Album Details
Title: Hope & Sorrow Artist: Wax Tailor Release Date: 4/3/2007 Label: Blend Corp, Decon Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto UPCs: 850717001483, 0933990100026, 829410808569 Genre: Rap Styles: Trip-Hop, Post-Rock/Experimental, Electronica, Experimental Techno, Turntablism, Illbient Moods: Atmospheric, Cerebral, Complex, Detached, Eerie, Ominous, Paranoid, Trippy, Nocturnal, Aggressive, Clinical, Fiery, Intense, Literate, Manic, Rousing, Volatile, Wintry, Hypnotic Total Copies: 0 Members Wishing: 2 Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1 |
Track Listings
-
Once Upon a Past
-
The Way We Lived
-
The Games You Play
-
The Tune
-
The Man with No Soul
-
Radio Broadcast
-
Positively Inclined
-
Sometimes
-
House of Wax
-
Beyond Words
-
To Dry Up
-
We Be
-
That Case
-
There Is Danger
-
Alien in My Belly
Additional Releases
| Year | Type | Label | Catalog # | | 2007 | CD | Blend Corp | | | 2007 | CD | Decon | 47 |
|
Other Editions
- No other editions were found for this album.
|
|
Review
French DJ JC la Saout, who records under the nom de club Wax Tailor, has the wide-ranging musical erudition of DJ Spooky without the latter's insufferable pretentiousness, and the Technicolor stylistic range of DJ Shadow without the latter's tendency towards unwieldy sonic sprawl. He is also -- and this is interesting -- not obviously concerned with showcasing his Frenchness in any noticeable way. No Johnny Hallyday or Indochine samples, no accordions, no French-language found sound. Some of his guests are French, but they all sing in English and contribute to an album that could almost be called an exercise in musical Esperanto -- a mishmash of stylistic elements that draws from a wide variety of sources and adds up to something familiar-sounding but new. Not everything is spectacular, and like many of his colleagues, Wax Tailor has a maddening weakness for between-song filler. But there's more than enough spectacular content here to justify the four-star rating. Highlights include the edgily funky "Once Upon a Past," the turntablist-goes-to-the-movies brilliance of "The Tune," and "That Case," with its jazzy flute multiphonics and Mission Impossible bongo drums. Feel free to skip over "Alien in My Belly," which ends the album on a creepy and rhythmically disjointed note. Highly recommended overall. ~ Rick Anderson, All Music Guide
Credits
| Name | Credits | | Laurent Collat | Mixing | | Marina Quaisse | Cello, Cello Arrangement | | Sharon Jones | Vocals |
|
|