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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superior work. The peak of their form., August 25, 1999
By A Customer
Please read the reviews attached to the album "The Art of Falling Apart" - the lyrical and orchestral content is similar, the form more refined and less ponderous. Although it is a close race, I have to buck the trend and declare this Almond & Ball's best album. Squalor and desperation have never been put to music more incisively, invasively and insidiously all at once. You'll feel the need to take a shower after listening. DON'T start your experience with this album; I still recommend easing one's self into their perspective by starting with their first and second albums, Non-Stop Ecstatic Dancing and Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret before moving onto This Last Night and The Art of Falling Apart. If you're curious as to whether or not your emotional memory/reaction to "the club scene" is/was common (and just how well it could be described through music), you will not find better. Far, far ahead of its time in every way back then, it's still ahead of its time now.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My Personal Favorite!, December 2, 2003
By A Customer
I'm 39 yrs. old and used to be a punk rocker-new waver of the late 70's to early 80's. I've heard it all 100 times over. This is absolutely the best Soft Cell album ever made barnone,... period! Listen to it in the dark, turned up real loud, on a hit of acid and see if you can walk away unaffected. Weird, darkly humorous, dirty, creepy, aren't strong enough words to describe this band's strange unclassifiable music. God I love this band!!! Murder my Angel*****
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Top of the short list, December 9, 1999
By 
If I were on a desert island and only allowed 10 CDs this would be on my list. I don't even consider myself a huge Soft Cell fan. This recording has stood the test of time. I've had this for about 15 years and it still sounds fresh everytime I hear it.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best of Soft Cell, February 11, 2002
By 
William D. Ackerman "Jackal5150" (Lincoln Park, Michigan United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is their best work without question. If you are true fan of Soft Cell you need this CD. Most casual listeners will know these guys from their mega-hit "Tainted Love" from their first LP. However, people who know the duo's other material know that Tainted love was the exception and not the norm.

These boys sing about depression, sex, sleeze, porn, murder, drugs, self abuse and self destruction.

Last Night in Sodom is sort of a slight departure from the previous works in that there is some guitar in some of the songs. The songs are more angrier in tone as well. "Mr Self Destruct" may be the closest Soft Cell has come to making an actual rock song. "Slave to This" is a chilling dirge where Marc Almond's lyrics are never more angry and desperate in this artsy track. "Meet Murder my Angel" is a great song that describes the mind of a killer before he takes out his victim. It is very creepy much like "Martin" is from the "Art of Falling Apart" CD. "Down in the Subway" is a catchy song in which Almond almost makes killing himself sound like fun or a happy event..heh. "Where was your Heart" is about a girl "giving it up" and losing her virginity to someone who never cared about her and just wanted to have sex with her. No, as you can probably tell there is no "Tainted Love" part 2 on this CD.

Hey, its great stuff from an 80's group who was way ahead of everyone else during this time period in ideas and also in sound. Almond is a great singer and his study of theater really shows when he sings. David Ball is one of the best keyboard players off all time......a must have.

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5.0 out of 5 stars SOFT CELL AT THEIR MOST DANGEROUS, December 29, 2009
This review is from: This Last Night in Sodom (Audio CD)
another album that i feel was and is vastly underrated. this is perhaps the most (marc and the) mambas-esque of all soft cell albums and along with 'the art of falling apart' remains an audibly tense and torrid affair which to a certain type of marc almond / dave ball fan is a wonderful thing. within a career of pushing boundaries i feel like this was the most "dangerous" soft cell album and much of the work simply explodes out of the speakers as an amazing amount of tension and frenzy was captured. the inclusion of the extra tracks seal the deal and a one-of-a-kind (and priced like it!) album this makes.
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This Last Night in Sodom
This Last Night in Sodom by Soft Cell (Audio CD - 1998)
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