Product Details
Hope & Sorrow

Hope & Sorrow
Wax Tailor

Price: £15.59 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. Once Upon A Past - Wax Tailor
  2. Way We Lived - Wax Tailor & Sharon Jones
  3. Games You Play - Wax Tailor & Voice
  4. Tune - ailor, Wax
  5. Man With No Soul - Wax, Tailor & Charlotte Savary
  6. Radio Broadcast - ailor, Wax
  7. Positively Inclined - Wax Tailor & A.S.M./Marina Quaisse
  8. Sometimes - ailor, Wax
  9. House Of Wax - Wax Tailor & The Others
  10. Beyond Words - ailor, Wax
  11. To Dry Up - Wax, Tailor & Charlotte Savary
  12. We Be - Wax Tailor & Ursula Rucker
  13. That Case - ailor, Wax
  14. There Is Danger - ailor, Wax
  15. Alien In My Belly - Wax, Tailor & Charlotte Savary

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #62376 in Music
  • Released on: 2008-06-02
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: CD
  • Dimensions: .16 pounds

Customer Reviews

Wax Tailor- Hope & Sorrow LP Review (8/10)4
Hope & Sorrow is the sophomore effort from France's Wax Tailor (also known as DJ and producer JC le Saout), the follow up to the acclaimed Tales of The Forgotten Melodies, a stunning debut that topped charts worldwide. Wax Tailor has proven to be a master of sampling, which is an art form in and of itself. Layering and arranging samples expertly is often difficult to pull off on just one track, but Hope & Sorrow keeps that skill in high gear from beginning to end. There are going to be the inevitable descriptions of this being a cinematic venture, which is absolutely true here, just as it was in the previous album.

With the help of a large cast, including Voice, The Others, and spoken word goddess Ursula Rucker, the story of Hope & Sorrow rolls out over several distinct movements, and you won't find any shortage of excellent selections. The album opens with Once Upon A Past, a track with stumbling beats and a showdown aura. Next, Sharon Jones paints soulful cabaret melodies over The Way We Lived. Beyond Words combines down tempo jazz aesthetic with a classic lounge air. To Dry Up has a mischievous beginning that inches forward, carrying Charlotte Savary's honeyed voice throughout this orchestral track. But the standout for me is Sometimes, a show-stopping interlude flavored with plenty of jazz form, circling funk beats, and haunting flute accents. Despite the often eerie feel of the vintage samples, optimism rides on each of these melodic tracks.

The spectral vocal samples, brass, and strings mix perfectly with the juggled beats, taking you all across the globe, from one era to the next. All of this blends together to create a masterpiece of an album that is sure to set Wax Tailor up as a turntable icon. (Angie Pardue)