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Dig!!! Lazarus Dig!!!

Dig!!! Lazarus Dig!!!

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Artist: Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds
Label: Anti

List Price: $17.98
Buy Used: $6.49
You Save: $11.49 (64%)



Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 33 reviews

Format: Special Edition, Limited Edition
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 5.7 x 5.2 x 0.5

MPN: 86943
UPC: 045778694327
EAN: 0045778694327
ASIN: B0014DBZT2

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: excellent condition! cd and complete artwork

Tracks:

  • Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!
  • Today's Lesson
  • Moonland
  • Night Of The Lotus Eaters
  • Albert Goes West
  • We Call Upon The Author
  • Hold On To Yourself
  • Lie Down Here (& Be My Girl)
  • Jesus Of The Moon
  • Midnight Man
  • More News Fron Nowhere

Similar Items:

  • Third
  • Grinderman
  • Consolers Of The Lonely
  • Accelerate
  • Attack and Release

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk
Dig!!! Lazarus Dig!!! finds Nick Cave back at the helm of his long-term band The Bad Seeds after some impressive soundtrack work--2005's The Assassination of Jesse James--and a busman's holiday in the raw, rocking Grinderman. As the title suggests, Lazarus finds Cave returning to familiar themes of God and redemption, although some of the raw poise and wild-eyed humour that resurfaced in Grinderman remains: take the opening title track, which retells the Biblical story of the resurrection of Lazarus as transposed onto the sleazy, poverty-stricken backdrop of modern-day New York City. Musically, the likes of "Moonland" and "Night of the Lotus Eaters" have a swampy feel, all skittering drums, simmering bass and smoky organ riffs; elsewhere, there are rockers that tie on dissonant guitars without losing their dissonant touch ("Lie Down Here"). Probably the album highlight comes with "We Call Upon the Author", a sprawling, "Sister Ray"-like chugger that shows off Cave's skill for magnificent, sung-shouted narratives: "Now mixamatoid kids roam the streets, we've shunned them from the greasy grind/The poor little things, they look so sad and old as they mount us from behind". --Louis Pattison

Product Description
Last seen under the gleeful guise of 2007's Grinderman, a no-nonsense rock 'n' roll excuse to head down to the basement and shout, now Nick Cave returns to his full time Bad Seeds co-conspirators for this release. "Grinderman was deliberately spare and the concepts were pretty simple," explains Cave. "With 'Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!' we allowed ourselves to get expansive." It picks up where Grinderman left off, filled with Stoogified electric guitar, driving beats, and Cave's literate, seductive, and firmly tongue-in-cheek lyrics.


Customer Reviews:   Read 5 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Surprise!   September 4, 2008
J. Laue (Rue Beautreillis)
This is CD is much better than I expected and an absolute surprise to me. I am big Nick Cave fan and loved his ballad CD's (Boatman's Call / No more shall we part / Nocturama) and the Pop inbetween (Abottoir Blues). I was a little afraid that after Grinderman he would try to get back to his roots of The Birthday Party trying to get the punk back. But no. Instead the CD is very much like "The Good son" and contains great ballads, fun songs and pretty much of everything. Very catchy and I can't stop listening. Only four stars because of 1-2 fillers.

Great CD!



5 out of 5 stars Cryptic and catchy!!   August 20, 2008
Nse Ette (Lagos, Nigeria)
8 out of 8 found this review helpful

This is the first CD by Nick Cave that I own. Before this, I'd heard (and liked) the odd song of his, usually on some soundtrack or compilation; "There is a light" from the "Batman forever" soundtrack, The songs he did on the "Leonard Cohen: I'm your man" album, "People ain't no good" from "Shrek 2" (which coincidentally I saw last night again on DVD) and the dark but brilliant ballad "Where the wild roses grow" with fellow Antipodean Kylie Minogue.

"Dig!!! Lazarus Dig!!!" is a rock album steeped in biblical imagery, and reminding me in parts of Bruce Springsteen (vocally) or Robbie Robertson (his dramatic narrative style). The title track is a chugging rocking narrative about Lazarus set in modern day New York.

The midtempo groovy "Moonland" is a killer song. Other standouts are the eerie effect laden "Hold on to yourself" (with nice twanging guitars), the bouncy and extremely catchy "Lie down here (and be my girl)", the brooding ballad "Jesus of the moon" (brilliant!), the lilting and shimmery "Midnight man", and closing , the midtempo verbose "More news from nowhere" (which wouldn't sound out of place on a CD by the Boss).

It did take me a few listens to really get into it, but it's turned out to be one of my favourite albums so far this year...



1 out of 5 stars Resurrection Joe   August 11, 2008
Paul Ess. (Holywell, N.Wales,UK.)
3 out of 5 found this review helpful

To say Nick Cave isn't the force he once was, is like saying Vlad the Impaler had minor anger management issues. Glories LONG gone, he's resorting to loose balladeering and conventional rock in a vain and desperate attempt to disguise the fact he's got nothing new to say and should've given up on this music thing a long time ago.
A new Nick Cave album is cause for despair, where once it was cause for celebration. Ok, you can't go on re-living past triumphs (ask Morrissey) but the guy must have SOME of that early threat and purpose kicking around somewhere. Where's the gusto and urgency that drove classics like 'Nick the Stripper' or 'Mr Clarinet' ?
He's become a rock dullard, a pale imitation, a caricature of all he once meant.
He's got a hopeless band together. The keyboard player looks like Bob the Murderer off 'Twin Peaks' and the rest of them try ham-fistedly to be eccentric, playing at being rock misfits in a Beefheartian sense, but the sad drone of long departed inspiration means the sound is a resounding mis-fire.
Like a once-proud wild animal that's become old, and needing to be put out of it's misery, Cave is a sorry sight. He tries vainly; 'Jesus of the Moon' is appalling, melody-less and uninspired. 'Midnight Man' is unco-ordinated pseudo HM dreck, in dire need of some serious oomph and pazzaz. Each song is asleep on it's feet, and finally, laboriously, drag 'Dig!! Lazarus Dig!!' sorrowfully along to it's spiritless, uninteresting conclusion.
The spark's gone. It went a long time ago, and what we're left with is lazy MOR for the less discerning 'alternative' masses. Cave always seemed close to breaking point, never far from the loony-bin, and his music reeked of that creative morbid intensity. But he doesn't need his straight-jacket any more. He's a summer season, woolly jumper and fabric softener man now.
I bet he even does requests....



4 out of 5 stars It's so inspiring   August 4, 2008
Timothy Collins.
It's so inspiring to watch a natural genius like Cave not only survive but thrive and mature. This record makes me want to say to every 20 and 30-something rock-star "THIS is how it's done!"


5 out of 5 stars Another fantastic album   July 17, 2008
Beth (Chicago, IL)
I have to admit that I wasn't impressed the first time I heard this album. I liked the title track well enough, and I enjoyed News From Nowhere, but none of the others impressed me. Every time I listened to the album it grew on me, one song at a time. Now I can't stop listening to it- I absolutely love Jesus of the Moon, Hold on to Yourself, and Lie Down Here. It's one of my favorite albums.