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    Third

    Third

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    Other Views:
    Artist: Portishead
    Label: Universal Music Group
    Category: Music

    List Price: CDN$ 15.99
    Buy New: CDN$ 10.97
    You Save: CDN$ 5.02 (31%)

    Qty 1 In Stock


    New (16) Used (2) from CDN$ 10.97

    Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
    Sales Rank: 561

    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

    MPN: 001114102
    UPC: 602517664005
    EAN: 0602517664005
    ASIN: B0016HNOXQ

    Release Date: April 29, 2008
    Availability: Usually ships within 1 - 2 business days
    Shipping: International shipping available
    Condition: **SHIPS from USA** Over 1,000,000 US shipments in 2007. TOP SELLER. 7 - 21 business day delivery. Fast shipping turnaround. Satisfaction Guaranteed.

    Tracks:

      • Silence
      • Hunter
      • Nylon Smile
      • The Rip
      • Plastic
      • We Carry On
      • Deep Water
      • Machine Gun
      • Small
      • Magic Doors
      • Threads

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    Customer Reviews:

    4 out of 5 stars THE Third!   May 22, 2008
    Eric Gignac (Montreal, Quebec Canada)
    It was worth waiting all this time. It took me a while to really appreciate it but now I'm absolutly into it.


    3 out of 5 stars Not Great...but not that bad   May 7, 2008
    Shawn E. Couch (Brantford, Ontario Canada)
    0 out of 1 found this review helpful

    For the amount of time it took to do this album I have to say I am dissapointed. It isn't a bad album but it really isn't that good either. Only a couple of standout tracks and the rest are just ok. I was happy when I heard Machine Gun as I thought Portishead was going to mix it up a little bit and try a slightly updated sound....I was wrong. They haven't really shown much growth to be honest.

    Nothing they have done since Dummy has impressed me that much. Dummy was amazing



    4 out of 5 stars A really addictive and excellent THIRD album.   May 4, 2008
    charmerismyname (Paris, France)
    5 out of 5 found this review helpful

    In the mid-1990s, Bristol collective Portishead released two definitive albums - Dummy and its follow-up Portishead - then promptly went into hibernation, running scared of the era-defining trip-hop sound they had helped to shape.
    For anyone that cares, Portishead are still made up of Geoff Barrow, Beth Gibbons and Adrian Utley, just as they were back in 1994 when "Dummy" hit the streets.
    It has taken them 11 years to produce another album, entitled "Third", which has moved on from previous offerings - the smoky trip hop sound that was the backdrop to many a chilled late night is gone - replaced by an altogether heavier, starker, darker flavour.
    Singer Beth Gibbons' distinctive, vulnerable bluesy, sometimes unsettling but beautiful vocals remain etched across the album's songs from hammering drums, tribal beats, and weird, sometimes crazy samples.
    The vulnerability and strength of the lady's voice really cements the record. It means that it still sound exactly like you remember Portishead sounding like, even though the musical backing is decidedly modern and much more sinister than anything the band tried in the happy-do-lucky days of the mid-90s.
    The openers "Silence" and "Hunter" sound like the stuff of some Edwardian ghost story, contrasting with the pseudo French chanteuse affectation of "The Rip", finding Beth Gibbons wafting an edgy ethereal vocal over plucked acoustic guitars. It could only be Portishead. Beth Gibbons ponders whether white horses will ever whisk her away, while a beautiful bass melody works up to a soft gallop in the background.
    Stand out tracks include the distinctive "Magic Doors" with piano chords, to the powerful hammering beats of the single "Machine Gun". Other highlights include "The Rip" which begins as a folksy and delicate number before a crazy electro finish, while "Hunter" starts with a plaintive beauty and flashes of an earlier Portishead sound before it rises to bleaker distortion.
    "We Carry On" is the key track on this excellent album, with a timpani beat driving a stirringly percussive track detonated with New Order guitars: the insistent beats prove the point perfectly. Strip Gibbons' rich vocals away from the track and you'd find a song that is as up to date as it's possible to be without it hurting.
    "Third" has a real claustrophobic, eerie feel to it, which is quite addictive
    If you're looking for uplifting sunny tunes then you've stumbled upon the wrong band and album.
    But, if challenging, inventive music is your thing - then "Third" is definitely for you.
    My favourite tracks: "We Carry On" and "Machine Gun"
    Check out the gorgeous Beth Giboons' "Out Of Season".



    1 out of 5 stars Third = Turd   May 1, 2008
    Paxton Sarazin
    3 out of 25 found this review helpful

    10 years in the making...
    11 songs on the cd...
    2 songs worth listening to...
    $12.99 I'll never get back again...
    The fact that a french guy might call it "Turd"... Priceless

    (and I think I was generous with the "2 songs worth listening to")



    4 out of 5 stars Don't know what I'd do without you   April 29, 2008
    E. A Solinas (MD USA)
    4 out of 6 found this review helpful

    Long vanished from the music scene, Portishead have finally reemerged with a new album. Hallelujah for that.

    But this isn't quite the same Portishead as before -- the music here is more raw, minimalistic and dark, with a ragged murky edge that replaces some of the trippiness. While its flavour is quite different from Portishead's earlier work (and this album is best heard with as few comparisons as possible) the beautifully bittersweet "Third" is a haunting experience on its own.

    First, a man recites the Wiccan rule of three... in Portuguese. Not sure what that has to do with anything, really.

    It's followed up by "Silence," a darkly vibrant mass of violins, urgent drumming and dark ripples of synth. But then it slows suddenly, and Beth Gibbons sings in a soft, fragile voice, "Tempted in our minds/Tormented inside lie/Wounded and afraid/Inside my head..." She adds in a wispy, plaintive voice, "Did you know when you lost?/Did you know when I wanted/Did you know when I lost...?"

    By this point, you should have a pretty good idea what you'll think of "Third." Whether you love it or you hate it, you'll know.

    The dark, fragile sound of that first song carries over into the fairylike "Hunter" with its growling guitars, and the songs that follow -- tense elusive pop laments, organ ballads riddled with weird flapping and echoing synth noises, satiny rattly piano-synth melodies, and even a light little acoustic song that sounds mildly out of place, but makes a nice little lightweight oasis in all the dark stuff. The album rounds out with "Threads'" bleak web of windy synth, crashing drums and eerie guitar.

    The song that really doesn't fit in here is ironically the first single, the rather repetitive, jarring drum-a-thon that is "Machine Gun." Sorry, but even Beth's haunting vocals cannot make this spiky song work.

    I'm not surprised that people thought that Portishead had broken up -- after all, it's been eleven years since their self-titled album came out. And in that time, many a musical trend has come and gone (including electronic ones) and most trip-hop bands have settled into other sounds -- usually acoustic or dancepop. Well, Portishead doesn't do anything so predictable -- in fact, the result is utterly UNpredictable.

    That trademark noir sound is gone. Completely gone. Instead we have a bleak, post-apocalyptic-dream sound, full of darker, tattered instrumentation, strange sounds and dark stretches of blipping/sweeping synth running just underneath. And yet if you listen to it without the comparisons of their previous albums, it turns out to be very compelling.

    There are some lighter moments, like the acoustic ballad "Deep Water," but these softer interludes are overshadowed: we've got generous servings of growling grimy guitars and softer cycling ones, drum machines, sweeps of delicate piano and strings, and solemn soaring organ. But sadly, no horns. Seriously, where are the horns?

    Beth Gibbons' voice sounds incredibly pretty and fragile, like a piece of silk just about to tear. Pretty perfectly suited to songs tinged with sorrow ("Somehow turn me around/No matter how far I drift/Deep waters won't scare me tonight"), even in their more positive moments ("Wild, white horses/They will take me away/And the tenderness I feel/Will send the dark underneath").

    Those expecting another "Dummy" are going to be deeply disappointed in "Third." But take it for itself, and its bleak, eerie beauty will start to show.


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