Powered by Google
Home
Listings
Editors' Picks
News
Music
Movies
Food
Life
Arts + Books
Rec Room
Moonsigns
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Personals
Adult Personals
Classifieds
Adult Classifieds
- - - - - - - - - - - -
stuff@night
FNX Radio
Band Guide
MassWeb Printing
- - - - - - - - - - - -
About Us
Contact Us
Advertise With Us
Work For Us
Newsletter
RSS Feeds
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Webmaster
Archives



sponsored links
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
PassionShop.com
Sex Toys - Adult  DVDs - Sexy  Lingerie


 
  E-Mail This Article to a Friend
 

The Blue Nile
HIGH
(Sanctuary)

The Blue Nile move slowly — four albums spread out over more than two decades is not prodigious. Their music moves slowly too, creating sustained moods in much the way Stanley Kubrick’s camera loiters endlessly on an image, forcing you to look deeper. But if all that matters to you is quality, then who cares about time? On 1996’s Peace at Last, this Scottish trio’s previous CD, principal songwriter Paul Buchanan appeared to have found a degree of domestic bliss. Unfortunately, his gain marked a loss for the band’s material in terms of emotional resonance. High finds him on less stable ground — over the past several years he’s been fighting an incapacitating undisclosed illness. But what’s been bad for his body and soul has been good for his writing. His songs concern themselves with fidelity, existential confusion, loneliness, rooftops, morning sun, and traffic noise. Delivered in his lugubrious Scott Walkerish voice, these depictions of life’s little truths take on weight. "Because of Toledo" and "She Saw the World" ooze with quiet desperation. "An ordinary miracle is what we need," he sings on "The Days of Our Lives." There’s a sense in which High is just that.

BY ELIOT WILDER


Issue Date: September 10 - 16, 2004
Back to the Music table of contents
  E-Mail This Article to a Friend
 









about the phoenix |  advertising info |  Webmaster |  work for us
Copyright © 2005 Phoenix Media/Communications Group