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I'm New Here

I'm New HereArtist: Gil Scott-Heron
Label: XL
Category: Digital Music Album

Buy New: £7.99
as of 30/7/2010 14:28 BST details

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Seller: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 28 reviews
Sales Rank: 4925

Genre: r-b-music
Media: MP3 Download
Running Time: 1696 Minutes

ASIN: B0032JYEPI

Release Date: February 8, 2010
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

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Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 28



4 out of 5 stars My first introduction to GSH   July 2, 2010
J. Orden (Hove, East Sussex United Kingdom)
This cd was recommended by a friend. Enjoyed every second of this recording, well worth adding to any music collection.


5 out of 5 stars Fantastic new Album   June 15, 2010
C. M. Kmita (London)
Gill's new album is gold. some of the sound bites in between songs are skippable on subsequent plays. I recently saw him in Edinburgh. Excellent show aside from some support player showboating.


5 out of 5 stars love it   June 2, 2010
Liz (Paris)
If you are Gil Scott Heron fan, you will not be disappointed. It is very different from the older work but equally powerful and deeply emotional and personal.


5 out of 5 stars Two bookends and mighty storm music   May 15, 2010
Bm Ballin (Birmingham, UK)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

The two bookends on this album are 'on coming from a broken home', a poignant and reflective tribute to Gil's Grandmother, which set the tone for this most personal of his albums. There is no 'The Revolution ...', 'B-Movies' or 'H2O gate blues', but the LP is no less political for that ... in a society where young black men are more likely to go to prison than to university, and where conservative rhetoric about 'broken homes' [or 'broken Britain' for that matter] crudely pathologises a complex mixture of economics, social pressure, continuing racism, existential striving, resistance and gender politics. The second bookend of the two defiantly reframes that situation as a struggle for survival: a pursuit of happiness, even.

In the 80s, Gil Scott-Heron was a lodestar in a fairly fluffy musical world, articulating with great humour and precision the concerns that many of us had in trying to make our way through life in the Reagan and Thatcher era. His voice is more battered now, more cracked in every way, but the insight and humour is still there - only ploughing a more visceral furrow.

The other pivotal track on this album is the exceptional 'Me and the Devil', where Gill channels the crossroads spirit of Robert Johnson and describes his own pact with the devil. It is this tornado which whirls through the rest of the album, magnificently underpinned by a wholly appropriate blend of deep blues and techno dramatics: hair-raising stuff on the track itself. Whether gently introspective, defiant, chaotically cut-up, the CD is a meditation on that diabolic pact, and Gil's personal jihad to reclaim himself and find a sort of redemption.

The bookends balance out that human tornado, humanise, soften and contextualise and externalise it, take it beyond himself. The grandmother we met years ago in 'Grandma's Hands' [another great G S-H cover] is there as a loving, tough, presiding spirit. Mending what seemed to be broken. This is 28 minutes of powerful medicine: an album, and not just a collection of songs.



5 out of 5 stars Genius   May 12, 2010
Jason Brooker (UK)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Those who have given this album a bad review just don't get it. Of course it's not like his other albums. Of course it is very different. GSH is an artist in the true sense of the word, and he has moved on from his previous incarnations. The man has spent alot of his adult life on drugs and some of it in jail, and he is reflecting on the consequences of this as well as the debt he owes to the women (the strong women) in his life. He is in his sixties now and has a different perspective from the young fire brand who wrote Whitey On The Moon. But make no mistake, this is an important work. It is both challenging, moving and profound. My only criticism, if you can call it a criticism, is that it is very short. But sometimes you can say all you need to say in 28 minutes.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 28


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