Rock/Pop
LPレコード

In Bocca Al Lupo

0.0

販売価格

¥
3,190
税込
還元ポイント

廃盤

在庫状況 について

フォーマット LPレコード
発売日 2018年07月27日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルBloodshot Records
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 BLDH7181
SKU 744302071817

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
The Indiana quartet Murder By Death augments its often raucous barroom ballads with cello, which gives its often dark, Nick Cave-like songs an aura of sinister drawing room gentility. Blending alt country with an old-world feel, songs like the uproarious "Dead Men and Sinners," which sounds like vintage Pogues, and the driving rocker "Sometimes the Line Walks You," contrast with the ominous, downbeat "The Devil Drives" and "The Big Sleep," both of which take justice and redemption as their themes.

  1. 1.[LPレコード]
    1. 1.
      Boy Decide
    2. 2.
      One More Notch
    3. 3.
      Dead Men and Sinners
    4. 4.
      Brother
    5. 5.
      Dynamite Mine
    6. 6.
      The Organ Grinder
    7. 7.
      Sometimes the Line Walks You
    8. 8.
      Raw Deal
    9. 9.
      The Big Sleep
    10. 10.
      Shiola
    11. 11.
      Steam Rising
    12. 12.
      The Devil Drives

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Murder By Death

商品の紹介

Q (p.121) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "Sarah Balliet saws at her cello dementedly, with both 'One More Notch' and 'The Big Sleep' capable of rousing a whole graveyard of sinners." Alternative Press (p.202) - "The ties that bind MBD's tunes -- cello-infused rock, classical dramatic narratives, folk-rock and alt-country spirit -- serve as a robust foundation for the band's boundless musical exploration." CMJ (p.4) - "[M]ore a collection of short stories bound together with the melancholy themes that colored the works of Edgar Allen Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne." Kerrang (Magazine) (p.48) - "This Indiana-based quartet play dark-hearted Southern gothic country for the 21st century."
Rovi

There's something about the idea of the Old West -- the lawlessness, the dry, dusty landscape, perhaps -- that appeals to the sinner in everyone (it's no coincidence that Vegas is in the desert), something seen and reflected in John Ford movies or Ennio Morricone film scores. Maybe it's all the empty space, or maybe it's the heat that seems to make people forget about civility and resort to more carnal emotion to settle things. It's exactly these ideas that Murder by Death chose to explore in their outlaw country-inspired In Bocca al Lupo. The title, an Italian idiom for "good luck" (literally "in the mouth of the wolf," to which the enthusiastic response is "crepi," or "kill it"), is perhaps used broadly as a reference to the original language of The Divine Comedy, from which the album seems to be loosely based. It's not that the band reworks the story; rather, it's as if they use characters and ideas from it as inspiration in creating their own work. Which characters exactly, it's not quite clear, but each song has its own story of death or regret, with singer Adam Turla changing his voice to match the feel of each. And to make it even better, stronger, more provocative, everything's placed in a kind of spaghetti Western setting, with strong rolling drums, a sultry tango-esque cello, and Johnny Cash vocals that all sound simply fantastic together. You can practically hear Satan dancing between the strings and the castanets in "One More Notch," and the cold-blooded murder outlined in "Dynamite Mine," with its warning, "Son, cover your ears/Lord, how that blast will ring," is wonderfully chilling. But it's the later tracks, the ones that begin to express remorse for actions done, to progress toward possible salvation, that are even more affecting. "The Big Sleep," the only song that clearly alludes to The Divine Comedy -- "The bailiff leads me back to my cell/Like the riverman ferrying me to Hell" -- is both touching and ominous with its Book of Revelations trumpets, and by the time the haunting "Shiola," which toys with the idea of memory and death and on which Turla sounds unnervingly like the Man in Black, comes around, the only crime that's committed is stealing "a look." It's not complete redemption (although the album does end with the very uplifting "There's still time to start again" refrain), but there's still hope to move past transgressions and find something else, something outside of the harsh, arid climes at hand. ~ Marisa Brown
Rovi

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