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Dead Can Dance (album)

Dead Can Dance
Dead Can Dance album.jpg
Studio album by Dead Can Dance
Released 27 February 1984
Recorded 1983
Genre Post-punk, gothic rock, darkwave, ethereal wave
Length 35:01 (original)
51:06 (re-release)
Label 4AD
Producer Dead Can Dance
Dead Can Dance chronology
Dead Can Dance
(1984)
Garden of the Arcane Delights
(1984)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3/5 stars

Dead Can Dance is the debut studio album by Australian musical act Dead Can Dance. It was released on 27 February 1984 by record label 4AD. This album differs greatly from later Dead Can Dance releases in its incorporation of post-punk and gothic rock musical styles.

Dead Can Dance commented on their official website regarding the name of the band and album:

To understand why we chose the name, think of the transformation of inanimacy to animacy. Think of the processes concerning life from death and death into life. So many people missed the inherent symbolic intention of the work, and assumed that we must be "morbid gothic types".

The album, according to the sleeve notes, was recorded at "Vineyard".

The musicians who performed on the album were Brendan Perry, Lisa Gerrard, Paul Erikson, James Pinker, Scott Rodger and Peter Ulrich. Erikson returned to Australia and was replaced by Rodger.

The instrumentation consisted of guitars, bass guitar and drums, with added percussion and the very distinct sound of the yangqin, as played by Gerrard.

The beginning sample on "The Fatal Impact" was taken from the 1964 film Zulu, and was recorded off of a television broadcast onto a cassette player. The drum machine used was built into the same cassette player. The percussion featured in the track consisted of three upturned, empty five-gallon paint tins tied together. This unorthodox instrumentation was one of the main reasons this song was not performed live at the time.

AllMusic commented on the album's sound: "Bearing much more resemblance to the similarly gripping, dark early work of bands like the Cocteau Twins and The Cure than to the later fusions of music that would come to characterize the duo's sound, Dead Can Dance is as goth as it gets in many places."

The album cover includes a photo of a piece of artwork from Papua New Guinea on the left side, and on the right, the Greek characters "ΔΞΛΔ CΛΝ ΔΛΝCΞ", which aimed to visually resemble the title "DEAD CAN DANCE".


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