This repository has been archived by the owner on Feb 23, 2024. It is now read-only.
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
album review
Hugo Melder edited this page Oct 15, 2020
·
2 revisions
GET
https://api.tidal.com/v1/albums/38519994/review?countryCode=DE
authorization: Bearer {access_token}
or
x-tidal-token: {client_id}
(No Authentication Needed)
{
"source": "TiVo",
"lastUpdated": "2020-01-25T05:08:00.288+0000",
"text": "During the years between 2008's [wimpLink albumId=\"77577154\"]The Devil, You + Me[/wimpLink] and 2014's [wimpLink albumId=\"25934525\"]Close to the Glass[/wimpLink], the members of [wimpLink artistId=\"3529689\"]the Notwist[/wimpLink] kept themselves busy with solo projects and writing pieces for theater productions and radio plays, some of which are collected in [wimpLink albumId=\"38519994\"]Messier Objects[/wimpLink]. In the best possible way, the compilation lives up to its name: where [wimpLink albumId=\"25934525\"]Close to the Glass[/wimpLink] was remarkably polished and focused (and only featured one instrumental, the standout \"Lineri\"), the band revels in many different approaches and experiments on these tracks. While the percolating post-rock of \"Object 9\" and \"Object 6\" deliver more familiar sounds from the band in miniature -- and the 12-minute \"Das Spiel Ist Aus\" stretches them to epic length -- elsewhere, [wimpLink artistId=\"3529689\"]the Notwist[/wimpLink] dives into completely unfamiliar territory. The bubbly \"Object 7\" recalls vintage library music in its atmospheric brevity; \"Object 4\" reveals a previously unheard fondness for Les Baxter and [wimpLink artistId=\"13544\"]Esquivel[/wimpLink], and \"Object 10\" incorporates Latin and trip-hop elements into something unlike anything they've ever done before. [wimpLink albumId=\"38519994\"]Messier Objects[/wimpLink] is a lot of fun for those wanting to explore [wimpLink artistId=\"3529689\"]the Notwist[/wimpLink]'s more experimental side. ~ Heather Phares",
"summary": ""
}