Roadrunner Records
2004
The Dresden Dolls (Explicit)
About This Album
Inevitably, music will have leaders as well as followers, and both have their place. It's unrealistic and foolish to think that every artist who comes along should be a trendsetter; people who shake things up as intensely as Charlie Parker, the Sex Pistols, John Coltrane, the Beatles, or Nirvana are the exception instead of the rule. But when someone does come up with something that is truly fresh, he/she deserves applause -- and there is plenty of freshness on this self-titled CD by the Dresden Dolls, a Boston-based duo that successfully blends alternative pop/rock with German cabaret. Lead singer Amanda Palmer brings an unlikely combination of influences to this release, and they range from Kurt Weill and Marlene Dietrich to goth rock, punk, and the riot grrrl movement. Palmer has been greatly affected by the emotional catharsis of PJ Harvey, Courtney Love, and Tori Amos -- her performances can be very stream-of-consciousness -- but she has also been influenced by the cabaret of Germany's pre-Adolf Hitler Weimar Republic (although Palmer writes and sings in English exclusively on this album). Hitler, a fanatically extreme social conservative, detested the flamboyant, sexualized imagery of the Weimar-era cabaret culture and did everything he could to eradicate it.
Track List
(try tracks 1,2,3,4,6,7,8,9 and 10)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
Similar Albums

Maps Of Tacit
by Shannon Wright

APVR
by A Particularly Vicious Rumor

Dreaming Through The Noise
by Vienna Teng

Beat Beat Pound
by Andrea Ball

Free To Stay
by Smoosh