
Everything But The Girl: Walking Wounded (180g) Vinyl LP
Everything But The Girlâs Walking Wounded has been at the top of my reissue wantlist for about as long as Iâve been buying records. It sits at a strange apex of every kind of music I hold dear - atmospheric drum & bass, highbrow electronica, tender indie singer-songwriter, bossa nova, Cool Britanniaâą - and drinks it all in without sounding forced or cliche. For context: LTJ Bukemâs Logical Progression only came out the month before; Goldieâs Timeless the year before that, so this was wayyy before drum & bass went mainstream, and a good 18-24 months before it became a bland caricature of itself. The bandâs UK label had just dropped them after the lukewarm sales of Amplified Heart, and the Todd Terry remix of âMissingâ was still a few months off from becoming the worldwide sensation that would elevate the band, when Ben Watt and Tracey Thorn were quietly checking out the burgeoning drum & bass scene, putting their own spin on the sounds they were hearing in DJ sets by scene fixtures Doc Scott, Bukem and Fabio in Londonâs West End, utilizing âjust an Akai sampler, a computer, a synth and guitar, an inexpensive vocal mic, and an 8-track tape machine.â The title track - co-wrote and produced by D&B-studio-rats-of-the-past Spring Heel Jack - was what hooked me initially, coming up again and again in Napster searches for âdrum and bass,â âjungleâ and âtrip hop.â But whatever I thought drum & bass was at the time, this was acres bigger than that⊠those delayed and re-pitched halftime 808 snares and cinematic orchestral washes carry Traceyâs vocals in like a giant cloud before dissolving into taut rolling breaks and booming 808 licks; it was unlike anything Iâd heard before, and Iâve yet to hear any drum & bass reach such levels of consciousness (we called it âintelligent drum & bassâ back then, barf) since. Once you really get into it though, âBefore Todayâ reveals itself to be the recordâs indisputable prized pig (look up some live performances of this one from the era, WTF), rolling out the title trackâs same arsenal of breaks and 808s with Wattâs sparse but sublime sample programming underpinning Thornâs grand subjugation: âI want your love, and I want it now.â âBig Dealâ and âGood Cop, Bad Copâ are cut from the same cloth to similarly delectable results. Elsewhere, âWrongâ is a callback to the chart-topping house sound of âMissing,â while âSingleâ deploys a more tempered downtempo production for Thornâs sultry petition of a former lover, and Howie B provides a big splashing groove for âFlipside.â Yeah, sure, most of these big tracks are available on twelves, many of them backed with deadly remixes by D&B icons (Omni Trio, Photek, Adam F, Dillinja, pretty motherfucking impressive in hindsight!), but all we've ever wanted was the freedom to put on this full album and just dissolve into the floor. Half-speed remaster at Abbey Road Studios by longtime EBTG mastering engineer Miles Showell with full-color picture sleeve. Highest recommendation!
- 180g black vinyl pressing
- remastered at half-speed at Abbey Road Studios
- housed in full-color picture sleeve
- limited edition
- music label:Â Buzzin Fly Records LTD 2019
reviewed by laughable butane bob 09/2019
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Everything But The Girl: Walking Wounded (180g) Vinyl LP
Everything But The Girlâs Walking Wounded has been at the top of my reissue wantlist for about as long as Iâve been buying records. It sits at a strange apex of every kind of music I hold dear - atmospheric drum & bass, highbrow electronica, tender indie singer-songwriter, bossa nova, Cool Britanniaâą - and drinks it all in without sounding forced or cliche. For context: LTJ Bukemâs Logical Progression only came out the month before; Goldieâs Timeless the year before that, so this was wayyy before drum & bass went mainstream, and a good 18-24 months before it became a bland caricature of itself. The bandâs UK label had just dropped them after the lukewarm sales of Amplified Heart, and the Todd Terry remix of âMissingâ was still a few months off from becoming the worldwide sensation that would elevate the band, when Ben Watt and Tracey Thorn were quietly checking out the burgeoning drum & bass scene, putting their own spin on the sounds they were hearing in DJ sets by scene fixtures Doc Scott, Bukem and Fabio in Londonâs West End, utilizing âjust an Akai sampler, a computer, a synth and guitar, an inexpensive vocal mic, and an 8-track tape machine.â The title track - co-wrote and produced by D&B-studio-rats-of-the-past Spring Heel Jack - was what hooked me initially, coming up again and again in Napster searches for âdrum and bass,â âjungleâ and âtrip hop.â But whatever I thought drum & bass was at the time, this was acres bigger than that⊠those delayed and re-pitched halftime 808 snares and cinematic orchestral washes carry Traceyâs vocals in like a giant cloud before dissolving into taut rolling breaks and booming 808 licks; it was unlike anything Iâd heard before, and Iâve yet to hear any drum & bass reach such levels of consciousness (we called it âintelligent drum & bassâ back then, barf) since. Once you really get into it though, âBefore Todayâ reveals itself to be the recordâs indisputable prized pig (look up some live performances of this one from the era, WTF), rolling out the title trackâs same arsenal of breaks and 808s with Wattâs sparse but sublime sample programming underpinning Thornâs grand subjugation: âI want your love, and I want it now.â âBig Dealâ and âGood Cop, Bad Copâ are cut from the same cloth to similarly delectable results. Elsewhere, âWrongâ is a callback to the chart-topping house sound of âMissing,â while âSingleâ deploys a more tempered downtempo production for Thornâs sultry petition of a former lover, and Howie B provides a big splashing groove for âFlipside.â Yeah, sure, most of these big tracks are available on twelves, many of them backed with deadly remixes by D&B icons (Omni Trio, Photek, Adam F, Dillinja, pretty motherfucking impressive in hindsight!), but all we've ever wanted was the freedom to put on this full album and just dissolve into the floor. Half-speed remaster at Abbey Road Studios by longtime EBTG mastering engineer Miles Showell with full-color picture sleeve. Highest recommendation!
- 180g black vinyl pressing
- remastered at half-speed at Abbey Road Studios
- housed in full-color picture sleeve
- limited edition
- music label:Â Buzzin Fly Records LTD 2019
reviewed by laughable butane bob 09/2019
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Everything But The Girlâs Walking Wounded has been at the top of my reissue wantlist for about as long as Iâve been buying records. It sits at a strange apex of every kind of music I hold dear - atmospheric drum & bass, highbrow electronica, tender indie singer-songwriter, bossa nova, Cool Britanniaâą - and drinks it all in without sounding forced or cliche. For context: LTJ Bukemâs Logical Progression only came out the month before; Goldieâs Timeless the year before that, so this was wayyy before drum & bass went mainstream, and a good 18-24 months before it became a bland caricature of itself. The bandâs UK label had just dropped them after the lukewarm sales of Amplified Heart, and the Todd Terry remix of âMissingâ was still a few months off from becoming the worldwide sensation that would elevate the band, when Ben Watt and Tracey Thorn were quietly checking out the burgeoning drum & bass scene, putting their own spin on the sounds they were hearing in DJ sets by scene fixtures Doc Scott, Bukem and Fabio in Londonâs West End, utilizing âjust an Akai sampler, a computer, a synth and guitar, an inexpensive vocal mic, and an 8-track tape machine.â The title track - co-wrote and produced by D&B-studio-rats-of-the-past Spring Heel Jack - was what hooked me initially, coming up again and again in Napster searches for âdrum and bass,â âjungleâ and âtrip hop.â But whatever I thought drum & bass was at the time, this was acres bigger than that⊠those delayed and re-pitched halftime 808 snares and cinematic orchestral washes carry Traceyâs vocals in like a giant cloud before dissolving into taut rolling breaks and booming 808 licks; it was unlike anything Iâd heard before, and Iâve yet to hear any drum & bass reach such levels of consciousness (we called it âintelligent drum & bassâ back then, barf) since. Once you really get into it though, âBefore Todayâ reveals itself to be the recordâs indisputable prized pig (look up some live performances of this one from the era, WTF), rolling out the title trackâs same arsenal of breaks and 808s with Wattâs sparse but sublime sample programming underpinning Thornâs grand subjugation: âI want your love, and I want it now.â âBig Dealâ and âGood Cop, Bad Copâ are cut from the same cloth to similarly delectable results. Elsewhere, âWrongâ is a callback to the chart-topping house sound of âMissing,â while âSingleâ deploys a more tempered downtempo production for Thornâs sultry petition of a former lover, and Howie B provides a big splashing groove for âFlipside.â Yeah, sure, most of these big tracks are available on twelves, many of them backed with deadly remixes by D&B icons (Omni Trio, Photek, Adam F, Dillinja, pretty motherfucking impressive in hindsight!), but all we've ever wanted was the freedom to put on this full album and just dissolve into the floor. Half-speed remaster at Abbey Road Studios by longtime EBTG mastering engineer Miles Showell with full-color picture sleeve. Highest recommendation!
- 180g black vinyl pressing
- remastered at half-speed at Abbey Road Studios
- housed in full-color picture sleeve
- limited edition
- music label:Â Buzzin Fly Records LTD 2019











