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Portal de Buena Musica gratis - The best music
Danielle Dax - Cathouse Lyrics
Pop-Eyes (Initial) 1983 (Awesome) 1985
Jesus Egg That Wept (UK Awesome) 1984 + 1985
Inky Bloaters (UK Awesome) 1987
Dark Adapted Eye (Sire) 1988
The Janice Long Session EP (UK Nighttracks/Strange
Fruit) 1988
Blast the Human Flower (Sire) 1990
Emerging from the ashes of the Lemon Kittens (formed
at Surrey University; 1979-'82), England's
Danielle Dax, Our Lady of the Arabic dance slink,
has a voice like vanilla yogurt: cool, high and
honey-sweet with a tartly mysterious flavor that
keeps her work from sounding the slightest bit
mainstream. From the old Hebrew inscription of
her Awesome Records logo (apparently gibberish)
through the lyrics on Inky Bloaters (where
"Big Hollow Man" reaps the wages of
his materialistic hypocrisy), there's an
underlying current of Biblical mysticism
embedded in her work and an infectiously droney
middle-Easternness to many of her melodies.
An eclectic collision between arty and rootsy,
Dax's work ranges from the almost scientifically
crisp and clinical ("...In Wooden Brackets,"
which she recorded while still a Lemon Kitten,
introduces backward instrumental tracks to
warbling pseudo-Chinese vocal chirps) to mutant
blues/gospel. In "Evil-Honky Stomp,"
from Jesus Egg That Wept, a moaning, off-kilter
saxophone evokes images of Mississippi
riverboats as she sings of branding slaves with
all the sweetness of a Scarlett O'Hara wafting
down a staircase.
The bright bop and twinkle of "Here Come
the Harvest Buns" (included on both Jesus
Egg and Pop-Eyes) bounces with perky electronic
keyboard percussion, triangle and bottle plinks,
disguising its dark message to cheating spouses:
"Spin we go with a hi-de-ho, with a knee in
the place where the hero roamed." The
sweeter she sounds, the more sinister her ideas.
(The reissued version of Jesus Egg contains an
additional track.)
Dax has a million sounds and at least as many
visions to cram onto vinyl. After the utterly
unaccompanied Pop-Eyes (amazingly recorded,
using more than a dozen different instruments,
on a 4-track tape machine!), her visions were
explored with the help of collaborator Karl
Blake, who shared vocals, writing, performing
and production duties in the fecund Lemon
Kittens. (He appears as a guest musician on
Jesus Egg's "Ostrich"). Around 1984,
she began to work with guitarist/keyboardist
David Knight; he appears on some of Jesus Egg's
tracks. Dax later added guitarist Ian Sturgess,
who plays numerous other instruments, including
jaw harp and harmonica, to her band.
The absolutely brilliant Inky Bloaters finds the
Dax troika merrily plundering the sounds of the
'60s (as well as ancient slinky Middle
Easternisms) with mock sitars, giddy fuzz
guitars and a by-the-numbers songbook that helps
recall everyone from Mungo Jerry ("Inky
Bloaters") to T. Rex ("Big Hollow Man")
to the Jefferson Airplane ("Brimstone in a
Barren Land"). "Flashback" and
"Sleep Has No Property" are among the
enticing potions Dax delivers in this remarkably
inventive stylistic encapsulation of the
Woodstock generation.
The Janice Long Session, an impressive December
1985 radio showing by Dax plus four sidemen,
features four selections from her extensive
catalogue. Dax's wavery singing lacks some of
its usual studio flair and polish, but the
version of "Fizzing Human Bomb" (from
Inky Bloaters) is quite extraordinary.
Dark Adapted Eye, Dax's excellent introduction
to America, mixes more than half of Inky
Bloaters (all the songs mentioned above except
"Sleep") with five new tunes, most
notably the T. Rexy drama of "Cat-House"
and the droney percussive pop of "Whistling
for His Love." Although the credits omit
mention of Sturgess (seemingly a prominent
figure on Inky Bloaters) in favor of newcomer
Pete Farrugia, his contributions don't appear to
have been wiped off the tracks.
After such a string of wonderful records, Dax
took a dive. A deeply disappointing commercial
sell-out, the dreadful Blast the Human Flower (produced
by Stephen Street) foolishly suppresses Dax's
eccentricity in anonymous modern guitar-rock
performed by such trusted associates as Knight,
Farrugia and Blake. Although relieved of its
sinuous character, her voice is the album's only
familiar element — the nearly witless lyrics
are no help. Having erased Dax's boundless pan-culturalism,
a routine sitar-house cover of the Beatles'
"Tomorrow Never Knows" lamely pays lip
service to it.
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