All Artists:Hugo Largo Title:Mettle Members Wishing: 1 Total Copies: 0 Label:Thirsty Ear Original Release Date: 1/1/1989 Re-Release Date: 5/8/2001 Album Type: Original recording reissued Genres:Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock Style: Number of Discs: 1 SwapaCD Credits: 1 UPC:700436603829
J. Keiko D. (yuzu) from MONTEREY PARK, CA Reviewed on 2/25/2008...
This cd's label is Opal Records Distributed by Warner Bros Inc copyright 1989
This cd's label is Opal Records Distributed by Warner Bros Inc copyright 1989
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CD Reviews
A former Hugo Largo groupie is still interested
Ayelet B | Cambridge, Massachusetts United States | 08/16/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I lived in NYC at the time Hugo Largo was playing there and still wish they were around. I have magical memories of the times I went to their shows. This album is a wonderful reminder of those great days."
Simply Gorgeous
Martin J Flanagan | Wantagh, NY USA | 08/17/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)
"It's very sad that this turned out ot be the band's swan song. It's a classic. Dreamier than most dreampop albums that followed in its wake. Like it's predecessor (the Michael Stipe-co-produced 'drum'), it's a short (about 30 minutes long) but focused album, with instrumentation that sounds like a chamber-pop Cocteau Twins, topped off with performance artist Mimi Goese's evocative (gravity defying?) vocals. One of the great unsung bands of the 80's (although I recall Alternative Press magazine placing this album on their 'Top 100 of the Last 10 Years' album list a few years back), and one of the great headphones-in-the-dark albums of all time."
Like floating in water...
Manny Hernandez | Bay Area, CA | 12/05/2001
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Recorded under Brian Eno's Opal Records in 1989, this second album by Hugo Largo contains the unmistakable beautiful singing of now-popular Mimi (recognized for her participation with Moby and her solo album). It will blow your mind... Their sound feels like floating in water, or sitting in your mother's womb."
Beautiful, but strangely detatched.
P. J. | Kansas City, MO | 11/18/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)
"This album is one of those that keeps percolating up through my CD collection. Four Brothers and Hot Day are standout tracks, but frankly, they are all very similar. That's not a bad thing; it has that Dark-Side-Of-The-Moon-ish feeling where all the tracks run together and wash over you as a single entity. The otherworldly lyrics, deliberately disjointed and vague, add to the feeling of letting your ordinary life completely behind when you listen to this album. The instrumentation has a subtly dramatic, nearly too-sparse, hollow feeling, with little melody. You won't walk away whistling anything from Mettle. The result is an album that takes us to someplace where we can look back on our everyday lives and emotions with fresh but strangely detached eyes, In the process, Mettle doesn't replace that connection with much of anything. It's obviously the intended effect, but it's like caressing a loved one with hands covered in bubble wrap. It's interesting, but too desensitizing to get addicted to."