Search - Jupiter Apple :: Hisscivilization

Hisscivilization
Jupiter Apple
Hisscivilization
Genres: Alternative Rock, International Music, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1

The third & most inventive album to date for the critically acclaimed Brazilian artist. The album is a melting pot of influences encompassing psychedelia, krautrock, progressive rock, bossa nova & 70's moogs, with...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Jupiter Apple
Title: Hisscivilization
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Voiceprint Brazil
Release Date: 3/16/2005
Album Type: Import
Genres: Alternative Rock, International Music, Pop, Rock
Styles: South & Central America, Brazil
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 604388508228, 766489649221

Synopsis

Album Description
The third & most inventive album to date for the critically acclaimed Brazilian artist. The album is a melting pot of influences encompassing psychedelia, krautrock, progressive rock, bossa nova & 70's moogs, with a songwriting style reminiscent of Kevin Ayers. Voiceprint. 2002.
 

CD Reviews

Stereolabby Brazilian indiepop
Joe Sixpack -- Slipcue.com | ...in Middle America | 05/17/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Hip Brazilian indie-rock, with an icy cool, ironic attitude. I liked the first track a lot -- a fifteen minute long, Moog-drenched prog-pop jam that could be compared to the ever-dreary Stereolab, yet is redeemed through its amatuerish rough edges, and comes off a bit more krautrock-y... something that the folks from Can could be proud of. The rest of the album is okay, too, though less audacious than this opening salvo. I was disappointed, though, that the lyrics were in English, rather than Portuguese -- it would have been much more fun the other way around. (Not that it matters that much; these songs are driven more by their grooves than by the lyrics... But I still prefer hearing "foreign" pop singers performing in their native languages; it seems so much more compelling and true to one's roots, somehow...) All in all, this disc is interesting for the light it sheds on Brazil's nascent indiepop scene, and it stands on its own with the UK and European music it seeks to emulate, though it also doesn't quite set the woods on fire. I'm telling you: they shoulda sung in Portuguese!"