Portishead – Dummy

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The classic debut Portishead album from 1994. The collaboration of studio whiz Geoff Barrow and singer Beth Gibbons,Dummywas made at the same time as a short film noir calledTo Kill a Dead Man, and the same approach - gloomy, tormented, and wildly melodram

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The classic debut Portishead album from 1994. The collaboration of studio whiz Geoff Barrow and singer Beth Gibbons,Dummywas made at the same time as a short film noir calledTo Kill a Dead Man, and the same approach – gloomy, tormented, and wildly melodramatic – permeates the album.

“Sour Times” (the hit in which Gibbons cries, again and again, “nobody loves me, it’s true”) and the more cryptic “Glory Box” are the lynchpins of the album, defining its sound: dark flashes of old soul and film music, dehumanised electronic bleeps, Gibbons emoting like she’s consumed by shame, and a bass-and-beat pulse derived from the slow bump and grind of the Bristol scene that spawned Barrow’s old collaborators.

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Portishead Dummy

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A TAV Essential Listening Album Portishead built upon the foundations laid by its trip hop predecessors to popularise the genrewith a sensuous, shadowy, and sultry debut album for the ages.Led by the chilling, wounded fragility of Beth Gibbons sombre vocal

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A TAV Essential Listening Album

Portishead built upon the foundations laid by its trip hop predecessors to popularise the genrewith a sensuous, shadowy, and sultry debut album for the ages.

Led by the chilling, wounded fragility of Beth Gibbons sombre vocals and the spectacularly desolate atmosphere crafted by multi-instrumentalist Geoff Barrow, Dummys entrancing amalgamation of slow-beat blues, jazz- inflected soul, dark breakbeats and hip-hop scratches feels like it was composed to backdrop the most mysterious film noir that was never filmed.

As cool as it is warm, as sexy as it is sad,as lonely as it is lovely – Dummy is a strangely irresistible, avant-garde exploration of trip hops smokiest bars and gloomiest alleyways. An absolute subliminal gem. –

Portishead’s album debut is a brilliant, surprisingly natural synthesis of claustrophobic spy soundtracks, dark breakbeats inspired by frontman Geoff Barrow’s love of hip-hop, and a vocalist (Beth Gibbons) in the classic confessional singer/songwriter mold.

Beginning with the otherworldly theremin and martial beats of “Mysterons,” Dummy hits an early high with “Sour Times,” a post-modern torch song driven by a Lalo Schifrin sample. The chilling atmospheres conjured by Adrian Utley’s excellent guitar work and Barrow’s turntables and keyboards prove the perfect foil for Gibbons, who balances sultriness and melancholia in equal measure.

Occasionally reminiscent of a torchier version of Sade, Gibbons provides a clear focus for these songs, with Barrow and company behind her laying down one of the best full-length productions ever heard in the dance world.

Where previous acts like Massive Attack had attracted dance heads in the main, Portishead crossed over to an American, alternative audience, connecting with the legion of angst-ridden indie fans as well.

Better than any album before it, Dummy merged the pinpoint-precise productions of the dance world with pop hallmarks like great songwriting and excellent vocal performances. (via John Bush,AllMusic)

Portisheads Mercury Prize-winning debut takes just seconds to spook its audience. An eerie drone, scratches that sound like alien chatter, a snapping beat that cracks with hip hop attitude but treads cautiously for fear of stepping on a crack and tumbling into whatever unholy chasm music like this is capable of opening. Mysterons title is apt named after the Martian race from Captain Scarlett, its an emission from a faraway planet of secrets and shadows. It opens the groups singular soundworld in a way thats exquisitely discomforting.

True, the constituents that make up much of this collection are easily traced back to dub, to soul, and especially to hip hop; the array of scratch effects, loops and samples (the best being the slurry use of Johnnie Rays version of Ill Never Fall in Love Again, on Biscuit) betraying its makers affections for very terrestrial traits. But its the manner in which the pieces come together that makes Dummy special to this day. While 16 years old, it sounds remarkably fresh perhaps because its minimalist design has been recently returned to the Mercury winners circle by The xx; perhaps because the mixture of this backdrop with the vocals of Beth Gibbons remains one of pop musics most compelling combinations.

While producer Geoff Barrow is the heart of Dummy, and Adrian Utley another just-as-vital organ, the soul is Gibbons. Its her presence that made Portishead truly stand out from the post-Blue Lines crowd, a group of artists loosely categorised as trip hop. Its important not to exaggerate her role in taking the group from their West Country roots to worldwide acclaim, to the detriment of her bandmates, but her voice a ghostly, fractured wail that sounds as if its crept from an Edwardian closet thats been sealed since 1902 plays a vital part in ensuring this set side-steps convention. Hers is a voice that cant be copied, coming from the back of her mouth, shaped by throat rather than tongue and lips; it creaks and moans like Mary Celeste decking, every bit as shivers-down-the-spine inducing as Barrows off-kilter turntable work and unsettling electronics.

And its not Gibbons words that do the damage its how theyre said. Roads the sort of contemporary masterpiece that in a parallel universe is being wheeled out on The X Factor and reducing Simon Cowell to floods of tears is the best example of how Gibbons technique surpasses any lyrical content. The tone is familiar, an unspecified collapse, potential or assured but surely emotional, is spoken of; but the way she signs off a repeated line with a certain pronunciation of “wrong” is utterly arresting. Its a shapeless sigh of beaten-down anguish, and theres more heartache and pain in this single second than a whole rack of by-the-book balladeers.

Imitators have come and gone, but no act has reproduced the disquieting magnificence conjured here except Portishead themselves. The bands next album, an eponymous effort of 1997, distanced them from the coffee tables that (wholly unexpectedly) had made room for Dummy; to some its a superior listen, though a lot colder and harder than its predecessor. And their overdue comeback of 2008, Third, embraced krautrock motifs to take an established sound into a new dimension. But to many, Dummy is the groups defining work and even if you disagree with that, what cant be doubted is that this is one of the greatest debuts of the 1990s. (via BBC)

Label: Go! Beat
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue, 180 Gram
Reissued:2003 onwards / Originally released: 1994
Genre: Electronic
Style: Trip Hop, Downtempo, Female Vocals

File under: Electronic // Downtempo

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