ScienceBlog.com Science Gifts
 Location:  Home» Music » General » O  
Subcategories
Compilations
General
Jewish & Yiddish Music
Related Categories
• General
Contemporary Folk
Folk
Styles
Music
• Alternative Folk
Contemporary Folk
Folk
Styles
Music
• Singer-Songwriters
Contemporary Folk
Folk
Styles
Music
• General
Folk
Styles
Music
• Traditional Folk
Folk
Styles
Music
• Compilations
Folk
Styles
Music
• General
Pop
Styles
Music
• Singer-Songwriters
Pop
Styles
Music
• Folk Rock
Rock
Styles
Music
• General
Rock
Styles
Music
• Post Grunge
American Alternative
Alternative Rock
Styles
Music
• CD Album
CD
Format (binding)
Refinements
Music
• Main Album
Edition (format)
Refinements
Music
• Pepsi Stuff Promotion
Music Specialty Stores
Specialty Stores
Music

O

O

enlarge enlarge 
Artist: Damien Rice
Label: Vector Recordings
Category: Music

List Price: $18.98
Buy New: $9.49
You Save: $9.49 (50%)



New (46) Used (17) Collectible (1) from $8.00

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 334 reviews
Sales Rank: 941

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4

MPN: 48507
UPC: 766481141549
EAN: 0093624850724
ASIN: B00009V7P8

Release Date: June 10, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: CD is factory sealed. Cutout in case. JB

Tracks:

  • Delicate
  • Volcano
  • The Blower's Daughter
  • Cannonball
  • Older Chests
  • Amie
  • Cheers Darlin'
  • Cold Water
  • I Remember
  • Eskimo

Similar Items:

  • 9
  • B-Sides
  • Trouble
  • Amos Lee
  • Till the Sun Turns Black

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Irish troubadour Damien Rice doesn't so much reinvent the folk genre on this lush, impossibly mature debut album as push its boundaries in several compelling musical directions at once--all the more remarkable considering the album was largely self-produced and home-recorded. His songs revolve around familiar, bittersweet concerns of life, love, and their attendant frustrations, but delivered with conspiratorial intimacy on melodic wings (like on the graceful "Cannonball") that Rice seems almost embarrassed to share. If there's anything like a template here, it's "The Blower's Daughter," the song that first attracted the interest/stewardship of film composer David Arnold (whose guest production provides "Amie" with expansive cinematic elegance) and became a massive Irish hit. His plaintive vocal, embroidered by the mournful solo cello of Vyvienne Long, is suddenly brightened by an instrumental flourish and Lisa Hannigan's vocals--before just as quickly wafting on the breeze. With touches that range from "Day in the Life"-styled string collages to the dizzy, exhilarating neo-operatic excesses of the 16-minute "Eskimo," Rice's musical palate here is as adventurous as his songs are grounded in emotional intimacy. --Jerry McCulley

Album Description
Damien Rice's intriguing brand of stylishly, un-styled dirty folk music has made him one of the standout artists of 2003. O was first released in Ireland, where it quickly broke the top ten, and achieved triple-platinum status. Slim hard-back digipak. Vector. 2003.


Customer Reviews:   Read 329 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Damien Rice is an Innovative Troubadour   June 29, 2008
Tiff (Oregon City, OR)
I just love this album. Damien Rice brings storytelling back to the alternative music scene. His warm and sultry voice is reminiscent of Indian singer Tanita Tikarum, only with a slightly more positive bent to the lyrics. The songs have a degree of continuity which makes whole album listening a pleasure. It is filled with unexpected and delightful interjections from female vocalists. The ample use of strings makes O both easy listening and the triumph of a contempory balladeir.


3 out of 5 stars So-so   February 28, 2008
Judson Roberts (Houston, TX USA)
This is a fairly uneven CD--some songs are very nice, but others make you want to reach for the "skip" button.


5 out of 5 stars Classic   February 25, 2008
David J. Murdock (H. V., TX, USA)
Blowers daughter, Amie, Older Chests, this album is packed with slow emotion that will never get old.


5 out of 5 stars on my mind   February 8, 2008
David A. Baer (Indianapolis, IN USA)
This stunning Damien Rice offering is by turns imperfect, soulish, quirky, self-absorbed, and fantastic.

Rice's persuasive voice is complemented with uncommon tact by gorgeous female accompaniment. Though it never ceases to be a Damien Rice album, Lisa Hannigan and her friends are so good that they play a solid supporting role without which Rice would not be what he is. Almost the same can be said of the understated by skillful acoustic guitar that encircles Rice's voice throughout `O''s tenspot of tracks.

One cannot escape the notion that there was some enjoying of wine as this album was perceived and executed and that it is best enjoyed beside a bottle of something red. The image, at the least, gets at the tone and substance of his artistry and the soft-ish reflection that his songs embody.

Among the album's many fine tracks, one deserves special mention: `Can't Take My Eyes Off of You' is an exquisite restatement of an old tune, masterfully accomplished in the way that remakes too often are not.

This album came to this reviewer from his son as a Christmas gift. I was unfamiliar with Damien Rice. On the strengths of this album, that will change.



5 out of 5 stars Supernatural   January 25, 2008
Ingrid Tulloch
1 out of 1 found this review helpful


I realize I missing out on some really cool music when I heard Damian Rice for the first time live in central park. I was so impressed that I ran out to get his music-all that I could find. His voice is beautiful, the phrasing spot on and with this album even more so. Few performers can express life's pain and pleasures in such a nuanced manner and allow the passion and emotion shine through. It's a style I've come to associate with great Irish performers and it doesn't get much better than this. Most of us have experienced unrequited love, obsessively continued a doomed relationship or get thrown by the general shocks of life. There is something about the way Rice puts it all to music that is never pretentious, yet forces you to stop and pay attention. Basically it gives you a glimpse of the contradictions inherent in ourselves, especially when it comes to the L word. Cheers darlin' for example, was so sad I wanted to cry, at the same time it left me strangely optimistic. His songs express emotions in such a lush and sensuous manner that you begin to wonder if he has a supernatural ability to see and translate all things relating to emotions.