Memento: The Very Best of Dead Can Dance

RELEASE
October 25, 2005
LABEL
Rhino
GENRES
Pop/Rock, Ethnic Fusion, Alternative Pop/Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock, Dream Pop

Album Review

Memento: The Very Best of Dead Can Dance is a condensed version of 2003's double-disc Wake, which was a condensed version of 2001's triple-disc (plus DVD) 1981-1998. Condensing the catalog of a group with eight good-to-spectacular albums to this extent is conceptually problematic, but Memento works well as an introduction, even if it is limiting, like a CliffsNotes of a CliffsNotes. Thirteen of the 15 tracks can also be heard on Wake, with "Ariadne" (surprisingly) and "The Song of the Sibyl" (less so) rounding out the track list. Just about any Dead Can Dance fan would agree with most of the choices, but one key misstep is that the self-titled debut goes unrepresented, and there is a pronounced slant toward 1993's Into the Labyrinth and the following year's Toward the Within. As such, this could be seen as an unacknowledged successor to A Passage in Time, an anthology released by Ryko in 1991. Regardless, Memento is a good way to dip your toes in, but don't be afraid to take a dive.
Andy Kellman, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Nierika
  2. The Ubiquitous Mr. Lovegrove
  3. Cantara
  4. The Carnival Is Over
  5. Ariadne
  6. Enigma of the Absolute
  7. The Lotus Eaters
  8. In the Kingdom of the Blind the One-Eyed Are Kings
  9. Sanvean
  10. Yulunga
  11. The Song of the Sibyl
  12. I Can See Now
  13. American Dreaming
  14. The Host of Seraphim
  15. How Fortunate the Man with None