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God in Three Persons

 
Album Review: God in Three Persons

  • Artist: The Residents
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1988
  • Total Time: 61:48
  • Type: Soundtrack, Avant-garde, Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Employing the same stress-scheme as Poe's "The Raven" throughout its 62 minutes, "God In Three Persons" is an extended work in "talking-blues" style for narrator, electronic instruments, and a chorus providing comments not to be found in the libretto -- they sing production credits at the beginning, and lines like "something's coming, but not real soon," and "this is a sad part, oh, such a sad part". This surreal and yet directly delivered work is as lovingly human as it is comic with profound experience simply expressed...in short, an original masterpiece of American music, directly in the tradition of the Thomson-Stein and Robert Ashley operas. As in all Residents pieces, the voices are modified electronically and the musical elements are deceptively minimal--most of its 14 episodes have only two chords which, however, still manage to instantly produce the correct atmosphere (Phil Glass-like Wagnerian thirds for mythic import, tonic-dominant in triplets for 50's teenage love story, etc.). There are only passing riffs, more like comments, and the only melody in the whole piece is a wheezy organ quote of the standard doxology hymn "Holy, Holy, Holy (God in Three Persons)."The subject matter is, in part, the derivation of religious and other symbolic images from the naturally erotic... but that's only part of it. Please give this one a listen. ~ "Blue" Gene Tyranny, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Main Title from "God in 3 Persons" The Residents (3:52)
Hard & Tenderly The Residents (4:36)
Devotion? The Residents (3:36)
The Thing About Them The Residents The Residents (4:05)
Their Early Years The Residents (4:39)
Loss of Loved One The Residents (4:50)
The Touch The Residents (3:30)
The Service The Residents (5:02)
Confused (By What I Felt Inside) The Residents (4:37)
Fine Fat Flies The Residents (4:26)
Time The Residents (1:18)
Silver, Sharp and Could Not Care The Residents (3:03)
Kiss of Flesh The Residents (9:39)
Pain and Pleasure The Residents (4:35)

Credits

The Residents (Arranger), The Residents (Composer), The Residents (Producer), The Residents (Main Performer), Richard Mariott (Wind), Richard Mariott (Brass), Richard Mariott (Woodwind), Dr. Toby Mountain (Engineer), Dr. Toby Mountain (Digital Mastering), Laurie Amat (Song Stylist), Steven Jurgensmeyer (Layout Design), Richard Marriott (Brass), Richard Marriott (Woodwind), Henrik Kam (Photography)
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Wikipedia: God in Three Persons
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God in Three Persons
Studio album by The Residents
Released 1988
Genre Experimental rock
Avant-garde
Length 61:48
Label Rykodisc
Producer The Residents
Professional reviews
The Residents chronology
Stars & Hank Forever (1986) God In Three Persons (1988) The King & Eye
(1989)

God in Three Persons is a rock opera/concept album by The Residents, released in 1988. It was about a man 'Mr. X' and two conjoined twins. The songs are all sung in a rhythmic spoken word fashion, similar to talking blues. A companion soundtrack album, featuring most of the instrumental backing tracks, was also released. A central motif of the album is the organ riff from "Double Shot (of My Baby's Love)" by 1960s frat rock band the Swingin' Medallions.

With a 5/5 rating, God in Three Persons is the highest rated Residents album in Allmusic[1].

Storyline

The album is the story of a Colonel Parker-type character called Mr. X, who finds a pair of Siamese twins who have miraculous healing powers. He convinces them to let him manage their careers, touring them as holy healers and conducting services during which they cure the masses. Mr. X begins to lust after the "female" twin, then realizes that the twins' sexes are fluid rather than fixed. When he discovers that the twins are far more worldly than he had believed, and therefore less under his control, he plots a vicious rape in which he severs the connection between the two, splitting them forever. In the end he realizes that his feelings for the twins were not being imposed on him by the twins, but came from within himself.

The story is narrated in the first person by Mr. X. He is accompanied throughout by instrumental music and sung commentary by Laurie Amat, who acts as a "Greek Chorus" (and sings the opening credits on the first track).

Track listing

  1. "Main Title from 'God in 3 Persons'" - 3:52
  2. "Hard & Tenderly" - 4:36
  3. "Devotion?" - 3:36
  4. "The Thing About Them" - 4:05
  5. "Their Early Years" - 4:39
  6. "Loss of a Loved One" - 4:50
  7. "The Touch" - 3:30
  8. "The Service" - 5:02
  9. "Confused (By What I Felt Inside)" - 4:37
  10. "Fine Fat Flies" - 4:26
  11. "Time" - 1:18
  12. "Silver, Sharp and Could Not Care" - 3:03
  13. "Kiss of Flesh" - 9:39
  14. "Pain and Pleasure" - 4:35
  • Soundtrack Tracks:
  1. "Main Titles (God in Three Persons)" - 3:38
  2. "Hard and Tenderly" - 3:44
  3. "The Thing About Them" - 3:25
  4. "Their Early Years" - 2:43
  5. "Loss of a Loved One" - 3:10
  6. "The Touch" - 2:08
  7. "The Service (Part 1)" - 2:51
  8. "The Service (Part 2)" - 1:28
  9. "Confused by What I Felt Inside" - 5:37
  10. "Kiss of Flesh" - 9:25
  11. "Pain and Pleasure" - 2:00

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "God in Three Persons" Read more