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A&E | 
| Artist: Goldfrapp Label: Mute Category: Music
Buy New: £4.99
New (11) Used (1) from £1.98
Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 124060
Format: Single Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0 Dimensions (in): 4.5 x 4.5 x 0.2
EAN: 5099951939823 ASIN: B00114XQNW
Release Date: February 11, 2008 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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5.0 out of 5 stars Like I hoped you'd call and hoped you'd see me February 23, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Well, I didn't see this coming. After the glitzy club sound of their last album "Supernature," Goldfrapp has gone to the other extreme -- floaty, instrumental pop.
And nowhere is this more evident than in the "A&E" single, which brings together two of the most addictive, alluring songs in this new style. One is a gorgeous, addictive little pop song, and the other an ethereal little ballad full of achy heartbreak and dull balloons -- and both are absolutely, utterly stunning. If "Seventh Tree" is half this exquisite, we're in for quite a ride.
"It's a blue, bright blue Saturday, hey hey/And the pain has started to slip away, hey," Alison Goldfrapp sings over a warm, fragile little melody that ripples with piano and ambient sounds. It starts off relatively ambiguous: "I'm in a backless dress on a pastel ward that's shining/Think I want you still/But it may be pills at work..."
But when the melody picks up into a swirling instrumental speckled with electronic blips, the tone turns a bit darker. "I was trying to phone you when I'm crawling out the door.... I was feeling lonely, feeling blue/Feeling like I needed you/Like I've woken up surrounded by me/A&E..."
It's a gorgeous song, and on first listen it completely overshadows the song that follows it: "Clowns." This is possibly the quietest, most delicate song that Goldfrapp has ever done -- it starts as an acoustic strum, with Goldfrapp's voice rising to an innocent girlish murmur... if that innocent girl was dreaming away a hangover.
The song quickly is wrapped in a beautiful cloud of strings and guitar, rising like a gentle wave over Alison Goldfrapp's voice. Despite the crazy lyrics ("Only clowns would play with dull balloons"), there's an aching, bittersweet quality to the song, which isn't hurt by the birdsong and soaring violins.
Goldfrapp aren't exactly new to changing their sound -- they went from quirky experimental electronica to clubby glammy electronica in one album, stuck with it for awhile, then moved on. But when I heard they were going for a more organic sound, all I could think was, "Huh? But Goldfrapp has always been all about the electronica!"
Well, you would never know that this is their first foray into downtempo folky-pop -- that is how polished this is. "A&E" is a lush, delicate little melody, spun out of acoustic guitars and shimmering waves of warm, swirling synth. And "Clowns" is a delicate little melody, filled with an ethereal fog of sorrowful violins, a touch of synth, clips of birds singing happily, and a strummed guitar that keeps it from floating away.
And Alison Goldfrapp's satiny, flexible voice seems perfectly at ease in less dancey songs. She sounds lovelorn, adoring and wistful in the "A&E" song, only to switch to a soft, girlish, tipsy sound in "Clowns," slurring her way smoothly through the insane lyrics ("Roasting, roasting, roast indeed, mahogany/Titties that live on on and on, on and on").
Just don't try to decipher "Clowns," because you might sprain an ear -- I had trouble making out what she was singing, but what little I could hear was... bizarre. But "A&E's" lyrics are solid: It's a blue, bright blue Saturday, hey hey/And the pain has started to slip away, hey hey... How did I get to accident and emergency?/All I wanted was you to take me out high..."
The "A&E" (meaning Accident and Emergency) single echoes with love, pain, and a whole new sound. And despite being totally incomprehensible lyrically, "Clowns" is even more painfully beautiful.
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