James
Wah Wah

Fontana    522 827-2  (1994)

Rock/Pop
CD, 23   Tracks, 68:07  Length
01 Hammer Strings James; Brian Eno 02:12
02 Pressure's On James; Brian Eno 04:27
03 Jam J James; Brian Eno 03:34
04 Frequency Dip James; Brian Eno 03:35
05 Lay the Law Down James; Brian Eno 00:58
06 Burn the Cat James; Brian Eno 06:50
07 Maria James; Brian Eno 04:03
08 Low Clouds James; Brian Eno 00:33
09 Building a Fire James; Brian Eno 02:43
10 Gospel Oak James; Brian Eno 02:48
11 DVV James; Brian Eno 01:05
12 Say Say Something James; Brian Eno 05:42
13 Rhythmic Dreams James; Brian Eno 02:35
14 Dead Man James; Brian Eno 00:58
15 Rain Whistling James; Brian Eno 02:45
16 Basic Brian James; Brian Eno 05:30
17 Low Clouds James; Brian Eno 00:16
18 Bottom of the Well James; Brian Eno 03:16
19 Honest Joe James; Brian Eno 04:39
20 Arabic Agony James; Brian Eno 03:57
21 Tomorrow James; Brian Eno 02:29
22 Laughter James; Brian Eno 00:31
23 Sayonara James; Brian Eno 02:41
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Digipac
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Vocals Tim Booth
Guitar Saul Davies
Bass Jim Glennie
Guitar Larry Gott
Keyboards Mark Hunter
Drums David Baynton-Power
Musician James
Producer Brian Eno
Engineer Benedict Fenner
Cover by Stylorouge
Personal Details
Index # 1657
Owner Dave
Tags Experimental, Indie Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
As Brian Eno's sometimes all too precious liner notes explain, when he and James worked together first in rehearsals and then in full recording sessions on Laid, a conscious decision was made to work on a variety of improvisations just to see what would happen. Wah Wah is the result, one of the more uncommercial albums any band of its stature and its accompanying major label has had a hand in releasing. Those expecting 60-minute maelstroms of free noise or recitations of obscenities or the like are in the wrong place, but definitely compared to the beautifully structured and precisely produced Laid, Wah Wah is much more a series of explorations in sound, sometimes quite fascinating ones. The general focus of Laid towards an evocative, restrained attractiveness and moody melancholy holds here as well, more immediate numbers with full lyrics from Booth sung in his fine voice mixed with more open-ended instrumental or wordless vocal jams. More than a few songs could have easily fit on Laid without a worry, such as the slow building "Pressure's On," easily a cousin to Laid's album-starter "Out to Get You," and the solid, techno-tinged trip "Honest Joe." Meanwhile, "Tomorrow," in re-recorded and even more warmly epic form, later became the excellent lead track on Whiplash. One tune, "Say Say Something," shares title and inspiration with the similarly named Laid song but takes a much different direction, with what sounds like Indian violin contributing to a slow-paced, serene wash of sound. Some songs are by default much more fragmentary than others, lyrics just dreamed up of the top of Booth's head, the rest of the band working around a rhythm loop or quietly rolling rhythm. Overall Wah Wah makes for a good listen both as a companion piece to Laid and on its own understated merits. -- Ned Raggett (allmusic.com)