Placebo
A Place For Us To Dream
Elevator Lady Ltd
A Place For Us To Dream is a fresh look back at 20 years of Placebo over 36 songs on two CDs or, if you have money to burn, a four-vinyl box set.
Since this is a retrospective album, Iβm going to journey back to the first time I heard Placebo. I remember watching shitty video streams of their music videos on an early-millennium Internet connection. This was around the time of my first foray into Alt-Rock music, listening past the radio-friendly βhitsβ I knew. I heard the nasal, semi-whiny vocals, distorted guitars and confident imperfection that was Placebo. In confused wonder, I couldnβt make sense of the singerβs androgyny by sight or by sound. The ultimate question that circled my mind as the presentation concluded was a bewildered βyouβre allowed to do that?!β It expanded my sense of possibility when it came to music, style and gender. Placebo, with Brian Molko at its helm, became a major source of inspiration to the genderqueer musician I eventually became. So with this in mind, youβll know a lot what I have to say about this compilation is delivered with a heavy, ashtray heart.
A Place For Us To Dream of course features the classics, the mid-career hits, and some of the newer ones you probably pretend donβt exist. But this collection sets itself apart from a standard βbest ofβ with its alternate versions and re-imaginings of some the bandβs earlier songs from its current place in time.
β36 degrees,β now 20 years older, is a much slower song with a rising tension β an interesting contrast to its energetic original. βSoulmates,β the B-side version of βSleeping With Ghosts,β should probably have stayed on the B-side of history with its amped-up rhythm section, reminiscent of sub-par Nu-Metal track. Some of these alternate versions sound like overproduced mixes that arenβt any better β and are sometimes worse β than the originals. To be fair, a good chunk of the songs are either left undisturbed or are radio edits with minor changes you might recognize better than the album versions. Either way, letβs not talk about track two, the new song on the release.
Overall, if you wanted a true βbest of,β you could go listen to the bandβs Once More with Feeling from 2004, which really does feature the bandβs best work.
My ultimate verdict:
Between the novelty of its alternative recordings and its strong foundation in the bandβs first decade, this retrospective album creeps up beyond a three. Ultimately though, retrospection is probably the most fitting lens to use when thinking about Placebo, because clearly the best has already passed.
ArtistΒ Links
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PLACEBO – A PLACE FOR US TO DREAM
RJ Vandrish