- Audio CD
- Number of Discs: 2
- Label: FOUR
- ASIN: B00000JQIN
- Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (1 customer review)
- Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 956,710 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)
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Product details
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| Disc: 1 | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Shock Me | |||
| 2. Grace Cathedral Park | |||
| 3. Katy Song | |||
| 4. Summer Dress | |||
| 5. New Jersey | |||
| 6. Medicine Bottle | |||
| 7. Michael | |||
| 8. San Geronimo | |||
| 9. Bubble | |||
| 10. Mistress | |||
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| Disc: 2 | |||
| 1. Funhouse | |||
| 2. Waterkill | |||
| 3. Uncle Joe | |||
| 4. Helicopter | |||
| 5. Brown Eyes | |||
| 6. Dragonflies | |||
| 7. Japanese To English | |||
| 8. Shock Me | |||
| 9. Over My Head | |||
| 10. Brockwell Park | |||
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Compilation of the 4AD Years.,
By Jason Parkes "We're all Frankies'" (Worcester, UK) - See all my reviews (No. 1 Hall OF FAME REVIEWER)
This review is from: RED PERSPECTIVE (Audio CD)
This compilation captures the 4AD years of Red House Painters- disc One is a basic best of, stemming from albums such as Down Colourful Hill, Red House Painters (two diff eponymous albums) & Ocean Beach. Plenty of fine songs: Grace Cathedral Park, Drop, Rollercoaster, Evil & the band version of New Jersey. The highlight is the epic Katy Song. Disc 2 is one for the fans- a collection of various demos, outtakes & live versions- Dragonflies, Funhouse, Helicopter & Summer Dress are all delivered in alternate forms. My only quibble with this, is that Down Colourful Hill is under-represented & my fave RHP-track Down Through is not here. I still think the 14 track eponymous LP from 1993 & the recent Old Ramon (on Sub Pop) are vital purchases. Listening to this excellent collection, with typically brilliant 4AD cover, you have to concede it's mood music- Mark Kozelek's downer songs at odd's with his cheery rendition of Elton John's Tiny Dancer in Almost Famous. A good intro & reminder of the first decade of Red House Painters, one of the great US bands of recent years & easily up there with American Music Club/Mark Eitzel, Jeff Buckley & The Grifters.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.5 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews) 11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A melancholic masterpiece of introspection/ retrospection,
By Ludmila - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: RED PERSPECTIVE (Audio CD)
I have to admit that I first heard of the Red House Painters through the film "Excess Baggage," starring Alicia Silverstone and Benicio del Toro as star-crossed lovers of sorts. The Painters' rendition of "All Mixed Up," originally by The Cars, was featured in this film, and I must say that although the film leaves just a little bit to be desired, that the choice of the aforementioned song in certain scenes of the film is phenomenal. . . see the movie, you'll see what I mean, perhaps. Emily Hope (Silverstone's character in the movie) compels "John Doe" (del Toro's character) to feel oh so "mixed up". . . Anyways, moving on. . . hearing this song was enough to make me pause the credits and see who exactly was this band performing such a hauntingly melancholic and gorgeous version of the Cars' classic. "The Red House Painters," I read. "Hmmm," I said to myself, this sounds like a potentially great band. So the next day I ventured to my friendly neighborhood record store to see what they had to offer for the Red House Painters. I went through the various CD's they had of the band, and purchased "Retrospective," which I thought would be a good introduction to the band. It truly was. (It goes without saying that I also got "Songs for a Blue Guitar," since it does, after all, contain the song "All Mixed Up" which had impacted me so, but since this review is about "Retrospective," I'm going to stick to this album in my review). I read the liner notes, while hearing both disks of this album, and I was enthralled. How could I, such a devoted fan of good and original music (with a penchant for the sad and gloomy and melancholic) have possibly missed this incredible band, I asked myself? I spoke to a friend that evening, after I had spent the entire afternoon indulging in my Red House Painters CD's, and I told her that I had "discovered" this awesome band, entitled the Red House Painters. "Oh, you mean the band who did the song for that Gap commercial?" she replied, much to my dismay (I'm not prone either to "commercial," or "commercialized" music, or to huge retail stores). Regardless, I did not allow this to alter my fascination with this band. They are really phenomenal; sad, gloomy, melancholy, wistful, somber, with an unbelievable talent for transforming the pain suffered in life and in love into song. 6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A true find.,
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: RED PERSPECTIVE (Audio CD)
Graceful, quiet, and elegiac. Mark Kozelek truly is a gifted songwriter, and if you haven't heard this band yet, this is a terrific place to start.P.S. A big raspberry to Ivo and 4AD for dropping these guys. 5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Melancholy and a glimpse into angst, but a brilliant band,
By Christopher Culver - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: RED PERSPECTIVE (Audio CD)
Red House Painters, a band centered on the ever melancholy Mark Kozelek, created some of the saddest and most haunting music ever released on the 4AD label. Kozelek's songwriting, focusing on angst, rejection, and the pain of solitude had a way of putting into words what everyone has felt at one time or another. On RETROSPECTIVE we are treated to a disc of some of the finest moments from RHP' five albums released on 4AD, as well as to a second disc of outtakes and live material.RETROSPECTIVE opens up, ironically, with a Kiss cover. "Shock Me", however, is transformed by Kozelek from a wild, outrageous romp to a low pleading. From there, though, the listener gets 12 tracks of Kozelek's poignant songwriting. "Katy Song", the first standout is, like most of RHP's output, an elegy to an ended relationship, twisting through complicated time signatures and finishing with a remarkably tightly played jam. "Medicine Bottle", called RHP's best song by many fans, is an 8-minute expression of the pain of losing a girlfriend because she could not handle introvertedness and the idea that certain thoughts and emotions are felt but can never be communicated. It cultimates in the astounding lines "I do not want to lose / the thrill that it gives me to look out from my window / and scour the houses from the world in the bedrom. / It's all in his head she read, in a girlfriend's self-help book..." That Kozelek can put into words the feelings that most men have from adolescent to 30 is a testament to his unique lyrical skill. Two of the later songs on this disc, the reverb-heavy "Drop" and "Evil", flow well together and display the crystal-clear production that was a hallmark of each of the albums the band released on 4AD. Disc 2 is less interesting than the first, as one assumes that the outtakes were taken out of the albums for a reason, and the live material is unexciting (in fact, the live version of "Japanese to English" is downright unlistenable). However, it's closing track, an instrumental, displays the musical prowess of a band where the singer and songwriter Kozelek tends to get more recognition than the musicians. RETROSPECTIVE is a great collection, and packs RHP's best output onto one release. Why only four stars? Red House Painters' music is not for everyone. While those who can remember the angst of their teenage years or still feel it now after a broken relationship know exactly what Kozelek is singing about, others feel the lyrics are juvenile and too depressing. The Red House Painters are worth trying, I think, and if RETOSPECTIVE is too much, try their first 4AD release DOWN COLORFUL HILL. |
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