![The Comsat Angels - The Glamour [2007 2-CD reissue] The Comsat Angels - The Glamour [2007 2-CD reissue]](images/comsatangels-glamour.jpg)
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2-CD: RENCD20
RELEASED: 2007
LABEL: Renascent
Disc 1
01. I Hear A New World
02. Goddess
03. Anjelica 
04. Valley Of The Nile
05. Sailor
06. Pacific Ocean Blues
07. Oblivion
08. The Niala Game
09. Audrey In Denim
10. Demon Lover
Disc 2
01. Psychedelic Dungeon
02. SS100X 
03. The Glamour
04. Breaker
05. Evanescent
06. Hyperprism 1
07. Space
08. Web Of Sound
09. A Song Called Dave
10. Slayer Of The Real
Digitally remastered 2007 reissue of the Comsat Angels' 1995 album. Now
a double CD, this is the version that the band originally wanted to release.
They have added 8 previously unreleased recordings, including 5 previously
unreleased songs.
This has to be one of the world's most unlucky bands. The Comsat Angels could
have ruled the world, if they'd just had anything but the longest, most demoralizing
series of misfortunes, mostly at the hands of the labels that were supposed
to be supporting their candidacy. First, Jive attempted to turn them into A
Flock of Seagulls in the mid-Eighties. Then Island, who wouldn't stand up for
their name against a space-hardware company, eventually forced them to change
it to Dream Command, and then dropped them anyway. Still, they made a terrific
comeback album called My Mind's Eye in 1992, and have put out two impressive
radio-session CDs since, and things really were finally looking up. So, would
the departure of bassist Kevin Bacon and the arrival of two new members, the
first personnel changes in the band's history, be the detail that derailed
them this time? The drums no longer sound like they were recorded inside a
hollow asteroid, the guitars no longer sound as much like the distorted emanations
of shattering galaxies, and Stephen Fellows voice doesn't tremble nearly as
close to the brink of heat death. "Oblivion", with its reversed electric
and precise acoustic guitars, and limber bass part, would probably look like
something off Waiting for a Miracle written out on paper. "Sailor" is
technically spare, using just one guitar and some keyboards as accompaniment.
Burbling keyboards and oscillating bass open "Psychedelic Dungeon",
which then slides into a sawing two-note groove accompanied by Mik Glaisher,
who still has the best splash cymbal sound ever captured on microphone.
"The
Glamour" is a pounding four-chord rock song, but the four chords are odd
ones, more a trapezoidal formation than square. "Web of Sound", with
its churning guitars and throbbing bass, could easily have fit on My Mind's
Eye next to "Driving" or "Route 666". Audrey in Denim",
previewed on Unravelled, has stark trademark Comsat Angels verses, and the
way the chorus "SS100X", the other Unravelled track, steps up the
scale is a particularly Angel-esque touch. However, the album comes together
in its best form for the last three tracks. "Anjelica" puts the rock
aspirations on hold and churns through a song that is repetitive in all the
best ways, showing that the two new members have been adequately tutored in
the virtues of a carefully executed slow chord cycle. "Valley of the Nile",
which essentially dispenses with the notion of a chorus, is even more focused.
Fellows' resonant voice slides a carefully controlled melody through a steady
weave of guitars and keyboards, and the song never breaks its deliberate slow
pace for a second. "Spaced", the epic final song, then drifts in
as a soft meditation that reminds of Ian McNabb at points, transforms after
a few minutes into a minor sonic tempest, and then subsides again, trailing
off gracefully with an extended coda of eerie piano, smooth bass and skeletal
drumming.
Influences / Similar Artists:
The Sound, The Chameleons, The Cure, Echo & The Bunnymen
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