Showing posts with label Shadowland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shadowland. Show all posts

03 November 2012

SHADOWLAND The Beauty of Escaping 1990

by request


 
 

The Beauty of Escaping Review

by Steven McDonald

Shadowland are another one of those '60s-oriented bands, but this time with a little bit of a twist. While you'll hear sitars and tablas and the odd burst of weird stuff on "Sweet Mystery," and it's really the sort of '60s orientation that allows for other influences. There's a little bit of R.E.M.-style Georgia acoustic rock here and there; there's a feel that's got a little Lou Reed and a little Led Zeppelin on "Heroin Eyes," yet doesn't get into that endless nasally drone. In some respects, part of the direction that Shadowland seems to want to take is a mix of Tom Petty and Creedence Clearwater, with a touch of clean Beach Boys-style harmonies. This isn't a thin mix by any means -- these guys are quite capable of starting quietly and breaking into a full-fledged wall of sound at a moment's notice (which they do at least one time too many, leading you to anticipate that everything that starts slowly is about to explode in crashing drums and roaring guitars). For all the divergence, too, it's a surprisingly uniform album -- even despite the "live in the studio" style of "Something On Your Mind," which has a good-naturedly ramshackle air about it, leaving it as one of the most engaging numbers on the album, along with the terrific "The Deepest Indigo Blue," which was apparently recorded with the band sleepy from an extremely long day; the relaxed air helps it considerably. The '60s ambience certainly comes through, though --"Miss Yesterday" is the one consciously '60s-oriented song, but then you also have "Evil That You Do," "The Deepest Indigo Blue," and "Sweet Mystery" sounding directly '60s-inspired. The nature of the whole album, for all the crashing around with percussion instruments, is organic, rather than technological, right down to the use of Rockfield Studios. The Beauty of Escaping is an entertaining album, good in terms of ambience, and certainly listenable, even when the songs are fitted with a message and fired point-blank at the listener. 

 
Tracklist

1
Miss Yesterday4:10
2
She's Shooting Fireworks5:00
3
Hypnotised5:01
4
Heroin Eyes4:26
5
Garden Of Eden4:54
6
My Escape6:13
7
Something On Your Mind3:47
8
Evil That You Do2:15
9
The Deepest Indigo Blue3:36
10
Sweet Mystery5:05
 

13 January 2011

SHADOWLAND Shadowland 1989





















Discogs

 

The Beauty of Escaping Review

by Steven McDonald

Shadowland are another one of those '60s-oriented bands, but this time with a little bit of a twist. While you'll hear sitars and tablas and the odd burst of weird stuff on "Sweet Mystery," and it's really the sort of '60s orientation that allows for other influences. There's a little bit of R.E.M.-style Georgia acoustic rock here and there; there's a feel that's got a little Lou Reed and a little Led Zeppelin on "Heroin Eyes," yet doesn't get into that endless nasally drone. In some respects, part of the direction that Shadowland seems to want to take is a mix of Tom Petty and Creedence Clearwater, with a touch of clean Beach Boys-style harmonies. This isn't a thin mix by any means -- these guys are quite capable of starting quietly and breaking into a full-fledged wall of sound at a moment's notice (which they do at least one time too many, leading you to anticipate that everything that starts slowly is about to explode in crashing drums and roaring guitars). For all the divergence, too, it's a surprisingly uniform album -- even despite the "live in the studio" style of "Something On Your Mind," which has a good-naturedly ramshackle air about it, leaving it as one of the most engaging numbers on the album, along with the terrific "The Deepest Indigo Blue," which was apparently recorded with the band sleepy from an extremely long day; the relaxed air helps it considerably. The '60s ambience certainly comes through, though --"Miss Yesterday" is the one consciously '60s-oriented song, but then you also have "Evil That You Do," "The Deepest Indigo Blue," and "Sweet Mystery" sounding directly '60s-inspired. The nature of the whole album, for all the crashing around with percussion instruments, is organic, rather than technological, right down to the use of Rockfield Studios. The Beauty of Escaping is an entertaining album, good in terms of ambience, and certainly listenable, even when the songs are fitted with a message and fired point-blank at the listener.

Tracklist

1
Wink Of An Eye
2
Imitation Of Life
3
It's All Over Now, Baby Blue
4
Indigo Blue
5
Sweet Mystery

FURTHER



















Next Time West Coast
1995




















Distance EP
1995

Thanks to Jon


Discogs


Next Time West Coast

Tracklist 

1 Be That As It May
2 Victim Rock
3 Grandview Skyline
4 Badgers (Part II)
5 Friends And Enemies
6 Stranger Than Silver
7 You're Just Dead Skin To Me
8 Way Too Much


Distance EP

Tracklist

A1 Springfield Mods
A2 The Kids Are All Wrong
B1 Spheres Of Influence
B2 LHS "79"
C1 Wett Katt
C2 Beautifull Delilah 2
D1 Sea-A-Suka-Tika
D2 High Gear
D3 Sometimes 3
D4 International Man (Whatever Happened To Reg King)