Norman Records Silhouette of a dancer with caption 'Slapping the thighs of melody'
 

Dressed Up For The Letdown, by Richard Swift (LP on Secretly Canadian)

Cover art for Dressed Up For The Letdown by Richard Swift Description: LP on Secretly Canadian
 
Format: LP
Label: Secretly Canadian
Price: £9.79
Availability: sorry, but this item is not available / sold out. (Other items may be available!)


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Some copies are in now. Richard Swift’s sophomore release Dressed Up For The Letdown seems to symbolically call for an end to the age of overdub onslaughts and overrated studio trickery that have been plaguing records since the advent of the ADAT. After all... Sly Stone didn’t quantize “Luv N’ Haight”; in 1969, Crosby Stills and Nash weren’t “Helplessly Hoping” auto-tune would be invented; and there’s no doubt in my mind that whoever is responsible for the tambourine on Bob Dylan’s “Rainy Day Woman #12 & 35” had gotten stoned (as suggested).Why bring this up? Because each of the aforementioned songs have remained steadfast against the hourglass sands, regardless of the lack of digital editing employed during their respective recordings. You can just smell it in the air, can’t you? You know, the unmistakable fragrance of the impending societal revolt against the modern milquetoast manifestations of “art”? Or is it just me? I mean, who among us found themselves wishing George Lucas was poor again, whilst miserably enduring the Star Wars
prequels? I see those hands. Sure, it looked cool... sort of... Personally I’d take A Clockwork Orange any day over this green-screen nonsense. And herein lies the point: just because you can, doesn’t necessarily mean you should. In the spirit of this truth Richard Swift has confidently composed yet another original masterpiece; employing an archaic attitude of tempered restraint on a fresh collection of ten songs, without appearing shamelessly retro or kitschy. Playing a vast majority of the instruments on Dressed Up himself, by
virtue Swift has created something that is characteristically his. And considering his rougharound- the-edges exterior, one could rightly assume that Swift desires the listener to accept him as an ordinary honest man with some honest songs — unmasked blemishes and all. Yet when one engages with Swift on this narrow-road-less-traveled, one immediately ignores the subtle imperfections shadowed by the all-consuming white light of well-crafted pop songs in an analog heaven. In effect he’s saying, “Just listen to my songs... the riffraff in the background is inconsequential.” Sure Swift... whatever you say. Dare I say fans of The Richard Swift Collection Vol. 1 will not feel Dressed Up For The Letdown, as Swift leads the faithful further into a melancholic world draped with colorful sonic landscapes.

 

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Norman Records:
Unit 1 Armley Park Court, Stanningley Road, Leeds, LS12 2AE, UK.
Tel/Fax UK (+44): 0113 2311114
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About the humble LP:

The LP is the daddy of formats. 12" inches of sheer joy. The LP adds to the glory of the 12" record as it can be played at a slower speed (33rpm instead of the usual 45rpm for singles), consequently more musical joy can be had. Played on a decent deck the sound of an LP is about a million times better than any other format. They look fantastic...... a nice gatefold sleeve with a information rich inner sleeve will keep you entertained for hours even before your stylus has chance to make eye contact with it's 12" prey. An essential part of musical heritage which will never be forgotten. It still does play at a multitude of speeds but as it's recorded to be played slower they normally sound ridiculous sped up. Though double albums can make up for this slight inadequacy by ramming more tunes into your ears for your money. Utterly essential.