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Seance

Seance in Franklin, TN

Current price: $63.99
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Seance

Barnes and Noble

Seance in Franklin, TN

Current price: $63.99
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Size: OS

The cover may have looked like something of a goth record of the era, though then again not many goths would have used pink as the dominant color of an album. On this, the band's third full album, the band consolidated the advances of
Blurred Crusade
well; if
Seance
isn't as immediately striking as the first two albums, it still has its share of winners, starting with the opening
"Fly."
Its string-synth touched, stripped-down arrangement almost sounded like something from
the Chameleons
' quieter moments, but the following
"One Day"
returned
the Church
to more familiar ringing-yet-forceful guitar territory. One very curious thing about this song and many of the others on the album has to with the drumming -- while
Ploog
very much remains the key credited drummer, here and on many other cuts nearly everything sounds produced by a particularly muffled drum machine. Whether or not one was used, the result is at once stiff and more than a little underwhelming, making what should be stronger songs sound more run of the mill than they are. Even the otherwise excellent remastering of the early catalog when the albums were reissued on
Arista
can't save some of the problems. Aside from this major flaw,
keeps at the understated guitar groove that
rapidly made its own, containing marvelous songs like
"Disappear?"
and the nicely paced
"Electric Lash."
Experimenting with keyboards more provides some nice results, as the
Kilbey
-and-synth introduction to the lovely
"It's No Reason"
shows. Meanwhile, the interplay between
Willson-Piper
,
Koppes
, and
on their respective instruments remains strong, with many noted strong points: the dramatic, tense build of
"Travel By Thought,"
the low-key combination on
"Electric"
bursting into keyboard-touched life on its choruses, and the quick, punchy
"Dropping Names."
~ Ned Raggett
The cover may have looked like something of a goth record of the era, though then again not many goths would have used pink as the dominant color of an album. On this, the band's third full album, the band consolidated the advances of
Blurred Crusade
well; if
Seance
isn't as immediately striking as the first two albums, it still has its share of winners, starting with the opening
"Fly."
Its string-synth touched, stripped-down arrangement almost sounded like something from
the Chameleons
' quieter moments, but the following
"One Day"
returned
the Church
to more familiar ringing-yet-forceful guitar territory. One very curious thing about this song and many of the others on the album has to with the drumming -- while
Ploog
very much remains the key credited drummer, here and on many other cuts nearly everything sounds produced by a particularly muffled drum machine. Whether or not one was used, the result is at once stiff and more than a little underwhelming, making what should be stronger songs sound more run of the mill than they are. Even the otherwise excellent remastering of the early catalog when the albums were reissued on
Arista
can't save some of the problems. Aside from this major flaw,
keeps at the understated guitar groove that
rapidly made its own, containing marvelous songs like
"Disappear?"
and the nicely paced
"Electric Lash."
Experimenting with keyboards more provides some nice results, as the
Kilbey
-and-synth introduction to the lovely
"It's No Reason"
shows. Meanwhile, the interplay between
Willson-Piper
,
Koppes
, and
on their respective instruments remains strong, with many noted strong points: the dramatic, tense build of
"Travel By Thought,"
the low-key combination on
"Electric"
bursting into keyboard-touched life on its choruses, and the quick, punchy
"Dropping Names."
~ Ned Raggett

More About Barnes and Noble at CoolSprings Galleria

Barnes & Noble is the world’s largest retail bookseller and a leading retailer of content, digital media and educational products. Our Nook Digital business offers a lineup of NOOK® tablets and e-Readers and an expansive collection of digital reading content through the NOOK Store®. Barnes & Noble’s mission is to operate the best omni-channel specialty retail business in America, helping both our customers and booksellers reach their aspirations, while being a credit to the communities we serve.

1800 Galleria Blvd #1310, Franklin, TN 37067, United States

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