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Ella Blame : Ineffable Desire
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Ethereal/Ambient and psychedelic sounds with stunning female vocals
Genre: Electronic: Electronica
Release Date: 2004
Ineffable Desire
Ella Blame
Record Label: Ella Blame
  • Buy CD - $11.99
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.99

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Preview Song Name Time Buy
1. Fast Life 2:35 + MP3 $0.99
2. Ineffable Desire 2:52 + MP3 $0.99
3. How Things Have Changed 6:16 + MP3 $0.99
4. Thought Control 3:51 + MP3 $0.99
5. I Can't Sleep 4:10 + MP3 $0.99
6. Dance With Me - Temple Mix 3:17 + MP3 $0.99
7. Crossing The Border 3:18 + MP3 $0.99
8. Another Side 4:37 + MP3 $0.99
9. Swamp Of Lead 3:25 + MP3 $0.99
10. Violent Silence 4:52 + MP3 $0.99
11. Covered With Sweat 4:13 + MP3 $0.99
12. So Special 5:09 + MP3 $0.99
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Album Notes

Release Date 09-22-2004. This CD package contains 12 tracks with a total playback time of 48:35 minutes and a 12-page booklet with all song lyrics.

ABOUT ELLA BLAME

Ella Blame's music has the intensity of twilight: deep, dark and luminous.

Ella Blame comes from a family of musicians and was already singing by the age of 3. Everyday during her childhood, she heard music almost around the clock - symphonic, operatic, chamber and twelve-tone music, jazz of all styles, R&B, soul, funk, rock and pop.

Ella has an extremely wide vocal range that covers the entire baritone, tenor and alto ranges, and exceeds the upper limit of the soprano range. With her vocal cords, she can produce sounds that many people consider having been generated by a synthesizer or by post-processing equipment. However, Ella can produce these sounds without using a microphone.

Ella is collaborating with several electronic musicians and multi-instrumentalists from around the world (USA, Canada, Japan, India, and Germany), especially Michael D. Temple and Shinji Imai a.k.a. "mode complex". They create partially revolutionary music of genres Ethereal/Ambient, Symphonic Outer Space Music, and Psychedelic Pop.

REVIEWS

* This CD should have a warning label: "May induce a state of altered consciousness with distorted perceptions of space and time. Do not drive or operate machinery while listening to this music." Ella Blame's Ineffable Desire grabs you by the synapses and delivers an endless stream of audio stimuli that completely dominate your attention. This is music you don't simply listen to - you experience it... Ella Blame is innovative, perhaps ahead of her time. But the day will come when this music is the pop music of a new generation, and Ineffable Desire will likely be held up as the seminal album of the genre. -- Kenny Hart, www.Indie-Music.com

* ... Then, in the frenetic "Thought Control" and the experimental "Another Side," both with music by guest collaborator Shinji Imai, Blame shows off the baritone end of her huge range, along with her hisses and moans and piercing high notes. She unveils a fluttery soprano for the spooky, deceptively simple ballad "I Can't Sleep." In fact, it wouldn't be too much of an exaggeration to say that Blame's voice is to a normal person's voice as Robert Patrick's shape-shifting Terminator was to the stolidly anthropomorphic Schwartzenegger model ... -- Jon Sobel, www.BlogCritics.org

* ... Ineffable Desire, though, is full of blood and soul. And madness. Off-kilter, 4:00 A.M. raw, dark-night-of-the-soul madness. The CD cover with an outlandish ray of light beaming out of one of Ella's eyes conveys all of this... Her voice, the heart and soul of the record, is the first thing that boggles the mind. Many of the songs have her voice covering almost her full range (she covers low middle and high registers with bull's-eye accuracy). The madness comes from fear, confronting death, life intensity, longing itself, frustrated desire. Ineffable desire... You have been warned. -- Mark Kirby, www.MusicDish.com

* ... Vocally, Ella Blame has incredible range. Here, she's like Loreena McKennit with balls; there, she's like Cocteau Twins with comprehensible lyrics; and there, she's like Sinead O'Connor with a satanic twist. The song styles likewise range from fun and upbeat, to brooding and downtempo, to downright intimidating. In short, Ella Blame is one of those incredibly rare artists who is unique and listenable... I advise you to just go to CDbaby and listen to the samples for yourselves. And then purchase "Ineffable Desire", and support this unique artist. -- Gregg (DJ Arhythmius)

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REVIEWS

Lullabies for restless tsunamis
author: Tim Chiavaroli
                            
She just wanted to go where she wanted to go. She had absolutely no desire to slow down. Phantasmagorical shadows with juxtapositional prisms appeared. Instead, she is seen swerving head on into some emotional terrain where no voice dares travel. That remote, wild country. Nobody sings like Ella Blame...nobody bungee jumps their vocal chords like Ella Blame. To even witness a C.D. as personal as "Ineffable Desire", is to to be hushed with silence as you hold your breath following a gathering vocal storm that deftly walks across a tightrope of awe-inspiring musicians gathered from all over the entire globe. There is no net. There is no chance she's turning around. She's brave. Boldly audacious. The spells will be quite powerful. You will be transported within unknown pleasures. Do not try to figure out how she is doing it all without trickery. She can. Did she meet a man at the crossroads? We don't know, and we don't even care. It's cozmik, it's primal, it's nothing you've ever heard before...and you'll find the tunes wrapping around your brain like a wasp in a wicked mood. There is but the one, Ella Blame. So buy it. Treasure it. Turn all of your hippest friends on to it...but, there will never be any chance you will soon forget it. 5*****'s! Now, counting backwards from 5...you are coming back and feeling more awake. Feeling very good now, and alert! Aaaaaah, welcome. Hello! We've been waiting for you. : )
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She's amazing
author: Shaomi
                            
Ella Blame is somthing of a crossover between Kate Bush and Björk and Dandi Winds and Planningtorock... but don't get me wrong: she ain't a copycat, she's got her own touch and it's deep! Melancolic and strange, her musical universe is deep and enjoyable. She's an artist, a true one, and her music deserves to be listened to, not to mention that incredible voice she uses with such creativity! Buy with no hesitation, she's amazing!
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So Glad..
author: Zac
                            
So very happy i have both of the Albums by Ella. They're both incredibly beautiful and have such passion within the lyrics! Her voice is unique, and so is the music, incredible buy.
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Ella Blame crosses over and conquers inner space (revised)
author: Thon Huijser
                            
Both albums by Ella Blame left me captivated and speechless from the very first notes. Writing a review would not be a simple task I knew. The first association that sprang to mind was: the “LaGrange-point” ... which is any point in space between two planets where both forces of gravity are equal or zero. For example the point between earth and moon where one escapes earth’s gravity and gets caught by the moon from thereon. This is what Ella Blame accomplishes with their music - when listened to at the appropriate volume (!) - she takes you out there, gets you floating and pulls you in. The albums are definitely connected, sequelled, building up to what I hope a third one. The first album “Ineffable Desires” kicks off with “Fast Life” and will move any dancefloor into harmonic vibrations. It is followed by 11 very compact songs, each stating their point with sweeping rhythms alternated with warm instrumental textures. The songs seem to have the overall lyrical theme of conflicting emotions, both concerning one’s individual doubts as well as conflict with other persons. Even in a song like “Dance With Me” there is a battle going on between surrendering and independency, reflected in lyrics and music. “Crossing The Border” is probably my favourite because it holds all these elements. Ella Blame collaborates with various musicians and she is careful to choose the particular sound and feel the songs need. The rhythms on “Swamp Of Lead” are brilliant as Ella’s voice sighs, moans and cries in a desperate way and haunts you long after the song’s faded. This is not an album aimed to please at first play, it grows on you, it challenges. The second album “Bitter Tears” shows a more introverted side of Ella, the songs tend more towards ballads - but with a sting. The lyrics dive deep into the emotions that come with infatuation, saying goodbye, disappointment, grief and being empowered. Again each song gets it’s own signature rhythm and texture. Ella composes some songs with Shinji Imai who has a wonderful sense for counterpointing when it’s needed and harmony when required. Michael Temple also contributes a solid beat and synth. All 11 songs are gems. I couldn’t pick a favorite, but “Incurable” stands out for it’s obstinate, angry point. On the other end of the spectrum “I’m Just Dreaming” distinguishes itself by its intimacy and desperation. Again this is an album that you’ll want to keep close to your CD-player because it has an array of moods, so you’ll find a song for every hour of the day to affirm you or shake you up. I have played both albums over and over for the past 10 days, sometimes shuffling through both, and I can assure you: this is precious ore from an off-world planet, ready to be mined. You should of course be ready and willing to lift off and succumb to Ella Blame’s gravity. Thon Huijser (the Netherlands)
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