Album Results
Album Reviews
Whatever its flaws, Ian Brown's debut album, Unfinished Monkey Business, suggested that he was the true visionary behind the Stone Roses, providing the wild mercurial ideas that were grounded by John Squire's classicist song structures. Its sequel, Golden Greats, confirms that notion. Less song-oriented than its predecessor and overflowing with neo-psychedelic sonic textures and dance beats, Golden Greats floats between dazzling peaks and unformed, unrealized ideas that are nonetheless quite intriguing. Some may miss the clear hooks that characterized the Stone Roses (and even parts of Unfinished Monkey Business), but Brown sounds revitalized here and the result is a fresh, frequently exciting record. True, it can get a little indulgent and it's not quite cutting edge (no matter how much he wishes it were), but that doesn't distract from its very real virtues. At its best, the album boasts wonderfully, subtly crafted productions brimming with neat textures (the organ riff, Mellotron, and sampled strings on "Set My Baby Free" are a perfect example) that are intriguing on first listen and grow richer with repeated listens. Like its predecessor, Golden Greats meanders a bit too much and it places a little too much emphasis on surface, but when the surface sparkles like this, it's hard to complain too loudly. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Track Listing
| 1. Gettin' High |
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| 2. Love Like A Fountain |
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| 3. Free My Way |
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| 4. Set My Baby Free |
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| 5. So Many Soldiers |
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| 6. Golden Gaze |
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| 7. Dolphins Were Monkeys |
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| 8. Neptune |
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| 9. First World |
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| 10. Babasonicos |
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| Featured Review | |
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Colours Move Fuck Buttons |
| More fine experiments in drone and noise from Bristol's finest leftfield duo; Fuck Buttons crown a triumphant year worldwide with another single taken off their excellent debut "Street Horrrsing", a strong candidate to feature among the year's best records in the most influential media. "Colours move" is a powerful blend of tribal drums, guitar fuzz, human screams and animal noises. But the real surprise in the 12" is the appearance of electronic icon Andrew Weatherall, reworking their former single "Sweet Love For Planet Earth." The man behind "Screamadelica" reshapes "Planet Earth" as an hypnotic, dub-driven track; the closest to the dancefloor Fuck Buttons have been to date and one of the most interesting mixes we have heard for ages. | |
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