Magazine: Rolling
Stone, March 9, 1995
REVIEWS
ROLLIN' & TUMBLIN'
DUMMY Portishead (Good 1/2) GO! DISCS/LONDON
From tape loops
and live strings, Fender Rhodes riffing and angelic singing,
these English subversives construct tres hip Gothic
hip-hop. A junkie for smoky atmosphere, key-boardist Geoff Barrow
selects offbeat samples (Johnny Ray, Lalo Schifrin,
Wayne Shorter) while Beth Gibbons croons through the intentional
murk, copping glamorous Astrud Gilberto attitude. Songs
like "Roads," "Glory Box" and "Sour
Times" come across both sad and sexy, provoking cinematic
images - lonely lovers in
cocktail lounges, light slipping through Venetian blinds.
Assertive rhythms and quirky production, however, save Portishead
from languishing in any coy retro groove. instead they manage yet
another - very smart - rebirth of cool.
BY PAUL EVANS