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Put your hands on the remote! browse music »Speed Of Life Pt 2 by Silverman
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fave it Modern Rock | Trip Hop
7 tracks | 36 minutes
Released Jun 2002
on Uglyman Music
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- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:52 Ctrl Alt Del lyrics BUY MP3 04:52 Ctrl Alt Del lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:52 Ctrl Alt Del
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:22 Secret Baby lyrics BUY MP3 04:22 Secret Baby lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:22 Secret Baby
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:25 Don't Leave This World Without Me lyrics BUY MP3 04:25 Don't Leave This World Without Me lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:25 Don't Leave This World Without Me
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 04:34 11:11 lyrics BUY MP3 04:34 11:11 lyrics "GIFT MP3" 04:34 11:11
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 05:50 Can I Have My Heart Back Please? lyrics BUY MP3 05:50 Can I Have My Heart Back Please? lyrics "GIFT MP3" 05:50 Can I Have My Heart Back Please?
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 03:56 Be Beautiful lyrics BUY MP3 03:56 Be Beautiful lyrics "GIFT MP3" 03:56 Be Beautiful
- sample lyrics "DOWNLOAD" 08:52 Nothing I Do, Nothing I Say lyrics BUY MP3 08:52 Nothing I Do, Nothing I Say lyrics "GIFT MP3" 08:52 Nothing I Do, Nothing I Say
Intimate, articulate, explorations. moments of thought and emotion exploding into beautiful songs. “some albums are just so cinematic they should be reviewed as movies, this is a sundance winning tearjerker of a record, glorious all consuming passion
Bio / Background
Anna Dennis: vocals, acoustic guitar
Martin Williams: sampler, drums, guitar, vocals
Steve Moody: bass
Alan Deacon: keyboards
Paul Treby: guitar
Location: "We exist in Cheltenham, England; though we live our lives in our warped imaginations."
Many bands - desperate to give the impression that someone somewhere gives a shit about them - claim to be a hit on the Internet. Silverman have been there and done that. Having charted high and consistently at MP3.com, ClickMusic and Besonic, they also won an audience poll by US portal Streamsearch, being flown to Los Angeles for the award ceremony, then appearing as guests-of-honour at the after-show party at Hugh Hefner's Playboy mansion. With the party sponsored by Viagra, says Silverman's co-founder Martin Williams, "we weren't short of somewhere to hang our coats."
Silverman are two - Martin and singer Anna Dennis - with a touring complement of a further three. Anna has no history in bands.
↓ more ↓She has, though, spent lonely years writing and trashing songs, finding her own voice. Martin's story is different. As drummer, co-songwriter and acting manager of Nilon Bombers, he has suffered the toilet-tours, and was once named Pick Of The Week in Melody Maker.
When the Bombers split, "savaged by time, stress and fatigue," Martin went looking for a singer and, pointed in her direction by "a completely inappropriate rock guy," discovered Anna in an acoustic club. Initial demos were a joy. Previously compromised by the band situation and stifled as a songwriter, Martin was drunk on liberty. Absolutely inexperienced, Anna had no idea what a boundary was. She introduced him to Tori Amos, Ani DiFranco and Heather Nova, he drew her into Mogwai, Sparklehorse and Arab Strap, "stuff that gives you somewhere to explore, where not everything is at the surface."
As the short-sighted industry infatuation with manufactured pop drove listeners into the arms of David Gray, Coldplay, Turin Brakes and Starsailor, so Silverman benefited too. Their wares sold well in cyberspace, so well that time constraints eventually forced them down the more traditional route. Their new album, Speed Of Life Part 2, will - shock, horror - be available in shops. Speed Of Life Part 1, a compilation of all their Internet hits, may have already passed you by.
So, SOL Part 2 is not strictly speaking a debut and - complex, refined and mature - it doesn't sound like one. Caustic, cruel duet Ctrl Alt Del will remind you of Gainsbourg and Birkin, or Cave and Kylie, with music courtesy of, perhaps, Massive Attack. "Can I have my heart back, please?" has you thinking of a tormented Cocteau Twins, with a broken Anna's sad request buried beneath a wave of brutal electro-noise.Themes include sex, death and lingering pain, though the sex is (tellingly?) not gender-specific.
These are "proper" songs, superbly written, beautifully performed and backed with cultured and soulful soundscapes that place Silverman alongside such contemporary greats as Low, Portishead and Sneaker Pimps. Listen and understand.
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