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Sold Date:
September 2, 2015
Start Date:
August 2, 2015
Final Price:
£14.50
(GBP)
Seller Feedback:
34177
Buyer Feedback:
202
This item is not for sale. Gripsweat is an archive of past sales and auctions, none of the items are available for purchase.
General
Article name:
Pale Green Ghosts
Genre:
Pop/Rock
Product type:
LP (Vinyl)
Label:
Partisan
Number of tracks:
11
Tracklist LP - 1
1. John Grant - Pale Green Ghosts
2. John Grant - Black Belt
3. John Grant - GMF
4. John Grant - Vietnam
5. John Grant - It Doesn't Matter to Him
6. John Grant - Why Don't You Love Me Anymore?
7. John Grant - You Don't Have To
8. John Grant - Sensitive New Age Guy
9. John Grant - Ernest Borgnine
10. John Grant - I Hate This Town
11. John Grant - Glacier
Description
Description
The title track from the ex Czars' frontman's second solo outing, the chilly, electro-kissed Pale Green Ghosts, sounds like a Brendan Perry (of Dead Can Dance)-fronted Kraftwerk taking on a James Bond theme. Like much of the album, it's icy, stylish, pompous, and self-obsessed, which is the direct antithesis, at least sonically, of his previous album, the maudlin, confessional Queen of Denmark, which was made with the help of wistful Texas folk-rockers Midlake. Pale Green Ghosts, on the other hand, was recorded in Reykjavik, Iceland with the help of GusGus' Birgir Þórarinsson (Biggi Veira) and while Grant keeps the microscope firmly on himself throughout the 11-track set, he does so with more wit and panache than he did on the record's predecessor. Populated by slinky electro-pop cuts ("Sensitive New Age Guy" and "Black Belt"), saucy, Harry Nilsson-esque, chamber pop fight songs (the saucy "GMF," one of two tracks to feature backing vocals from Sinéad O'Connor), and melodramatic "Return to Oz"-era, Scissor Sisters-inspired ballads ("Vietnam," "I Hate This Town," and "Glacier"), Pale Green Ghosts has a little something for everyone, and while all of the over-sharing can be a little overbearing, Grant's huge, expressive, and oddly comforting voice acts as a sedative, turning even the saddest, raunchiest, and most uncomfortable turn of phrase into a caress. [Pale Green Ghosts was also released on vinyl.] ~ James Christopher Monger
James Christopher Monger
Contributors Artist: John Grant Record Label: Partisan