Echo & The Bunnymen
Porcupine
Label ©  Sire
Release Year  2003
Length  1:17:51
Genre  Rock
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  E-0018
Bitrate  320 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      The Cutter  
       3:54  
      2.  
      The Back of Love  
       3:15  
      3.  
      My White Devil  
       4:40  
      4.  
      Clay  
       4:16  
      5.  
      Porcupine  
       6:00  
      6.  
      Heads Will Roll  
       3:33  
      7.  
      Ripeness  
       4:50  
      8.  
      Higher Hell  
       5:01  
      9.  
      Gods Will Be Gods  
       5:26  
      10.  
      In Bluer Skies  
       4:37  
      11.  
      Fuel  
       4:06  
      12.  
      The Cutter (Alternate Version)  
       4:08  
      13.  
      My White Devil (Alternate Version)  
       5:03  
      14.  
      Porcupine (Alternate Version)  
       4:04  
      15.  
      Ripeness (Alternate Version)  
       4:42  
      16.  
      Gods Will Be Gods (Alternate Version)  
       5:31  
      17.  
      Never Stop (Discotheque)  
       4:45  
    Additional info: | top
      Deleted in the U.S., the band's third album. Originallyreleased in 1983, 'Porcupine' reached #2 in the U.K. &features the top 10 U.K. hit 'The Cutter' & the top 20 U.K.hit 'The Back Of Love'. 10 tracks total, also featuring'Heads Will Roll', 'Clay' and 'My White Devil'.

      Review by David Cleary

      The group's third album is a solid outing, a noticeably better listen than its predecessor, Heaven Up Here. Songs are intriguing and elaborate, often featuring swooping, howling melodic lines. Arrangements here owe a lot to 1960s psychedelia and feature lots of reverb, washed textures, intricate production touches, and altered guitar sounds. Ian McCulloch's vocals are yearning, soaring, and hyper-expressive here, almost to the point of being histrionic, most notably on "Clay," "Ripeness," and the title track. Driving bass and drums lend the songs urgency and keep the music from collapsing into self-indulgence. Parallels between the group's U.S. contemporaries such as Translator, Wire Train, and R.E.M. can be drawn, though all seem to have developed aspects of this style at about the same time -- and none utilize it as flamboyantly as the Bunnymen do. Highlights here include "Back of Love" (with its galloping drumbeat and fragmented yet ardent vocal line) and "Gods Will Be Gods" (which gradually speeds up from beginning to end, working itself into a swirling frenzy). This album is well worth hearing.
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