BJN wrote:verb and noun. Multiple meanings. i love the word, the name. i've long had an interest in the city. Yummy.
I wish to travel there myself, one day...
BJN wrote:i'm quite in love with the album, -Esoterica-. Though the silence and secret track at the end seem unnecessary.
Well, it kind of is.
The final track was the first Shanghai song ever "written" (it was actually an improvisation, recorded on a crappy 4 track tape machine), recorded about 5 years before the EP, and even before Shanghai existed. It was the catalyst for Shanghai even coming into being, so we thought it quite fitting to have it on there, in all it's rawness, as a little piece of interesting nostalgia, which we wanted to share with people, outside of the context of the rest of the songs, which work as a cohesive whole. Self indulgence, if you will...
BJN wrote:The way it flows is... wow. The Chinese instrument that opens the CD is beautiful...
That Chinese instrument is an Erhu:

A beautiful instrument, which I feel perfectly "bookends", not to mention compliments, the whole recording.
I originally wanted a Chinese Ensemble to play on it, also featuring a Pipa and Guqin, but on the day only the Erhu player could make it. She, Liu Ling, was amazing BTW. Never met her before, she came in, bashed it out like a pro, and left...never to be seen nor heard of again...
BJN wrote:the artwork is fucking cool.
Yeah, very important to the overall vibe of the recording, I feel.
A lot of effort was put into it as well.
Most of the art work was taken from an old calender book of mine, containing hundreds of chinese pop culture images.
The image that really stands out for me is the tray image where you take the CD out:

From Nicolas Poussin's "Et In Arcadia Ego", which was the original title for our song "Arcana Dei Tango". That songs lyrics are very heavily influenced by Freemasonary, and even take a lot from the book "The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail", which we all know now that Dan Brown "borrowed" plenty of ideas from for his book "The Da Vinci Code".
Shanghai were ahead of their time...
Read more about it here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Et_in_Arcadia_egoBJN wrote:"Worms" (part3 of "Looking for Worms") might be the catchiest song, but it is not the best. Fits in better as part of the album than it does on it's own, though it sticks in my head either way. The male vocals are perhaps a little too Mike Patton, but they don't sound bad. The female vocals are nice.
That's the thing, the EP to me should be listened to as a whole. It's when the tracks work best, sequeing in and out of one another.
I just always think of it as one large cohesive work...
BJN wrote:Way better than The Locus Scene, in every way. Though the "Summer Rains" instrumental track thingie is pretty damn cool.
i'm not reviewing, i'm just rambling.
SHANGHAI!!!
2 completely different kettle of fish, and impossible for me to compare, or seperate, which is kind of ironic.
I guess all my music shares a conceptual continuity, whilst still managing to fall into different categories. It's kind of hard to explain.
As for choosing which is better? That would be like choosing a favourite child or something.
I love them both equally, for different reasons...