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So Tonight That I Might See

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (115 ratings)
So Tonight That I Might See album cover
01
Fade Into You
4:52
$1.29
02
Bells Ring
4:28
$1.29
03
Mary Of Silence
5:58
$1.29
04
Five String Serenade
4:21
$1.29
05
Blue Light
5:07
$1.29
06
She's My Baby
4:22
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07
Unreflected
3:38
$1.29
08
Wasted
5:29
$1.29
09
Into Dust
5:32
$1.29
10
So Tonight That I Might See
7:19
$1.29
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 51:06

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eMusic Review 0

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Marc Hogan

eMusic Contributor

Marc Hogan has been occasionally getting paid to write about music since 2003. His music writing has appeared, with enormously varying degrees of regularity, in...more »

05.18.11
Narcotic desert slow jams fit for a David Lynch soundtrack
1993 | Label: CAPITOL

Mazzy Star's second album was a sleeper hit in more ways than one. Roughly a year after the record's release in the fall of 1993, sumptuous opener "Fade Into You" cracked Billboard's Hot 100. Pairing singer Hope Sandoval's distant sighs and guitarist/producer David Roback's languorous pedal steel in a David Lynchian roadhouse waltz, it was the finest moment of a core duo that sounded perpetually on the brink of unconsciousness.

In another way, though, Mazzy Star's unlikely breakthrough had taken even longer. After all, So Tonight That I Might See barely modifies a signature style the band had defined on its 1990 debut: narcotic slow jams, haphazardly chasing the dark psychedelia of the Velvet Underground and the Doors into the desert night. Fragile, violin-accented Arthur Lee cover "Five String Serenade" evocatively addresses the group's occasional lack of memorable tunes, while "Mary of Silence" adds distorted freakouts over descending organ chords, and the guitar-grinding title track drones until dawn.

It was a sound also very much in keeping with Roback's prior work in California's Paisley Underground scene, as well as with the loose, rambling dream-pop of contemporaries like Galaxie 500, Slowdive and Cocteau Twins. "We don't have… read more »

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Wonderful, profoundly relaxing, one of a kind

Spidercake

This is a great album. If you were brought to them by the 1st track "Fade into You" then get their first CD "She Hangs Brightly." It is just a little less psychedelic but its homey-er, and is a much stronger collection of songs. I like this album . . . but i LOVE "She Hangs Brightly."

user avatar

Beautifully classic.

Ontheboundz

Relaxing, sensual and hypnotic. One can't go wrong with Honey's affective angelic voice that make's one want to tune into the music and fade into her...

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They Say All Music Guide

Thanks to the fluke hit “Fade Into You” — one of the better beneficiaries of alt-rock’s radio prominence in the early ’90s, a gentle descent of a lead melody accompanied by piano, a steady beat, and above all else, Hope Sandoval’s lovely lead vocal — Mazzy Star’s second album became something of a commercial success. All without changing much at all from where the band was before — David Roback oversaw all the production, the core emphasis remained a nexus point between country, folk, psych, and classic rock all shrouded in mystery, and Sandoval’s trademark drowsy drawl remained swathed in echo. But grand as She Hangs Brightly was, So Tonight That I Might See remains the group’s undisputed high point, mixing in plenty of variety among its tracks without losing sight of what made the group so special to begin with. Though many songs work with full arrangements like “Fade Into You,” a thick but never once overpowering combination, two heavily stripped-down songs demonstrate in different ways how Mazzy Star makes a virtue out of simplicity. “Mary of Silence” is an organ-led slow shuffle that easily ranks with the best of the Doors, strung-out and captivating all at once, Sandoval’s singing and Roback’s careful acid soloing perfect foils. “Wasted,” meanwhile, revisits a classic blues riff slowed down to near-soporific levels, but the snarling crunch of Roback’s guitar works wonders against Sandoval’s vocals, a careful balance that holds. If there’s a left-field standout, then unquestionably it’s “Five String Serenade.” A cover of an Arthur Lee song — for once not a Love-era number, but a then-recent effort — Roback’s delicate acoustic guitar effortlessly brings out its simple beauty. Tambourine and violin add just enough to the arrangement here and there, and Sandoval’s calm singing makes for the icing on the cake. – Ned Raggett

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