Prize

Prize Artist: Arto Lindsay
Label: Righteous Babe
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 748731701628
EAN: 0748731701628
ASIN: B00001T3GB


Release Date: 1999-10-19

Prize


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Tracks:

  1. Ondina
  2. The Prize
  3. Pode Ficar
  4. Prefeelings
  5. Modos
  6. Ex-Preguica
  7. Unsure
  8. Resemblances
  9. O Nome Dela
  10. Tone
  11. Interior Life
  12. E Ai Esqueco

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  3. Subtle Body
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Amazon.com's Best of 1999

With an abundance of nonchalance, Arto Lindsay opens <I>Prize</I>, his voice lazing over simple guitar strums, jumpy hand percussion, and more. Lindsay's shown himself a rich kaleidoscopic vortex, where vastly different music intermingles, creating a sleek display of his aesthetic appetite. He's obviously schooled in Os Mutantes and Gilberto Gil but he spikes every trace of his fellow Brazilian music makers with added layers originating in the No Wave and loft-jazz scenes. --Andrew Bartlett

Amazon.com

Arto Lindsay's a polynational multistylist of the first order. His Portuguese and English lyrics speak dually to the Brazilian Tropicalia movement and an experimental postpunk fluidity that never shies away from dropping jazzy horn licks amid scrabbling noise episodes. <I>Prize</I> is just that, a full-body and mind assault on singularity, grafting acoustic guitar elements à la Antonio Carlos Jobim into a stew of subtle horn charts, dual-language vocals, and thunking percussion. And then Lindsay delves, heart on sleeve, into a lovely ballad, always with a twist and yet always powerful in the way Tropicalia has consistently been. His fondness for electronics and samples comes to the fore severally, with squiggles and washes of synthetic sound knitting the music warmly but also challengingly. On par with Lindsay's best work, <I>Prize</I> makes dozens of bold statements by a man who seems to make only bold statements. --Andrew Bartlett

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Another amazing update of the bossa nova sound.......2002-11-16

Brazilian-born, New York-based bossa nova pioneer Arto Lindsay is a marvel. This is his fourth full album of amazing "novo bossa nova" updates of the classic sound created in the late '50s by Antonio Carlos Jobim and Joao Gilberto -- Lindsay adds a New Yorker's sense of irony, dread and sexuality to the mix, as well as heavy doses of funk, soul and electronica, bubbling under the surface. This disc has some mildly jagged touches, like the dreamy/noisy guitar fill on "Ex-Preguica", which sounds like something straight off a Roy Montgomery album. I still have no idea what his lyrics are about -- I'm always too lulled by the music, and too lazy to read the lyric sheet -- but it really doesn't matter. The music is delicious. For me, the only sour note on here was on the art-rap on "Pode Ficar," which wasn't icky, just a bit boring. Otherwise, this album is ace bunny killer -- HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.

4 out of 5 stars Arto good, fire friend!.......2000-05-14

Arto's pop-self comes as a surprise to those who witnessed his no-wave beginnings or even his later stuff in the earliest Golden Palomino's projects. The closest comparison here might be Caetano Veloso (who has repeatedly worked with Arto, most notably on '89's Estrangeiro ), but Arto's a much more limited vocalist, he uses his wispy-soulful song/talk really beautifully. Intoning, insinuating, suggesting, erotic or just dreamy-descriptive, his voice is the perfect instrument for these songs. Arto's craft is a subtle, shifting mix of Brazilian avant-pop, trip-hop, funk, hallucinatory folk-jazz, and soul balladry, all put together around a feeling of remarkable ease, as seductive as this is, it feels like the goal has already been reached, repeatedly, even exhaustively. Post-coital sex pop in a moody sci-fi rhythmic cultural mutation mode. His signing to Ani Difranco's label has me dreaming of a collaboration between the two of them, maybe an album of erotic duets, or just some remixing. Anyway Arto's pop work has been consistently excellent since his 80's work in the Ambitious Lovers.Also highly recommended are; O Corpo Sutil/The Subtle Body (`96), Mundo Civilizado (`97), Noon Chill (`98) all on Bar/None.

5 out of 5 stars simply enchanting..........2000-05-04

i've been a big fan of arto lindsay for a while, mainly familiar with his work in DNA and the fabulous Arto Lindsay Trio record, "Aggregates 1-26." (i guess i'm the hopeless romantic sonic youth/glenn branca fan a previous reviewer mentioned.) i had been wary of his more recent work however, surmising from the reviews i had read and the odd song i heard on the radio that he had moved away from the noise-skronk guitar of his younger days that appealed to me so much. however, i saw this in a store when it came out last year, and on a whim, i picked it up. from the first listen i was completely amazed...

this album is rooted in two worlds, the brazilian tropicalia music of the '60s (and Arto's youth) and the New York underground of the past two decades. the music is a wonderful synthesis of these influences; it is passionate and sensual, but with a subtly powerful backbone that is incredibly affecting. in many places the music almost sounds like electronica, except that it's played by real musicians with real instruments, and not by a computer, which lends it a wholly organic feel. the mostly supple mood is only strengthened in the moments when the noisey undercurrent threatens to break through, most notably in "the prize" and "prefeelings." while i've always been fascinated by arto's guitar playing, which is wholly otherworldly, but fleetingly glimpsed on this album, i would be remiss if i didn't also mention his equally superior talents as a singer, lyricist and songwriter. the vocals complement the music perfectly, and the abstract poeticism of the lyrics manage to simultaneously sound intelligently self-concious and emotionally arresting. every track on this album is a stunning. as an added bonus, the last song, the beautiful "e ai esueco," features the talents of members of blonde redhead, firmly cementing this albums place in my heart as not only one of the top ten albums of '99, but all time as well.

5 out of 5 stars Jobim meets Morphine..........2000-02-19

Generally agreeing with the other reviews posted, I'll add that this is just a totally cool disc - eye-catching packaging, and a beautiful, subtle vibe. At times it grabs you by the throat, but usually you feel like you're floating on top of the melodies. This sensation is enhanced greatly by the fluidity of the basslines and the overall spaciousness of the music.

I enjoyed this unique musical fusion immensely and hope you do too - DJAdrian

4 out of 5 stars Pricklier and pricklier each time.......1999-12-18

If you can take your beautiful minimalist sambas and bossa novas spiked with jagged bursts of howling noise, grab it. It's a lovely, haunting record, and this time around he's added the earsplitting noise guitar he started with 20 years ago. A risky move, but when it works, it _works_. The downside is that a few songs, while good in their own right, are too aggressive to be pretty. The last three records worked as a geek-intellectual Barry White or Al Green. This one gets rougher.

Music Album:

  1. A Distant Shore ~ Tracey Thorn
  2. A Kind of Closure ~ Tram
  3. Ashes in the Brittle Air ~ Black Tape for a Blue Girl
  4. Live ~ Jan Akkerman
  5. The Undefined Design ~ Man on Fire
  6. Keep the Change ~ Apologetix
  7. In and Out of Focus ~ Focus
  8. Golden Era of the 50's ~ Various Artists
  9. Smoke Signals ~ Matching Mole
  10. The Fags ~ The Fags

Music Album

Music Album

Music CD

Waves From Albert Ayler ~ Mount Everest Trio

Inside Hi-Fi

Volume 1 ~ George Lewis

Cafe Bohemia, Vol. 1: 1955 ~ Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Vol. 2 ~ John Altenburgh

Steamin' With The Miles Davis Quintet ~ Miles Davis

L' Orso Bruno ~ Antonello Venditti

Scottish World Cup Anthems ~ Various Artists

Cecilia Militao ~ Cecilia Militao

Jorge Aragao Ao Vivo ~ Jorge Aragao