Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

In Ribbons

 
Album Review: In Ribbons

  • Artist: Pale Saints
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: April 14, 1992
  • Total Time: 55:48
  • Genre: Rock

Review

An argument could be made for In Ribbons topping the Pale Saints' debut, and it would be a rather solid one. Thanks to yet another stellar job by "knob twiddler of the mighty atmospheric pop bands" Hugh Jones, the Pale Saints sound full and polished, gleaming and bright. What makes this a lesser record in comparison to its predecessor is the absence of that loose sense of adventure from before. The songs are strong, the musicianship is improved, and Meriel Barham's presence as second guitarist and vocalist provides for more muscularity, but In Ribbons is missing the slightly perverse sense of experimentation that The Comforts of Madness had in spades. The unpredictability is gone, which is one of the few downsides of a band whose members are getting to know each other musically. That doesn't prevent In Ribbons from being a great record, stacked to the gills with great songs. Barham's sporadic contributions provide a fine spoil to those of Ian Masters. The mid-tempo moodiness of "Thread of Light" benefits from Jones' excellent treatment of her voice, with swooning backgrounds that dart between the left and right channels. (The verses bear odd sonic resemblance to Duran Duran's "Save a Prayer" -- no kidding.) Her reading of Mazzy Star's "Blue Flower" tops the original, and "Baby Maker" also makes the grade with its dizzied liveliness. Masters' love for the abandonment of rock constructs strikes upon a zenith on "Hair Shoes," a drumless cluster of limpidly jousting guitars that simultaneously jiggle, rattle, moan, twinkle, and reverberate. His miasmatic vocals seal the track off as a brilliant approximation of the oceanic wash of 69-era AR Kane. Otherwise, more accessible fare, like the sprightly "Throwing Back the Apple" (a single) and the melancholy epic "Hunted," are also accountable for the record's success. Though these tracks' more traditionally structured material doesn't sound a great deal different from many of the Pale Saints' peers, the wan voice of Masters -- who sounds less world-weary here -- clearly sets this unit apart. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Throwing Back the Apple Pale Saints Pale Saints
Ordeal Pale Saints Pale Saints
Thread of Light Pale Saints Pale Saints
Shell Pale Saints Pale Saints
There Is No Day Pale Saints Pale Saints
Hunted (Lyrics) Pale Saints Pale Saints
Blue Flower Peter Blegvad, Anthony Moore Pale Saints
Hair Shoes (Lyrics) Pale Saints Pale Saints
Babymaker (Lyrics) Pale Saints Pale Saints
Liquid Pale Saints Pale Saints
Neverending Night Pale Saints Pale Saints
Featherframe Pale Saints Pale Saints
A Thousand Stars Burst Open Pale Saints Pale Saints

Credits

Phil Ault (Engineer), Chris Cooper (Drums), Chris Bigg (Artwork), Meriel Barham (Guitar), Stephen Bray (Engineer), Chris Bigg (Design), Vaughan Oliver (Artwork), Hugh Jones (Producer), Paul Tipler (Engineer), Vaughan Oliver (Design), Caroline LaVelle (Cello), Ian Masters (Group Member), Meriel Barham (Vocals), Graeme Naysmith (Guitar), Goetz Botzenhardt (Engineer), Kevin Westenberg (Photography), Hugh Jones (Engineer), Pale Saints (Arranger), Hugh Jones (Arranger), Kevin Hurley (Engineer), Alan Branch (Engineer), Pirate (Model Maker), John O'Donnell (Engineer)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 
Learn More
shred
lasagne
tagliatelle

What does ribbon mean? Read answer...
What rhymes with ribbons? Read answer...
How do you get sun ribbon? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Are ribbons recycable?
What does the ribbon symbolize?
Why does ribbon curl?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

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