Electronic stylePop musicJazzBluesRock musicLatinFunk & SoulClassical musicBrass & MilitaryHip-hop & RAPReggaeFor childrenWorld & CountryScreen & StageNot musicOther
» » Cornelius - Point
Cornelius - Point FLAC

Singer:

Cornelius

Album:

Point

Genre:

Electronic style / Rock music / Pop music

FLAC album size:

1984 mb

MP3 album size:

1182 mb

WMA album size:

1533 mb

Other music formats:

RA DXD APE MP1 MMF TTA MP2

Rating:

4.5 ✱

Style:

Abstract, IDM, Experimental, Indie Rock

Country:

Japan

Date of release:

2002

Cornelius - Point FLAC


Cornelius - Point FLAC

Tracklist Hide Credits

1 Bug (Electric Last Minute) 0:38
2 Point Of View Point 3:53
3 Smoke 5:48
4 Drop 4:53
5 Another View Point 5:35
6 Tone Twilight Zone 3:38
7 Bird Watching At Inner Forest 4:22
8 I Hate Hate 1:42
9 Brazil
Lyrics By [English] – S.K. Russell*Lyrics By, Music By – Ary Barroso
3:27
10 Fly 5:40
11 Nowhere 5:48

Companies, etc.

  • Manufactured By – WEA Manufacturing
  • Licensed From – Trattoria
  • Licensed From – Polystar
  • Glass Mastered At – WEA Mfg. Olyphant – Z04313

Credits

  • A&R – Hiroshi Nagai
  • Cello – Youhei Matuoka*
  • Design [Sleeve], Photography – Masakazu Kitayama
  • Mixed By, Mastered By – Toru Takayama*
  • Other [Elle Deco Nostalgie] – Skate-Thing
  • Producer – Keigo Oyamada
  • Recorded By, Programmed By – Toyoaki Mishima
  • Translated By – Ricky Domen
  • Viola – Ayako Ueda
  • Violin – Mikiko Kuwabara*
  • Written-By – Keigo Oyamada (tracks: 1 to 8, 10, 11)

Notes

©℗ 2002 Matador Records
Manufactured under exclusive license from Trattoria/Polystar

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 7 44861 03322 6
  • Matrix / Runout: [wea mfg. OLYPHANT logo] Z04313 LN OLE 322-2 01

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
Menu.241, PSCR-6000 Cornelius Point ‎(CD, Album) Trattoria, Polystar Menu.241, PSCR-6000 Japan 2001
OLE 332-2, OLE 332 Cornelius Point ‎(CD, Album) Matador, Matador OLE 332-2, OLE 332 UK & Europe 2002
OLE 543-2P Cornelius Point ‎(CD, Album, Promo) Matador OLE 543-2P US 2001
OLE 332-2V Cornelius Point ‎(CD, Album, Promo) Matador OLE 332-2V US 2001
OLE 332-2, OLE 332 Cornelius Point ‎(CD, Album) Matador, Matador OLE 332-2, OLE 332 UK & Europe 2002



Xtreem
At first I didn't think much of "Point" - it seemed annoying, cheesy, and pretentious. It took me several listens and a little bit of research to finally "get" it. "Point" is a successful juxtaposition of musical elements that no one would ever think of juxtaposing (due to the seeming disparity and incongruity of those elements). These elements include musique concrete, gentle r&b-ish backgrounds, speed metal, rather danceable grooves, and vocal harmonies sustained far beyond the capacity of the human lung. The talented Cornelius somehow manages to blend all these elements (and more) into a surprisingly palatable aural stew - a remarkable feat. In some cases, such as the title track, the result is something so fresh and architecturally sound that it could be considered a work of art. Other times, the effect is one of calming cybernetic beauty ("Tone Twilight Zone", "Brazil", "Nowhere"), or, in the case of the John Zorn-esqe "I Hate Hate", attention span reduction and head shaking. When approached as belonging to any specific musical genre, "Point" can seem annoying, cheesy, and/or pretentious, like the trying-to-sound-as-radio-friendly-as-possible, trying-way-too-hard demo of a band far too eccentric for the mainstream. But as is becoming increasingly more common in the world of music as time goes on, Cornelius is a genre unto himself, a hybrid of too many pre-existing genres to possibly concatenate (with hyphens) into a single pronounceable word.
Shou
A unique blend of canonical electronic experiments, rock, La Monte Young influence (perhaps?), and Asian pop. Phenomenally produced. Intriguing drones, vocal harmonies, and funky ultra-tight rhythms abound. But so do examples of cliché psuedo-humor and cheesy tracks that could almost be classified as "adult contemporary". The distorted guitar/bass riffs are hair-metal-nostalgic at best and annoyingly-fruity-loopy at worst. I can only stand about the first 1/3 of this CD. Recommended for those who like Japanese pop-rock music, but who want something a little more adventurous and arty. All others would be best off avoiding this release.
Daiktilar
Japanese voices, strange harmonics, extremely funky drumtracks, nice melodies, all blended together in very listenable and enjoyable, yet very strange music. It's worth a try!

Review Cornelius - Point


Related albums at Cornelius - Point