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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my favorite Reed albums--somber, disquieting, hopeful
On "Magic and Loss," Lou Reed once again digs inside himself with all the fatal fervor of a junky prodding a needle in his arm. He also shows that rock'n'roll is a fine vehicle for growing up, growing old, and dying. A melancholy, painful album, part regret, part sentiment, part loneliness and contemplation, this is a very personal statement during a period...
Published on March 2, 2000 by William Errickson Jr.

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6 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars High on loss, low on magic
On this album Reed investigates mortality, loss, guilt, rage and resignation. Each song has a subtitle and a mystical symbol, tracking the issue in full circle and attempting to cover all aspects and relevant emotions of the chosen theme. The best tracks, because their melodies make them stand out, include Sword of Damocles (Externally) with its flash of humor ("That mix...
Published on September 22, 2002 by Pieter


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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my favorite Reed albums--somber, disquieting, hopeful, March 2, 2000
By 
William Errickson Jr. (Raleigh, NC United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Magic & Loss (Audio CD)
On "Magic and Loss," Lou Reed once again digs inside himself with all the fatal fervor of a junky prodding a needle in his arm. He also shows that rock'n'roll is a fine vehicle for growing up, growing old, and dying. A melancholy, painful album, part regret, part sentiment, part loneliness and contemplation, this is a very personal statement during a period when Reed lost two friends to cancer. It's not an album you can put on to play in the background--few of Reed's albums are. Listen to it while you're in a reflective, downbeat mood--it draws you in, shows you sights of beauty and sadness, and leaves you with a ray of hard-won hope. Stand-out songs include "What's Good: The Thesis," "Magician: Internally," "Dreamin': Escape, "Cremation: Ashes to Ashes" and "Harry's Circumcision: Reverie Gone Astray." In one moment of honesty, a character says, "Doctor, you're no magician, and I am no believer... I need more than faith can give me now." Ouch. These are not the same old platitudes... Lou Reed explores not just the terminal illness of disease, but of life itself.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Contemplating both sides, June 30, 2002
This review is from: Magic & Loss (Audio CD)
In both his Velvet Underground and solo days, Lou Reed has explored dark themes: sex, S&M, drugs, mind trips, and the rough street life. His art has been about experiencing these things, not so much social commentary. One dark theme has not been that much of a preoccupation. In Magic and Loss, Lou switches gears and looks at life's experiences contemplatively, but focuses heavily on its end--death. This was inspired by the recent deaths by cancer of two friends and apparently also the AIDS epidemic.

The majority of songs are mellow, with soft, sweet guitar riffs, allowing us to focus on Lou's very strong lyrics. There are also five strong rockers: the opener (effectively), "What's Good"; the acoustic "Sword of Damocles"; "Warrior King"; "Gassed and Stoked"; and "Power and Glory Part II." The first two are marked by crisp, pretty definition in the rhythm guitars, smooth strokes, in contrast to the guitars in the others, which have the edge, and a bit of the fuzziness and distortion, often seen in Lou's work. "What's Good" and "Warrior King," the CD's most potent tune, are the two best songs. The softer, mostly slower songs are good too. My only problem is that there are too many of them: six of seven between the opener and "Warrior King."

There is a positive spin to Magic and Loss, witness the album title and the concluding title cut: "There's a bit of magic in everything and then some loss to even things out." Lou sees things both ways, focusing heavily on hardship and death, but also dignity.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The best in Lou's long career, November 1, 1999
This review is from: Magic & Loss (Audio CD)
This is my personal choice for the best album Reed has ever released. I think its something one has to listen to in order to appreciate, not read a review about it. The level of emotional intensity reached hear is extremely rare in popular music.

This is not easy listening, especially for anyone who has experienced the untimely loss of a loved one. Every song on this - a true concept album if there ever was one - has a purpose, as Lou takes us through his personal experience of grieving. Most listeners will find much to relate to.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Are you innocent or over-privileged? Maybe skip this album., September 29, 2004
This review is from: Magic & Loss (Audio CD)
I think you have to have hurt some, lost someone, suffered with someone dying, or had some sort of dramatic compromise in your life to really get into this album. This album is just total cosmic blues, and it is stark. If you haven't experienced a loss, you will not have some of the emotional triggers and tacit information that fills the songs in emotionally what they lack in orchestration. Basically, pain is the orchestra in this CD.

It is easy to be put off by this CD because in some spots it sounds like a precious garage band spoken word, and there are some weak spots in the album that make it an easy target from a critical standpoint (there are some ugly noodling guitar solos). But from a feeling standpoint, the starkness of the album is soothing. The instruments, chorusy guitars and fretless bass, create an ambience. If you can relate to the feeling, you have some emotional information to plug into the soft spots, and it becomes a whole experience.

There is clarity and reckoning in the songs, and the weak spots to me signify just exactly how hard it is to capture the loss. Lou Reed sometimes errs while daring to do something very hard, and that is far more valuable than succeding at something mundane and predictable (to loosely paraphrase Roosevelt.) The magic, although not consistent from song to song, is really there and amazing, trancendant, crystalline in some spots, and not in a highly stylized or cliched way that taps into your pop-music programming (you know, like in soundtracks that get really tense when you are supposed to be scared--music can be programmed to trick you into feeling a certain way).

The album is really solid in the first half, especially Creamation, Magician, Power and Glory, and What's Good, and spottier toward the end IMO, especially Harry's Circumcision, Gassed and Stoked, and Power and Glory Part II.

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars God Forbid We Should Get Depressed About Death, July 3, 2005
By 
Ham On Wry (Decatur, GA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Magic & Loss (Audio CD)
Magic and Loss grabbed me in the 90's when I was relatively at peace with myself. It grabbed me again this year when I had experienced some turmoil and loss. Forgetting the "depressing" lyrics for a moment, it's got some catchy licks and a couple of excellent tunes (well, Lou doesn't actually sing, but whatever you call what he does is very effective here).

Do people really avoid depression by not thinking about something? I don't know, but I come out of listening to this album feeling better about life. Not because he holds out any false hope or turns to Greener Pastures at the end, but because hey, if this guy can deal with his grief and turn it into art, then by golly so can I.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another great concept album from Lou Reed., July 2, 2005
This review is from: Magic & Loss (Audio CD)
Magic and Loss was another concept album from Lou Reed. I wished he made more of them because he's quite good and making song cycle discs. The story of this album is about the cycle of life and death, magic and loss of life and how they intwine with each other. Lou Reed lost to friends to cancer and his thoughts and expressions were put to music. A lot of interesting ideas here (how radiation can cause cancer but it's used to treat it at the same time)
that are executed very well.

A depressing album that has a small light at the end of the tunnel. Just like life, in order for it to continue we have to accept loss along with the magic. One hand washing the other. Great stuff from Lou Reed. Check out New York, Songs for Drella, Berlin and Blue Mask for other great concept albums from the New Yorck City Man himself, Lou Reed.

Highly recommended.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Death Becomes Lou, December 8, 2001
This review is from: Magic & Loss (Audio CD)
Lou Reed has always been better at tackling deep subjects, such as drug abuse and sexual depravity, than lighter ones. On "Magic and Loss," he tackles his deepest subject yet, death by cancer. Two of Reed's friends succomed to the disease, and this album is his tribute to them. It is a difficult album to listen to, but one that is worth the effort. The second track "What's Good," is the catchiest and probably most well-known number. From there, many of the songs feature Reed's trademark talk-singing. The lyrics are often quite poetic, with references to things like "The Sword of Damocles," and the "Power and Glory," two of the other song titles. It also includes strange stuff, like "Harry's Circumcision," about a guy who tries to alter his appearance with a straight razor.

Overall, I would recommend this album most strongly to Reed fans, since it is perhaps a bit too ecclectic for most casual listeners.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars BRILLIANT!!, March 27, 2001
By 
ROBERT M. STJOHN (APO, AE United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Magic & Loss (Audio CD)
Lou recorded this gem after recording two previous ones; NEW YORK and SONGS for DRELLA. Lou has written an epic grieving process after witnessing the death of two of his close friends. The opening track (What's Good) questions the fairness of life. By the last track (Magic & Loss) Lou finds closure. In between are brilliant perceptions on what it my be like to find oneself facing his/her own mortality. Power & Glory, Magician and Sword of Damocles are masterpieces. This is Lou's most thought provoking recording to date...and it is my favorite.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars the thesis: a solid lou reed album, November 11, 2000
By 
"persistence_is_all" (Orlando, FL United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Magic & Loss (Audio CD)
Never have been a big Lou Reed fan, he was always just so-so in my mind. I came across Magic and Loss while on a Jimmy Scott fix (he does the background vocals for track 3). This wasn't too bad, alot of very well done songs, much more emotional than anything i've heard from Reed before. The album starts off strong, gets a little slow through the middle, but ends wonderfully. The last track is my favorite. I also have to give Mr.Reed credit for the concept of this theme album, it worked very well.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Magic and Loss -- through the valley of the shadow, August 25, 2000
By 
Julie C. Horne (Decatur,, GA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Magic & Loss (Audio CD)
This is one of two albums that I bought because of a magazine article. I've always been a Lou Reed fan, but in 1992, I discovered what was to become one of my favorite albums of all time -- Magic and Loss. What an emotionally beautiful album! It was inspired by the death of two of his friends in one year due to cancer. His sparse but impassioned arrangements know no equal. Even better, I was introduced to my favorite singer through his backing vocals on this album -- Jimmy Scott. Lou Reed is one of those rare performers who are artists because of his innate ability to convey emotion by his cracked and strained voice. You'll not find him singing opera anywhere, but he is a consummate artist, nonetheless.
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Magic & Loss
Magic & Loss by Lou Reed (Audio CD - 1992)
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