You Are the Quarry EXPLICIT LYRICS Kelis

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CD

  • Release Date: 05/18/2004
  • Sales Rank: 37,376
  • Label: SANCTUARY RECORDS
  • UPC: 060768600225
 
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  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Morrissey has been biting his tongue for the past seven years -- You Are the Quarry is his first new disc since 1997's Maladjusted -- so you know he's got plenty of bile to spit out on this long-awaited, rock-centric album. He sounds renewed and revitalized on what can only be described as a kinetic comeback. As always, his clever wordplay and swooning songs coat the bitter pill, as does the amped-up, guitar-centric production from Jerry Finn (Blink 182, Green Day). Morrissey's as acerbic as ever when lashing out at his new home ("America / Your head's too big," he begins his tirade on the elegiac "America Is Not the World," before concluding "I love you"), as he is when lashing out against his native land ("I've been dreaming of a time when / To be English / Is not to be baneful / To be standing by the flag not feeling / Shameful, racist or partial," he laments atop a mountain of careening guitars on "Irish Blood, English Heart"). No surprise to fans of the Mozzer, the disc is chock-full of lines to pore over (have fun with "I Have Forgiven Jesus"), but it's also musically diverse enough to sustain interest without the lyric booklet. He sketches a contemplative tone on "Come Back to Camden," couched in nimble piano and billowing strings, and on the swooning almost-love song "Let Me Kiss You," gilded by a gorgeous vocal refrain. Ringing guitars echo his anger on "How Can Anybody Possibly Know how I Feel?," and "You Know I Couldn't Last" alternates delicate moments with glammy power chords and pounding drums. While a few production flourishes detract from Moz's singular vision (did "I'm Not Sorry" really need that flute bit?), the crunchy guitars and towering sonics largely serve a songwriter and singer who continues to astound, confound, and resound with the truth of the maladjusted loner's life. Lydia Vanderloo, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

You Are the Quarryby Anonymous

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July 10, 2004: this cd is pretty darn good. I wouldnt say it is his best album, but it is very good. Vauxhaul and I is definately still one of his best. But this one is pretty good. One thing that did disappoint me was that most of his songs are some kind of protest or message. Its okay to mix beliefs and music sometimes but i think that in this case he shouldnt have. mixing politics and music is irretating and stupid.

You Are the Quarryby Anonymous

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July 01, 2004: I love "Irish Blood, English Heart"! The guitars sound so cool! I heard the song on my local rock station, and I thought, "Morrissey still has it!"


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