Knowle West Boy

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (155 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 45:53

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Unlike Most Contemporaries...

conceptina

What makes Tricky unique is his amazing ability to let the music work for him. I believe this is why people often are drawn to his music, it's not only good, but his voice is unmistakable when it filters through your speakers. I love how some moments are gritty with heavy bass beats. The next moment he's mixing his dialogue with conversations. Meanwhile the music is consistent. A mark of a true artist is the ability of being timeless. Whether it's 1999 or 2009, there's always a song from Tricky which still sounds off as being relevant despite pop trends. The best compliment I've heard someone give the music of Tricky comes from a friend who upon hearing his music for the first time responded, "It feels like he's trying to seduce me." Suggested Tracks: Joseph - Veronika - Past Mistakes - Far Away. Those songs are distinct, yet show a good sample as to a bit of the tone in the album.

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Great Pop

CamiloM

Tricky is Tricky, you never know quite to expect. Most seem to like his experimental stuff as long as it's not "too experimental". Most don't like it when he does straight out pop like "Vulnerable" either. Well, this is experimental, and yet it's pop and yet nothing at all like "Blow Back". It's a great album, though not as good as Martina's "Blue God".

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Agree with Pieter...

JRED

I too am hooked on Tricky. All his CDs have been inconsistent since PMT, but there is really no one else like him so it is always interesting, and when it's good, it's hard to resist. There are some very good tracks on this CD - e.g. Puppy Toy has great Tricky singing, Coalition is very menancing (would have sat well on PMT), while Past Mistake is classic Tricky growling over a beat while the female singer leads; however some of it is not his best work. Saw him in San Fran a few nights back - his show was really good, still plays lots from first two CDs. Bottom line is - if you like Tricky, the CD is worth getting. If you don't know much of him, get Maxinquaye or PMT first. Sounds bad what he did in NYC, but it was 9 years ago and probably doesn't have much relevance to his current CD!

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What's Wrong With Me?

Pieter

I seem to like all Tricky's albums (including this one). Even in his sloppiest or most self-indulgent moments I find something intriguing. Dunno why.

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Thanks Jess Harvell for the review

scientifik

Brutally honest, insightful, and on point, Jess Harvell. Heard lots of hype. Thanks for having an opinion & not regurgitating what Tricky's PR agent sent you. I like that old Tricky music, but am convinved he is one of the most self-important barely celebrities on earth. Laughed out loud at your searing remark that people "await a return to the sinister boom bap that made him semi-famous." He pulled worst scam ever at Summerstage in NYC circa 1999. Pissed off NYers sweating in "DoTheRightThing" hotter than July summer heat nearly rioted when he tried to split without ever actually performing. He advertised a Tricky show but didn't bring a band or DJ! It was really a reading for some terrible book he published, not even written by him. In response to the impending riot, he conceded to do 3 or 4 tracks with a beatboxer & drunk off key singer he pulled from the crowd before slinking off stage when plastic cups began to fly at him and boos drowned out his "performance"

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They Say All Media Guide

Is the year 2008 a Bristol revival? First there’s a new Portishead recording (Third), their first in over a decade, then Massive Attack finishes a new album (Weather Underground) and curates the Meltdown festival, and finally, Tricky’s released his finest record since Pre-Millennium Tension. Knowle West Boy is named for the Council Estates housing project neighborhood Tricky grew up in. This set is not shrouded in mystery: it’s autobiographical. It’s the first album of well-crafted songs he’s come up with since Maxinquaye (but doesn’t sound a thing like it). As has been his wont since early on, Tricky also employs a host of other vocalists here for the sake of expressing more complex emotions, and also toward spinning a more complete — if sometimes complex — narrative. Rage and paranoia haven’t been replaced so much as they’ve been extrapolated upon and expanded by humor, joy, bravado, and an authentic vulnerability and sense that the personal is political, as this set deals straight on with issues of race and class without even remotely preaching. That said, it’s a down and dirty musical beat collision that combines punk, reggae, funk, pop, and hip-hop and hard rock in a wicked brew that is focused and in your face.
The set begins with a lounge-blues soundscape that evokes the late-night feel of Barry Adamson at his sleaziest. It explodes about a minute in, strutting its scrappy big band against Fripp-ian guitars, a cracking distorted snare, and cymbal thuggery. The cool thing is in its humor. Tricky plays a lounge lizard boasting about himself to a young woman (Alex Mills) who hands it back to him on a funhouse mirror. The first single, “Council Estate,” is a furious punk anthem created as a football-style chant set to a post-punk bassline, with big menacing kick drums, staggered reverb vocals, and Tricky letting the pride in his upbringing come to the fore. It’s a breathless two-and-a-half minutes, but it’s the best thing here. “Past Mistake” is reminiscent of the torch song duet balladry of Nearly God’s “Poems,” a tune Tricky performed with Terry Hall and Martina Topley-Bird. “Bacative” employs a ragged punk-charged ragga, and features toaster Rodigan (a New Yorker of West Indian origin). He begins his toast to a plucked cello, drum loops, snares, tambourines, and a set of hi-hat cymbals that shimmer above the bassline. “Joseph” is titled for a young man who does the vocals. The use of harp, hand drums, vibes, and a synthed bassline is strangely atmospheric and haunting. “Veronika” features vocals by French-Moroccan vocalist Lubua; it commences with a slew of distorted beats and tom-tom loops that feel like a military march; her voice is anything but, however. She expresses hurt, heartbreak, and anger brought about by the absent subject. She is also present on the haunting ballad “School Gates” that closes the set; a haunting ballad about a teen pregnancy told from both male and female points of view. “C’Mon Baby” is a rockist thumper that evokes AC/DC with beats! There is also a cover here of Kylie Minogue’s “Slow.” Whereas the original is all sleek, sensual, and inviting, Tricky inverts the song’s meaning by becoming a sleazy, macho Lothario narrating. Knowle West Boy is not another Maxinquaye (it doesn’t try, either) but it is a very strong, accessible set that puts his renewed creativity on display in a blur of sound and color. It not only re-establishes him as a pioneer, but as an engaging personae who isn’t hiding behind his sonic palette anymore; his music is all the better for it. – Thom Jurek

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