The London Suede - Head Music (CD)

Head Music
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3.8 out of 5.0 stars 11 Ratings (11 Reviews)

Album Details: Head Music

Release Date:12/07/1999
Label:Sony Bmg Europe
UPC:5099749424326

Other Available Formats: Head Music

User Reviews: Head Music

  • Overall:

    God-damn good!!!

    By FreeLander  Mar 31, 2001

    The songs are extremely good..but still there are some that I still do not like...'cos a kind of mix....Good luck!1

  • Overall:

    try to listen more times

    By Yau  Sep 28, 2000

    listen more times so you may feel it is very good

Pro Reviews: Head Music

  • All Music Guide

    Coming Up was every bit the triumphant comeback Brett Anderson and company were expecting and it was a terrific little record, but it did suggest that Suede had begun to reach the limits of Ed Buller's production ideas, while also feeling a little superficial. The very fact that its sequel was produced by Steve Osbourne, the man behind classics LPs from New Order and Happy Mondays, suggested they were returning to the dark undercurrents of their first two records, yet, Head Music is Coming Up, Pt. 2. Working with Osbourne has added some vague elements of electronic and dance music to Suede's signature sound, but these primarily manifest themselves in the form of gurgling analog synths and canned, old-school drum machines. Essentially, they're just window-dressing, since the songs themselves are extensions of the glam flash of Coming Up. While that hardly qualifies as an artistic progression, it hardly qualifies as a bad album either, and they've never sounded quite as unself-conscious ...as they do here. Suede even gets downright silly at times, whether it's the goofy puns of the title track or the ridiculously intoxicating stomp "Elephant Man." It's hard not to miss early Suede -- the psychedelic "Indian Springs" comes close to capturing the feel, but it's bright, not menacing, and the ballads are pretty, not majestic -- but even in this streamlined incarnation, nobody does this kind of trash pop as alluringly as Suede. Nobody can turn out a single as thrilling as "Electricity," nobody can grind out sex'n'drugs anthems as electrifying as "Can't Get Enough," or swoon as fetchingly as "She's in Fashion." When it comes down to it, nobody makes cheap sleaze sound so alluring. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Suede

Suede kick-started the Brit-pop revolution of the '90s, bringing English indie pop/rock music away from the swirling layers of shoegazing and dance-pop fusions of Madchester, and reinstating such conventions of British pop as mystique and the three-minute single. Before the band had even released a single, the U.K. weekly music press was proclaiming them as the "Best Ne... Read more