Review: 2000's Stories From The City, Stories From The Sea is a lauded set that many critics still cite as one of the singer-songwriter's greatest works. Famously, most of the songs focus on love and relationships and were written while Harvey was living in New York City at the tail end of the '90s. It remains a fine album that has stood the test of time well, with highlights including soaring opener 'Big Exit', jangling sing-along 'A Place Called Home', the sparse and haunting 'Beautiful Feeling' and full-throttle, grunge-inspired rocker 'Kamikaze'.
Review: It has been said before that Polly Jean Harvey's 1998 album, Is This Desire, marked a watershed moment in her career. A veritable coming of age record that failed to match the commercial heights of To Bring You My Love, but was actually a far more complete and personal thing. Less angry than preceding efforts, it painted a more balanced and accurate portrait of an artist whose formative years were pockmarked with media analysis and criticism of her visible powerful attributes - sexuality and fury.
Coupled with the fact that Harvey has never been one to pander to scenes in the hope of top ten chart success, and you can only imagine how happy she was with the finished product. And all this is before we start banging on about the musicality, from title track's subtle, hushed baritone blues to the garage rock-out of 'A Perfect Day Elise'.
Review: PJ Harvey's ongoing vinyl reissue series has finally arrived at 2007's White Chalk, an album that at the time was thought of as something of a curveball from the West Country singer-songwriter. Unlike its predecessors, which were celebrated for their raw, fuzzy, stripped-back alt-rock sound, White Chalk emerged after Harvey decided to write an album of "piano songs" - despite having no experience playing the instrument herself. With Flood and John Parish handling production duties, the set's tracks were generally lighter and breezier sonically, with a little more polish and much more restricted use of electric guitar. Harvey's lyrics are as distinctive as ever, though, offering a clear contrast to the pastoral and oddly traditional feel of the music.
Review: Polly Jean Harvey broke into the common conscious with her unique and individual approach to alternative rock, and she's managed to maintain that aural autonomy throughout a storied career that has simultaneously found favour in the musical mainstream and refused to stray far from the leftfield. A difficult balance to strike, this, her eighth solo studio album, is indicative of that point. There's nothing here not to enjoy, but there's very little here you could predict.
Not least given where it sits in her back catalogue. Production began as the seminal but decidedly hushed White Chalk was released, and this record couldn't be more different from the preceding LP. Doing away with introspect, for the most part anyway, and refocusing attention away from pianos, it's a rousing indie collection that further cements the artist as one of Britain's national treasures.
Dry (demo - LP1 - B Sides demos & Rarities - Record 1) (3:38)
Man-size (demo) (3:24)
Missed (demo) (4:01)
Highway '61 Revisited (demo) (3:14)
Me-jane (demo) (2:57)
Daddy (demo) (3:09)
Lying In The Sun (LP2 - B Sides demos & Rarities - Record 2) (4:26)
Somebody's Down, Somebody's Name (3:40)
Darling Be There (3:48)
Maniac (4:02)
One Time Too Many (2:57)
Harder (2:07)
Naked Cousin (3:54)
Losing Ground (3:14)
Who Will Love Me Now (5:17)
Why D'ya Go To Cleveland (3:14)
Instrumental #1 (LP3 - B Sides demos & Rarities - Record 3) (1:11)
The Northwood (1:57)
The Bay (3:08)
Sweeter Than Anything (3:12)
Instrumental #3 (1:07)
The Faster I Breathe The Further I Go (4 track version) (3:58)
Nina In Ecstasy 2 (2:15)
Rebecca (3:01)
Instrumental #2 (1:48)
This Wicked Tongue (3:44)
Memphis (3:48)
30 (4:08)
66 Promises (LP4 - B Sides demos & Rarities - Record 4) (3:45)
As Close As This (2:37)
My Own Private Revolution (3:54)
Kick It To The Ground (4 track version) (3:14)
The Falling (3:51)
The Phone Song (4:06)
Bows & Arrows (3:38)
Angel (3:52)
Stone (3:39)
97° (LP5 - B Sides demos & Rarities - Record 5) (2:46)
Dance (2:57)
Cat On The Wall (demo) (2:43)
You Come Through (demo) (2:47)
Uh Huh Her (demo) (2:57)
Evol (demo) (3:51)
Wait (2:15)
Heaven (3:14)
Liverpool Tide (2:42)
The Big Guns Called Me Back Again (2:44)
The Nightingale (4:13)
Shaker Aamer (2:48)
Guilty (demo - LP6 - B Sides demos & Rarities - Record 6) (4:36)
I'll Be Waiting (demo) (3:15)
Homo Sappy Blues (demo) (2:17)
The Age Of The Dollar (demo) (3:09)
The Camp (4:28)
An Acre Of Land (6:00)
The Crowded Cell (3:09)
The Sandman (demo) (2:02)
The Moth (demo) (3:25)
Red Right Hand (2:51)
Review: We've been treated to reissues of everything else from PJ Harvey's spectacular catalogue, so it's only right we get a chance to savour the deeper cuts that shape out the persona of the high priestess of alternative rock. Gathering together an exhaustive 59 B sides, demos and previously unreleased tracks, this six-LP box set takes us into the heart of Polly Jean's writing process, showing the raw power in the songwriting when it's just her voice and an overdriven guitar, and showing us the broader possibilities of songs which didn't make the cut for the studio albums. This is a true treasure of music getting the authoritative release she deserves.
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