Positively Negative (Remastered - Bonus Tracks - w/guest Ronnie Montrose)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Tenth Anniversary Remastered Edition with previously unreleased bonus tracks (instrumentals) that feature guitar legend Ronnie Montrose.
Track Listing
- Security (w/ Ronnie Montrose)
- Television (w/ Ronnie Montrose)
- Lonely (w/ Ronnie Montrose)
- Saltation
- Nothing
- Positively Negative
- Delusions
- Iniki (w/ Ronnie Montrose)
- Anesthesia
- The Saline Solution (brine)
- Rap this around your head
- Why
- Assaulted (a. Pieces of Jesus b. Pass the salt)
- Burn (video remix)
- The last wave (extended)
- Silicone Rose
- You Only Die Once (from the DVD of the same name)
- Security (prev unreleased Instrumental w/ Ronnie Montrose)
- Television (prev unreleased Instrumental w/ Ronnie Montrose)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #435961 in Music
- Released on: 2005-09-27
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: Extra tracks
Editorial Reviews
Review
POSITIVELY NEGATIVE is one of those rare beasts that should be in everyone's collection... no excuses! --Darren Tracy FLUSHSTL.COM
Review
..Peter Murphy-style vocals... and the biggest synthesizers this side of Depeche Mode. Techno-surf instrumentals... . --The Santa Barbara Independent-Danny Gellert
Review
Three years on and we find our heroes back in the studio, this time toning down the quirky sense of humour, and going for a more sensible seventeen tracks and keeping the narrative out of the window altogether. So, it starts off with a song that bizarrely mixes D.Mode style synths, drums and vocals with a biting electric guitar lead courtesy of none other than Ronnie Montrose, who also contributes some stirring guitar work on three further tracks, while guitarist Steve Weber, whose influences I am reliably informed are Fripp/Holdsworth, contributes electric guitar to most of the other tracks, while the main duo behind the band remain as Ruston Slager on lead vocals and keyboards, with John Wardlaw on keyboards, lead vocals and guitar. With six instrumental and eleven songs, it's a strange mix of music that mixes the likes of Human League/D.Mode/Heaven 17 styles with some hot electric guitar work in there too, giving it quite a unique feel, and if you're into that style and era of songs, only with less pop, more atmosphere and overall stronger instrumentally, then this is for you, for sure. (review refers to original release, prior to remastering and bonus tracks) --Andy Garibaldi-CD Services
Customer Reviews
"An Experience for the Senses"
"Positively Negative" by the band Anti-M is truly an experience for the senses. Ruston Slager's vocals are reminiscent of Peter Murphy and the music itself incorporates driving rhythms that cruise conjuring images of driving on the open road across a desert, Joshua Tree by full moonlight, or any other such remote and mysterious landscape. The music is very listenable and could be used to close your eyes, relax, and transport yourself to another place or just as well for the soundtrack to anything from a futuristic sci-fi thriller to a modern-day drama dealing with themes of social alienation while living in a large city in Anywhere, U.S.A. A personal favorite of mine was "Lonely" that has a fabulous beginning segueing into a nice melody line with a smooth-moving bass-line. Check out the flowing solo guitar work by Ronnie Montrose that weaves itself intermittently through this gem of a piece. Also note the song "You Only Die Once" from the 1993 Topographic Movies production of the same name--a colorful James Bond spoof filmed in and around Santa Barbara, CA available on Netflix. Topographic Productions, the brainchild of Santa Barbara native, John Wardlaw, continues to crank out imaginative tunes and movies to this day. "Positively Negative" is not to be missed.
Review from flushstl.com
ANTI-M: Positively Negative: 2005 Remaster (Topographic Productions)
ANTI-M (uncredited photo)When I saw that Ronnie Montrose was involved in this project, I just had to check it out (even if it totally alluded me in its original release). After all this time, I wasn't sure what to expect from Ronnie: Would it be hard rock, a la Montrose? Would it be spacey kinda pop like Gamma or kinda jazzy like some of his instrumental releases? About all I can say is this: I wasn't expecting what I got! Anti-M is John Wardlaw, Ruston Slager, and Mark Rumer, a trio of retro-thinking futurists whose sound is very dark, not something that I would imagine Montrose would agree to playing. But... he did and the results are quite impressive! The imaginative hodge-podge that is POSITIVELY NEGATIVE was originally released in 1995; this ten year anniversary remaster features the original 17 tracks plus two bonus tunes, instrumental versions of "Security" and "Television." Trying to nail down a musical thread in Anti-M's music is like hunting for the proverbial needle in the hay stack: Just when you think that you can put your finger on a certain style ('80s New Wave Electronica, English Goth, '70s metal, '90s hard rock, English pop, etc. ad infinitum), it's gone. The music is generally dark and crushingly claustrophobic, kinda like mid-era Depeche Mode or most of Tangerine Dream's output (even the seemingly happy and innocuous tracks, like "Why" and "Rap This Around Your Head," have an underlying menace that sneaks up and gut-punches you). The vocals by Wardlaw (known to all and sundry as "Wedge") and Slager (and I'm not really sure who's singing on what... I think that the majority of the leads are taken by Slager, though) can best be described as a synthesization of David Bowie, Leonard Cohen, Peter Steele, Peter Murphy, Greg Lake, and that guy from Rammstein. The guitars are generally crisp and up-front, though the bass and synths seem to be the forces driving the music. With Montrose only appearing on four of the original tracks (plus the bonus material), that means that the guitar has to come from somewhere. That somewhere is the supple fingers of Steve Weber who, though not an official member of Anti-M, also played on the group's debut, NO WAVES IN HELL; Wedge also adds guitar on several tracks. Trying to describe this release - other than to say that it is absolutely brilliant - has induced a headache the size of Nebraska, so I'm gonna quit trying, except to say this: I don't know if the guys in Anti-M are modern day visionaries or if they just got lucky with this record; whatever, POSITIVELY NEGATIVE is one of those rare beasts that should be in everyone's collection... no excuses! To secure your own copy of this musical masterpiece and to learn more about the band, go to the Anti-M web-site (www.anti-m.com). Do it now! We'll wait for you. - Darren Tracy, flushstl.com




