PermanentJoy Division
Release Date: 09/25/2007
Original Release:
1995
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 1000937_CD
UPC # 081227996581
Label: Rhino Records (USA)
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Disc: 1
1.
Love Will Tear Us Apart
2.
Transmission
3.
She's Lost Control
4.
Shadow Play
5.
Day of the Lords
6.
Isolation
7.
Passover
8.
Heart and Soul
9.
Twenty Four Hours
10.
These Days
11.
Novelty
12.
Dead Souls
13.
Only Mistake, The
14.
Something Must Break
15.
Atmosphere
16.
Love Will Tear Us Apart - (Permanent Mix)
Performer: Joy Division
Distributor: WEA (Distributor) Notes: Joy Division: Ian Curtis (vocals); Bernard Sumner (guitar); Peter Hook (bass); Stephen Morris (drums). Producers: Joy Division, Martin Hannett, Don Gehman. Includes liner notes by Jon Savage. For those curious about Joy Division, but wary of diving into the double-disc compilation SUBSTANCE or the band's two outstanding studio albums, the single-disc PERMANENT provides a strong, representative sampling of the band's songs. These 15 tracks (culled from the studio records and non-album singles) remind listeners that, among other things, Joy Division was a tally of the time in its brilliant presaging of punk's metamorphosis into moody, introspective, synth-tinged dance music. But Joy Division cannot be reduced to a page in late-1970s history--the group's music sounds as fresh and uncompromising decades later as it did in '79. Led by Ian Curtis's possessed, anguished vocals, the quartet's sound is an intuitive navigation of chaos--propulsive drum lines, angular guitar riffs, and throbbing bass. Though it often seems on the verge of flying apart, the music coalesces in its fierceness and intensity. PERMANENT covers most of Joy Division's memorable moments--"These Days," "Isolation," "She's Lost Control," "Heart and Soul," "Love Will Tear Us Apart," among others--and reveals a remarkably influential and powerful band.
Entertainment Weekly (10/06/95, p.65) - "...PERMANENT documents the band's cool, beyond-punk voltage beneath Curtis' murmurings..." - Rating: A-
Joy Division virtually defined the term "post-punk." They combined punk's rawness and iconoclasm with an artier sensibility that encompassed poetic lyrics, existentialism, and a dark moody mix of guitars and keyboards that was a major influence on goth and industrial music. After singer Ian Curtis's suicide in 1980, the rest of the band went on to even greater success as the poppier, more electronic-oriented New Order. Although they burned brief, their indelible imprint revived over two decades later as inspiration for a whole movement of indie rock on both sides of the ocean.
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