Album Title
Nadine Shah
Artist Icon Love Your Dum and Mad (2013)
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First Released

Calendar Icon 2013

Genre

Genre Icon Indie Rock

Mood

Mood Icon Moody

Style

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Tempo

Speed Icon Medium

Release Format

Release Format Icon Album

Record Label Release

Speed Icon Apollo Records

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Album Description
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"Love Your Dum and Mad" is the début full length studio album of British singer, songwriter Nadine Shah, produced by Ben Hillier, and released on July 2013 through Apollo Records.
At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from critics, the album received an average score of 75, based on 13 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
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User Album Review
Love Your Dum and Mad begins with this insistent clanging; it's guitarist Simon McCabe hammering away on a zither, making some industrial-grade din-- the noise perfectly mimicing a train crossing signal. It's an anxious sound, the soundtrack of impatiently waiting, of staying clear of a powerful, inevitable force that could crush you. The jing-jing-jing of this lasts for the nearly four minutes of the album opener "Aching Bones", a dark droning concoction of martial drums, blown-out bass, and pricks of parlor piano. All is static until Nadine Shah arrives and unfurls her velvet voice, singing of a love that destroys-- and setting the tone for a dark record that does not relent.
Dum and Mad is blood-red gothic, desperate loves, and bitterness-- much more fully-fledged than you'd expect a debut to be. Producer Ben Hillier doesn't carve out a lot of space for Shah in the songs, but she takes it. The sound of the album is heavy, claustrophobic even; reflecting the subject matter, sounds double back, pile up, and refuse to fade. The arrangements are simple, usually just piano, bass, guitar, drums, and some bits of feedback or guitar scuzz saturating the mix for emphasis. It's all baroqueness and black clouds, and Shah low voice, purring, like she is trying to beg the moon down from the sky. For all of Dum and Mad's unebbing intensity-- it never gets overbearing, it retains a dynamism through Shah's magnetic voice-- she makes you want to stay in the darkness with her.
Reviewed by Jessica Hopper for pitchfork.com.



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MusicBrainz Large icontransparent block Amazon Large icontransparent block Metacritic Large Icon