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The Nephilim

Fields of the Nephilim

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Album Review

Having built a considerable and passionate fanbase, the Nephilim approached their second album with confidence and a clutch of stunning new songs. The resulting, semi-self-titled release blows away the first by a mile (the art design alone, depicting an ancient, worn book with strange symbols, is a winner), being an elegantly produced and played monster of dark, powerful rock. Even if McCoy's cries and husked whispers don't appeal to all, once the listener gets past that to the music, the band simply goes off, incorporating their various influences — especially a good dollop of pre-Dark Side of the Moon Pink Floyd (think songs like "One of These Days") — to create a massive blast of a record. Buchanan again produces with a careful ear for maximum impact, whether it be the roaring rage of "Chord of Souls" or the minimal guitar and slight keyboard wash of "Celebrate"; McCoy's vocal on the latter is especially fine as a careful, calm brood that matches the music. Perhaps most surprising about the album is that it yielded an honest-to-goodness U.K. Top 40 hit with "Moonchild," which is very much in the vein of earlier songs like "Preacher Man" but with just enough of a catchier chorus and softer guitar part in the verse to make a wider mark. Though the first part of the album is quite fine, including such longtime fan favorites as "The Watchman" and "Phobia," after "Moonchild" the record simply doesn't let up, building to a fantastic three-song conclusion. "Celebrate" is followed by "Love Under Will," a windswept, gloomily romantic number with a lovely combination of the band's regular push and extra keyboards for effect. "Last Exit for the Lost" wraps everything up on an astonishing high; starting off softly with just bass, synths, one guitar, and McCoy, it then gently speeds up more and more, pumping up the volume and finally turning into a momentous, unstoppable tidal wave of electric energy.

Customer Reviews

Possibly the most under-rated album in the history of rock music ...

IMPORTANT PREFACE: If you buy this album, buy the individual tracks and skip "Shiva". The simple reason is that -- although there is nothing inherently wrong with Shiva -- it has no place on this album and its placement is practically an act of musical vandalism. Neither the original vinyl nor cassette versions had this track but, back in the early days of CDs, the record companies used to bung "bonus" tracks on to CDs to justify the higher price. Shiva was, I believe, a B-side and its placement here, alongside another slow track in Celebrate, practically breaks the back of the album. With that off my chest: this is a great album. No, seriously, it's a capital-G Great Album. It captivates and mesmerizes, exhilarates and thrills. It's an album of rare texture and depth. Don't expect to make any sense of the lyrics, filtered as they are through Carl McCoy's very personal sense of mysticism, but that's part of what makes the album work so well. Oblique and impenetrable as they are, they form one more layer in this complex work. You may initially fasten on the crowd-pleasers at first listen: Phobia, Moonchild, Chord of Souls, but the back half of this album is sheer genius. McCoy's vocal style tends to get much comment and it is easy to overlook the quality of the musicianship here. The Fields always had one of the most distinctive guitar sounds in rock music and, in Nod Wright, a criminally overlooked drummer of prodigious talent. On top of that, the Fields of the Nephilim also wrote damn fine tunes and were never better than on Last Exit for the Lost, which opens with quiet insistence and builds almost imperceptibly until the track audibly shifts up a gear in the final third and powers towards as thrilling a conclusion as any album could hope for. I have listened to this album, right the way through, at least once a week for the last twenty years. That's over a thousand times, and it continues to astonish and excite me, and to move me in strange and mysterious ways.

The Watchmen of the eighties

This album is a journey through the ages and is timeless. With soundscapes and ancient references to the occult it became a goth masterpiece to be reckoned with in the late eighties, the band donning themselves in leather and covering themselves in flour they were also ridiculed as 'cowboys'. However, they have continued to amuse and bemuse audiences with split off projects such as Rubicon, and the recently reformed Nephilim are to release a new album 'Mourning Sun' soon..... Watch this space watchmen.....

No HiFi loud enough!

This is simply stunning! This is what guitars are for! Impossible to not sing(?) along to! Download it, stick it in your car, turn it up loud and the journey to work will be a blast!

Biography

Formed: 1984

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '80s

Of all the bands involved in Britain's goth rock movement of the 1980s, Fields of the Nephilim were the most believable. The group's cryptic, occult-inspired songs were sung in a guttural roar by vocalist Carl McCoy. Live appearances were shrouded with dim light and smoke machines, while bandmembers stalked the stage in black desperado gear inspired by western dress. The group was also...
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The Nephilim, Fields of the Nephilim
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