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The Civil War
 
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The Civil War [Enhanced]

~ Matmos
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
Price: £7.79 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Audio CD (22 Sep 2003)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Enhanced
  • Label: Matador
  • ASIN: B0000ALWDP
  • Other Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 135,547 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

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Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. Regicide 2:47£0.79
Listen  2. Zealous Order Of Candied Knights 4:36£0.79
Listen  3. Reconstruction 9:31£0.79
Listen  4. Y.T.T.E. 9:07£0.79
Listen  5. For The Trees 3:31£0.79
Listen  6. The Stars And Stripes Forever 2:07£0.79
Listen  7. Pelt And Holler 4:17£0.79
Listen  8. The Struggle Against Unreality Begins 5:34£0.79
Listen  9. For The Trees (Return) 4:19£0.79


Product Description

CD Description

Ever-searching electronica experimentalists Matmos change their game yet again on THE CIVIL WAR. Renaissance folk, contemporary classical, Irish jigs, and a variety of other stylistic elements are mixed into Matmos's rapid-fire collages, with a blanket of martial drums and sonic warfare echoing thealbum's title. While its usual noise-guerilla ethos is in full effect, there is an undeniable artistry to the group's dense sound painting, cluttered as they are with microbeats, off-kilter melodies, and sonic detail. THE CIVIL WAR reinforces Matmos's status as one of the most consistently challenging and brilliant groups in the IDM genre.

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Struggle Against Unreality Begins, 13 Mar 2004
By A Customer
I bought this album unfamiliar with Matmos, perhaps unwisely, as this is not music for the uninitiated. The more you listen to it though, the more strange and wonderful parts of it seem. Unusually for the glitchy end of electronica, the music is amazingly evocative and narrational, whole epics of time and place – specifically, in this case, civil-war America. Some of the tracks, in particular the twenty-minute suite of ‘Reconstruction’ and ‘YTTE’ are whole stories in themselves, with marching bands, campfires and fireworks tucked into their varied soundscapes. 'Regicide' opens things off nicely with shuddering beats and waves of chimes and static, while the 'Jealous Order of Candied Knights' is the electronica equivalent of morris dancing (and I don't mean that in bad way!). As you may gather, this is a difficult album to describe, albeit one that may appeal to those beyond the ambient and glitch genres for its pure evocative power. While ‘The Stars and Stripes Forever’ and ‘Pelt and Holler’ demonstrate the more frustrating side of Matmos’ style, ‘The Struggle Against Unreality Begins’ is the album’s most dramatic moment, which surges abrasively into a thing of some power. A genuine journey.
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars MATMOS FIND TEXTURE AT LAST, 22 Jan 2004
By Vargiu Riccardo James (Bologna, Italy) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
[A foreword: Other than THE CIVIL WAR, I own and am very familiar with A CHANCE TO CUT IS A CHANCE TO CURE and DO YOU PARTY? Opinions and comparisons in my review, therefore, are limited to these albums by Matmos.]

“Micro-beats” virtuosos, Drew Daniel and M. C. Schmidt, find texture for their music at last, on THE CIVIL WAR. Texture, as in an underlying foundation for all their bleeps and crackling sounds to tinkle over. At last, in the sense that such a musical underpinning is precisely what’s missing in their previous compositions, notwithstanding a few significant exceptions (such as the marvellous piece named “Satie,” off Daniel’s DO YOU PARTY?).

What’s rather extraordinary is that they didn’t find such a texture in the layering of drones, hums or other electronically generated bars, in the style of – say – Boards of Canada, Mùm or even Stars of the Lid, just to mention three (very different) groups in the greater electronic music scene. Oddly enough, they located it in a great variety of traditional musical instruments – namely: hurdy-gurdy, banjo, acoustic/electric/bass/dobro guitars, drums, piano, chimes, violin, bassoon, tuba, peck horn, trumpet – played by Matmos themselves but also by a thick group of friends (Blevin Blectum, Mark Lightcap, Steve Goodfriend and several others). This extensive use of traditional instruments, in some cases of instruments from a remote past, makes it possible for THE CIVIL WAR to touch on, and refurbish, several genres that one would be tempted to say have nothing to do with electronic music: 1. medieval popular music (and particularly popular music from medieval Scotland/Ireland and other Northern European countries), 2. American country-folk music and 3. experimental rock. Indeed, there is no more than one track on THE CIVIL WAR that could fit into any of their previous works: “Pelt and holler” is the only piece which is based on sampling, sequencing and mixing alone, while each and every other is more complex by far than anything off their other records (structurally speaking, that is, but also with reference to the ever-shifting “mood” of the piece).

It should be clear by now that THE CIVIL WAR is an impressive collage, an attempt to syncretize styles and/or traditions of music which are generally kept separate, perhaps notwithstanding a common root. The civil war the record title refers to could be thought of as an allusion to more than just the American war of secession. I don’t think it would be too far fetched to suppose that Matmos were also jokingly hinting at the clash between music old and new, fast and slow, electronic and instrumental. A clash which, indeed, is often a lot more about the way things are perceived than about the way they actually are. For instance, this record certainly reminds us to which extent popular medieval music was based on repetition, looped sequences, energetic beats. In other words, it reminds us that it was – back then no less than today – “pop,” as in “for the masses.” Needless to say, it does so in such a cerebral way that, unlike the material it draws on, this CD will never quite suit the average music consumer, let alone the masses (and I mean this in the most neutral way possible: to me, it’s neither a good thing nor a bad one).

The vast majority of pieces on THE CIVIL WAR exhibit a playfulness, a fascination with music itself, a desire to explore it for its own sake. This leads to the tracks on the album being rather experimental in tone, as if they were simply a (battle?) ground for Matmos to challenge with the force of their talent and to conquer. Once again then, Matmos are true virtuosos in their field, loving what they do to the point of wanting merely to indulge in it to the fullest. This “inwardness,” this mannerism, this light-hearted toying with music just for the fun of it is what’s so unique about this album, but it’s also the one thing that some might consider pestering. Although I am highly impressed with THE CIVIL WAR, and indeed find it to be their best output so far, I am inclined to believe that they will truly outdo themselves and express their full potential only when they will veer towards a more “narrative” (as in, less “abstract”) form of music. “The Struggle Against Unreality Begins” is good proof of that, I think. This track seems to me to be the highpoint of the record, and in my opinion it is the one and only piece that really appears to want to “reach out,” to communicate an intelligible sequence of emotional states. It is the only “humanized” piece, if you will. Then again, this might just be a personal perception: of course the way each person relates to music is very subjective and has to do with too many variables for me to account for.

All in all, the more I listen to THE CIVIL WAR the more I realize that it is an outstanding work of art, a genuine milestone. What will Matmos come up with next?

[Total running time: 45:52; Enhanced CD: contains Mark Boswell’s video for “Stars and Stripes Forever”]

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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars elaecktro'clasche, 13 Nov 2003
By N. Butler "renus" - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
opening to the sound of the middle ages, matmos have at the very least expanded their palette, and probably that of most listeners. the album (which sounds extremely like "storm and stress" towards the back-end) presents the sound of the medieval jig with an electronic aesthetic listeners will be familiar with from vespertine. no point in saying too much, but it IS a very special piece of work, although, admittedly let down when they veer too far into the electro and too far away from the folk music. all in all, i would recommend it to anyone interested in music, regardless of taste, not because its a masterpiece (because its not), but because it combines flavours i've never heard before; which cannot be a bad thing, at all, ever.
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