The Dance Of Death (Scaramanga Six Album)
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''The Dance of Death'' is the fourth album by English rock group
The Scaramanga Six The Scaramanga Six are an English rock band. Originally formed in 1995 and based in Huddersfield, the band currently consists of multi-instrumentalist founder members Paul Morricone (vocals, guitar, etc.) and Steven Morricone (vocals, bass guita ...
.


Background

''The Dance of Death'' was the second of the Scaramanga Six's albums to be produced by
Tim Smith Tim, Timothy or Timmy Smith may refer to: Musicians *T. V. Smith (born 1956), British singer and songwriter *Tim Smith (Cardiacs) (1961–2020), English singer-songwriter and frontman of Cardiacs *Timmy Trumpet (born 1982), Australian DJ and produ ...
of
Cardiacs Cardiacs are an English rock band formed in Kingston upon Thames by Tim Smith (lead guitar and vocals) and his brother Jim (bass, backing vocals) in 1977 under the name Cardiac Arrest. The band's sound fused circus, baroque pop and medieval mu ...
. It was also the only studio album to feature multi-instrumentalist Chris Catalyst as part of the line-up, as well as drummer Anthony Sargeant. In a 2004 interview before the album sessions, Paul Morricone noted the increasing macabre tone in the band's songcraft - "The new material for the next album seems to be themed with violent murder. There’s a new song about a man who kills his victims with cyanide then performs a macabre dance with their corpses. There’s also a beautiful song based on John Fowles' '' The Collector'' which is all about a man who stalks, kidnaps, imprisons and eventually kills his ideal woman… If you want to see a macabre pantomime, try watching Cannon & Ball doing the winter season at
Blackpool Blackpool is a seaside resort in Lancashire, England. Located on the North West England, northwest coast of England, it is the main settlement within the Borough of Blackpool, borough also called Blackpool. The town is by the Irish Sea, betw ...
– it's like watching death. What we do is often called 'black humour' – do you laugh or do you shit your pants?"“The Scaramanga Six: Paul Morricone of ireallylovemusic's fave band The Scaramanga Six! tells us all bout the gore and horror that is the band’s new album ''Cabin Fever''”
– interview in ''ireallylovemusic.co.uk''


Reception

''Manchester Music'' described the album as "a dangerous beast... the kind that should be muzzled and owned only on special licence. The Scaramanga Six make big albums and ''The Dance Of Death'' could be their hugest yet... a shrewd song writing style that owes as much to The Divine Comedy as it does Hugh Cornwell... The bloody rattle of "Helvetica" is endemic of an album that's immersed in semi-gothic humour and seriously angular new alt.rock anthems and ballads." Jo Williams, in ''Gigwise'', described the album as "ten epic tales of self confessed evil pop bastardry... this CD grabs you by the throat and strokes your face, like a lover who has been drinking whiskey until all hours. You never quite know what it’s going to do next. But you know it's going to be a grand gesture… The passion and skill in this CD is palpable in every play... ''The Dance of Death'' takes every little trendy boy and hangs him with his own skinny tie." On ''Leeds Music Scene'', Richard Garnett recalled that "''Cabin Fever'', the Six's last outing, punched you in the face from the off, it splattered your knackers (if you have them) all over the room with a hefty boot… The Scaramanga Six serve up a distinctly more accessible vibe on ''The Dance of Death'' with tracks like the string laden pounding-prog-romp "Baggage", the glam-grit of "I Wear My Heart On My Sleeve" or the camped up rocker "Helvetica". From pace changing opener "The Throning Room" the scene is set for a monster of an album with songs evolving as they leap around the room shedding skins of rock as they smash up your stuff… "Sunken Eyes" finds the band on a rarer more meaningful note tackling the not so trivial subject of domestic violence, "Hide the bruises on your arm" scream the vocals halfway through and the band rip into yet another rock tangent before showing off with a seamless quick switch to some lounge jazz... the clever bastards. Throughout, the sense of rock opera is never far away and leaves the listener desperately searching for some sort of narrative. The narrative if any is of course the band's unique perspective on life with a penchant for the theatrical." In ''Drowned in Sound'', Dom Gourlay commented "''The Dance of Death'' sounds like " Bohemian Rhapsody" after being stripped down into ten segments by Kwikfit before each one was rebuilt by a team of three-chord wonders with alarmingly distinctive falsetto voices... as grandiose a record as anyone who'd previously listened to The Scaramanga Six would expect, with the Morricone brothers Paul and Steve in fine form here both in their songwriting ("I am the man from Helvetica!") and the delivery, such as on the epic finale of "The Towering Inferno"... Any A&R scouts currently foaming at the mouth over fellow Leeds pomp'n'grandeur merchants Wild Beasts would do well to check these out first, if only for the fact that these guys actually sound like they really mean it, maaaan. Now isn't that a novelty?” ''Trakmarx'' wrote "The pace is frenetic throughout, the sarcasm withering, the songs as expansive & ambitious as ever. On ''The Dance of Death'', the Scaramangas sound wound up to the point of apoplexy - & it shows. Throughout it all, the group’s love of Bowie, Pulp & all things suave are wrapped around the core of this record like a favourite old scarf encasing a soar throat on a particularly chilly winter’s morning." On the ''Leonard's Lair'' website, Jonathan Leonard concluded "The Morricone brothers love their harmonies, there's a liberal use of strings, a sense of humour (on the excellent "The Collector", ''"coincidence"'' is mis-pronounced to rhyme with ''"silence"'') and - for a relatively modest record label - the production of ''The Dance of Death'' sounds huge. Rock-solid riffs and semi-operatic vocals propel "Vesuvius", "Sunken Eyes" features a great melodic twist, "I Wear My Heart on My Sleeve" boasts a cracking punky chorus, whilst "Towering Inferno" lives up to its immodest title. So although their tongues remain firmly in cheeks, The Scaramanga Six remain a serious musical proposition."Review of ''The Dance Of Death'' by Jonathan Leonard on ''Leonard's Lair''
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Track listing


Personnel


The Scaramanga Six

*Paul Morricone – vocals, guitars, baritone saxophone *Steven Morricone – vocals, bass guitar, tenor saxophone *Julia Arnez – guitars, vocals *Chris Catalyst - keyboards, bass guitar, trombone, drums, backing vocals *Anthony Sargeant - drums


Guest musicians

*Mike Scott – arrangements (including "Horrible Face" and "Walking Through Houses") *Tim Smith – timpani, bell


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Dance of Death, The 2007 albums The Scaramanga Six albums