Louis Philippe - Rainfall

Rainfall
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Album Details: Rainfall

Release Date:01/01/1991
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Track List: Rainfall

  1. Farewell Maria
  2. Sally Gardens
  3. I Just Wasn't Made for These Times
  4. Sirens Call
  5. Rainfall
  6. Captain's Apprentice
  7. Still Life
  1. Cloudless Day
  2. Metempsychosis Song
  3. Dark
  4. Chelsea Bridge
  5. Corncircle Dance
  6. Shoot
  7. Sleep

Pro Reviews: Rainfall

  • All Music Guide

    Following the demise of el records in 1989, Louis Philippe found his career unexpectedly blighted by the widespread belief that the whole el roster consisted entirely of fictional characters dreamed up by the label's svengali figure Mike Alway. Yet when he did get back to work, rather than present the mainstream recording industry with a calling card in the form of a commercially viable album, Louis and his collaborator Dean Brodrick came up with two of his most experimental collections to date. The first, Rainfall, was driven by a selfimposed (and conveniently lowbudget) manifesto which dictated that every sound on the album should be the product of either voice or piano, both of which are heavily multitracked. Though they bent the rules by using a sampler too, Philippe and Brodrick also used considerable ingenuity in obtaining a range of sounds from the piano by, in that dread term employed by avantgarde jazz musicians, going ‘under the lid'. Although the instrument was variously p...lucked, beaten and ravished, however, the results were far from cacophonous. In fact much of the album's experimentalism stems more from song selection and structure than a desire to push the envelope sonically. An unusually large number of cover versions included Britten's ‘The Sally Gardens', the traditional English folk song ‘The Captain's Apprentice', a vocal interpretation of Duke Ellington's ‘Chelsea Bridge' (in French), and Brian Wilson's ‘I Guess I Just Wasn't Made For These Times'. As for the original material here, Philippe's range of models and influences is more farflung than ever. The Dark seems to originate from a musical cowritten by Leonard Bernstein and Brian Eno, while songs like ‘The Metempsychosis Song' and The Corncircle Dance reach a degree of knotty intricacy that veers between thrilling and daunting. There are admittedly moments when Rainfall's deliberately restricted palette seems perverse in the face of so much harmonic and rhythmic adventure, yet it's hard to imagine how the version of the album's strongest track ‘Still Life' could have been bettered at any cost. Just 5,000 copies of Rainfall were pressed and sold in Japan, where Philippe had found a new audience as one of the progenitors of the Shibuya sound. It was only finally released in Europe as part of a twoCD set with its successor Jean Renoir in the late Nineties. - Christopher Evans, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Louis Philippe

Louis Philippe may still be best known as a purveyor of creamy pop confections for Mike Alway's wonderfully eccentric él label, yet his work continued to deepen and develop long after él bit the dust in 1989. He once described his music as "covering the range from pure bubblegum to symphonic sweep, with detours via jazz and soul along the way. A typical album might mi... Read more