Capricornia

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Since 1990's benchmark
Blue Sky Mining disc, Australian agitprop rockers Midnight Oil have arguably functioned better in theory than in practice. You can't nitpick the band's politics--however left they may lean, they are at their core humanist--but while theirs is a noble cause, music, at its core, is entertainment. Tough talk about land misappropriated from aboriginals is just not what most folks crave day after day, record after record. While no one will walk away from Capricornia confusing Midnight Oil with knuckleheads like Sum 41, most will notice an appreciable softening of the edges, especially musically. Songs like the outstanding "Tone Poem," though lyrically driven by sobering ecological questions, is also notable for a bridge and chorus built on a chiming, instantly memorable guitar part. Similarly, "Under the Overpass" drapes a snippet of melody from Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" over a springy keyboard bit that Brian Wilson might have fashioned for a top-down corker. Capricornia--its title track buoyed by one of the Oil's most insistent choruses--is a rock record, but it's one with more settings than "pummel." --Kim Hughes

Music Review:

  1. Changes [Import]
  2. Classic Alternatives, Vol. 1
  3. Come on Feel the Lemonheads
  4. Covert Action [Enhanced]
  5. DERAM Anthology [Import]
  6. Don't Be Shallow [EP]
  7. Electric Warrior
  8. Exile on Coldharbour Lane
  9. Floored Genius: The Best, Vol. 1 (1979-1991)
  10. Ghost in Machine

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Swampgas [Import]

Weill: Symphony No.2, etc.

Wagner: Die Walküre / Bavarian State Opera / Mehta 3DVD

Music: Dance Party

Unbelievable [CD-single] [Import]

Where the Fun Starts Early in the Day

Traditional Dances [Import]

The Last Waltz [Original recording remastered]

Voices [Import]

Vol. 1-Grandes Exitos

Tigermilk

Troika

We Getz Down [CD-single]

Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 3 "Eroica" & 8

Modern Jazz Classics