Pôle - Inside The Dream (France 1975, POLE 0002)
Members:
* Eric Dervieu - Bass
* Christian Rouch - Vocals
* Marc Azad - Guitar
* Arranged By, Effects:
Arp 2600 - Paul Putti
Arp 2600 - Jean-Louis Rizet
Arp 2600 - Pierre Chavigny.
Tracks:
01. Inside The Dream (24:48)
02. Outside The Nightmare (14:44)
03. In The Mäelstrom (4:37)
To start, "Inside The Dream" by Pôle the band / collective is a completely different beast from it's predecessor, "Kotrill" (both 1975). Not just musically but, beyond synthesist and Pôle records major domo Paul Putti, the line up is entirely different. Where "Kotrill" started with it's title track exploding out of the speakers in a synthoid götterdämmerung, "Inside The Dream" begins with an acoustic tranquility. A mellow folk riff (Michael Azad) rises into focus and is joined by a sopping wet electric guitar (Paul Putti) and near subliminal bass (Eric Dervieu). Then a smooth pleasant vocal (Christian Rouch) follows "Walking inside your dream now / So sweet, so cold / Watching your face in rainbows" . As so it goes, but somewhere along the line the electric guitar decides it's sick of playing nice and forces it's way into the front of the mix; if that means it's completely out of key and pushing the needle into the red - so what? The following track, 'Outside The Nightmare' (solo composition by Jean-Louis Rizet) is more in keeping with 'Kotrill' in that it is based in the realm of synthesizers, but if 'Kotrill' was the soundtrack to the apocalypse, then 'Outside The Nightmare' is most certainly the soundtrack to the post-apocalypse. You may have lived through the worst, but you're not out of the woods yet, kid. The third and final track, 'In The Mäelstrom', bleeds in from 'Outside', the sound of acceptance of the horrible turn the world has taken, and the will to face it, come what may. Slashing synths (courtesy Mssrs. Putti, Rizet, and Pierre Chavigny) march along with our hero, bloodied but unbroken. Along with "Kotrill", "Inside The Dream" feels like it was either quickly and cheaply put together to get some product on the streets for Pôle (the record label), or they were the projects that inspired the start of Pôle (again, the label). Either way, they are all the better for their raw immediacy and near punk primitivism.
~ Reviewed by MarsHottentot (RYM).
more info:
http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=447508830
Download links:
http://www.mirrorcreator.com/files/I1TCISZH/Pole_-_Inside_The_Dream__Fra_1975_.rar_links
...and also...
http://sharebee.com/961a77af
Filename: Pole - Inside The Dream (Fra 1975).rar Size: 82.41 MB
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Members:
* Eric Dervieu - Bass
* Christian Rouch - Vocals
* Marc Azad - Guitar
* Arranged By, Effects:
Arp 2600 - Paul Putti
Arp 2600 - Jean-Louis Rizet
Arp 2600 - Pierre Chavigny.
Tracks:
01. Inside The Dream (24:48)
02. Outside The Nightmare (14:44)
03. In The Mäelstrom (4:37)
To start, "Inside The Dream" by Pôle the band / collective is a completely different beast from it's predecessor, "Kotrill" (both 1975). Not just musically but, beyond synthesist and Pôle records major domo Paul Putti, the line up is entirely different. Where "Kotrill" started with it's title track exploding out of the speakers in a synthoid götterdämmerung, "Inside The Dream" begins with an acoustic tranquility. A mellow folk riff (Michael Azad) rises into focus and is joined by a sopping wet electric guitar (Paul Putti) and near subliminal bass (Eric Dervieu). Then a smooth pleasant vocal (Christian Rouch) follows "Walking inside your dream now / So sweet, so cold / Watching your face in rainbows" . As so it goes, but somewhere along the line the electric guitar decides it's sick of playing nice and forces it's way into the front of the mix; if that means it's completely out of key and pushing the needle into the red - so what? The following track, 'Outside The Nightmare' (solo composition by Jean-Louis Rizet) is more in keeping with 'Kotrill' in that it is based in the realm of synthesizers, but if 'Kotrill' was the soundtrack to the apocalypse, then 'Outside The Nightmare' is most certainly the soundtrack to the post-apocalypse. You may have lived through the worst, but you're not out of the woods yet, kid. The third and final track, 'In The Mäelstrom', bleeds in from 'Outside', the sound of acceptance of the horrible turn the world has taken, and the will to face it, come what may. Slashing synths (courtesy Mssrs. Putti, Rizet, and Pierre Chavigny) march along with our hero, bloodied but unbroken. Along with "Kotrill", "Inside The Dream" feels like it was either quickly and cheaply put together to get some product on the streets for Pôle (the record label), or they were the projects that inspired the start of Pôle (again, the label). Either way, they are all the better for their raw immediacy and near punk primitivism.
~ Reviewed by MarsHottentot (RYM).
more info:
http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=447508830
Download links:
http://www.mirrorcreator.com/files/I1TCISZH/Pole_-_Inside_The_Dream__Fra_1975_.rar_links
...and also...
http://sharebee.com/961a77af
Filename: Pole - Inside The Dream (Fra 1975).rar Size: 82.41 MB
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hello, I work for The Oxford American magazine and we are researching our upcoming Music Issue. I was wondering if you, or any fellow audiophiles, might know anything about the Ukulele Dream Band, originally from Florida.
ReplyDeleteIf you have any information please let me know. Thanks for your time.
Sincerely,
Natalie Elliott
The Oxford American
editorial8@oxfordamerican.org
WOW! I'm getting used to describe one of my favorite LP's by one of the best blog collectives! My heart is on fire!
ReplyDeleteold days come to live
ReplyDeletethanks from holland