Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - From Her To Eternity [1996, PCCY-00915]

From Her to Eternity (1984) is a visceral, intense, and deeply influential album that served as the explosive debut of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds. Departing from the more chaotic sound of Cave's previous band, The Birthday Party, the album was seen as a bold, uncompromising statement and the record established a new, yet still frighteningly primal, direction for his creative vision. From Her to Eternity cemented Nick Cave's reputation as a vital, visionary songwriter and laid the groundwork for an impressive and consistent career. It is seen as a crucial link between his abrasive post-punk past and the more narrative-driven, gothic blues of his future. For both longtime and new fans, it remains an essential and potent listen that captures a new band at its moment of artistic birth.

Review by Ned Raggett
Nick Cave launched his solo career in style with From Her to Eternity, an accomplished album mixing the frenzy and power of his Birthday Party days with a dank, moody atmosphere that showed he was not interested in simply continuing what the older group had done. To be sure, Mick Harvey joined him from the Party days, as ever playing a variety of instruments, while one-time Party guest Blixa Bargeld now became a permanent Cave partner, splitting his time between the Bad Seeds and Einsturzende Neubaten ever since. The group took wing with a harrowing version of Leonard Cohen's "Avalanche," Cave's wracked, buried tones suiting the Canadian legend's words perfectly, and never looked back. From Her to Eternity is crammed with any number of doom-laden songs, with Cave the understandable center of attention, his commanding vocals turning the blues and rural music into theatrical exhibitionism unmatched since Jim Morrison stalked stages. Songs like "Cabin Fever," with its steadily paced drumming and relentless piano line, and the more restrained and moody "The Moon Is in the Gutter" sound like cabarets in hell. "In the Ghetto," already perfectly suited to such a treatment, shows the underlying sense of beauty that defines the Seeds as much as drama. Even though it's a Presley cover, the sense of Scott Walker's influence isn't far away at all. The title track is and remains a Bad Seeds classic, played at shows up through the present, a tense piano/organ beginning then accompanied by the edgy build of the band, pounding drums, stabbing feedback and keyboard parts and more.


Ripped to MP3

1. Avalanche
2. Cabin Fever!
3. Well Of Misery
4. From Her To Eternity
5. In The Ghetto
6. The Moon Is In The Gutter
7. Saint Huck
8. Wings Off Flies
9. A Box For Black Paul
10. From Her To Eternity (1987)

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