Hallway of the Gods

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (14 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 62:51

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Return to Forever

Birdmyth

I discovered the Pink Dots at the right time for my music tastes. Maria Dimension had just been released and is still my favorite LPD album. Then came two more of my favorite LPD albums. But from there, they seemed to lose something major with the next two albums. It appeared that all was lost. The magic on Nine Lives to Wonder and From Here We'll Watch the World Go By was scarce and the cheese was strong. Then Hallway of the Gods came along and showed that those two duds were mere experiments in dark strange pop but that the LPD I'd grown to love was still there and ready to haunt me in my dreams. This is a great disc and a few more great discs followed (with some exceptions). All of this to say, this a wonderful place to start or a great next LPD disc for those of you curious or digging deeper. Every song is tremendously affecting and the album as a whole is absolutely cohesive. Warning: you should be prepared when you enter the Hallway of the Gods. They are not there to entertain.

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a masterpiece

massive_music

In my opinion, one of the greatest releases from The Legendary Pink Dots. The production is flawless, the song writing is some of their best, and all elements of this great band shine like diamonds throughout. Considering the huge quantities of music released by LPDs, saying this is the greatest release may be going too far (but not by much, I suppose)- but in any case if you are new to The Legendary Pink Dots, this is a fine place to start. The tour that followed this record will always remain in my heart as the greatest live experience I have ever had. Such a great band. Encore!

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They Say All Media Guide

This 1997 entry from the band’s continuing exploration in dark psychedelia is, like so many of the Legendary Pink Dots’ efforts, a winner in both quiet and overwhelming modes. Sliding into things with the steady “On High,” Edward Ka-Spel and his merry men aren’t going to provide longtime listeners with any surprises, but as with most of their late-’90s albums, the combination of rich recording and production quality with subtle twists and variations works very well. The looped rhythm of “Harvest Babies,” leading into a dramatic keyboard/guitar conclusion that conveys a sense of the band’s strong live power, reflects the band’s not-quite-relationship with modern electronic dance, though the roots are generally more in space rock trance than Goa. Mellower songs like “Mekkanikk” and “Destined to Repeat” show how the band’s sense of drama and space can work just as effectively on low volume as well as on overload, as well as giving Ka-Spel a chance to make his cryptic imagery stand out more strongly. Ka-Spel’s vocals in particular bring up some understated differences — consider the shift on “Spike,” where it almost sounds like he’s biting down on his word once the full chug of the song starts, or the buried delivery on “All Sides” and the a cappella, conversational beginning of “The Saucers Are Coming.” That the latter song turns into the killer freak-out on the album — at once paranoid and a charge to the heavens — seems only appropriate. One of the best moments is “Sterre,” with its acoustic guitar start and gentle, mournful air (Niels Van Hoornblower’s clarinet/sax work here, set against some delicate electric guitar wails, makes for an entrancing conclusion). “Lucifer Landed” has a similar start and an even more stripped-down, calm air — it’s one of the band’s most conventional songs in ways, all without losing Ka-Spel’s obsessive focus or the detailed arrangement that the collective band is known for. – Ned Raggett

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