The Sisters of Mercy
First and Last and Always [Bonus Tracks]
First and Last and Always [Bonus Tracks]
UPC: 5051011757921
Format: CD
Release Date: Nov 07, 2006
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Sisters Of Mercy: Andrew Eldritch (vocals, guitar, keyboards, synthesizer, programming); Wayne Hussey (guitar, background vocals); Craig Adams (guitar); Gary Marx (bass).
The Sisters Of Mercy's debut, 1985's FIRST AND LAST AND ALWAYS, is the definitive goth record. Combining the filtered punk-inspired angst and fury of Bauhaus, a machine-honed brittleness, and the literate dourness of artists like Leonard Cohen (whose songs are referenced in both the Sisters' lyrics and by their name), it's an amazingly solid album.
Highlights include "Marian (Version)" and "Some Kind of Stranger"; on the first, Andrew Eldritch's vocals (about half of which are in German) are felt rather than heard, an effect accentuated by crystalline guitar notes. The latter song is arguably the most spectacularly gloomy song that the goth movement ever produced--nearly seven and a half minutes of soaring keyboards, morose, tortured vocals, and aching, brittle guitars. Fans might wish to note the album's 1992 remastering cleans up the sound quality significantly, but whichever version you hear, this album is an extraordinary document.
The Sisters Of Mercy's debut, 1985's FIRST AND LAST AND ALWAYS, is the definitive goth record. Combining the filtered punk-inspired angst and fury of Bauhaus, a machine-honed brittleness, and the literate dourness of artists like Leonard Cohen (whose songs are referenced in both the Sisters' lyrics and by their name), it's an amazingly solid album.
Highlights include "Marian (Version)" and "Some Kind of Stranger"; on the first, Andrew Eldritch's vocals (about half of which are in German) are felt rather than heard, an effect accentuated by crystalline guitar notes. The latter song is arguably the most spectacularly gloomy song that the goth movement ever produced--nearly seven and a half minutes of soaring keyboards, morose, tortured vocals, and aching, brittle guitars. Fans might wish to note the album's 1992 remastering cleans up the sound quality significantly, but whichever version you hear, this album is an extraordinary document.
Tracks:
1 - Black Planet
2 - Walk Away
3 - No Time to Cry
4 - Rock and a Hard Place
5 - Marian
6 - First and Last and Always
7 - Possession
8 - Nine While Nine
9 - Amphetamine Logic
10 - Some Kind of Stranger
11 - Poison Door
12 - On the Wire
13 - Blood Money
14 - Bury Me Deep
15 - Long Train
16 - Some Kind of Stranger
2 - Walk Away
3 - No Time to Cry
4 - Rock and a Hard Place
5 - Marian
6 - First and Last and Always
7 - Possession
8 - Nine While Nine
9 - Amphetamine Logic
10 - Some Kind of Stranger
11 - Poison Door
12 - On the Wire
13 - Blood Money
14 - Bury Me Deep
15 - Long Train
16 - Some Kind of Stranger