The Jewels

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The Jewels album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 44:10

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great Neubauten album

noisician

This is one of my favorite Neubauten releases, especially lately. (I think their recent stuff is too song oriented and their always iffy lyrics have not improved.) But here they return the focus to the more experimental material, and I think it really works.

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Impromptu and Experimental EN

Televiper

The 'Jewels' are series of track originally released to the Neubauten supporters at Neubauten.org. For each a track, the members would select cards and seek out the sounds and ideas presented on those cards. It makes for some interesting output.

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They Say All Music Guide

The 15 tracks that eventually comprised the 2008 release The Jewels were first made available one at a time only as website downloads at various points between 2006 and 2007 before being compiled onto a standard CD release. Using a game (called “DAVE,” for the record) that had both deliberate and enigmatic instructions on each card, the band generated ideas — without telling each other what their cards were inscribed with — that were then used to construct and complete tracks within a day or two. Adding another unconventional element to the process, the lyrics were based on dreams. Yet while the methodology might have been unusual, all told the results really aren’t uncharacteristic of Einstürzende Neubauten, if perhaps not as noisy as what listeners familiar with their most celebrated work might anticipate. There’s not much in the way of conventional pop or rock song melody, of course, but there’s a fairly even and creative spread of textures both ambient and clamorous, with both English and (more often) German lyrics that are more spoken than sung in nature. The combination of elements is starker and sparer than in most electronic or ambient music, however, and while the unpredictable and incongruous elements are suggestive of dreams, those dreams are sometimes fairly serene as well as fairly disturbing. Perhaps the most memorable soundbite of the lot is the eerie quasi-prayer chant “am I only Jesus, I am only Jesus” that underscores “Am I Only Jesus?” The CD also includes a 40-minute Quicktime video in which the band, in German, discuss and illustrate the making of the album and the various unusual devices/instruments they used in its creation. – Richie Unterberger

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