Ju Ju

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Ju Ju album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 53:08

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One of their darkest...One of their best

b4now2more

The cool thing about SATB is their vast difference in style from album to album/ song to song. I am more a fan of the “post punk” version of SATB vs. the newer pop tripe. For studio work go for Once Upon a Time, Kaleidoscope, Tinderbox, and the Scream. The later pop albums- Superstition and Rapture-you should definitely skip. Best Tracks on Juju: Arabian Knights, Into the Night, Nightshift, Voodoo Dolly, Monitor. One of their darkest and best albums.

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I've no idea if this is any good as . . .

stormclouds

emusic recommended it to me and then told me I couldn't have it because I don't live in the "right" country. What is the point in my personal recommendations based on previous downloads containing several album that I cannot legally download due to living in a certain country? This is becoming really annoying emusic.

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They Say All Music Guide

One of the band’s masterworks, Juju sees Siouxsie and the Banshees operating in a squalid Wall of Sound dominated by tribal drums, swirling and piercing guitars, and Siouxsie Sioux’s fractured art-attack vocals. If not for John McGeoch’s marvelous high-pitched guitars, here as reminiscent of Joy Division as his own work in Magazine, the album would rank as the band’s most gothic release. Sioux and company took things to an entirely new level of darkness on Juju, with the singer taking delight in sinister wordplay on the disturbing “Head Cut,” creeping out listeners in the somewhat tongue-in-cheek “Halloween,” and inspiring her bandmates to push their rhythmic witches brew to poisonous levels of toxicity. Album-opener “Spellbound,” one of the band’s classics, ranks among their finest moments and bristles with storming energy. Sioux’s mysterious voice emerges from dense guitar picking, Budgie lays into his drums as if calling soldiers to war, and things get more tense from there. “Into the Light” is perhaps the only track where a listener gets a breath of oxygen, as the remainder of the album screams claustrophobia, whether by creepy carnival waterfalls of guitar notes or Sioux’s unsettling lyrics. “Arabian Nights” at least offers a gorgeously melodic chorus, but only after that the band performs a symphony of bizarre wailings and freaky imagery. As ominous as the cacophony is on its own, close attention to Sioux’s nearly subliminal chants paints a scarier picture. A passage such as “I saw you…a huge smiling central face with eyes and lips cut out but smiling and eating lots of other lips” doesn’t exactly brighten one’s day. Sioux is full of such quips throughout the album’s running time, but her delivery packs as much punk as her message. Her attack-the-world dynamic range on “Voodoo Dolly” predates and out-weirds Björk’s similar styling years later. McGeoch, Budgie, and bassist Steven Severin deserve just as much credit for crafting an original sound that would inspire a diverse group of future bands from Ministry to Placebo. All the while, producer Nigel Gray maintains the sense that the album is an immediate, edgy performance unfolding right in front of the listener. The upfront intensity of Juju probably isn’t matched anywhere else in the catalog of Siouxsie and the Banshees. Thanks to its killer singles, unrelenting force, and invigorating dynamics, Juju is a post-punk classic. [This reissue features three bonus remixes.] – Tim DiGravina

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