MARTINA TOPLEY-BIRD
''QUIXOTIC''
JULY 29 2003
50:32
1 Intro (Martina Topley-Bird) 01:10
2 Need One (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 03:51
3 Anything (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall)04:21
4 Soul Food (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 05:29
5 Lullaby (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 04:21
6 Too Tough To Die (David Holmes, Martina Topley-Bird) 03:54
7 Sandpaper Kisses (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 03:49
8 Ragga (Martina Topley-Bird, Tricky) 03:13
9 Lying (Martina Topley-Bird) 04:12
10 I Wanna Be There (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 01:51
11 I Still Feel (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 05:15
12 Ilya (Martina Topley-Bird) 04:34
13 Stevie's (Day's Of A Gun) (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 04:26
Guitar – Alex McGowan (tracks: 2, 7, 8, 10 to 12, 13), Steve Crittall (tracks: 2 to 5, 10, 11, 13)
Organ – Alex McGowan (tracks: 2, 8, 11, 12)
Programmed By – Alex McGowan (tracks: 4, 6 to 9, 11, 12), Martina Topley-Bird (tracks: 3, 9, 11, 12), Tricky (tracks: 7, 8, 11, 12)
Programmed By [Additional] – Fabien Waltmann (tracks: 7 to 9, 12)
CREDITS (AMG)
REVIEW/AMG
by Tim DiGravina
Longtime Tricky chanteuse Martina Topley-Bird's solo debut is a fine but entirely inoffensive affair, and thus perhaps exactly what the doctor ordered for her trip-pop-adoring admirers. For the most part, Quixotic sees Topley-Bird straddling tasteful chillout vibes with patches of soul, blues, and rock thrown in for good measure. The far too short "Intro" is the deepest excursion into Topley-Bird's blues jones, and if it were just another minute longer, it would be worth the price of admission on its own. The appropriately titled "Soul Food" sees the singer donning her very best Dusty Springfield garb. Just a touch too commercial and plastic, the song is still a wonderful showcase for Topley-Bird's beautifully sweet voice. Similarly geared toward the Top 40 is "Need One," a collaboration with Queens of the Stone Age's Josh Homme. The track is certainly catchy, but its airy background vocals drown out Homme's contributions. "Too Tough to Die" and "I Wanna Be There" round out the rock tracks and present another dose of mimicry: Topley-Bird's snarling aggression on these two tracks positions her as an absolute dead ringer for Rid of Me-era PJ Harvey. With other collaborators such as David Holmes, David Arnold, and Tricky himself lending helping hands, every note, sample, and genre flourish feels exactly in the right place. The album showcases both Topley-Bird's range and her gorgeous voice, and while its stylistic shifts make for a consistently engaging listen, one can't shake the sense that specific musical formulas are in place at every corner. Still, most listeners will probably revel in the album's eclecticism, as Topley-Bird is an absolutely first-rate musical and vocal chameleon. Satisfying but rarely challenging, Quixotic is a fantastic start to a solo career, and its display of range, talent, and charm suggests that Martina Topley-Bird has an endless well of creativity at her disposal and that she is most likely destined for greater things.
BIOGRAPHY/AMG
by David Jeffries
Because of a printing error on Maxinquaye, Martina Topley-Bird has often been referred to as "Martine," an error the unpredictable, low-profile, and confusion-loving singer/songwriter didn't bother correcting. The woman Vibe referred to as "the black Dietrich of Soul" grew up in London and went to schools that were mostly white and middle class. Being the odd one out suited Martina just fine; in fact, it was an environment she thrived in. A chance meeting with Tricky led to a relationship, both romantic and musical. Martina's ethereal voice mixed well with Tricky's gruff style, sounding like a siren calling listeners into a dark world. She played a large role on Tricky's debut, Maxinquaye, along with the follow-ups Nearly God and Pre-Millennium Tension.
The relationship eventually cooled down to platonic and Martina looked to strike out professionally on her own. She spent most of 2002 working on her debut, producing it herself with some help from Tricky and Alex McGowan. The appropriately named Quixotic hit the shelves in the U.K. in 2003, with guest appearances from DJ/producer David Holmes, Kyuss guitarist Josh Homme, and former Screaming Trees frontman Mark Lanegan. Critics loved it, so much so that it was a 2003 finalist for the U.K.'s esteemed Mercury Prize, but it failed to find release in America. With help from Martina, Palm Pictures "re-designed and re-sequenced" the album and released it as Anything in the summer of 2004. During a four-year hiatus, she collaborated with Diplo, Gorillaz, and Son of Dave. She returned to recording proper in 2008 with the Danger Mouse-produced retro-sounding yet experimental album The Blue God. After an international tour, Topley-Bird released Some Place Simple in 2010 on Damon Albarn's Honest Jon's imprint.
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''QUIXOTIC''
JULY 29 2003
50:32
1 Intro (Martina Topley-Bird) 01:10
2 Need One (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 03:51
3 Anything (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall)04:21
4 Soul Food (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 05:29
5 Lullaby (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 04:21
6 Too Tough To Die (David Holmes, Martina Topley-Bird) 03:54
7 Sandpaper Kisses (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 03:49
8 Ragga (Martina Topley-Bird, Tricky) 03:13
9 Lying (Martina Topley-Bird) 04:12
10 I Wanna Be There (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 01:51
11 I Still Feel (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 05:15
12 Ilya (Martina Topley-Bird) 04:34
13 Stevie's (Day's Of A Gun) (Nick Bird, Steve Crittall, Alex McGowan, Martina Topley-Bird) 04:26
Guitar – Alex McGowan (tracks: 2, 7, 8, 10 to 12, 13), Steve Crittall (tracks: 2 to 5, 10, 11, 13)
Organ – Alex McGowan (tracks: 2, 8, 11, 12)
Programmed By – Alex McGowan (tracks: 4, 6 to 9, 11, 12), Martina Topley-Bird (tracks: 3, 9, 11, 12), Tricky (tracks: 7, 8, 11, 12)
Programmed By [Additional] – Fabien Waltmann (tracks: 7 to 9, 12)
CREDITS (AMG)
REVIEW/AMG
by Tim DiGravina
Longtime Tricky chanteuse Martina Topley-Bird's solo debut is a fine but entirely inoffensive affair, and thus perhaps exactly what the doctor ordered for her trip-pop-adoring admirers. For the most part, Quixotic sees Topley-Bird straddling tasteful chillout vibes with patches of soul, blues, and rock thrown in for good measure. The far too short "Intro" is the deepest excursion into Topley-Bird's blues jones, and if it were just another minute longer, it would be worth the price of admission on its own. The appropriately titled "Soul Food" sees the singer donning her very best Dusty Springfield garb. Just a touch too commercial and plastic, the song is still a wonderful showcase for Topley-Bird's beautifully sweet voice. Similarly geared toward the Top 40 is "Need One," a collaboration with Queens of the Stone Age's Josh Homme. The track is certainly catchy, but its airy background vocals drown out Homme's contributions. "Too Tough to Die" and "I Wanna Be There" round out the rock tracks and present another dose of mimicry: Topley-Bird's snarling aggression on these two tracks positions her as an absolute dead ringer for Rid of Me-era PJ Harvey. With other collaborators such as David Holmes, David Arnold, and Tricky himself lending helping hands, every note, sample, and genre flourish feels exactly in the right place. The album showcases both Topley-Bird's range and her gorgeous voice, and while its stylistic shifts make for a consistently engaging listen, one can't shake the sense that specific musical formulas are in place at every corner. Still, most listeners will probably revel in the album's eclecticism, as Topley-Bird is an absolutely first-rate musical and vocal chameleon. Satisfying but rarely challenging, Quixotic is a fantastic start to a solo career, and its display of range, talent, and charm suggests that Martina Topley-Bird has an endless well of creativity at her disposal and that she is most likely destined for greater things.
BIOGRAPHY/AMG
by David Jeffries
Because of a printing error on Maxinquaye, Martina Topley-Bird has often been referred to as "Martine," an error the unpredictable, low-profile, and confusion-loving singer/songwriter didn't bother correcting. The woman Vibe referred to as "the black Dietrich of Soul" grew up in London and went to schools that were mostly white and middle class. Being the odd one out suited Martina just fine; in fact, it was an environment she thrived in. A chance meeting with Tricky led to a relationship, both romantic and musical. Martina's ethereal voice mixed well with Tricky's gruff style, sounding like a siren calling listeners into a dark world. She played a large role on Tricky's debut, Maxinquaye, along with the follow-ups Nearly God and Pre-Millennium Tension.
The relationship eventually cooled down to platonic and Martina looked to strike out professionally on her own. She spent most of 2002 working on her debut, producing it herself with some help from Tricky and Alex McGowan. The appropriately named Quixotic hit the shelves in the U.K. in 2003, with guest appearances from DJ/producer David Holmes, Kyuss guitarist Josh Homme, and former Screaming Trees frontman Mark Lanegan. Critics loved it, so much so that it was a 2003 finalist for the U.K.'s esteemed Mercury Prize, but it failed to find release in America. With help from Martina, Palm Pictures "re-designed and re-sequenced" the album and released it as Anything in the summer of 2004. During a four-year hiatus, she collaborated with Diplo, Gorillaz, and Son of Dave. She returned to recording proper in 2008 with the Danger Mouse-produced retro-sounding yet experimental album The Blue God. After an international tour, Topley-Bird released Some Place Simple in 2010 on Damon Albarn's Honest Jon's imprint.
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