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Soundtracks

Serpent's Egg [Re-Mastered]

Serpent's Egg [Re-Mastered]

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Artist: Dead Can Dance
Label: 4ad Records
Category: Music

List Price: $19.99
Buy New: $14.92
You Save: $5.07 (25%)



New (17) Used (5) from $14.92

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 31 reviews
Sales Rank: 5926

Format: Hybrid Sacd, Original Recording Remastered
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

UPC: 652637270938
EAN: 0652637270938
ASIN: B0015YFOHE

Release Date: July 22, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • The Host Of Seraphim
  • Orbis De Ignis
  • Severance
  • The Writing On My Father's Hand
  • In The Kingdom Of The Blind The One-Eyed Are Kings
  • Chant Of The Paladin
  • Song Of Sophia
  • Echolalia
  • Mother Tongue
  • Ullyses

Similar Items:

  • Within the Realm of a Dying Sun [Re-Mastered]
  • Aion [Re-Mastered]
  • Into the Labyrinth [Re-Mastered]
  • Spleen and Ideal [Re-Mastered]
  • Dead Can Dance [Re-Mastered]

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Their fourth album, originally released in 1988. At the time of its release, Brendan Perry and Lisa Gerrard were in Spain writing and recording music for "El Nino De La Luna", a film in which Lisa also made her acting debut.

Album Description
SACD Hybrid Remastered CD of the 1988 album, Serpents Egg by Dead Can Dance recorded by the duo, Lisa Gerrard and Brendan Perry. It featured the song "The Host of Seraphim" which was later used in the film Baraka. Group performs "Echolalia" and "Mother Tongue" at 1992 Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony in Albertville. The album was the last produced during the time of Perry and Gerrard's amorous relationship. Much of the album was recorded in a multi-story apartment block in the Isle of Dogs area of London.


Customer Reviews:   Read 26 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars SACD version = AMAZING   August 2, 2008
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

I bought this SACD reissue (along with the other 8 DCD SACDS recently released) with trepidation, wondering if it would be worth the money. How much better can a cd sound? The music on this cd is great on its own. It's deep, spiritual, complex, well-crafted music that often transcends expectations. To put it simply, the music is heavenly. It manages to be dark and spiritual, yet uplifting at the same time, without ever seeming corny or overwrought. The band exercises its creativity without restraint, but it's never self-indulgent. The voices complement one another. Brendan is deep, masculine, and earthy, whereas Lisa is otherworldly, wordless, and pure sounding.

Regardless of whether or not you like this type of sound, the SACD version of this disc is amazing. It surpassed any hopes or expectations I may have had. Listening to this program is like listening to it for the first time. Every nuance is brought out, clear, crisp, full-bodied, yet there isn't that sense of the sound having been cranked up as you may notice on other "remasters." Some companies who remaster old albums seem to believe that "loud" is better. I've bought remasters before and thought they were worse than the originals as they just sound "blaring." These SACD reissues were left in capable hands as all of them sound astounding.

The band's two earliest releases ("Dead Can Dance" and "The Garden of the Arcane Delights") were maybe my least favorites. They certainly sound better, clearer, more detailed, but the SACD versions tend to underscore the limitations present when they were originally recorded. They tend to be a little more shrill, but that's simply how they have always been in my humble opinion. Don't get me wrong, they're still great cds, but simply not my favorites.

The other 7 sound rich and much warmer, particularly "Within the Realm of a Dying Sun," which to me, always had a cold, stark feeling to it. It sounds amazing. ("Dawn of the Iconoclast" is frightening.) All of this music has been given new life. The live cd in particular, "Toward the Within," literally takes your breath away (The track "Cantara" is thrilling.) If you are a dedicated fan of this band you have to consider getting an SACD player and these discs. You won't regret it. For those who don't know, you cannot hear the SACD program on these discs without an SACD player. If you play them on a regular cd player, you won't hear the high resolution version.



5 out of 5 stars I love this cd   April 27, 2008
This is the cd that got me turned unto The Dead Can Dance. I've never heard of them before it. Now I'm addicted to this group.
I very highly recommend this cd.
I think it's beautifully done. It's one of those rare cds where I actually like all of the songs on it.



4 out of 5 stars Aonther highly appealing offering   October 10, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

A short, repetitious, minimal, but often spectacular album refines further some of the haunting world-goth music this legendary duo helped pioneer. For as brief and seemingly light the album feels compositionally, Serpent's Egg still rests somewhere near the top of this immersive act's most sensual disc's on the whole. The crisp, diverse instrumentation, transportive vocals, and ethereal production all merge effortlessly to bring another modern mystical classic to their unique and impressive catalog.


4 out of 5 stars Some great music here, but a mixed bag   April 15, 2007
On their fourth studio album, the Dead Can Dance duo of Brendan Perry and Lisa Gerrard transitioned away from the classical sound of their previous masterpiece, Within the Realm of a Dying Sun, and towards a more diverse set of influences, including eastern European and medieval music. While this disc contains some of their most brilliant tracks, I don't find that it holds together well as an integrated album when compared to some of their other efforts, and would actually rate it 3.5 stars if I could.

The two standout tracks here are the ones that open and close the album. The Host of the Seraphim is probably the most stunning music Lisa Gerrard has ever recorded, particularly the achingly beautiful rise and fall of the final chorus, which brings me both goose bumps and tears with every listening. Brendan's Ullyses is dazzling in its creativity, and features a rare of example of him singing glossolalia (the kind of wordless non-language that makes up nearly all of Lisa's singing) in the introduction, segueing into a weirdly speeded up waltz evocative of a demented merry-go-round. Both of these tracks fit well in the gothic semi-orchestral style of their earlier work.

The rest of the tracks are more of a mixed bag both with regard to style and quality. Brendan's Severance and Lisa's The Writing On My Father's Hand are lovely, and feature the medieval influences that would come to full flower on their next album, Aion, while Lisa's stark a capella Song of Sophia features more of an Eastern European sound. Mother Tongue begins with a passage of infectious, lively drumming, then downshifts into a more dreamy combination of drumming and chanting by Lisa. Orbis de Ignis is another medieval track, but a bit dull, while the sonorous Chant of the Paladin is eerie at first, but eventually becomes monotonous by the end of its nearly four minutes. Brendan's In the Kingdom of The Blind is typical stylistically of his songs of this period, and is often included on best of compilations, but I actually find it somewhat grating, unmusical and forced in its climax.

So, overall not necessarily their most cohesive album -- and at barely 36 minutes, one of their shortest -- but worth getting for the handful of standout tracks alone.



5 out of 5 stars Some of the most superb music of the last century   November 22, 2006
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I first heard the amazing tune "Ullyses" from this disk on the Seattle college music FM station KCMU/KEXP in about 1988, and instantly was fascinated with Dead Can Dance. I rushed out and bought this disk, and entered a whole new world of unparalleled beauty and taste. Middle eastern, british folk, and so many other influences applied with brilliant taste and audacity. As I understand it, Lisa Gerrard's lyrics are in a language of her own creation, designed to be evocative, but owing no particular reference to modern languages, and perhaps evoking a language which predates any modern language. Can you name an artist of such courage who, is also a pop-star? This is a triumph of high art! "The writing on my fathers hand" is exquisite with its delicate string tones and Lisa's evocative singing. Mother Tongue, with its drum tones is delicious. But "Ullyses" is my favorite, with Brendan Perry's rich and full vocal, a classic tale of the triumph of the human spirit in the face of global war. Arise "John Francis Dooley, wipe the sleep from your eyes, and embrace the light"! What else could a sensitive listener ask from a CD, great sound, great art, profound spiritual depth? This is one of the best disks I've encountered in all my 48 years. An associated disk is "This Mortal Coil/It'll end in tears" which features Lisa Gerard on several cuts, also highly recommended.

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