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Nick Cave

Boatman's Call

Boatman's Call Tracks
1. Into My Arms
2. Lime-Tree Arbour
3. People Ain't No Good
4. Brompton Oratory
5. There Is A Kingdom
6. (Are You) The One I've Been Waiting For?
7. Where Do We Go Now But Nowherer?
8. West Country Girl
9. Black Hair
10. Idiot Prayer
11. Far From Me
12. Green Eyes
Nick Cave - Boatman's Call
Boatman's Call Review
After a career spent tearing down the world with horror and disgust, Nick Cave finally sounds ready to start rebuilding from scratch. He's begun to find a quiet grace, and perhaps even beauty, past all the darkness that's long consumed him. Amid the ashes of a world unable to exorcise its demons, Cave actually finds love; a strange, twisted, doomed love, perhaps--but love nevertheless.

On The Boatman's Call, Cave's latest collection, the singer-songwriter finds room for the personal, the spiritual, and even the hopeful in his grey psyche. With only the sparest accompaniment--often just a piano or organ, light percussion, and violin (care of Dirty Three's Warren Ellis)--Cave employs traditional folk song structure and simplicity to weave tales saddened less through tragedy as through emptiness. Songs like "Into My Arms" and "(Are You) The One That I've Been Waiting For?" are among Cave's most self-assured and soulful to date. Stripped down and grown up--though still ghoulish and grave--Cave the storyteller has turned into something of a vampire Springsteen.

Ultimately, The Boatman's Call sounds like Cave's attempt to poison his cake and eat it too. For a record so resolute in its denial of divinity, The Boatman's Call's obsession with religious themes and imagery might seem contradictory if they hadn't come from someone like Cave, who fancies himself a fallen angel searching for a ladder back to heaven. Where Gothic meets cathedral, there resides, for better or worse, our dark saint Nick. --Roni Sarig



Users's Reviews
Feel free to add your comments about Boatman's Call
Another great Nick Cave album
4
If there was ever a modern day Edgar Allen Poe, Nick Cave would probably have to be that person. With his rich baritone vocals and often bittersweet lyrics, his music is what I consider great rainy day music, let alone any day music. Nick Cave is one of my personal favorite male vocalists today, along with Andrew Eldritch (The Sisters of Mercy), Ronan Harris (VNV Nation), Robert Smith (The Cure), Dave Gahan (Depeche Mode), and Voltaire. His voice sends chills down my spine. And on "The Boatman's Call", Nick doesn't fail me at that. I absolutely adored "Murder Ballads" which was my first exposure to Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds' music. I didn't think he could match the intensity of that album with "The Boatman's Call". Although there isn't any songs as morbid as "Where the Wild Roses Grow" and "Stagger Lee", Nick still succeeded in releasing a classic album with "The Boatman's Call". He gets the album going with the wonderful ballad "Into My Arms" and the songs just gets better and better one song after another. I especially love "People Ain't No Good". I consider it one of my personal anthems. "Brompton Oratory" gives me this image of being in church and listening to church music with the lush organ sounds. Nick's bittersweet lyrics never ceases to amaze me, and the fact that he puts them to such beatiful, lush music makes him an absolute genius in my book.
Posted by Anonymous, on 2005-07-01
Another great Nick Cave cd
4
If there was ever a modern day Edgar Allen Poe, Nick Cave would probably have to be that person. With his rich baritone vocals and often bittersweet lyrics, his music is what I consider great rainy day music, let alone any day music. Nick Cave is one of my personal favorite male vocalists today, along with Andrew Eldritch (The Sisters of Mercy), Ronan Harris (VNV Nation), Robert Smith (The Cure), Dave Gahan (Depeche Mode), and Voltaire. His voice sends chills down my spine. And on "The Boatman's Call", Nick doesn't fail me at that. I absolutely adored "Murder Ballads" which was my first exposure to Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds' music. I didn't think he could match the intensity of that album with "The Boatman's Call". Although there isn't any songs as morbid as "Where the Wild Roses Grow" and "Stagger Lee", Nick still succeeded in releasing a classic album with "The Boatman's Call". He gets the album going with the wonderful ballad "Into My Arms" and the songs just gets better and better one song after another. I especially love "People Ain't No Good". I consider it one of my personal anthems. "Brompton Oratory" gives me this image of being in church and listening to church music with the lush organ sounds. Nick's bittersweet lyrics never ceases to amaze me, and the fact that he puts them to such beatiful, lush music makes him an absolute genius in my book.
Posted by Anonymous, on 2005-05-30
Sheer dark beauty abounds
5
If you missed out on this one when it was released as I did, don't forever rue the day, correct your error now. The Boatman's Call is the shining pearl buried for so many years in Nick Cave's irritated soul. "Into My Arms" is one of the most beautiful, poignant songs ever written and the cd's caliber drops little from that auspicious beginning. This is not "essential Nick Cave" it's just essential. A classic piece of music for the ages.
Posted by Anonymous, on 2004-03-27