Dead Can Dance: The Serpent’s Egg

Dead Can Dance is a two-person group comprised of Lisa Gerrard (of the amazing voice) and Brendan Perry. As I mentioned a couple of weeks ago, Gerrard's solo album The Mirror Pool led me to this one. Or, I should say, back to it, because although I have it I had not listened to it for at least twenty years. Judging by it there seems to be a tendency for their joint effort to be clearly separable into Gerrard tracks and Perry tracks (as the work of the Incredible String Band was clearly separable into Robin Williamson and Mike Heron songs). The first one, for instance, "The Host of Seraphim," could have been included on The Mirror Pool, as could several others featuring Gerrard's voice, often multi-tracked: vaguely Middle-Eastern-sounding chants, either in some foreign language or none at all. 

There are two songs on this album that I really love, and they are sung by Brendan Perry, perhaps written by him, with clear and interesting lyrics (in English). This is one of them, "Severance":

The other is "Ullyses" (sic). And I also like a third one which Perry sings, "In the Kingdom of the Blind the One-Eyed Are Kings." I don't dislike the others at all, but neither do I love them. Still, the album as a whole is a rich experience, a stately, often grandiose, mysterious and distant sound-world. The instrumentation is sparse and fairly simple, as in "Severance": droning organ (or something of the sort), a tinkling harpsichord, big slow drums, bells, strings. The credits list only hurdy-gurdy, violin, viola, and cello, but there are many sounds here obviously not produced by any of those (unless they were transmogrified electronically).

The album was released in 1988, during the glory days of 4AD Records. Since that was pre-CD, or at least early in the CD takeover, it's of LP length, meaning that it does not overstay its welcome. I'm sure you can hear the whole thing on most of the streaming services, and if you like "Severance" you probably should.

What about the title? I vaguely thought that it had some proverbial sort of meaning, and the phrase is common enough that it has a Wikipedia page. It's the name of one of Bergman's lesser films, one which I have not seen. But Brendan Perry is quoted as saying

In a lot of aerial photographs of the Earth, if you look upon it as a giant organism—a macrocosmos—you can see that the nature of the life force, water, travels in a serpentine way.

And Shakespeare uses it, though my guess is that this is not what Perry had in mind. From Julius Caesar:

And therefore think him as a serpent's egg,
Which, hatch'd, would as his kind grow mischievous,
And kill him in the shell.

I mentioned in that Lisa Gerrard post that something of a spiritual nature had put me off this group not long after I first heard them decades ago. This is the only one of their albums that I've heard, and now I don't find anything seriously off-putting in it. So I wonder if it was something I read, or if I'm just less critical. They do in general have that New Age vibe, a sense of interest in or connection with esoteric spirituality-but-not-religion, but not to an annoying or offensive extent. I definitely want to investigate their work further. AMG gives most of their albums 4 to 4 1/2 stars; this one gets 4 1/2. 

I have the album on cassette, almost certainly bought used. And now I have to make a decision: I have a lot of cassettes–should I get rid of them? I rarely listen to them, and they take up a fair amount of space. I have a perfectly good player, so I can't use the excuse of having no way to hear them. Perhaps a third are pre-recorded, i.e. commercial products. Probably very few of those are essential. The rest are mixtapes, compiled with care by friends through the '80s and into the early 2000s. But it seems a shame to throw them out. Maybe I'll just leave that task for my children, who won't have my same scruples. 


6 responses to “Dead Can Dance: The Serpent’s Egg

  1. There is a bit of a boom in cassette sales, believe it or not, and some old cassettes can be worth a fair amount of money if they’re uncommon. Might be worth checking on Discogs. I got rid of most of mine six or seven years ago and now I wish I hadn’t.

  2. I was aware of that boomlet but haven’t taken it very seriously, partly because the medium is so fragile. Figured it was just a hipster fad that wouldn’t last very long. But I checked Discogs and The Serpent’s Egg goes for $20-30. And a still-sealed original for $250!?!?
    I had a cassette of Lonely Is An Eyesore (famous 4AD compilation as you probably know) and got rid of it not all that long ago, since I also had it on cd. There’s one copy available on Discogs : $49.99.
    So I guess I’ll look up some of these others. Most of them are fairly obscure. I never bought full-priced cassettes, so most of the ones I have were $1 in the cutout bin, or used.

  3. Wow, my cassettes went to Goodwill quite a while ago. Cannot even remember the last time I had a working cassette player. I don’t even have a working CD player; I play my CDs on the BluRay player. LOL The only downside of that is it takes over the television, so you can’t have music and TV at the same time.

  4. I don’t currently have a way to watch dvds on the tv, only on my computer. We have a player but at the moment I don’t know exactly where it is. We’ve gotten so much out of the habit of watching dvds that since we moved we haven’t bothered to set it up. Doesn’t matter because the dvds that I would want to watch my wife mostly doesn’t, so watching them on the computer is fine.

  5. I was thinking of you last night, Mac. Something I was watching had the detective main character walk into a room and notice something that none of the other police had yet noticed. Does this silly sorta plot device ever get old? I wonder if in every single TV series or movie with the main character as a detective, private eye (etc.) this has happened in at least one scene? You all watch way more detective kind of stuff than I do.

  6. Your suspicion is sadly all too justified. Yeah, it happens over and over and over again. Sometimes the writers switch it around, so that Main Detective gets taken down a few notches by a subordinate. More often the subordinates are given a plausible but mistaken theory to push, so that MD can prove them wrong.

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