Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Happiness In Magazines

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1,590
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在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2012年07月30日
国内/輸入 輸入(ヨーロッパ盤)
レーベルEMI
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 X6332432
SKU 5099963324327

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
It's suitably perverse that Graham Coxon released his first full-fledged pop album, Happiness in Magazines, in 2004, the year after his former bandmates in Blur tipped the scale in favor of the indie art rock he championed while he was in the band. Coxon always functioned as a passive-aggressive catalyst in the band, pushing songs forward and twisting them inside out with his thrilling, fluid guitar. He was raised on the same British punk and pop as his former collaborator Damon Albarn -- the same stack records by the Smiths, the Specials, and the Jam -- but he had an instinct to pursue a different path than prevailing pop culture, leading Albarn down the path to the Britpop of Parklife and the American-indie pastiche of Blur and 13. On the latter two, he began singing his own compositions, soon stretching out to a series of dogmatically lo-fi solo records before leaving the band during the sessions for their seventh album. Blur continued down the willfully messy indie path with Think Tank, obscuring their songs with meandering arrangements, but Coxon's own contrarian instincts set in when he cut his fifth solo album in 2003: he turned back to guitar pop. He reunited with Stephen Street, who produced Blur's best albums, but retained much of the rough-hewn, D.I.Y. feel of his solo projects for Happiness in Magazines, and the result is a wonderful fusion of ragged invention and sharp, tuneful songwriting. While the basic sound of the record isn't quite a surprise -- since Coxon still plays the bulk of the instruments, it does sound like a homemade record, but the songwriting recalls vintage Blur, so it does sound familiar -- what is a shock is that Coxon has the confidence and will to not hide behind the noise and obscurist tendencies that made his previous solo efforts a bit laborious. Here, his emotions are pushed to the surface and they're married to catchy, memorable songs that are delivered in an immediate, imaginative fashion. This return to guitar pop doesn't feel like a retreat, it feels like a warm acceptance of Coxon's strengths, particularly because he hasn't completely abandoned the guitar squalls and unpolished production of his other four efforts. And that's why Happiness in Magazines feels like Coxon's first true solo album -- it's the first to present a complex, robust portrait of him as an artist, and the first that holds its own next to what he accomplished in Blur. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
エディション : Reissue

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Spectacular

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

    2. 2.
      No Good Time

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

    3. 3.
      Girl Done Gone

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

    4. 4.
      Bittersweet Bundle of Misery

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

    5. 5.
      All Over Me

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

    6. 6.
      Freakin' Out

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

    7. 7.
      People of the Earth

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

    8. 8.
      Hopeless Friend

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

    9. 9.
      Are You Ready?

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

    10. 10.
      Bottom Bunk

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

    11. 11.
      Don't Be a Stranger

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

    12. 12.
      Ribbons and Leaves

      アーティスト: Graham Coxon

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Graham Coxon

オリジナル発売日:2004年

商品の紹介

Rolling Stone - 3 stars out of 5 - "[Incorporates] legible, likable tunes into [Coxon's] ragged guitar rave-ups..." Alternative Press - 3 stars out of 5 - "Coxon sounds best when he amps up his songs with pop chops that reference David Bowie's snappy glam by way of Supergrass..."
Rovi

It's suitably perverse that Graham Coxon released his first full-fledged pop album, Happiness in Magazines, in 2004, the year after his former bandmates in Blur tipped the scale in favor of the indie art rock he championed while he was in the band. Coxon always functioned as a passive-aggressive catalyst in the band, pushing songs forward and twisting them inside out with his thrilling, fluid guitar. He was raised on the same British punk and pop as his former collaborator Damon Albarn -- the same stack records by the Smiths, the Specials, and the Jam -- but he had an instinct to pursue a different path than prevailing pop culture, leading Albarn down the path to the Britpop of Parklife and the American-indie pastiche of Blur and 13. On the latter two, he began singing his own compositions, soon stretching out to a series of dogmatically lo-fi solo records before leaving the band during the sessions for their seventh album. Blur continued down the willfully messy indie path with Think Tank, obscuring their songs with meandering arrangements, but Coxon's own contrarian instincts set in when he cut his fifth solo album in 2003: he turned back to guitar pop. He reunited with Stephen Street, who produced Blur's best albums, but retained much of the rough-hewn, D.I.Y. feel of his solo projects for Happiness in Magazines, and the result is a wonderful fusion of ragged invention and sharp, tuneful songwriting. While the basic sound of the record isn't quite a surprise -- since Coxon still plays the bulk of the instruments, it does sound like a homemade record, but the songwriting recalls vintage Blur, so it does sound familiar -- what is a shock is that Coxon has the confidence and will to not hide behind the noise and obscurist tendencies that made his previous solo efforts a bit laborious. Here, his emotions are pushed to the surface and they're married to catchy, memorable songs that are delivered in an immediate, imaginative fashion. This return to guitar pop doesn't feel like a retreat, it feels like a warm acceptance of Coxon's strengths, particularly because he hasn't completely abandoned the guitar squalls and unpolished production of his other four efforts. And that's why Happiness in Magazines feels like Coxon's first true solo album -- it's the first to present a complex, robust portrait of him as an artist, and the first that holds its own next to what he accomplished in Blur. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine|
Rovi

通算5作目にしてブラー脱退後初となるソロ・アルバム。ここにきて、コクソン印の躍動感溢れるフリーキー・ギターにポップなメロディーが大爆発! ていうかブラーそのもの!! これまでのソロ作品が片手間だったのかとすら思わせる、まさに〈コク村〉の村民全員が歓喜する超充実作! そのギラついた箱庭ポップセンスは、つくづくブラーにとって必要不可欠なものだったと、いまさらながら痛感させてくれる一枚。
bounce (C)加賀 龍一
タワーレコード(2004年06月号掲載 (P76))

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