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| Song Title | Time | Price | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Play | 1. The Earth Died Screaming | 3:38 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 2. Dirt In The Ground | 4:07 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 3. Such A Scream | 2:08 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 4. All Stripped Down | 3:03 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 5. Who Are You This Time | 3:55 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 6. The Ocean | 1:51 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 7. Jesus Gonna Be Here | 3:18 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 8. A Little Rain | 2:58 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 9. In The Colosseum | 4:50 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 10. Goin' Out West | 3:20 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 11. Murder In The Red Barn | 4:29 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 12. Black Wings | 4:35 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 13. Whistle Down The Wind | 4:35 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 14. I Don't Wanna Grow Up | 2:31 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 15. Let Me Down Up On It | 0:53 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 16. That Feel | 3:12 | £0.69 |
Product details
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Lyrically, the album is as uncomfortable as the music and production, with the first song adopting the frantic perspective of cornball 50's sci-fi with the title 'Earth Died Screaming', to subsequent tracks like Dirt in the Ground, The Ocean Doesn't Want Me, Murder in the Red Barn and I Don't Wanna Grow Up, which seem to have an unhealthy preoccupation with old age, failure, death, bereavement, murder and decay. The album switches between loud, vibrant, carnivalesque tracks with a fuller band performance and robust, theatrical vocals from Waits, and more restrained numbers, which recall the late night minimalist misery of albums like Closing Time and Small Change. The reason that the whole thing hangs together so well, regardless of tempo changes or the odd stylist anachronism, is through the deft mixing and sequencing of the album, and through Waits' peerless production. The whole record sounds gargled and muffled, as if playing through an old transistor radio, whilst certain sources have claimed that the album was recorded in an old converted storage space... which is certainly apparent from the muffled claustrophobia of songs like Whistle Down the Wind, and the fantastic closing track, That Feel.
Waits's vocal delivery is quite often a major part of the song's style and atmosphere, moving further and further away from the crooning lounge style of his earlier work and often relying heavily on lower-register growls, sinister whispers, screaming, carnival-like announcements, and menacing spoken-word laments. The vocals compliment the music and the lyrical subject matter perfectly, capturing the surreal and slightly menacing feeling of backwoods Americana and lo-fi abandon that runs throughout these sixteen tracks. As the other reviewers have mentioned, there is no real standout, with the whole album feeling complete... moving from the more surreal and abrasive tracks like The Earth Died Screaming, Jesus Gonna be Here and In the Colosseum, to the wistful downers Dirt in the Ground, Who Are You This Time? and Whistle Down the Wind (ok, I lied, if I had to choose one standout from this album, then that would be it!!). Even the shorter tracks, which seem to be there only to link the longer songs (Such a Scream, Black Wings and Let Me Get Up On It) have a great atmosphere that contributes to the overall feeling that the album creates.
Bone Machine is one of Tom Waits' many musical peaks, offering a grungy and often quite grim record that looks at a number of bleakly beautiful subjects and runs them through this bizarre musical filter, which ends up splicing genres as disparate as backwoods blues, piano jazz, college rock and Weimar influenced cabaret!! The songs hang together perfectly, and despite the bleak subject matter and the buzzing dissonance of the overall sound and instrumentation, it never becomes a chore to sit through. Instead, it represents Waits at his strongest, crafting deep and meaningful lyrics that offer heart and emotion without sacrificing his trademark wit and wordplay, combined with a number of dazzling arrangements and performances from everyone involved. Bone Machine is an impeccable album, something that could easily be considered a modern masterpiece, and one to file away with Rain Dogs, Small Change, Blood Money and Alice as Waits at his absolute best.
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