2004 reissue of 1990 release, features 4 tracks including 'An Evening Of Contemporary Sitar Music', a transfixing 40-minute-plus document of a landmark Spacemen 3 performance recorded at Waterman's Art Centre in Hammer... more »smith on August 19, 1988. Space Age.« less
2004 reissue of 1990 release, features 4 tracks including 'An Evening Of Contemporary Sitar Music', a transfixing 40-minute-plus document of a landmark Spacemen 3 performance recorded at Waterman's Art Centre in Hammersmith on August 19, 1988. Space Age.
Spacemen 3-'Dreamweapon'(Sympathy For The Record...)
Mike Reed | USA | 09/21/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)
"One thing about 'Dreamweapon' is that it's quite a bit different from their other live recordings, at least the ones that I've heard. Originally released in 1990 and reissued in 2003. The tracks on 'Dreamweapon' were recorded at a UK concert that took place in August,1988. Really enjoyed the 44-minute epic "An Evening Of Contemporary Sitar Music" which, of course features some top notch guitar (though it sounds like sitar) playing. Best described as dreamy neo psychedelia. The disc's other two cuts are "Ecstasy In Slow Motion" and "Spacemen Jam", which were penned by Sonic Boom. Basically,if you're a Spacemen 3 fan and you even somewhat dig sitar playing, you SHOULD have no problem digging on this CD. A must-have."
La Monte Young Meets Punk
Mike Reed | 03/17/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)
"La Monte Young's classic band (archival material has been released by John Cale) was the seed of the Velvet Underground and is clearly where Spacemen 3's influences lie. Most of their albums are focused around trippy psych punk jams. However, this cd leaves out the harsher edges and is a punked out modern day equivalent of what La Monte Young and Terry Riley were doing in the sixties. On first listen you may find this album to be repetitive and unfocused but if you try to use it as an ambient experience rather than trying to relate to it as a song you will really enjoy it. This is ambient music that "goes somewhere""
Best for going to sleep to
T. Hunter | 11/09/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)
"too bad this is out of print again! the first track is revelatory (and not just because it reveals fragments of many songs that would appear on 1989's Playing with Fire). in addtion, it's a fantastic album to fall asleep to!"
Like listening to electricity
T. Hunter | North Carolina, USA | 12/09/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The 45-minute "evening of contemporary sitar music" is the reason to buy this. It is droning, repetetive and utterly sublime. If the 45-minutes part along with the droning and repetitive commments don't sound like your cup of tea, that's ok, too -- it is not much like "perfect prescription." But this is a tremendous record to go to sleep or do other nighttime stuff to...spacemen three say: relax."
The Beautiful Pulse and Ramble
DJ Caliban | San Francisco, CA | 11/16/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"
To start off - there is no sitar played in this recording. It's all guitar and some effects. That's where they're going with the "An Evening of *Contemporary* Sitar Music" title. The style is eastern influenced, and tonally reminiscent of Indian/sitar music. Vox vibratos more masterfully crafted than anything pulled off by Marr in "How Soon is Now?" and guitar rambles which are both totally captivating and completely simple. You hear soul. You hear passion.
The primary, 44-minute recording is as influenced by marijuana as anything else, and if you're of the aesthetic subscriptions that appreciates music of such influences, this is a maioribus opus. A prime candidate soundtrack for modern meditation, a massage, and afternoon nod, quieting a restless mood or indeed restless children. Getting on an airplane? Pump this into your earbuds as you sit, close your eyes, and drift. External stimuli cease to pertain.