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The Private Press

 
Album Review: The Private Press

  • Artist: DJ Shadow
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: June 04, 2002
  • Type: Contains explicit content
  • Genre: Electronica

Review

Five years on from his breakout Endtroducing..., hip-hop's reigning recluse showed he still had plenty of tricks up his sleeve -- as well as many more rare grooves left for sampling. Shadow had kept a low recording profile during past years, putting out only a few mix sets alongside a pair of collaborations (Psyence Fiction by UNKLE and Quannum Spectrum). That lack of product actually helps The Private Press display just how good a producer he is; the depth of his production sense and the breadth of his stylistic palette prove just as astonishing the second time out. His style is definitely still recognizable, right from the start; "Fixed Income" and "Giving Up the Ghost" carefully layer wistful-sounding string arrangements overtop cavernous David Axelrod breaks (the latter a bit reminiscent of "Midnight in a Perfect World" from Endtroducing...). From there, though, DJ Shadow seldom treads the same path twice, switching from strutting disco breaks ("Walkie Talkie") to melancholy '60s pop that sounds like the second coming of Procol Harum ("Six Days"). "Right Thing/GDMFSOB" is pure breakers revenge, boasting accelerating, echoey electro breakbeats and enough confidence to recycle Leonard Nimoy's "pure energy" sample and make it work. Later, Shadow turns to pure aggro for the hilarious road-rage comedy of "Mashin' on the Motorway" (with Lateef the Truth Speaker behind the wheel), then summons the conceptual calm of a David Axelrod classic on the very next track with solo piano and a vocal repeating Bible text. Fans may have grown impatient waiting almost six years for the second DJ Shadow LP, but a classic like The Private Press could last at least that long, and maybe longer. [Initially, most copies of The Private Press on sale in America included a track available for download as a bonus.] ~ John Bush, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
(Letter from Home) DJ Shadow (1:09)
Fixed Income Steve Cataldo, Josh Davis DJ Shadow (4:49)
Un Autre Introduction (Lyrics) Josh Davis DJ Shadow (:44)
Walkie Talkie (Lyrics) Josh Davis DJ Shadow (2:27)
Giving Up the Ghost Josh Davis DJ Shadow (6:30)
Six Days (Lyrics) Josh Davis DJ Shadow (5:02)
Mongrel... Josh Davis DJ Shadow (2:20)
...Meets His Maker Josh Davis DJ Shadow (3:02)
Right Thing/Gdmfsob [Instrumental][Version] Josh Davis DJ Shadow (4:20)
Monosylabik (Lyrics) Josh Davis DJ Shadow (6:46)
Mashin' on the Motorway (Lyrics) Josh Davis DJ Shadow (2:58)
Blood on the Motorway (Lyrics) Josh Davis DJ Shadow (9:12)
You Can't Go Home Again (Lyrics) Josh Davis DJ Shadow (7:03)
(Letter from Home) DJ Shadow (:57)

Credits

DJ Shadow (Arranger), DJ Shadow (Mixing), Tim Young (Mastering), Tom Sarig (A&R), DJ Shadow (Producer), Billy Conkel (Assistant), DJ Shadow (Art Direction), Jim Abbiss (Mixing), DJ Shadow (Scratching), Lateef the Truth Speaker (Vocals), A-Lex (Vocals), Neil Tucker (Assistant), Keith Tamashiro (Art Direction), Martel (Vocals), B+ (Photography), Alex Reverberi (Assistant), Brian (Vocals), Nasty Little Man (Publicity)
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Wikipedia: The Private Press
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The Private Press
Studio album by DJ Shadow
Released June 2, 2002
Genre Electronica, trip hop
Length 56:57
Label MCA
Producer DJ Shadow
Professional reviews
DJ Shadow chronology
Preemptive Strike
(1998)
The Private Press
(2002)
The Private Repress
(2003)

The Private Press is the second full-length studio album by DJ Shadow, released on June 2, 2002 on MCA. Although not as critically acclaimed as his 1996 debut breakthrough Endtroducing..., The Private Press still received universal acclaim.[1]

Contents

Release

The single "Six Days" featured a promotional video directed by Wong Kar-wai. "Blood On The Motorway" was featured in a TV commercial for the British mobile phone network O2 and for the BBC advert for Darwin: The Genius of Evolution.

The Limited Edition version of The Private Press has different packaging, and includes "Giving Up The Ghost (original version)" and a bonus disc featuring "Pushin' Buttons Live" (a 12-minute live track featuring Cut Chemist and DJ Nu-Mark).

The album was given a Parental Advisory, because the tracks "Walkie Talkie" and "Mashin' on the Motorway" contain several uses of profanity. An edited version also exists with the profane moments re-edited.

The Private Repress was released in 2003, consisting of remixed tracks and b-sides from the recording era.

The song "Blood on the Motorway" was featured in the ending scene of the film Dot The I.

A remixed version of "Six Days" was featured in the street racing film The Fast and The Furious: Tokyo Drift.

Track listing

  1. (Letter from Home) – 1:09
  2. "Fixed Income" – 4:49
  3. "Un Autre Introduction" – 0:44
  4. "Walkie Talkie" – 2:27
  5. "Giving Up the Ghost" – 6:30
  6. "Six Days" – 5:02
  7. "Mongrel..." – 2:20
  8. "...Meets His Maker" – 3:02
  9. "Right Thing/GDMFSOB" – 4:20
  10. "Monosylabik" – 6:46
  11. "Mashin' on the Motorway" – 2:58
  12. "Blood on the Motorway" – 9:12
  13. "You Can't Go Home Again" – 7:03
  14. (Letter from Home) – 0:57
A limited edition version of the album came with an additional single track CD. The track was "Pushin' Buttons Live" and featured guest appearances from Jurassic 5 DJs, Cut Chemist and DJ Nu-Mark.

Samples

(Letter From Home)

  • A recorded letter ("Recordio-Gram") by Nubella Johnson.

Fixed Income

  • "She’s Gonna Grow on You" by Sensations Fix
  • "Million Grains of Sand" by Marcus
  • "Bright Shadows" by Beaver and Krause
  • "Voyage to Cleavland" by Saint Steven
  • "Love Eyes" by Phluph
  • "Beacon From Mars" by The Kaleidoscope
  • "With Cat like Tread" by Spindrift Libarate

Un Autre Introduction

  • "Jingle Overture Discoteque" by Francois Bernard

Walkie Talkie

Giving Up the Ghost

  • "Bound to Be" by The Dream Academy

Six Days

  • "I Cry in the Morning" by Dennis Olivieri
  • "Six Day War" by Colonel Bagshot
  • "Drummer's Salute" by The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards

Mongrel...Meets His Maker

  • "Strange About Your Hands" by Sensations Fix
  • "Little Waterfalls" by Facedancers
  • "Thoughts" by Iliad
  • "Fantasy World" by James Knight & The Butlers

Right Thing/GDMFSOB

  • "Ask Me Why the Tape Wobbles" by Barry O'Brian
  • "What's On Your Mind" by Information Society
  • "Mooses Saloon" by Smile
  • "Work The Box" by The Children
  • "Disco Duck part 1" by Rick Dees
  • "Here (In the Garden)" by Gypsy
  • "Techno Scratch" by Knights of The Turntables

Monosylabik

  • "Plenty Action" by Soft Touch

Mashin' on the Motorway

  • "Sunshine" by David Wertman
  • "He just wanted us to call him Captain Da. He said you could call me Da-Da. Whatever that meant." from the movie "Roger & Me"

Blood on the Motorway

  • "Pissing In A River" by Patti Smith
  • "It's Easy" by Mark Z.
  • "Gli Uccelli" by Franco Battiato
  • "Let Laughter" by Phil Collins

You Can't Go Home Again

References

External links

DJ Shadow official site


 
 

 

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 "The Private Press" Read more

 

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