Desertshore

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Desertshore album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Nico (See All Albums by Nico)
  • Date Released: Mar 14, 2002

  • Genre: Rock/Pop

  • Label: Rhino/Warner Bros.

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 29:17

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was not prepared

starbearer

ok... her stuff on that velvet underground was stellar, so i download this album thinking that i'll listen to it and just study my electronics math and chill out to this. i was NOT prepared for what would come out of my speakers. At this very moment of me writing this, it has me jaw dropped and memorized. Not talked about enough is this woman's voice and heart that is found in this album? i think so.

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eMusic Features

1

The Impact and Influence of Nico

By Lenny Kaye, eMusic Contributor

She rests amidst the solace of Grunewald Forest outside Berlin, surrounded by woodland quietude. Even here, off the beaten path, there are floral tributes carefully placed around her grave; a bottle of unopened wine, candles (some still lit), ribbons, memorial notes. I have come to pay her respect, to leave yellow flowers beneath the marker listing her birth and death dates, a half-century apart. I can hear her voice, inflected with the accent of Prussia,… more »

They Say All Music Guide

While Nico was the member of the Velvet Underground who had had the least experience in music prior to joining the group (while she had recorded a pop single in England, she’d never been a member of a working band before Andy Warhol introduced her to the Velvets), she was also the one who strayed farthest from traditional rock & roll after her brief tenure with the band, and by the time she recorded Desertshore, her work had little (if anything) to do with traditional Western pop. John Cale, who produced and arranged Desertshore, once described the music as having more to do with 20th century classical music than anything else, and while that may be going a bit far to make a point, even compared to the avant-rock frenzy of the Velvet Underground’s early material, Desertshore is challenging stuff. Nico’s dour Teutonic monotone is a compelling but hardly welcoming vocal presence, and the songs, centered around the steady drone of her harmonium, are often grim meditations on fate that are crafted and performed with inarguable skill and intelligence, but are also a bit samey, and the album’s downbeat tone gets to be rough sledding by the end of side two. Cale’s arrangements are superb throughout, and “My Only Child,” “Afraid,” and “The Falconer” are quite beautiful in their own ascetic way, but like the bulk of Nico’s repertoire, Desertshore is an album practically designed to polarize its listeners; you’ll either embrace it’s darkness or give up on it before the end of side one. Then again, given the thoroughly uncompromising nature of her career as a musician, that’s probably just what Nico had in mind. – Mark Deming

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