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    Peter Hammill - The Future Now - 1978 (2006)

    Posted By: mfrwiz
    Peter Hammill - The Future Now - 1978 (2006)

    Peter Hammill - The Future Now - 1978 (2006)
    Lossless (Ape Image + Cue + Log + auCDtect Report): 235 Mb | EAC Secure Mode Rip | Mp3 (320 kbps): 104 Mb | Complete HQ Scans | Rar Files (3% Recovery)
    Audio CD (November 28, 2006) - Original Release Date: 1978 - Number of Discs: 1 - Label: Charisma - Catalog Number: CASCD 1137 - Source: eMule
    Progressive Rock, Art Rock, Avant Garde


    Product Description: The Future Now is one of Peter Hammill's best and most disconcerting albums since the mid-'70s. Filled with beautiful piano ballads, strange experiments, and anthemic rock songs, it stands as multi-faceted as the artist – who, incidentally, shaved half of his facial hair for the eye-catching cover shot. Hammill has never mastered the art of the opening track, and this album marks no exception: "Pushing Thirties" is a bland, surprise-less rock song. Once you pass that gate though, wonders succeed one another in your ears. In the ballad department, "If I Could" shines like a diamond. This beautiful love song about a man who will never be able to keep his wife from leaving would remain a regular feature in Hammill's concerts for the next 25 years, but no later recording matches this studio version. "The Mousetrap (Caught In)" – the story of an actor performing the same play for the last 30 years – is another highlight. Unstable fuzz guitar (reminiscent of Robert Fripp, although he is not credited as a guest) give "Trappings" and "Mediaevil" a strange atmosphere, while backward vocals turn "The Cut" into the most sinister song in Hammill's book since "German Overalls." "A Motor-Bike in Africa" combines electronic percussion, studio effects, a mantra-like narrative, and a pinch of English humor to uncertain results. Amidst all these good songs is another gemstone, although it has not been polished yet; "The Future Now" is too lyrical in this incarnation, too tamed and polite, although it still has the power to send shivers down your spine with its imperative chorus. The Future Now is an artist album. It requires dedication but rewards a hundredfold. ~ François Couture

    2006 digitally remastered edition of the Van Der Graaf Generator frontman's seventh solo album that was originally released in 1978. From the bizarre photo of the artist on the cover (which could possibly have provided inspiration for Phil Oakey's early Human League look in the early 80's), the music is the alternately bizarre and beautiful musings of a tortured artist whose gifts become clear after repeated listenings. Recorded at Sofa Sound, Surrey, England, March 18-April 26, 1978.

    Peter Hammill - The Future Now - 1978 (2006)

    Review: The Future Now, released in 1978 is one of Peter Hammill's most distinctive albums in a line of highly distinctive music. To start with, the eye catching album cover of Hammill, half-shaven in a peculiar pose and startled look strikes strong emotions. More importantly the music is stark yet oddly catchy and precise; challenging but a bit more inviting than previous efforts. Peter Hammill is one of the more deftly insightful and introspective singer/songwriters of the last 40 years; the type of thoughtfulness, brilliant wordplay and expression is certainly a rarity of art in this day and age, let alone in the world of rock. As the songwriter and leader of Van Der Graaf Generator as well as numerous solo efforts, Hammill wrote songs that asked all the searching questions about God, existence, relationships, and anything else one might question because of it's seemingly dual nature. Introspective art does not lend itself easily to mass appeal; sometimes too extreme, Hammill's music is not always pretty or agreeable but the integrity and honesty comes out in all it's substance, and purely shows an experience in the human condition. His solo projects tended to delve even deeper into those searches mostly because he wrote, produced and played most of the instruments on those albums. The results were always interesting because although he was not an accomplished musician on all the instruments he played, but he had a way of expressing his depth through inspired need. The Future Now was, in retrospect, an interesting follow-up to the "break-up album" Over. Where Over was straightforward in it's dissection of the feelings that come when a relationship has gone bad, The Future Now turned it's focused analysis and angst towards the world and mankind's arrogance, spiritual hunger, and ambivalence to morality. There isn't a single track on The Future Now that I don't love. Pushing Thirty would have fit in nicely with the punk rock of Nadir's Big Chance- the song is aggressive and full of vigor and sharp wit. The Second Hand, with it's simple bass groove pulsates the lyrics about how fool's can waste their lives. Trappings has a cool folk/rock arrangement, and connects well topically with the simple introspection of Mousetrap and then the violent echoing of Energy Vampires. The lone plaintive ballad "If I Could", possibly a remaining strain of sadness from Over, may not strike one immediately as fitting in with the rest of the album, but on repeated listening the song takes on the form of a serene oasis of desired romance in a troubled world. But the anthem-call of The Future Now brings the music back into the stark cry in the wilderness that seems to be the theme to this album. Still In The Dark mellows things out a little, to contemplate our place in the universe under the interpretation of science. Medieval is a dissonant Gregorian chant that brings to light the issue of when true spirituality is stuffed behind the hierarchy of religion. A Motor-bike In Afrika uses an interesting motorized rhythm and tribal chants that give a pretty distinctive feel to the songs theme. And the final two songs, The Cut and Castaway (Palinarus), partner up quite well. The Cut, with it's backward loops and skewed vocals make for a disorienting sound; then it speeds into the awakening of Castaways electro landscape of waves crashing against the boat as the search for purpose and life twirl upward through the abstract lyrics.

    Peter Hammill - The Future Now - 1978 (2006)

    The two bonus tracks are interesting, live performances from 1978. The sound isn't very good but the performances are great. I've always likened Peter Hammill's late 70's/ early 80's albums (`78's Future Now through '81's Sitting Targets) to both Peter Gabriel and David Bowie's experimental art rock around that same period. Gabriel and Hammill especially seemed to have paralleled careers up to that point; both fronting highly successful progressive rock bands (VDGG and Genesis) before moving into more personal/introspective and experimental solo albums. Hammill even did occasional back up vocals on a few of Gabriel's albums.

    Peter Hammill - The Future Now - 1978 (2006)

    The new re-mastered albums (both of Hammill and VDGG) sound amazing, clearing up details and showing the fullness of the music.

    Highly Recommended. Some other albums of Peter Hammill I would recommend are pH7, Nadir's Big Chance, Over, Fool's Mate, and The Silent Corner And Empty Stage; as for VDGG stuff all the albums are superb but some are very different than others- Pawn Hearts or Still Life are pretty good places to start. ~ Amazon Customer

    Peter Hammill - The Future Now - 1978 (2006)

    Note: Credit to ellery, the original uploader.
    Peter Hammill - The Future Now - 1978 (2006)
    Track Listing:

    01 - Pushing Thirty - 4:21
    02 - The Second Hand - 3:28
    03 - Trappings - 3:30
    04 - The Mousetrap (Caught In) - 4:06
    05 - Energy Vampires - 2:56
    06 - If I Could - 4:37
    07 - The Future Now - 4:11
    08 - Still in the Dark - 3:39
    09 - Mediaeval - 3:07
    10 - A Motor-Bike in Afrika - 3:11
    11 - The Cut - 4:21
    12 - Palinurus (Castaway) - 3:48

    Personnel: Peter Hammill (vocals, various instruments); Graham Smith (violin); David Jackson (saxophone).

    Peter Hammill - The Future Now - 1978 (2006)


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    EAC extraction logfile from 26. April 2006, 15:35 for CD
    Peter Hammill / The Future Now

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    Read offset correction : 667
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    Used output format : C:\Program Files\Exact Audio Copy\MAC.exe (Monkey's Audio Lossless Encoder)
    High Lossless Compression

    Other options :
    Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
    Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
    Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000


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