| Tilt was Scott Walker's first album following over a decade of silence, 
        and whatever else he may have done during his exile, brightening his musical 
        horizon was not on the agenda. Indescribably barren and unutterably bleak, 
        Tilt is the wind that buffets the gothic cathedrals of everyone's favorite 
        nightmares. The opening "Farmer in the City" sets the pace, 
        a cinematic sweep that somehow maintains a melody beneath the unrelenting 
        melodrama of Walker's most grotesque vocal ever. Seemingly undecided whether 
        he's recording an opera or simply haunting one, Walker doesn't so much 
        perform as project his lyrics, hurling them into the alternating maelstroms 
        and moods that careen behind him. The effect is unsettling, to put it 
        mildly. At the time of its release, reviews were undecided whether to 
        praise or pillory Walker for making an album so utterly divorced from 
        even the outer limits of rock reality, an indecision only compounded by 
        its occasional (and bloody-mindedly deceptive) lurches towards modern 
        sensibilities. "The Cockfighter" is underpinned by an intensity 
        that is almost industrial in its range and raucousness, while "Bouncer 
        See Bouncer" would have quite a catchy chorus if anybody else had 
        gotten their hands on it. Here, however, it is highlighted by an Eno-esque 
        esotericism and the chatter of tiny locusts. The crowning irony, however, 
        is "The Patriot (A Single)," seven minutes of unrelenting funeral 
        dirge over which Walker infuses even the most innocuous lyric ("I 
        brought nylons from New York") with indescribable pain and suffering. 
        Tilt is not an easy album to love; it's not even that easy to listen to. 
        First impressions place it on a plateau somewhere between Nico's Marble 
        Index and Lou Reed's Metal Machine Music -- before long, familiarity and 
        the elitist chattering of so many well-heeled admirers rendered both albums 
        mere forerunners to some future shift in mainstream taste. And maybe that 
        is the fate awaiting Tilt, although one does wonder precisely what monsters 
        could rise from soil so belligerently barren. Even Metal Machine Music 
        could be whistled, after all. (by Dave Thompson, AMG)  | 
  
    | "There's truly no parallel in contemporary rock history 
      for the kind of late career renaissance that Tilt signified for Scott Walker. 
      Although most thought his best material well behind him in 1995, he came 
      out with a record that confounded everyone, full of magical ideas and brain-storming 
      musical leaps that far outstripped what even the most advanced avant-rock 
      groups were formulating at the time. Then again, Walker was always a highly innovative performer who perilously 
      followed the dictates of his heart ever since he split from the greatest 
      boy band of the late 1960s, The Walker Brothers. His run of four great solo 
      albums, Scott 1-4, beautifully plotted his reinvention from fluffy pin-up 
      to black-hearted existential misfit. By the time of 1969´s Scott 4 
      he was writing songs based on Ingmar Bergman movies and dedicating tracks 
      ''to the neo-Stalinist regime''. As the 1970s and 1980s rolled on he became 
      even more reclusive, only emerging for a patchy solo album, Climate Of Hunter, 
      and an even worse Walker Brothers reunion.
 The circumstances couldn´t have been better for springing Tilt on 
      an unsuspecting public. From the first track, Farmer In The City, it´s 
      so gloriously confusing as melancholic strings make for the morning light 
      while Walker reads a litany of hallucinatory imagery, of wild horses and 
      the long shadows of macabre threshing machines. The closing Rosary is Walker 
      at his most intense, just quivering over a spare electric guitar, genuinely 
      chilling in its unearthly qualities. Nowadays he produces Pulp, so go figure."
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