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Whatever You Love You Are
Dirty Three
Whatever You Love You Are
Genres: Alternative Rock, Special Interest, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (6) - Disc #1

It is remarkably easy to get washed into the turbulent sea by Dirty Three's gorgeously shambolic instrumental gusts. Compressing gently strummed guitars, sweeping violin, and hints of percussion into forms that suggest eve...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Dirty Three
Title: Whatever You Love You Are
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: Touch & Go Records
Original Release Date: 3/7/2000
Release Date: 3/7/2000
Genres: Alternative Rock, Special Interest, Pop, Rock
Styles: Indie & Lo-Fi, Experimental Music, Progressive, Progressive Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 036172092321

Synopsis

Amazon.com
It is remarkably easy to get washed into the turbulent sea by Dirty Three's gorgeously shambolic instrumental gusts. Compressing gently strummed guitars, sweeping violin, and hints of percussion into forms that suggest everything from mournful Celtic airs to stirring Baltic melodies to the buzzing cacophony of Sonic Youth, Dirty Three are able to sound remarkably fresh and innovative, yet still raw and improvisationally energetic. At times, Dirty Three burn white hot, blazing a path of passion that leads directly to a stirring climax; other times, hardly anything happens except for a plaintive swipe at a guitar and a pensive rap on a drum. Either approach leads to a thoughtful, satisfying musical journey. While not substantially different than either Ocean Songs or Horse Stories--violinist Warren Ellis leads the tune and establishes the pace and melody, guitarist Mick Turner strums with halting subtly, and drummer Jim White adds faint percussive punctuation--there is still plenty of emotional and musical territory to discover on Whatever You Love, You Are. On "Some Summers They Drop Like Flies," a gently plucked violin gives way to a swirling, multitracked melody and a beguiling string tangle from the guitar. On "Stellar," the guitar establishes a hypnotic web of picked notes and whispering chords while the drums and fiddle improvise. At first, it hardly sounds as if a tune will emerge, but one does, slowly, mysteriously, and with all the rough, poetic eloquence that has become Dirty Three's trademark. Whatever You Love, You Are, while not a revelation in the band's career, is yet another wonderful, beguiling, and beautiful piece of music. --S. Duda

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CD Reviews

Love at first site...
Michel Farmer | Peoria Illinois | 12/11/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This record has the unfortunate distinction of being one that I liked way too much on first playing. Most of The Dirty Three's output has to slowly grow on me in order to deepen my appreciation for it but this one hit me as a grand, beautiful miasma of sound immediately and as a perhaps bizzare result it doesn't get as much play as my other D3 disks.That isn't to say that it isn't a wonderful record and the Dirty Three are without a doubt one of my favorite bands of all time.This record lacks the violence of "Horse Stories" and the spiritual confusion of "Ocean Songs". These may be good things for the future but it was the violence and the confusion that made their other records so enjoyable. Keep in mind when I first bought this one I fell in love with it.Let me put it this way, this may be one of the greatest albums of all time it's just isn't (in my opinion) the greatest Dirty Three record of all time. I can't wait for their next album!!"
3 guys and a whole lotta beautiful noise
Eschat | CA | 04/23/2002
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Dirty Three create quite a dense sound despite being only 3 men thick. The center of the album is definitely the violin, but the guitar and drum are not neglected in terms of importance...they strum and beat along the underlying melodies while the violin soars and dips, wails and cries.

There really are no need for lyrics in these songs because the instruments sing beautifully. You can hear the tortured bliss of Ellis' violin, the longing of Turner's guitar, the White's lazy yet attentive drums (which occasionally explode along with the rest of the music). There are completely natural elements alive in these songs and then there are effects employed that give the sound a more dynamic feel. This is perfectly executed in the third track "I Offered It Up To the Stars & the Night Sky". The song begins with a single violin crying out a cracking melody, and little by little loops of other violins are added in, until at about the 1:15 mark there are about 5 different layers of violins all playing off one another...the song then abruptly changes course for about 4 minutes, while keeping the with the theme, until the multi-layered violins come back to blast your ears with layers upon layers of beauty....one of my favorite songs of all-time. this is extremely affecting music.

And, if for no other reason, buy this album for the artwork. Turner's use of thick brushstrokes and gobs of color, reminicient of Van Gogh, creates an emotional feel that together with the music fleshes out the album's distinctly expressive personality."