Saturnalia
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Stations, The
- God's Children
- All Misery / Flowers
- Body, The
- Idle Hands
- Circle The Fringes
- Who Will Lead Us
- Seven Stories Underground
- I Was In Love With You
- Bete Noir
- Each To Each
- Front Street
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #39769 in Music
- Brand: Dig
- Released on: 2008-03-04
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .16 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Saturnalia is the anticipated first album from The Gutter Twins, the collaboration forged in late 2003 by Mark Lanegan and fellow maverick singer-songwriter Greg Dulli. Saturnalia finds the axis Dulli nicknamed "the Satanic Everly Brothers" going even deeper into the shadows than ever before. Mystical, unpredictable, ultimately masterful, the album both embodies and defies any expectations suggested by the principals' individual notoriety. Pointedly not resting on the sonic laurels of their previous successes, Saturnalia instead proves rootsy but Baroque, handmade yet modernist, teeming with siren melodies that don't resolve. Produced by Dulli and Lanegan along with the band's unofficial third member Mathias Schneeberger.
Amazon.com
This wily and depraved collaboration between Greg Dulli (Afghan Whigs, The Twilight Singers) and Mark Lanegan (Screaming Trees, Queens of the Stone Age) was aptly named for the Roman festival of misbehavior. Saturnalia allots equal time to both of the veteran alternative rockers as they traipse a wayward path. The sinister strings, Mellotron, and harmonium compliment Lanegan’s bourbon-drenched baritone as well as Dulli’s vocal abandon. While Dulli’s compositions, the funereal "God’s Children," torchy "The Body" and ghostly "Front St.", are terrific, Lanegan’s contributions may not have an equal impact--though his mere presence is imposing. Guttural ballads like "Bete Noir," "Seven Stories Underground" and the lingering "Who Will Lead Us" surge with his familiar, nostalgic imagery ("I think the chariot is coming… Lord, I’ll give this trumpet up"), and "Idle Hands" will have ‘Tree’s fans reminiscing. --Scott Holter
Customer Reviews
Greg Dulli-side project continues his winning ways
Looking at many of the reviews here, it appears you either come to this album as a fan of Greg Dulli (The Twilight Singers; Afghan Whigs) or as a fan of Mark Lanegan (The Screaming Trees). Let me state upfront that I am a pretty big Greg Dulli fan. After all he built his initial successes in my very own Cincinnati when he lead the Afghan Whigs in the late 80s and early 90s.
"Saturnalia" (12 tracks; 53 min.)continues a collaboration between Dulli and Lanegan that was started on several tracks on the excellent 2003 Twilight Singers "Blackberry Belle" album. "Saturnalia" crashes in with "The Stations" and then takes off from there. The dark and brooding "All Misery/Flowers" is my favorite track of the album, with great underlying drums (played by Dulli, incidentally) and the songs just drones on (and I mean that in the best of ways), just fabulous. Other highlights include "Idle hands", the pensive "I Was In Love With You" and "Each to Each". The closer "Front Street" (starting off very quitetly and acoustic) somehow feels out of place with the rest of the album and should have been kept off the album.
Most (but not all) of the songs are co-written by Dulli and Lanegan but let's be honest: this feels much more like a Greg Dulli album, and in fact "Saturnalia" fits in musically very nicely along with the Twilight Singers' catalog. One of the reviewers who gave rated this album only 2 stars wrote "Not Enough Lanegan For Me", and I can certainly understand that. For me, I'm quite happy with this realease.
Heaven's Quite A Climb
Lanegan and Dulli have forever been troubled souls, and "Saturnalia" shows no glimpse of the two lightening up. Lyrically, musically and visually this album is as passionately dark and melancholy as anything in either artist's back catalogue. Don't expect classic folk singalongs about the prairie and summertime joys - expect two wistful men of acumen singing the real dirty blues.
Where "Saturnalia" succeeds most is in fusing the styles and sounds of the two artists. Like all of Lanegan's solo albums, there is an overwhelming sense of maturity and wisdom in his delivery - a feeling that he really has seen some bleak times, far beyond those of the self-wallowing MTV plastics. His voice is as gravely and whiskey-drenched as it has ever been, perfectly matching and emphasising the often gloomy lyrical content. This complements Dulli's higher pitched and more melodic vocals perfectly. The two voices are constantly shifted to great effect; the best examples of this would be "Circle The Fringes" in which Lanegan rips through Dulli's melodic lines with a rumbling quake, instantly blackening the song's atmosphere. If not within the same song, the two deliveries are often placed side by side, such as with Lanegan's Tom Waits styled romp "All Misery" and Dulli's beautiful ballad "The Body".
In terms of song writing "Saturnalia" is successfully varied, and a seamless combination of the two artists. Songs such as "Who Will Lead Us Now", "All Misery", "Bete Noir" and "Seven Stories Underground" sound very reminiscent of Lanegan's solo output, all offering frustrated and brooding lyrics over a sombre folk/blues sound. Dulli's writing is very evident in a few of the more rocking songs (note - more rocking in relation to the brooding dirge elsewhere), such as "God's Children" and "Idle Hands", both of which recall "Gentleman" era Afghan Whigs with driving guitars and a vigorous delivery from Dulli. However, this is not to say "Saturnalia" is merely a mix-match of the two artists' sound - "I Was In Love With You" sounds superbly fresh, starting up like a down tempo Lanegan love song it builds and climaxes into a blistering rock ballad, with Dulli really attacking the vocals to create one of the album's finest moments. The album's closer "Front Street" fashions the album's strongest duet, centred around the chilling lines "We're gonna have us some fun".
"Saturnalia" is yet another remarkable outing from Mark Lanegan, and for me, some of Dulli's work best since the Afghan Whigs heyday. Perfect for fans of either artists, or those simply wanting some real gritty folk blues.
This Much Anticipated Album Really Delivers
This is a much anticipated album for previous Screaming Trees or Afghan Whigs fans. The Gutter Twins is put together by alternative rock/indie/grunge music faves Mark Lanegan (Screaming Trees and solo projects) and Greg Dulli (Afghan Whigs). This project has been talked about or rumored as early as 2000, but was confirmed in 2003, however it didn't get released until a big five years later. It definitely has that early '90's sound to it. I don't know why it took so long to come out, but I have always loved Mark Lanegan's voice. With The Gutter Twins he still sounds amazing. It brings me back memories of those early '90's with kool-aid dyed hair and flannel shirts that you'd buy at the local thrift store. Mark Lanegan has always been an excellent musician/singer/guitarist, who has been so under-appreciated throughout the years.
Saturnalia sings with the vibe of troubles mixed with religion. Songs like "The Body" about salivation and "Idle Hands" have a religious over tone them. Of course, a lot of the songs have lyrics that you would expect of Lanegan, deep and thoughtful, like struggles between good and evil. "Who Will Lead Us" is probably the albums' prayer like folk anthem, giving a touch of reality. Both musicians have just gotten better with age. I can't wait to hear what them come out with next.





