All Artists: Current 93 Title: Great in the Small Members Wishing: 2 Total Copies: 0 Label: Phantom Sound & Vision Original Release Date: 1/1/1983 Re-Release Date: 12/4/2001 Genre: Pop Style: Number of Discs: 1 SwapaCD Credits: 1 UPC: 766486984424 |
Current 93 Great in the Small Genre: Pop
Mid-price digipack with full color collage cover of all theCurrent 93 covers by Steven Stapleton. The album comprises all the studio recordings made by C93 from their first release, LaSht Al (1983) to the most recent album... more » |
CD Details
Synopsis
Album Description Mid-price digipack with full color collage cover of all theCurrent 93 covers by Steven Stapleton. The album comprises all the studio recordings made by C93 from their first release, LaSht Al (1983) to the most recent album Faust (2000). Special care was taken to include all the tracks that have appeared on compilations, as well as those alternate mixes which were sometimes featured on vinyl editions. 2000 release. |
CD ReviewsNerve-wrecking, utterly fascinating, but not for everyone. -¦- | over here. | 03/19/2002 (4 out of 5 stars) "Ahhhh.... What could I possibly say about Current 93 that hasn't been said before? They're legendary for being eccentric, idiosyncratic, and prolific to the point of lunacy. When I heard that this release was to be all of C93's recorded output on one disc, I was stupified. I had to hear it (like I wouldn't have bought it anyway).
To spoil the surprise, this is more a sound collage with different elements exchanging volumes and placement, and the true C93 obsessive can pick out which scrap is from where. That having been said, this is truly one of the most nightmarish things I have ever encountered. A tangled mess of accoustic guitars, piano, countless layers of phased vocals, girls singing pagan melodies, drones, feedback, synth squibbles, drum races, fevered rants and chants, various stringed instruments, and much more all swimming in an omnipresent gel of warbly effects. And it's absolutely spell-binding. Current 93 can be a harrowing experience when taken one album at a time, and when mashed together? Like being immersed directly into the foggy, spectre-ridden mind of David Tibet himself. It takes a strong stomach to take this ride more than once, but with every listen, a flow becomes apparent. The magnitude of somehow combining elements from 40 recordings (at the very least) was not approached lightly, and the furthur one explores this world, the truer this becomes. However, I can definately see even the more tolerant followers of this group being turned off by this very quickly. As it was, what I thought had been twenty minutes into the album turned out to be six. All in all, I highly recommend this to only the most adventurous Current 93 fans, but be warned; if Hell has a waiting room, this is surely what it must sound like." |