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

Gone, by Mono (CD on Temporary Residence)

Cover art for Gone by Mono Description: CD on Temporary Residence
Add Gone by Mono to your cart

UK ORDERS OVER £50 SHIP FREE!
Format: CD
Label: Temporary Residence
Price: £9.49
Availability: despatched in 1 working day


What you say

No-one has reviewed Gone by Mono yet.

  • Give us your opinion on Gone by Mono.

What the label says:

The players: Takaakira "Taka" Goto, Yasunori Takada, Tamaki, Yoda. Formed in 1999 by four Tokyo natives as an antithesis to the omnipresent Japanese pop scene. At first, MONO wore their influences on their sleeves, colliding the ugly washes of noise pioneered by My Bloody Valentine with the beautiful, subtle guitar figures of Slint and Mogwai. Not groundbreaking, but certainly magical. Eventually, MONO developed into a whole different species: Their classical influences broke through, pushing the music to structural and emotional extremes that owed as much to Wagner and Beethoven as it did Black Sabbath and Neurosis. Collecting all of MONO’s rare and out-of-print non-album tracks, Gone perfectly (and chronologically) displays their astounding growth, from the modest opening notes of “Finlandia” to the scorched finale of “Little Boy (1945-Future).” These tracks are culled from a series of highly sought-after releases, including the Japanese-only debut Hey, You. EP, their split LP with Pelican, the Cameron Crowe-commissioned Memorie dal Futuro vinyl 10”, and The Phoenix Tree, their out-of-print EP for the storied Travels In Constants series. All tracks have been beautifully remastered from their original master tapes, with both CD and 3xLP formats boasting absurdly beautiful deluxe packaging. The vinyl is a limited edition one-time pressing of 3,000 copies

 

Other customers buying this also bought:

Split by Redjetson / Youthmovie Soundtrack Strategies (12", £4.49)
Milk Man by Deerhoof (CD, £7.99)
New York Soundtracks by Mono (CD, £8.99)
Split by Tomcats In Tokyo/ ISAN (CD single, £3.49)
The Runners Four by Deerhoof (CD, £11.99)

Other items by Mono:

Gone by Mono Gone by Mono (Triple LP, £18.99)

New York Soundtracks by Mono New York Soundtracks by Mono (LP, £9.49)

New York Soundtracks by Mono New York Soundtracks by Mono (CD, £8.99)

One Step More And You Die by Mono One Step More And You Die by Mono (CD, £9.99)

The Sky Remains The Same As Ever by Mono The Sky Remains The Same As Ever by Mono (DVD, £13.49)

Under The Pipal Tree by Mono Under The Pipal Tree by Mono (CD, £13.49)

Walking Cloud & Deep Red Sky by Mono Walking Cloud & Deep Red Sky by Mono (Double LP, £14.49)

You Are There by Mono You Are There by Mono (LP, £11.79)

You Are There by Mono You Are There by Mono (CD, £9.99)


Request more details

If you would like more details about Gone by Mono, fill in the form below and we'll get back to ya.

Your Name (required):

Your E-Mail Address: (required)

What do you want to know about? (required)

Your comments/questions/request:

in your cart:

You sadly have 0 items in your cart.

main links:
Homepage
Contact details
Competition
Mailing list
Blog
MySpace
search:

Restrict search by format?
Catalogue A-Z
New stuff in
Used items
Pre-ordering
Sale items!
View entire catalogue
Jonathon Whiskey
Chain With No Name
news & opinion:
News & reviews
Search reviews
ordering:
Payment methods
Shipping info.
Reserving records
Special orders
Wants & trading
Update your info
about us:
FAQs
Life at Norman Towers
Links
Credits
 


Back to top | Search | Browse the catalogue | New stuff in | Recommendations | News & reviews

Bookmark & Share

Send this page to a friend | Print this page

Norman Records:
Unit 1 Armley Park Court, Stanningley Road, Leeds, LS12 2AE, UK.
Tel/Fax UK (+44): 0113 2311114
phil@normanrecords.com


About the humble CD:

The CD is essentially a small portable face mirror which has an extra feature of being able to play music (through a thing known as a CD player). These CD's are a modern invention hence them being all shiny and digital. They can hold about 80 minutes of music and apparently are indestructible as you can smear jam on them and they still play (not as nourishing as toast mind you but when you're hungry.....). They sound crystal clear and are tiny convenient things. They lack the charm and warmth of their old analogue counterparts but their portability, convenience and ease of being duplicated make them a perfect thing of a thing for most folks. Jewel cases are the worst thing ever though and they really need to stop.

'it's like I'm the farmhand and you're my animals.'