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Is This Desire? The Demos
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Is This Desire? The Demos
Current price: $29.99
Barnes and Noble
Is This Desire? The Demos
Current price: $29.99
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On
Is This Desire?
,
PJ Harvey
challenged expectations with her most daring production choices yet -- which is saying something, given the abrasive sound of her breakthrough
Rid of Me
. Working once again with
To Bring You My Love
collaborator
Flood
, she went all in on that album's industrial and electronic flirtations, giving her rock a chrome-plated edge and surrounding her desolate ballads in atmospheres that echoed
Tricky
and
Portishead
. As
Is This Desire? The Demos
reveals,
Harvey
's initial sketches for the album were even more polarized in their dynamics and moods. The seething electronics on "Joy" are still startling in the low-res form they take here, while "The Wind"'s layered whispers are even softer, albeit less distant, than in their final incarnation. Though some of these recordings understandably feel unfinished, others gain surprising depth from a simpler approach. The tinny trip-hop beat and
's raw vocals on "Angelene" have an appealing nakedness, but the demo of "My Beautiful Leah" shows the song needed the full studio treatment to become the industrial rock dirge it was meant to be. "The River" remains hauntingly beautiful with a few synths hinting at the scale of its final form; similarly, "The Sky Lit Up" remains electrifying stripped of its spacey keyboards. On the demo of "Is This Desire?,"
's voice is closer and more magnetic, underscoring that it would have been a highlight on any of her albums. As with her previous collections of demos,
unearths connections within her body of work. Filled with dark, grinding distortion, this version of "A Perfect Day Elise" emphasizes its links to
tracks like "Down by the Water" and "Meet Ze Monsta." Likewise,
's bruised soprano and the subdued melody of "The Garden" foreshadow
White Chalk
Let England Shake
, where she proved beyond a doubt that her hushed confessions could be just as compelling as her head-on confrontations. Starker yet somehow more fully formed than some of her other demo albums,
is an illuminating listen. Fans who were initially perplexed by
's chilly aesthetic just might gain a fuller appreciation of the album through these versions of its songs -- and as always, it's fascinating to hear
's original concepts. ~ Heather Phares
Is This Desire?
,
PJ Harvey
challenged expectations with her most daring production choices yet -- which is saying something, given the abrasive sound of her breakthrough
Rid of Me
. Working once again with
To Bring You My Love
collaborator
Flood
, she went all in on that album's industrial and electronic flirtations, giving her rock a chrome-plated edge and surrounding her desolate ballads in atmospheres that echoed
Tricky
and
Portishead
. As
Is This Desire? The Demos
reveals,
Harvey
's initial sketches for the album were even more polarized in their dynamics and moods. The seething electronics on "Joy" are still startling in the low-res form they take here, while "The Wind"'s layered whispers are even softer, albeit less distant, than in their final incarnation. Though some of these recordings understandably feel unfinished, others gain surprising depth from a simpler approach. The tinny trip-hop beat and
's raw vocals on "Angelene" have an appealing nakedness, but the demo of "My Beautiful Leah" shows the song needed the full studio treatment to become the industrial rock dirge it was meant to be. "The River" remains hauntingly beautiful with a few synths hinting at the scale of its final form; similarly, "The Sky Lit Up" remains electrifying stripped of its spacey keyboards. On the demo of "Is This Desire?,"
's voice is closer and more magnetic, underscoring that it would have been a highlight on any of her albums. As with her previous collections of demos,
unearths connections within her body of work. Filled with dark, grinding distortion, this version of "A Perfect Day Elise" emphasizes its links to
tracks like "Down by the Water" and "Meet Ze Monsta." Likewise,
's bruised soprano and the subdued melody of "The Garden" foreshadow
White Chalk
Let England Shake
, where she proved beyond a doubt that her hushed confessions could be just as compelling as her head-on confrontations. Starker yet somehow more fully formed than some of her other demo albums,
is an illuminating listen. Fans who were initially perplexed by
's chilly aesthetic just might gain a fuller appreciation of the album through these versions of its songs -- and as always, it's fascinating to hear
's original concepts. ~ Heather Phares