The Night

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Singer-bassist-frontman Mark Sandman died July 3, 1999, onstage just outside Rome doing what he loved most. While it was never intended as a swan song, The Night, Morphine's fifth official studio album (not counting a B-sides collection or a projected live album), has all the dramatic hallmarks of a long, permanent goodbye. The band's "low-rock"--of bass, baritone sax, drums, and Sandman's own Leonard Cohen-afterworld vocals--always had a finality about it. The serious mix of blues fatalism and muted jazz hysteria filtered through the downbeat world of Tom Waits ("Like a Mirror" is gift-wrapped in his image) and other lingering beatniks always means it's 3 a.m. in Sandman's gypsy soul. The title track, "Top Floor, Bottom Buzzer," and "Rope on Fire" will stand among the finest in Morphine's catalog--which will seem deeper and increasingly profound as distance creates a greater mystery for a band that always presented itself as an enigma. --Rob O'Connor

Music Review:

  1. The Process of Belief
  2. The Runners Four
  3. The Very Best Of [Original recording remastered]
  4. Third/Sister Lovers
  5. Warehouse: Songs and Stories
  6. Weird Tales
  7. When Broken Is Easily Fixed
  8. When We Were Small
  9. Wide Awake in America [Live]
  10. Wild Planet

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Ginmill Perfume

Jaeckel and Hyde, Organ Music, Sacred and Profane

Grandi Voci: Arleen Auger

Music: Classic DJ Mix, Vol. 1

Music [CD-single] [Import]

In at the Deep End [Explicit Lyrics] [Import]

Frie Für Dich [Import]

Instrumental Addicts: Wake up Show

Jumping the Creek

Grieg: Slåtter; Norwegian Peasant Dances

Jazz Collection

How to Raise an Ox

Heartbeat Reggae

Classical Music classical-music-14

The Intimate Ella