SOUNDTRACK: TRICKY-“Sun Down” (2014).
I really liked Tricky’s first few albums. He came back with a good album last year and now he has a new one called Adrian Thaws. It is currently streaming on NPR.
I listened to the whole album and I like it quite a lot. There’s a decent variety of stuff, most of which is really fantastic. There’s a few tracks I’m not so sure about. But one of the key things is that Tricky’s claustrophobic and slighty off-kilter style is at the forefront here. Especially in this song.
It begins with a kind of tribal sounding beat and then some distorted bass notes. There’s a clock ticking in the background as Tricky’s voice (sometimes doubled) speaks/raps his slow style. It feels close up and dark. When guest vocalist Tirzah sings the female parts, she continues that slightly echoed, slightly muffled style that doesn’t really shed any brightness on the song.
Sure, there’s a chorus, but it’s not the reach out and grab you kind. Rather, it just pushes the song along to its inevitable conclusion. The keyboards noises that end the song create an uneasy feeling as the beat continues until the song ends with a ticking clock.
It’s great to have Tricky back in form.
[READ: July 1, 2014] The Bird King and other sketches
I’ve been marveling over Shaun Tan’s work this summer, so I was delighted to see this book as well. The Bird King is, as the subtitle says, a collection of Tan’s sketches. He gives a brief introduction about how he was unsure whether or not to publish them as they are clearly unfinished, but so many of them are so beautiful in their “what might be” stage, that it’s hard to deny their value.
I mean, the very first picture, called “Bee-eater” is magnificent (it’s at the bottom of the page here). It is part of the first section called Untold Stories. This includes several of the pages from the comic Flinch that I read back in June. I said I didn’t love the pieces then (I didn’t realize he did the cover of that book as well). But I see now that I like the drawings better out of the context of that book, which was more about spooky and unsettling things. I don’t think of Tan’s work as spooky or unsettling, rather it’s more magical, so seeing this series of titled pencil drawings together was really cool.
The second section is called Book Theatre and Film (I didn’t know that he was a creative consultant for Wall-E), and it includes samples from his books (like Eric and The Red Tree) as well as stills from movies that were made of his books like The Lost Thing as well as earlier books which I don’t know like John Marsen’s The Rabbits and covers of other books (like Tender Morsels).
Drawings from Life is mainly more realistic pictures. I especially love Tan’s more outlandish drawings so it’s weird to see these realistic ones (which are also stunningly beautiful and amazingly accurate–which is a lame way of saying he’s really talented).
Notebooks is the final section, the one he really questioned whether to include–it’s basically just pictures from a small notebook that he carries around when he gets ideas. As an artist myself, I love seeing the kind of doodles that real artists do–I love his animals especially–he claims that he makes his aliens by studying animals and them morphing them into aliens, and I can totally see that.
The last few pages describe all the works in the book–how they were drawn and where they originally appear or where they would have appeared. It’s a helpful way to see what he did and what eventually came from his ideas.
This is certainly a book that I would come back to when I am sketching just to see how his creatures evolve.
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