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Product Details
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| 1. Don't Touch Me |
| 2. For Young Moderns |
| 3. Stop/Go/Stop |
| 4. Furniture Music |
| 5. Radar In My Heart |
| 6. Stay Young |
| 7. Out Of Touch |
| 8. Better Homes In The Phant |
| 9. Substitute Flesh |
| 10. Atom Age |
| 11. Art/Empire/Industry |
| 12. Revolt Into Style |
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Nelsons finestelectro pop perfection digitally remastered,
By A Customer
This review is from: Sound on Sound (Audio CD)
In these days of CD reissues and hindsight reappraisals, there are too many albums that are being retrospectively labelled as a 'forgotten classic' or an 'obscure masterpiece', whilst their creators find themselves elevated to the status of 'neglected genius'. Very few are worthy of such audacious epithets but 'Sound on Sound', finally released on CD twenty years after its vinyl debut, is one where such proclamations hold water. Bill Nelson had established his name as singer/songwriter in the mid-seventies with Be Bop Deluxe, releasing five studio albums in five years, each of which progressed their initial Ziggy-plays-Yes hybrid, evolving it into a highly distinctive quasi-futuristic commercial rock sound. By 1978 Nelson was lauded as one of the most gifted and creative guitarists this country has ever produced, regularly featuring in the top-ten polls run by the music press, and lionized by magazines such as International Musician and Guitarist. Yet he was becoming increasingly bored by the musical limitations of his role as axe hero and the expectations that went along with it. He thus split Be Bop and, with one ear on New Wave acts such as Magazine and fellow labelmates Wire, and another on the emerging electronic influence of Kraftwerk and The Yellow Magic Orchestra, he produced a record which sounded unlike anything else released that year. With its angular rhythms, layered synthetics, and Dave Mattacks' idiosyncratic drum patterns, 'Sound-on-Sound' was immediately notable for its total absence of guitar solos. To many Be Bop fans, still in a quandary after the minimalism of the previous year's `Drastic Plastic' release this was like Jimi Hendrix recording an album on the flugel horn. Yet, as Bill himself sung, with Be Bop he was "out of touch" but with Red Noise, essentially a troupe of session musicians rounded-up for recording purposes, he was cutting edge, and that meant discarding the self-indulgent guitar solo that had been the trademark of rock music for well over a decade and an intrinsic part of his own previous work. Yet the most exceptional feature of this album is not the way it rejects conventional rock cliches, although that in itself is refreshing, but the actual songs themselves. This is by far the most commercial record Nelson ever made, each track a pop gem, every chorus a radiant burst of understated sing-along passion. Titles like 'Art/Empire/Industry' and 'Don't Touch Me (I'm Electric)' belie the outright catchiness of their hooks. This was pop music of the future, firmly grounded in the now, whilst simultaneously waiving goodbye to the seventies and the musical excesses that went with it. 'Sound on Sound' was indeed a record ahead of its time - but only just! Within eighteen months David Bowie would release his own rock/pop/science fiction vision for the eighties, 'Scary Monsters' (recorded with Be Bop and Red Noise keyboard player Andrew Clark), and the synth-pop movement, typified by Ultravox and Gary Numan, would storm the UK charts, giving birth to New Romanticism en route. Yet somehow, unlike his peers output, 'Sound-on-Sound' still sounds fresh, as though it were recorded last month rather than two decades ago. Perhaps that is because the resonances of this sole Red Noise album can still heard today in major label acts such as Elastica, Ultrasound and Gay Dad, as well as in underground outfits like Cardiacs (their entire recorded output - thirteen albums worth - all contain variations on the 'Sound-on-Sound' template). Now turned fifty, Nelson continues to make albums, last year signing to Robert Fripp's DGM label. Since the late-eighties he has become increasingly infatuated with capturing the creative spark at work, improvising material direct to tape and describing it as 'sonic snapshots', sketches rather than finished pieces. This resulted in many of his innumerable CD releases sounding like a collection of half-baked ideas haphazardly flung together as opposed to the fully-rounded soundscapes he used to construct. Although his latest, 'Atom Shop', is something of a return to form, 'Sound-on-Sound' captures Nelson at his creative and artistic peak. Buy it, enjoy it, stay young (and keep in touch). Richard Scarr
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
FIVE UNABASHEDLY ELECTRIC STARS,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sound on Sound (Audio CD)
I don't know if I would categorize this recording as `the best Bill Nelson album ever', like another reviewer - but it's certainly right up there at or near the top. The problem with such `top album' lists with an artist like Nelson is that his creativity is so very diverse - he works so well in so many genres that it's hard to pick a single `best' recording. One only has to look at (rather, listen to) his incredible album of music for Jean Cocteau's classic film LA BELLE ET LE BÊTE to understand the breadth and depth of Nelson's creative spirit. Cocteau is an artistic hero to Nelson - and LA BELLE is a fine homage to the master. As founder and guiding light of legendary UK band Be-Bop Deluxe, Nelson produced some great guitar-driven, intelligent rock and roll - Red Noise is sort of an extension of that, with some of the punk-rock sensibilities and attitudes of the late 1970s (the album was originally released in 1979) thrown in for good measure. The incredibly varied solo albums that he has produced - and continues to produce - illustrate that he has a lot yet to offer.After the breakup of Be-Bop Deluxe - which Nelson described as a weight being lifted from his shoulders (being in a band for a long stretch can feel like that, even in the best of situations) - Nelson put together Red Noise. Andy Clarke, the keyboard player from Be-Bop Deluxe, came along, joined by Ian Nelson (Bill's brother) on saxophone and Rick Ford on bass. On this recording, drumming chores are handled by Bill, with some tracks featuring Dave Mattacks. Mattacks, from UK folk-roots band Fairport Convention, might seem like an unlikely choice for such a high-energy outfit as Red Noise - but he holds up his end more than adequately. For the tour that followed the release of this album, American Steve Peer was enlisted - there are some live tracks available (originally the b-sides of singles) that showcase his work. Nelson's rock and roll/sci-fi visions that he expressed so lucidly over the years in Be-Bop Deluxe take full flight on this album - and the energy level is cranked up to the top right from the first bars of the opener, `Don't touch me (I'm electric)', right through to the last notes of `Revolt into style'. Close editing - VERY short pauses between some of the tracks - gives the whole project a feeling of unrelenting, driving energy. The pairing of `Stay young' (the final track on side one of the original lp), with its final line of `Stay young...and keep in touch' with `Out of touch' (the first track on side two of the lp) is especially effective (and humorous). The pace is almost draining - there are no slow tracks here, so get ready for a ride. Every track is a great one - there are no throwaways here. For me, the album's highlight is a song that I think was also one of the `most perfect singles ever released' - `Furniture music'. Every time this cd makes it into my car player, and that song comes on, I find myself hitting the `replay' button several times. This is an album from the late 1970s that I find just as entertaining here in the 21st century - but I think that's where Mr. Nelson has been leading us all along...
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent music, second-rate CD,
By Anthony D Ravenscroft (Santa Fe, NM United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sound on Sound (Audio CD)
Okay, it ain't the CD itself that's bad. True, it's only a set of LP tracks, so 38:20 is a kinda short CD, but we expect that sometimes, especially with rarities. My problem is that I like liner notes, & especially so for an artist as complicated as Bill Nelson. Bad enough I don't get the lyric sheet, but this is one of the very few albums where Nelson worked with more than two or three musicians."Bill Nelson goes New Wave"? Nelson LED the New Wave, if anything. I suppose if April Wine & Bad Company are New Wave for *you*, dude... Best tunes (no losers): Furniture Music; The Atom Age Buy it. Enjoy it. If you know anything about British pop music of the 1970s & '80s, savour the following. Don't Touch Me (I'm Electric) For Young Moderns Stop/Go/Stop Furniture Music Radar In My Heart Stay Young Out Of Touch A Better Home In The Phantom Zone Substitute Flesh The Atom Age Art/Empire/Industry Revolt Into Style
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