Passionoia [Import]
Editorial Reviews
Album Details
Japanese Version featuring a Bonus Track
Passionoia, Music, Black Box Recorder, Pop
Average customer rating:
- Lulling pretty vocals but look out for smart lyrics!
- Where are the lyrics?
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Passionoia
Black Box Recorder
Manufacturer: One Little Indian Us
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| British Alternative
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Indie Rock
| Indie & Lo-Fi
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Indie & Lo-Fi
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Alternative Dance
| Alternative Styles
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Pop Rock
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
General
| Dance Pop
| Dance & DJ
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- England Made Me
- The Facts of Life
- The Worst of Black Box Recorder
- Off My Rocker At the Art School Bop
- Christie Malry's Own Double Entry
ASIN: B0000AYL46
Release Date: 2003-09-02 |
Tracks:
- School Song
- GSOH Q.E.D.
- British Racing Green
- Being Number One
- New Diana
- These Are the Things
- Andrew Ridgley
- When Britain Refused to Sing
- Girls Guide for the Modern Diva
- I Ran All the Way Home
Product Description
1. The School Song
2. GSOH Q.E.D.
3. British Racing Green
4. Being Number One
5. The New Diana
6. These Are The Things
7. Andrew Ridgley
8. When Britain Refused To Sing
9. Girls Guide For The Modern Diva
10. I Ran All The Way Home
Format: CD
Customer Reviews:
Lulling pretty vocals but look out for smart lyrics!.......2006-03-05
My first impression of Black Box Recorder with England Made Me was that Sarah Nixey has a sweet soothing voice and on subsequent releases like The Facts of Life the background music is often sweet and dreamy.However it turns out it all cleverly makes the cynical and clever songs go down smooth.On the spellbinding Passionoia this British group creates spellbinding music from the addictive These Are The Things which will have you singing along to The New Diana(I want to be the new Diana lying on a yacht reading photomagazines visiting the shore occassionally)to the gorgous British Racing Green.Passionoia is that rare creation...a cd that is both beautiful and smart enough to reward your attention to the words.
Where are the lyrics?.......2003-12-29
Like REM, Black Box Recorder seem to have a tradition of not having the lyrics in their album inlays. I had to print the lyrics for their two previous albums off of the Internet, but I can't seem to find the full lyrics for this new album which is really a shame because lyrics are essential with this band. This is the only complaint I have, though. Passionoia is pretty similar to Black Box Recorder's previous album, The Facts Of Life, so if you enjoyed it you'll love this. As usual, the sharp writing team of Haines & Moore keep exploring the beauty of the United Kingdom with an ever-present edge of irony & observation. Here they focus on the country's obsession with the royal family, the death of Princess Diana & rich celebrities. "These Are The Things" was a clever choice for a first single & it's entirely our loss that it didn't get any exposure. "Andrew Ridgley" evokes sweet memories from the 1980's (even if you didn't like Wham!). Basically all of the songs are equally good so I don't wanna do a song by song review as the album is really short & sweet & I want my review to reflect that. Buy this if you like The Facts Of Life, Britpop or Britain in general.
Average customer rating:
- Solid, but surprisingly not captivating
- Goodbye eerie dream pop; hello Giorgio Moroder
- I feel let down, but still want to get up and dance
- Not Afraid To Be Pop
- Their best yet, and one of the best albums of the year
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Passionoia
Black Box Recorder
Manufacturer: One Little Indian Us
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| British Alternative
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Indie Rock
| Indie & Lo-Fi
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Indie & Lo-Fi
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Alternative Dance
| Alternative Styles
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Pop Rock
| Pop
| Styles
| Music
General
| Dance Pop
| Dance & DJ
| Styles
| Music
Alternative Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
ASIN: B00008BXH3
Release Date: 2003-03-10 |
Tracks:
- School Song
- GSOH Q.E.D.
- British Racing Green
- Being Number One
- New Diana
- These Are the Things
- Andrew Ridgley
- When Britain Refused to Sing
- Girls Guide for the Modern Diva
- I Ran All the Way Home
Album Description
Third album from sleaze-pop ironists featuring erstwhile Auteurs mastermind Luke Haines. This follow-up to 2000's 'The Facts of Life' has a more uptempo, electronic feel than before, subversively coating sugary pop over the bitter cynicism of the lyrics.
Customer Reviews:
Solid, but surprisingly not captivating.......2003-09-04
Black Box Recorder's third album represents a departure in more ways than one. Dominated mostly by upbeat drum machine driven melodies, the only really familiar thing here is Sarah Nixey's spoken word/soft melody delivery. This is Black Box Recorder's least rewarding album. One of the main reasons being their lyrical ingenuity. While it's still above average, it falls to bring the songs up to the previous level of quality that was once standard for this group. There is no "bad" song on this album, nothing stands out either. There is no "The Art of Driving", "Kidnaping an Heiress", or "The English Motorway System" here.
The album opener and highlight "The School Song" is entertaining, though they probably should have come up with something a little more innovative for the background chant than "black box recorder". "British Racing Green", and "The New Diana" can be reminding of previous better songs, but are good enough to listen to in the moment. Songs like "Andrew Ridgely" and "These Are the Things" however, should have been b-sides.
Black Box Recorder captured some of the things that make them unique on Passionoia. They just didn't do it as well as they did on "England Made Me", or the even better "The Facts of Life"
Goodbye eerie dream pop; hello Giorgio Moroder.......2003-05-15
"Passionoia" marks an abrupt change in style for this intelligent and seductive band. Whereas on the first two albums the mood was eerily dreamy; now they've made a first-rate disco album. It's sort of a theme album (just as "England Made Me" dealt mainly with British middle-class anomie, and "The Facts of Life" was a teen sex/romance album), with most of the material dealing with the various aspects of fame. Nixey has never sounded better; her raps here are more assured than on the last record. The beats are very good and you will want to dance. A few of their parodic targets are too easy - especially "Andrew Ridgely" (from Wham! - remember?). But more often they are right on and very witty, with takes on Lady Di wanna-bes, supermodels (I think Naomi Campbell in particular) and the fame driven girl on "Being No. 1". Best of all: GSOH Q.E.D. (good sense of humor/quod erat demonstrandum), a delectable dance song in which Nixey raps her way through an increasingly pathetic list of personal ads. Perhaps their best. I hope they get the domestic release.
I feel let down, but still want to get up and dance.......2003-05-08
For all those familiar with Black Box Recorder and the geniuses behind it (John Moore and Luke Haines), you'll already know that perhaps the maturity level behind the music is low (not obscene, just elementary, specifically songs like "Facts of Life"). The fact is, though, that the British band Black Box Recorder is so fun to listen to with sexed up electronics, vocals and instrumentation.
I must say that I fell in love with the band with their second true LP, "The Facts of Life." Sarah Nixey's voice comes into the tracks as soft whispers, usually silently sexy, but on this release, many times her vocals are drown out by the back-up vocals, like in "GSOH Q.E.D." and "British Racing Green." This makes me sad. As kitchy, catchy and cute as the vocals are, they just aren't up to par.
The first time I think the album could be getting better is in "British Racing Green" when we hear a majority of solo from Nixey with just a little bass going in the background, the topics once again dealing with British culture, rock 'n' roll and love (I think it could be safely said that these topics pretain to most of their songs).
"Being Number One" starts with great, slightly dark electronics and seems to be one of those songs you really would get on the dance floor with. Here, we hear the use of back-up vocals ENHANCING what's already there, and thank god. I think at this point, you can safely assume that Black Box Recorder is good again (and thank god).
"The New Diana" makes me want to classify Black Box Recorder as Eletroclash, the music movement of course dealing with image over musicianship, and I think we can see here that maybe Black Box Recorder is just that, this sexy band with a sexy lead singer and sexy subjects. "I want to be the new Diana / visiting the shore occasionally / lying on the yacht reading photo magazines," the song goes. Comparing Sarah Nixey to Princess Diana of course may raise some eyebrows, but when you listen to this... I guess you get the feel for the glamour of both Diana and Black Box.
Perhaps the MOST FUN, SEXIEST song on the album is "Andrew Ridgley." "I was brought up to the sound of the synthesizer / I learned to dance to the sound of electronic drums" and other lyrics hinting to the roots of BBR redeams this album somehow. Maybe it's that... or that you really want to just move to this song. Damn catchy melody!
Coming at a time when the electroclash movement is at its height in popularity with bands like Ladytron, W.I.T. and singular artists like Peaches, Felix Da Housecat and Miss Kittin already becoming well-known in the UK and across Europe, BBR delivers a more poppy, lo-fi version of what could become.
The thing is, Black Box Recorder used to be magnificent. Here, I feel they're only good, overall. "England Made Me" and "The Facts of Life" were just such great albums, I think that this is stepping down a little, not stepping up, which is unfortunate.
Still, this is a good album. Get "Facts of Life" first though... it's a brilliant album after a couple listens.
Check out if fans of: Ladytron, Miss Kittin, W.I.T. (Whatever It Takes), Cat Power, Goldfrapp, Ida, Arab Strap, Belle & Sebastian, or maybe even Beth Orton
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Not Afraid To Be Pop.......2003-04-30
Black Box Recorder goes lush pop! If their previous record was BBR doing Air, Passionoia sounds a bit like Different Class PULP if BBR's Sarah Nixey was singing instead of Jarvis Cocker. There are lots of great hooks and fat sounds on this record. It's nice to hear a group not trying to obscure their pop side, which seemed to be the trend of the 90s and early 2000s.
My criticisms are minor. Sometimes, they are trying too hard to be clever. The "We are English, We are Cheeky, and We are Black Box Recorder" routine wears on the nerves after a while. I also wish they'd use other vocalists in addition to Sarah Nixey's. She can do the timid, fey, girlie thing - but this album rocks in places where her vocals don't.
Their best yet, and one of the best albums of the year.......2003-04-26
So far, there's no word of a U.S. release for this album. With any luck that situation will be corrected soon, as "Passionoia" is the best Black Box Recorder album yet. The sound is a shade brighter than their past efforts-- a little more emphasis on synthesizers, pretty much an even split between live drums and programmed rhythms-- but this only serves to enhance the cynicism and bleakness of the words Sarah Nixey sings in her incongruously ethereal voice. The album opener, "School Song", extends the grand British tradition of castigating the rigidity and individuality-destroying aspects of the educational system, with Nixey speak-singing the role of the cold, embittered teacher; and things only get darker from there, with tales of romantic disaster ("GSOH Q.E.D.") and unhealthy celebrity obsession ("The New Diana"), all set to stunningly gorgeous melodies. There's even a trace of hip-hop influence in the semi-rapped section of "When Britain Refused To Sing"-- and believe me, it works a whole lot better than Madonna's clumsy flow on "American Life". This is genuinely uncompromising music, all the more cutting for its deceptively upbeat sonic surfaces, and it's one of the finest albums of the year so far.
Average customer rating:
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Passionoia
Black Box Recorder
Manufacturer: One Little Indian
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| British Alternative
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Indie Rock
| Indie & Lo-Fi
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Indie & Lo-Fi
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Alternative Dance
| Alternative Styles
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Rock
| Styles
| Music
Alternative Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
ASIN: B00008QSD0
Release Date: 2003-04-29 |
Tracks:
- School Song
- GSOH Q.E.D.
- British Racing Green
- Being Number One
- New Diana
- These Are the Things
- Andrew Ridgley
- When Britain Refused to Sing
- Girls Guide for the Modern Diva
- I Ran All the Way Home
Average customer rating:
|
Passionoia
Black Box Recorder
Manufacturer: Imperial
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| British Alternative
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Indie & Lo-Fi
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Alternative Dance
| Alternative Styles
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Alternative Rock
| Imports
| Stores
| Music
ASIN: B00009SF6B
Release Date: 2003-08-04 |
Album Details
Japanese Version featuring a Bonus Track
Average customer rating:
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Passionoia
Black Box Recorder
Manufacturer: Msi Music Corp
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
ASIN: B0000DEPYK
Release Date: 2003-03-03 |
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