It hints at a new direction but then jumps ahead nearly 15 years. Where the early recordings feature {$Mark E. Smith} brashly upfront, you have to dig through the crisp sonic chaos to get to his new slur and spit by 1995. The last eight tracks feature the {^Light User Syndrome}-era lineup, the one where guitarist (and {$Smith}'s ex-wife) {$Brix} came back after a big soap opera that {^Words of Expectation} ignores. Missing {^Syndrome}'s {\techno} sheen, the versions here are pleasingly raw and will hopefully improve the underrated era's standing. Biggest surprise, a bouncy version of {$Nancy Sinatra}'s {&"The City Never Sleeps"} with a guest vocal by {$Lucy Rimmer} that {%Austin Powers} would find groovy. It all adds up to more quality {$Fall} than you usually get on a compilation, but the huge gap in the middle is disappointing. ~ David Jeffries, All Music Guide
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