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Cranes|Future Songs

Future Songs

Cranes

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After an extended absence from recording, Cranes returned in 2001 with a slightly different lineup (bassist Paul Smith and drummer Jon Callender replacing long-standing veteran Francombe and Ros for live shows), their own label, Dadaphonic, and a fantastic new album, Future Songs. After the enjoyable if fairly conventional alt-rock effort that was Population Four, Future Songs is an excellent breath of fresh air, not least because it reflects some newer influences and approaches that the Shaws, who recorded the entire collection almost entirely on their own, had discovered and absorbed. While Alison Shaw's immediately recognizable singing voice had remained unchanged in general tone, her words were now heard more clearly than ever, while the refined gloom of Loved took on a new incarnation here, ever more cinematic and elegant than before. Jim Shaw played everything on Future Songs in a harking back to the group's earliest origins (Alison and on one song Tom Hazel contribute some guitar), and it's little surprise that, after 15 years of music-making, his ear for performance and arranging is so fine as it is. "Future Song" itself easily builds on the past -- its Cure-like combination of guitar and keyboards so immediately evocative of the early-'90s connection between the two groups. As the album progresses, though, hints of everything from experimental techno (check the beats and bleeps on "Don't Wake Me Up") to classic film soundtracks can be heard in the music. Aside from the brief clatter-collage of "Eight," the brusque industrial harshness of the earliest days is long gone, while even the queasy feel of songs like "Lilies" is now sublimated into a calmer but no less compelling swoon, as heard on "Flute Song." Other highlights of this remarkable album include the low-key guitar quiver of "Sunrise" and the pop-but-not-schlock sweet melancholy of "Fragile" and "Everything For."
© Ned Raggett /TiVo

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Future Songs

Cranes

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1
Future Song
00:04:31

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

2
Submarine
00:03:29

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

3
Flute Song
00:04:15

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

4
Sunrise
00:05:27

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

5
Don't Wake Me Up
00:03:28

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

6
Driving in the Sun
00:05:04

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

7
Fragile
00:05:01

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

8
Eight
00:01:08

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

9
Even When
00:02:54

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

10
Everything for
00:02:53

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

11
The Maker of Heavenly Trousers
00:03:35

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

12
Fragile (Remix)
00:04:31

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

13
Don’t Wake Me Up (Remix)
00:03:35

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

14
In the Reeds
00:03:15

Cranes, MainArtist

2002 Dadaphonic 2002 Dadaphonic

Album review

After an extended absence from recording, Cranes returned in 2001 with a slightly different lineup (bassist Paul Smith and drummer Jon Callender replacing long-standing veteran Francombe and Ros for live shows), their own label, Dadaphonic, and a fantastic new album, Future Songs. After the enjoyable if fairly conventional alt-rock effort that was Population Four, Future Songs is an excellent breath of fresh air, not least because it reflects some newer influences and approaches that the Shaws, who recorded the entire collection almost entirely on their own, had discovered and absorbed. While Alison Shaw's immediately recognizable singing voice had remained unchanged in general tone, her words were now heard more clearly than ever, while the refined gloom of Loved took on a new incarnation here, ever more cinematic and elegant than before. Jim Shaw played everything on Future Songs in a harking back to the group's earliest origins (Alison and on one song Tom Hazel contribute some guitar), and it's little surprise that, after 15 years of music-making, his ear for performance and arranging is so fine as it is. "Future Song" itself easily builds on the past -- its Cure-like combination of guitar and keyboards so immediately evocative of the early-'90s connection between the two groups. As the album progresses, though, hints of everything from experimental techno (check the beats and bleeps on "Don't Wake Me Up") to classic film soundtracks can be heard in the music. Aside from the brief clatter-collage of "Eight," the brusque industrial harshness of the earliest days is long gone, while even the queasy feel of songs like "Lilies" is now sublimated into a calmer but no less compelling swoon, as heard on "Flute Song." Other highlights of this remarkable album include the low-key guitar quiver of "Sunrise" and the pop-but-not-schlock sweet melancholy of "Fragile" and "Everything For."
© Ned Raggett /TiVo

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