GOODBYE & HELLO
仕様 | 価格 | 新品 | 中古品 |
CD, インポート, 2023/4/14
"もう一度試してください。" | インポート | ¥1,593 | ¥2,831 |
CD, 2006/10/25
"もう一度試してください。" | 1枚組 |
—
| — | ¥225 |
CD, 1998/8/26
"もう一度試してください。" | 1枚組 |
—
| — | ¥449 |
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曲目リスト
1 | No Man Can Find The War |
2 | Carnival Song |
3 | Pleasant Street |
4 | Hallucinations |
5 | I Never Asked To Be Your Mountain |
6 | Once I Was |
7 | Phantasmagoria In Two |
8 | Knight-Errant |
9 | Goodbye And Hello |
10 | Morning Glory |
商品の説明
商品の説明
WEA 755960896; WEA ITALIANA - Italia; Pop Internazionale
Amazonレビュー
Before Tim Buckley got carried away with jazz rhythms in the 1970s, he made profoundly moving folk-rock albums such as Goodbye and Hello which showcased his stunning vocal range, thoughtful lyrics and a penchant for imbuing songs with surprisingly soulful, non-blue-eyed grooves and infectious jangle-pop melodies. This, his second album (recorded in 1967 when he was only 20), runs the gamut. Here Buckley hints at the sensual howl that would blossom in the 1970s ("I Never Asked to Be Your Mountain", "Pleasant Street", "Hallucinations"). While he goes into hippie-poet-deep-thinker mode on a few songs, it's the excellent folk-soul tracks that win out. --Lorry Fleming
登録情報
- メーカーにより製造中止になりました : いいえ
- 製品サイズ : 14.4 x 12.8 x 0.99 cm; 92.13 g
- メーカー : ELEKT
- EAN : 0075596089623
- 商品モデル番号 : 327583641
- オリジナル盤発売日 : 1990
- レーベル : ELEKT
- ASIN : B000005ITY
- ディスク枚数 : 1
- Amazon 売れ筋ランキング: - 452,467位ミュージック (ミュージックの売れ筋ランキングを見る)
- - 96,014位ロック (ミュージック)
- - 135,857位輸入盤
- カスタマーレビュー:
カスタマーレビュー
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トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
他の国からのトップレビュー
1. A great chunky pressing.
2. Lovely Electra label.
3. Flat as a pancake!
4. Gatefold sleeve is well made and printed.
5. Sounds fantastic.
He also uses occasional references to exotic places or to an earlier time. He sings of a lover who will "spin you, he'll weave you 'round his emerald loom". He mentions gold and castles, kings and queens, a fiddler, a "soldier...on foreign sands", a hunter who "brought home fresh meat". "Morning Glory" is a dialogue with "The Hobo", a term you don't hear very often now. And the song "Knight-Errant" is a troubadour song if ever there was one.
In general, he sings of big, important topics - war ("Have you each and all gone blind: Is the war inside your mind?"), disappointment in love ("I saw you walking only yesterday/When I ran to catch you, you disappeared and the street was gray."), conditions of various people in society and society's effect on them ("The velocity addicts explode on the highways/Ignoring the journey and moving so fast...And I wave goodbye to speed/And smile hello to a rose"). He uses extremely varied styles of music, in addition to folk-rock, to put across these ideas. "Carnival Song" very appropriately uses a background of circus music. "Pleasant Street", one of the best tracks, has a dirge-like melody for the verses, each of which ends in descending notes while Tim sings "...down, down, down, down". The effect is riveting. "Hallucinations" contains sections that are similar to religious chanting. In "I Never Asked To Be Your Mountain" we hear eastern/exotic sounds including the percussion. "Goodbye And Hello" is a multi-part epic that combines folk-rock with medieval instruments (recorder, harpsichord), and classical and jazz elements. The medieval sounds can be heard on other tracks as well. "Morning Glory" ends the album as a 60's ballad backed by an inspirational choir.
I find the last verse of "Goodbye And Hello" very significant. It is both descriptive of 60's society and prophetic at the same time. After going into detail about "The antique people" who are "fading out slowly", and announcing that "The new children will live for the elders have died", he closes the verse, and the song, with "And I wave goodbye to America/And smile hello to the world". To me, the antique people are "the establishment" in 60's society, with their old, rigid ideas, and the new children are the young people whose ideas will change that society. This is not very radical. The surprising part is the last line. To me, waving goodbye to America and smiling hello to the world is an expression of globalization, a concept that was not discussed in 1967 nearly as much as it is now. It seems that Tim was ahead of his time in more ways than in musical experimentation.
I have read that Tim's albums were not commercially successful. I guess this explains why I missed this extraordinary talent and variety until now. I certainly intend to buy other albums to see where else he can take me.