The Lighthouse is the first solo album by Ana da Silva of the Raincoats, released on 21 February 2005 on the Chicks on Speed label.
The Lighthouse | |
---|---|
Studio album by | |
Released | 21 February 2005 |
Recorded | 2004 |
Label | Chicks on Speed |
Producer | Ana da Silva |
The first new music from da Silva since the Raincoats' 1996 album Looking in the Shadows, The Lighthouse was written and recorded by da Silva alone in her flat using a Yamaha QY70 sequencer and a Roland 8-track digital recorder, except "Modinha", which was recorded with Stuart Moxham (of Young Marble Giants) at his house, originally for a tribute album to Antônio Carlos Jobim.[1][2][3][4]
The album received a positive review from CMJ New Music Monthly, with Kory Grow saying the album "drips with traditionally tuneful beauty and stunning electro-innovation".[5] Spin gave the album an A− rating, called it "utterly seductive", commenting on "lovely, lulling, ticktock keyboard backdrops...for her exquisite chorales about disco balls and the cold winds."[6] Heather Phares, reviewing the album for Allmusic, gave it a 4-star review, calling it "striking and pure".[1]
Track listing
editAll songs by da Silva, except "Modinha" (Antônio Carlos Jobim).
- "Friend"
- "Two Windows over the Wings"
- "Running in the Rain"
- "The Lighthouse"
- "Hospital Window"
- "Modinha"
- "In Awe of a Painting"
- "Sister"
- "Disco Ball"
- "Climbing Walls"
References
edit- ^ a b c Phares, Heather "The Lighthouse Review", Allmusic. Retrieved 18 March 2017
- ^ "The Wire Tapper 12", The Wire, December 2004. Retrieved 18 March 2017
- ^ Bonini, Alessandro & Tamagnini, Emanuele (2006) New Wave, Gremese Editore, ISBN 978-8884404121, p. 56
- ^ Nicholas, Pam (2006) "Ana da Silva: Raincoats not required for home recording", Tape Op, Issue 51, Jan/Feb 2006. Retrieved 18 March 2017
- ^ a b Grow, Kory (2004) "Best New Music: Ana da Silva - The Lighthouse", CMJ New Music Monthly, Issue 131, p. 37. Retrieved 18 March 2017 via Google Books
- ^ "Breakdown: Ana da Silva The Lighthouse", Spin, April 2005, p. 108. Retrieved 18 March 2017 vis Google Books