Pygmalion is the final album by the band Slowdive,
released on February 6, 1995. A departure from their
previous two albums, Pygmalion incorporated a more
experimental sound tilted towards ambient electronic
music, with sparse, atmospheric arrangements. All
compositions were by Neil Halstead. Lyrics on tracks
Miranda and Visions of La by Rachel Goswell. The
cover illustration is by accled designer Steven
Woodhouse. It was the final album before Slowdive
disbanded in 1995, an event widely associated with the
demise of shoegazing.
BBC Review
----------
Despite being lumped in with the early 90s shoegazing scene
that’s inspired the likes of M83, s and Serena Maneesh,
Slowdive were always a little different to their contemporaries.
While Ride and Chapterhouse were wont to immerse their music in
an ethereal wall of sound, Slowdive favoured a polite narcotic
haze, soothing rather than battering the brain into passive
submission. 1995’s Pygmalion saw them travel furthest but was
also their least commercially successful album – partially due to
a fierce press backlash against the band, but mainly because
label Creation was far more focussed on new signings Oasis. The
Manchester band’s debut album, Definitely Maybe, bore the next CD
catalogue number on from Pygmalion.
Reissued alongside their first two full lengths – 1991’s dreamy
Cocteau Twins-esque Just for a Day and 1993’s ‘difficult’ second,
Souvlaki, which hinted at more abstract experimentations sadly
reined in by label boss Alan McGee – Pygmalion has more in common
with the emerging electronic scene than the Britpop sound that
was by now sidelining grunge. Neil Halstead and Rachel Goswell
had be to experiment with digital technology, something no
doubt encouraged by collaboration with Brian Eno on two of
Souvlaki’s tracks. But rather than cling – as many did in the
early 90s – that there had always been a dance element to their
music, using this as an excuse to awkwardly layer a breakbeat
beneath their standard indie fare, Slowdive were more interested
in the ambient end of the spectrum: Cello, frankly, could be an
excerpt from one of Eno’s mid 70s releases like Discreet Music.
Much of Pygmalion therefore bears more relation to Global
Communication’s classic 76:14, released a year earlier. On
Trellisaze they allow a clock to tick out the beat – much as
Global Communication had on 14 31 (Ob-selon Mi-Nos) – while
disembodied, treated voices waft amidst a vapour trail of
guitars. On opener Rutti, Halstead’s vocal follows a sparse trail
of chords for three minutes before more familiar crystalline
guitar lines embellish its meditative mood, and on Crazy for You
a simple melody is refracted through a cloud of effects. It’s
still shoegazing, but not as we know it, and sometimes they
dispense with percussion entirely: the ghostly Miranda, the
angelic Visions of La and the elegiac All of Us have more in
common with folk.
Dropped by a Gallagher-fixated McGee shortly after this record’s
release, Slowdive morphed soon afterwards into Mojave 3. But it’s
the soft-focus mist of Pygmalion that remains Halstead and
Goswell’s masterpiece.
--Wyndham Wallace Find more music at the BBC ( http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/syn//albumreviews/-/music/ ) This link
will take you off in a new window