Take Fountain

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (90 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 44:48

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Surprisingly Good

eberlin

I loved George Best 20 years ago. And then I loved the Nobodys Twisting Your Arm EP. I started relistening to them a couple of years ago after buying Seamonsters from Fopp and then getting George Best on CD. And then I joined emusic and discovered this album from 2005. Imagine my surprise when I discovered how very good it is. They have moved on and still move me. I love this album. So if you remember them from the 80's, you will not be disappointed. And they have a new album out in May. I await with eager anticipation. Now, I must go and upgrade my emusic account so I can buy the Cinerama back catalogue.

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Back with a vengeance !!

superfurrybadger

After trying out most of this material while still Cinerama, Gedge realised that it was closer to the ethos of his old band. So although you still get elements of the Cinerama sound (which is no bad thing) - eg the spaghetti western ending to Interstate 5 - it is a Weddoes album & the best one they've done since Seamonsters. There maybe no My Favourite Dress but there is Don't Touch That Dial & I'm From... which rank with the classics they did in their pomp. A more mature sound maybe than in the heady days of C86 but hey we all have to grow up !

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They Say All Media Guide

From the start, Cinerama was not a drastic diversion from the Wedding Present. David Gedge rounded off whatever remaining edges were left in the Weddoes’ sound and developed a crack chamber pop group. Softer songs off Watusi and Saturnalia, such as “Catwoman,” “2, 3 Go,” and “Real Thing,” dropped hints. Gedge’s gruff yelps vanished, replaced by bedroom whispers; roaring electric guitars were swapped out for delicate acoustic strums, with extensive use of strings, brass, woodwinds, and keyboards. After Cinerama released their first album, they began to sound more and more like the Wedding Present, to the point where the two groups were virtually indistinguishable from one another. In 2004, Gedge and his associates began recording the fourth Cinerama album with Watusi producer Steve Fisk and resurfaced instead with the sixth Wedding Present album. To no surprise, Take Fountain sounds just like Cinerama and the Wedding Present. Opener “Interstate 5″ gets it across right off the bat, its first six minutes an effectively repetitive chugging groove that shifts into a drifting hybrid of Ennio Morricone and John Barry for the final two minutes — a bracing zip up the West Coast turns into a restful gondola ride alongside an Italian village. From then on, the album is populated by a range of three- to four-minute pop songs that you’re accustomed to hearing from Gedge. For every hushed, playful passage, there’s an explosive chorus, and for every verse dealing with some form of romantic frustration, there’s…a bunch of romantically frustrated verses. Most songs are of the standard that made Gedge one of the most loved indie figures of the ’80s and ’90s, though the bluntly sexual phrasings that repelled George Best/Tommy-era fans from Watusi, Saturnalia, and everything released by Cinerama remain. Take Fountain is a solid Wedding Present album, one that will satisfy those who have been following Gedge all along. (As an important footnote, the Wedding Present name was reactivated in time to record one final Peel Session before John Peel’s passing in October of 2004.) – Andy Kellman

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