Showing posts with label Art Of Noise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art Of Noise. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 February 2021

The Art Of Noise Influence Hits, Singles, Moments, Treasures



Get It At Discogs

Art of Noise. If ever there was a band/concept/thing that was so completely brilliant in its essence, and reached its apogee with its first album, it’s them/it. Their debut, Who’s Afraid of the Art of Noise, encapsulated everything in its nine tracks. If they’d vanished immediately afterwards, it would’ve been a Never Mind the Bollocks-style statement of when hip hop met Dadaism and rammed the Fairlight centre stage while japing around with masks and spanners. It spoke of the beginning of a whole new world during the mid-80s, during the period between the post new-pop fall-out and seriousface issues-based stadiumness. It was of its time and yet still way ahead of it. Influence sees the band – who were essentially composer Anne Dudley, multi-instrumentalists JJ Jeczalik and Gary Langan, along with producer Trevor Horn and journalist/ZTT minister of information and spin Paul Morley, and later Lol Crème – chart their journey through their hits on disc one and throw up bits and bobs from their cupboard of rare things on disc two. Naturally, the early hits are all here: Close (To the Edit), Moments in Love and Beat Box, and then it proceeds consecutively through difficult second album In Visible Silence with the previously-never-on-CD Legs getting an airing and the impressive Duane Eddy hook-up of Peter Gunn. Then it gets a bit sticky; Paranoimia with vocals from Max Headroom is none-more-80s, and the less said about the reanimating of Tom Jones for a version of Prince’s Kiss – taking it from a subtle saucy funk to a blustery strip-night horror should’ve been punishable by death – the better. They did recover some form with the Rakim-assisted Metaforce and its accompanying album The Seduction of Claude Debussy, but the early magic wasn’t quite there anymore. The second disc, with its unreleased mixes, experimental scraps, John Hurt narrations and doodahs, is pleasant enough, but you do sense that a lot of incredible stuff has been left off due to either being lost to time or – hopefully – because it’s being saved for a colossal repackage of the debut. However, let’s not dwell on the negatives: this is a handy overview of an amazing yet frustrating band, and there’s more genius on display in its first few tracks than some acts manage in a lifetime. If that encourages today’s pop generation to explore and develop new music, then Influence will have done its job.

Saturday, 22 April 2017

Art Of Noise Daft


Art Of Noise Daft

Get It At Discogs
The place for Art of Noise neophytes to start, Daft collects (Who's Afraid Of?) The Art of Noise! and Into Battle with the Art of Noise, along with two reworkings of "Moments in Love" from the original U.K. release of that song, to make a fantastic hour's worth of music. If anything, a single or two aside, Daft beats out the official Best Of compilation by a mile. Having aged superbly with time, AON's early works sound all the more advanced and of the moment, a testament especially to Trevor Horn's excellent production and Anne Dudley's gripping arrangements. Further entertainment comes from the liner notes, which aren't merely state-of-the-art 1984 album design but an apparently barbed attack on the further incarnation of the band from one Otto Flake. The exact seriousness of this is up to the reader. As for the "Moments in Love" versions, both are gentler and more elegant than the already lush original,
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