Sinister and sleezy
ChicagoKnights@webtv.net | 02/04/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)
"If you're up at three AM, high, waisted, with liquor breath and cigarette stenched body odor, and you're looking for something to listen to, try this. Walk down yr dark lit streets which are splattered with neon lit puddles and listen to this on your walkman. Or don't. Because the life you lead is maybe like the one talked about in the songs on this album, so maybe you don't need to, you already know what it's like. Or maybe you do need to listen, because it will relieve your soul of the weight that it holds, that it restrains and holds in its pocket. Can not you feel the glory inside, the tense struggling of your light and heavy sides, that is, good and evil? Are you not one with the darkness? Can you see my breath in your face when I kiss you? Dust streams out light heaven bread in heaven death kiss night island wonderful twilight blizzard streaks the sky and dies. Will you not be with me tonight in this lost star of light? Blind cats and rats and Sam the butcherman is alive tonight with fright. Hand me the hammer, wind down the clock and listen to me. These are the feelings you will feel when listening to this album."
The Emperor's New Clothes
Captain Cook | Leeward to the Sandwich Islands | 10/10/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)
"David Ball makes a pleasant enough electronic tinkle, but what really distinguishes the music of this early 80s duo is the voice and warped world-view of Marc Almond. In his endearingly smutty picture of the Universe, every movie is a porn flick; every telephone call carries heavy breathing; every public toilet is a heaving, grunting haven of gay sex; and every respectable facade conceals a perverted double life. What makes this so entertaining is that to a certain extent it's actually true. Almond has the innocence of the little boy in 'The Emperor's New Clothes' who points out that all the people are 'naked.' We all know this, of course, but as mature, sophisticated, self-seeking, duplicitous adults we prefer to keep up appearances. Also, most of us have got over the first shock and guilt of sexuality. For Almond this proved more difficult, and in songs like 'Sex Dwarf,' 'Seedy Films,' and 'My Secret Life,' we encounter that exaggerrated adolescent sense of cynicism and fascination with sex."
CLASSIC
oscar | los angeles, ca United States | 07/07/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"you never will get tired of hearing this album over and over.even tainted love who after 20 years still gets played on the radio,sounds fresh as it did when it first came out.i highly recomend this album to anyone who likes to get up and dance,relax,even dream while listening to music.this cd has it all."