Pygmalion

by 
AlbumJul 23 / 19969 songs, 48m 43s
Ambient Pop Post-Rock Dream Pop
Popular

The masterful shoegaze group Slowdive departs from its wall-of-sound approach for its third and final studio album. For *Pygmalion*, the band strips the sound down to its studs, creating sparse atmospheres that allow for great contemplation. The 10-minute opening masterwork \"Rutti\" brings Neil Halstead\'s warm and imagistic vocals to the forefront. \"Crazy for You\" turns up the ambience, with samples and loops that create a shimmering (but austere for Slowdive) façade; this is further explored with the abstract \"Trellisaze\" and the subtle tone poems \"Cello\" and \"J\'s Heaven.\" \"Miranda\" brings Rachel Goswell up in the mix, as she provides indecipherable lyrics and ghostly vocals, while \"Visions of La\" sets her down in the parlor for a brief acoustic number. The songs often feel like faint sketches, as if the ground could give way under them. \"Blue Skied An\' Clear\" starts as a simple acoustic number before an intergalactic transmission opens up the heavens. After this, Halstead and Goswell formed the country-influenced Mojave 3. 

Pygmalion is the most abstract of Slowdive's albums; after moving from the sugary pop of Just for a Day to the more mature and more experimental Souvlaki, the band began to incorporate even more elements of ambient electronica -- drum loops, samples, and songs even less tangible than on previous releases.

5.0 / 5

Slowdive - Pygmalion review: Listen close, it's all in pain.