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Alice
 
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Alice

Tom WaitsMP3 Download
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
Price: £7.49
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Album Savings: £2.86 compared to buying all songs

 
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  Song Title Time Price    
Play   1. Alice 4:28 £0.69
Play   2. Everything You Can Think 3:10 £0.69
Play   3. Flowers Grave 3:28 £0.69
Play   4. No One Knows I'm Gone 1:42 £0.69
Play   5. Kommienezuspadt 3:10 £0.69
Play   6. Poor Edward 3:42 £0.69
Play   7. Table Top Joe 4:14 £0.69
Play   8. Lost In The Harbour 3:45 £0.69
Play   9. We're All Mad Here 2:31 £0.69
Play 10. Watch Her Disappear 2:33 £0.69
Play 11. Reeperbahn 4:02 £0.69
Play 12. I'm Still Here 1:49 £0.69
Play 13. Fish And Bird 3:59 £0.69
Play 14. Barcarolle 3:59 £0.69
Play 15. Fawn 1:43 £0.69
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
35 of 36 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Do you like me have a problem with being allowed to put on Tom albums at home? The woman in my life can't get to grips with "those noisy tracks". But I can get away with Closing Time, an album almost 30 years old, plus selected tracks from the years since.
And now Alice. It's achingly beautiful, chilled, smoky, low-down cabaret shmaltz. But unlike those early jazzy albums, you know that the creator has now lived a lot, growled a lot, hit a lot of percussion - he's been through albums like Bone Machine and come out the other side. All of his depth and complexity is there within a beautiful silky wrapping. And those lyrics. Arithmetic, arithmetock....
The pinacle of his career.
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45 of 47 people found the following review helpful
By RT
Format:Audio CD
An astonishingly moving sequence of songs, a collection I would agree to be perhaps the crown of Mr Waits' achievements. The emotional progression through the album is immaculately well judged, and follows a path from isolated lonely yearning, through dark avenues of insanity and morbidity (recurrent motifs in the album are notions of water, death and loneliness; consider the image of the face being a beach and the eyes being fish - the image is introduced in 'Everything you can think' and makes a startling reoccurrence in 'We're all mad here'). The final uneasy union of the protagonist with his object of desire is the subject of the masterful closer 'Barcarolle.
A magnificent emotional progression then and, it is worth pointing out, one completely different to how it was presented on the stage. Without the complex dialogue in between and the visual splendour of the stage production, the sequence used for the play would have been meaningless and emotionally neutered. Nonetheless, for posterity, here is a run through of the sequence and a brief description of how the songs were used in Wilson's production of Alice;
The first song is sung by Dodgson, the central male character of the play, and is 'Alice'. Following this, Alice falls into the rabbit hole and mournfully sings 'No one knows I'm gone'. She then meets 2 flowers, one of whom (called Lily) sings 'Flower's grave' before the 2 flowers burst into tears. Alice then drinks (courtesy of the white rabbit) the shrinking potion and meets the caterpillar, who tells her about 'Table top joe' (sung in the 3rd person, as opposed to the version on the album). We then see Dodgson writing a letter to Alice (which appears on the album as 'Watch her disappear'). Following this, Alice finds the mad hatters tea party where she is treated to a rendition of 'We're all mad here'. There is then a song which is not included on the album called 'You are old' sung by Father William and his son. Alice, having left the tea party then meets a fawn in the forest and they sing a beautiful wordless song together ('Fawn'), before the fawn loses its nerve and runs away into the forest. We then see the Black King (the chess piece) singing 'Reeperbahn', before Alice's trial. The Executioner introduces another musical theme not included on the album; 'You've murdered the time'. Alice is rescued by the White knight who sings to her the 'Fish & Bird' track, with Alice joining in on the "Please don't cry" chorus. A chorus of vicars then sing 'Jabberwocky' (again - not included), introducing the puzzle Alice must break to escape. The White knight (in response to Alice's asking for help to break the riddle) sings 'Everything you can think'. He leaves Alice, and she comes across a sheep in a shop who she also asks for help. The sheep tells Alice that it cannot help her, but nonetheless they sing 'Barcarolle' together as they take a boat trip. Alice meets Humpty Dumpty who sings 'Lost in the Harbour'. Following this there are two more unreleased tracks, 'Altar Boy' by the Duchess and the mad hatter, and a brief refrain 'It always rains here' by Tweedledee and tweedldum. After this the White Knight fights the Black knight (who kidnaps Alice), and lies defeated singing 'Poor Edward', before walking offstage (to reveal on the back of his head - a girl's face). After this there is a big court case as to who wrote the letter to Alice which includes an ensemble rendition of the unreleased track 'You've murdered the time'. Ultimately, the White knight, the white rabbit and Dodgson all turn up in the case and admit writing the letter, and are all beheaded, before Lewis Carroll turns up and admits to writing everything, that all of the characters are his creations. At this the world breaks down and it is revealed that Alice and all of the events were in the head of this man. The play closes with Alice, as an old woman with a cat on her knee, singing 'I'm still here'.
So, there is the sequence of events in the play. I have simplified them somewhat, so you get an idea of how complex it is. Needless to say, as the events are all used to show different parts of the desire for Alice, including the possessive, aggressive and loving aspects of this, then they are no more relevant in the sequence they were used in the play than in the sequence Waits chooses for the album. Bear in mind, Waits wrote the songs and chose the sequence on the album, Wilson chose the sequence in the play. Notice the absence of Kommienezuspadt. Anyway, should you wish to program the sequence in the play, programme your CD to;
1,4,3,7,10,9,15,11,13,2,14,8,6,12

As I have said, I find both the logical narrative/emotional progression of Waits' sequencing better, and I find it to be more musically satisfying.

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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
This album is so beautiful and so moving. It's full of late night ballads, with the usual freakish Waitsian twists though. Torch songs for the insane. The album opens with the gentle, lilting title track, which contains Waits' least gravelly vocal in years. His vocals throughout the album are as good as he has ever delivered, and his ballad singing is much more agreeable than it is on Blood Money. After the beauty of the title track, beautifully chilled as it is with sinister but distanced associations (Lewis Carrol's unhealthy preoccupation with the girl who inspired Alice In Wonderland) we get the ugly and mischevious stomp, Everything You Can Think, which is very similar to the stomps on Blood Money. However, the album really unfolds into something truly marvellous after this. A couple of lovely ballads then the brilliant malevolent Germanic spitting of Kommienezuspadt. This is followed by two songs about freaks - Poor Edward, with a woman's face stuck on the back of his head, his evil twin he cannot escape from and who whisper terrible things to him, and Table Top Joe, who was born without a body, but has hands, and has proved himself a brilliant pianist. Like Eyeball Kid from Mule Variations, it's the story of a freak making good despite the odds. Once again Tom treads the line between comical and poignant. Table Top Joe is musically one of the nicest surprises on the album, as Waits returns to his jazz roots and scats enthusiastically for the first time in over two decades. But it's important to emphasise the beauty and power of the ballads on this album. There are plenty of them, and they are all really beautiful and moving, and sung in Tom's most humane and gentle voice. Perhaps the most beautiful are 'Lost In The Harbour' and 'Fish And Bird'. This album will send you off to the Dreamland talked of in the lyrics. And you may want to never return.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
How long was I dreaming?
The booklet - so often a highlight of Tom`s releases - is worth the price of admission alone, with darkly atmospheric, unsettlingly droll photos of Waits in windswept ringmasterful... Read more
Published 4 months ago by GlynLuke
in a genre all of its own
this gets five stars from me, purely for being so different to almost anything else i've ever heard. there are waits albums i prefer, but sometimes only this one will do. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Biffer Spice
One of his best.
Tom Waits seems to just churn out music and the music is always very good, but sometimes it's great. Alice is made up of such music. Read more
Published 21 months ago by Georgiana
Its Dreamy Weather
Like on Bone Machine, Waits creates a unique musical soundscape with storytelling at its heart. This is probably Waits most beautiful collection of songs. Read more
Published on 6 Jan 2010 by Leeam
Alice who?
I was lead to believe that this cd was about Alice in Wonderland. Maybe it is, but seen from Tom Waits point of view. Disappointing in that sense. Read more
Published on 1 Dec 2009 by Lilecama
And they heard his tale, of a world that was so far away...
The ideas of lust, obsession, innocence and regret are explored throughout in Alice, a lush and surreal fever dream of an album that manages to tie in nicely with that other,... Read more
Published on 10 Jan 2008 by Jonathan James Romley
Dreamy Weather - Waits waves his crooked wand
This is a mesmerizing, immersive lp of beautifully crafted and produced ballads, originally for a musical of `Alice in Wonderland'. Read more
Published on 11 July 2007 by ChinaBoatMan
Extraordinary
I am something of a Tom Waits obsessive. I own 8 of his albums and am familiar with a couple more; well, this may just be my favourite. Read more
Published on 3 April 2006 by E. K. Randell
AMAZING
BUY THIS ALBUM!!!!!!!!!!!
Published on 19 Aug 2005 by Bunji Kugashira
Tom Wiats-Alice
I bought this album after hearing the opening song for it which says something for how good it is. I'm a musician myself so usually i don't have favourate albums or songs but... Read more
Published on 3 Jun 2005 by Christopher Cunningham
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