ScottR wrote:Hi Simon,
I like to refer to it as Man-a-bomb. What in the Jersey was he thinking?
As I had mentioned in another thread, the sales for this thing outside of his core audience are non-existent. The only thing that is selling is the limited edition, and that is probably all speculators trying to make money on ebay. And with all of the money he dumped into this project, artwork, promotion...etc, he will be lucky if it doesn't fold Samadhi up. Huge gamble...he lost.
I just wonder what this will mean long term. Hopefully he can find a way to continue on. Maybe burning shed will release this crap for him. Maybe he will start making music that people actually like to hear. At any rate it will have to change.
Ok Baht, your turn....And yes, I love to stir the pot.
Foales Arishes wrote:Well Manafon was my first DS album, and I am now in the process of collecting other work by him...thanks to others recommendations I now have Blemish, Naoshima, Plight & Premonition, Everything and Nothing and Approaching Silence [on its way for just £3] - I have also listened to as much material of his I can around the net, and I can honestly say that Manafon is far and away the best thing for me, followed by Blemish then Naoshima.
I love the fact that DS is ploughing his own furrow, with not one jot of concern for his fan-base or critics...as an artist myself, I too do whatever I please, if people like it great! If not, I lose no sleep over it, and yet I do ok in my own small way. I have no idea of its sales figures -obviously others do- but I bet it justifies its being in that respect, even though it doesn't have to.
Repetition is the death the death of art...and "pot stirrers" end up being very dull...yawn
Simonp wrote:Fed up with it already? The discussions for Blemish seemed to go on for months after its release but Manafon doesn't seem to have ignited the same debate...past caring people?
baht habit wrote::-) shhhhh.... Please don't summon evil Baht now, as I am getting into the mood for the upcoming season by listening to the soothing and tranquil traditional sounds contained on Sting's If On A Winter's Night. ahhhhhh.
i find this post very affending moderators please ------i thought musik is a free will of the person that writes it..
a shame for david i love his label![]()
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he reads the stuff on here .....just sad![]()
Foales Arishes wrote:I love the fact that DS is ploughing his own furrow, with not one jot of concern for his fan-base or critics...as an artist myself, I too do whatever I please, if people like it great! If not, I lose no sleep over it, and yet I do ok in my own small way. I have no idea of its sales figures -obviously others do- but I bet it justifies its being in that respect, even though it doesn't have to.
Repetition is the death the death of art...and "pot stirrers" end up being very dull...yawn[/color]
Bern wrote:I remember when Blemish was due for release "A Fire In The Forest" was released as a downloadable promo, and I remember on first hearing Blemish thinking was I going to have to plough through this turgid mess to get to the final track? now however I love the album and for me it really doesn't have a bad track, and that I think is the problem in that I don't think Manafon is as good as Blemish, with Manafon we were given "Small Metal Gods" as the promo a track that bears no resemblance to anything else on the album and once the track was finished I had to force myself through the rest of the album presuming I would have a road to Damascus moment as I had with Blemish and fall in love with it, "Snow White.." stood out immediatley and could be both a Blemish or Nine Horses outtake and both "Emily Dickinson" and the title track have really grown on me, I have made some progress with "The Rabbit Skinner" mainly because I think the lyrics and the musicality of the track seem to come together out of nothing but isolating "Random Acts.. and The Greatest.." I just find them even after now numerous plays so disappointing, disjointed and lacking in any passion or poetry
ScottR wrote:Charts:
Billboard 200 ranking: did not chart
Amazon.com Sales Rank: #4,177
Amazon #39 in Music > Miscellaneous > Experimental Music - This is funny. Four of Porcupine Trees records rank higher, including 1995's the sky moves sideways
Amazon UK: #1453
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