Pale Saints - Mrs. Dolphin (1990)
Artist: Pale Saints
Title: Mrs. Dolphin
Year Of Release: 1990
Label: 4AD
Genre: Indie Rock, Shoegaze
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:39:31
Total Size: 84 mb | 197 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Mrs. Dolphin
Year Of Release: 1990
Label: 4AD
Genre: Indie Rock, Shoegaze
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:39:31
Total Size: 84 mb | 197 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Pale Saints - Sight of You
02. Pale Saints - She Rides the Waves
03. Pale Saints - Mother Might
04. Pale Saints - Colours and Shapes
05. Pale Saints - A Deeper Sleep for Steven
06. Pale Saints - Half-Life, Remembered
07. Pale Saints - Baby Maker
08. Pale Saints - Two Sick Sisters
09. Pale Saints - A Revelation
10. Pale Saints - The Colour of the Sky
A handy compilation of the band's earliest EPs, Mrs. Dolphin was a Japanese-only release that swiftly became a new point of obsession among the band's fans when it first came out, leading the group themselves to ask that folks not re-buy material for only a bonus song or two. That said, the unfamiliar songs that did surface were quite enjoyable "Colours and Shapes," if one of the more conventional compositions from the band, still has a nicely hyperactive drum shuffle on the verses and a fine Ian Masters lead vocal. "A Deeper Sleep for Steven," an alternate take of the Comforts of Madness track, isn't radically different, but has a little less echo and still makes its attractively woozy way along. As for the rest of the contents, consisting of tracks from Barging Into the Presence of God and Half-Life Remembered, both still sound as wonderful as ever, the often-underappreciated creativity of the band in their rhythm work and sometimes off-kilter melodies still shining through. "Sight of You" remains a deserved high point of U.K. indie as well as being one of the best drone/shoegaze songs ever done, with Masters' sweet singing belying the sharp sentiments of the lyrics while his majestic guitar overdubs are both loud and heavenly. More frenetic combinations of soothing singing and feedback chaos like "She Rides the Waves" and "Baby Maker" still sound truly captivating as well (the latter's shifts between wistful verses and pile-it-on choruses are to die for). A cruel trick for a dear friend play the dark, moody psychedelia of "The Colour of the Sky" at louder-than-usual volume and say nothing about the screaming that begins 50 seconds in.