翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ This Side Up (Scream album)
・ This Side Up (song)
・ This Sinking Ship
・ This Sitcom Is...Not to Be Repeated
・ This So-Called Miracle
・ This Song
・ This Song's for You
・ This Sorrowful Life
・ This Sorry Scheme
・ This Space Between Us
・ This Space for Rent
・ This Spartan Life
・ This Sporting Life
・ This Sporting Life (album)
・ This Sporting Life (radio program)
This Station Is Non-Operational
・ This Storm
・ This Strange Effect
・ This Strange Engine
・ This Strange Place
・ This Stuff'll Kill Ya!
・ This Suffering
・ This Summer
・ This Summer at Five
・ This Summer's Gonna Hurt like a Motherfucker
・ This Sweet and Bitter Earth
・ This Sweet Sickness
・ This Sweet Sickness (film)
・ This Tangled Web / Times Square
・ This That and The Other


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

This Station Is Non-Operational : ウィキペディア英語版
This Station Is Non-Operational

''This Station Is Non-Operational'' is a compilation album by the El Paso, Texas-based post-hardcore band At the Drive-In, released May 24, 2005 by Fearless Records, four years after the band went on indefinite hiatus. Its tracks span the band's career from 1997 to 2000, with selections from ''El Gran Orgo'' (1997), ''In/Casino/Out'' (1998), ''Vaya'' (1999), and ''Relationship of Command'' (2000), as well as several rare tracks taken from singles and a previously unreleased cover version of The Smiths' "This Night Has Opened My Eyes". The album also includes a DVD with the music videos for "Metronome Arthritis", "One Armed Scissor", and "Invalid Litter Dept.", an electronic press kit, a discography, and multimedia content. It became the band's highest-charting release in the United States. Its title comes from a lyric in the song "One Armed Scissor".〔
The compilation does not contain any material from the band's releases prior to 1997, omitting the EPs ''Hell Paso'' (1994) and ''¡Alfaro Vive, Carajo!'' (1995) as well as their 1996 debut album ''Acrobatic Tenement''. Guitarist Jim Ward addressed these omissions in a 2006 interview:

I was just adamant about certain things staying off it. There was just some stuff I wanted to stay special, like those early seven-inches. If you have them, then you have them because you were in a certain place at a certain time. I wanted to keep it special for those people if it makes sense. It's not that they’re embarrassing to me, it's because I wanted them to remain intimate with those people who were there when we slept on their floors. We were putting out 500 seven-inches even though people sell them on eBay for more than I had to put them out with. I still prefer it that way. I like that culture; I’m part of that culture. I didn’t want everything homogenized into one album. I'm not a big () of "greatest hits" or whatever, but I understand that's part of what labels do. I wasn't really a big part of it to be honest with you.

== Reception ==

''This Station Is Non-Operational'' became At the Drive-In's highest-charting release in the United States, reaching #95 on the ''Billboard'' 200 and #3 on the Top Independent Albums chart. Critical reaction to the compilation was very positive. Johnny Loftus of Allmusic stated that it "really makes you miss the focused intensity of the band's salad days", and that because of the stylistic improvisations of the band members' post-At the Drive-In projects The Mars Volta and Sparta "it's easy to forget about At the Drive-In's capacity for convention. Their spectacular live show was a big part of their success. But as ''This Station Is Non-Operational'' continually points out, At the Drive-In wrote incredible songs, too." Mike Diver of Drowned in Sound gave the album a perfect score of 10 out of 10, remarking that it "must be listened to with an absolutely open mind. Yes, those earliest efforts from ''El Gran Orgo'' are scratchy, gutterside punk at best and, well, utterly underwhelming in absolute fairness. But that's not what ATD-I will be remembered for - it's the tracks from ''In/Casino/Out'' and the straw that ultimately broke their collective back, ''Relationship of Command'', that today's fashioncore 'punks' have plumbed almost endlessly for inspiration. And you know what? They still sound amazingly fresh and vital." He noted that the rare tracks make the release attractive to existing fans, but "To the newcomer, though, this record just about transcends essential; really, if you like contemporary punk rock, even the MTV-sanitised version, then you've no excuse whatsoever for not owning this."〔
Jason Crock of Pitchfork Media noted that the release "aims to be a retrospective in the true sense of the word", ignoring some of the band's strongest songs and singles such as "Invalid Litter Dept." in favor of offering "a snapshot of the band's artistic growth, from class-act emo to muscular modern rock." He criticized the B-side tracks as "unrewarding" and "mildly compelling curios", but accepted them as "simply footnotes to the story told by the first 11 tracks"〔 Remarking on the press' interpretation of the band members' post-At the Drive-In projects Sparta as "accessible" and The Mars Volta as "difficult", he noted that "the push/pull between the two extremes within the songs on ''This Station Is Non-Operational'' is seamless. This anthology begs the question: Why should rock fans have to settle for one or the other?"〔 Christian Hoard of ''Rolling Stone'' was more critical of the compilation, stating that "Where ATDI's later albums were art-punk cherry bombs packed with cascading shouts and tricky rhythms, most of these singles, rarities, B sides and live cuts sound unfocused -- long on arty twists and youthful bloodletting but short on explosiveness."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「This Station Is Non-Operational」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.