Tender Prey

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
It was Tender Prey that raised the delightfully unlikely specter of Nick Cave the pop star. What was even better was that the song that damn near did it--"The Mercy Seat"--was an epic litany relating the thoughts of a condemned prisoner awaiting his walk to the electric chair. "The Mercy Seat" is Cave and his Bad Seeds at their best: the former leavening his mordant tale with grim wit ("A ragged cup, a twisted mop . . . the face of Jesus in my soup"), the latter conjuring an appropriately demented squall of electric guitars and violins. Tender Prey was a massively important album for Cave: for the first time, he is unabashed about projecting his bleak and often misunderstood sense of humor and his ability to write as good a pop tune as anyone. Tender Prey is the beginning of Cave's voyage toward acceptance by the general public and perhaps himself. Everything good he's done since--and there's been an impressive amount--starts here. --Andrew Mueller

Music Review:

  1. The Argument
  2. The Art of Losing [Enhanced] [Explicit Lyrics]
  3. The Beekeeper (Special Limited Edition) [Limited Edition]
  4. The Charm of the Highway Strip
  5. The Greatest Songs Ever Written (By Us)
  6. The Lexicon Of Love [Original recording remastered]
  7. The Million Dollar Hotel: Music From The Motion Picture (2000 Film) [Soundtrack]
  8. The Science of Things
  9. The World and Everything in It
  10. The Years 1979-1997 [Import]

Music Review

music review

Music Review

I Was Part of the 50's

Izmir Symphony Orchestra

Great Toccatas & Chimes For Organ

Music: Window of My Heart [Import]

Feel Brand New

Great Delay

L'ami [Import]

Ghetto Platinum [Explicit Lyrics]

Jazz at Massey Hall [Live]

Furtwangler: Te Deum; Religious Hymn

In the Park

Immortal Concerts [Live]

J. Beez Wit the Remedy [Explicit Lyrics]

Rachmaninov: Piano Concertos Nos. 2 & 3

A Good Git-Together