Flesh + Blood [PA] [Slipcase]Roxy Music
Release Date: 06/24/2008
Original Release:
1980
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 1025652_CD
UPC # 5099921691720
Label: Virgin Records (USA)
|
Buying Info
|
|||||
| Track Details Credits Artist Related Shipping |
|
Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Roxy Music
Engineer: Rhett Davies Distributor: Caroline Distribution Notes: Roxy Music: Bryan Ferry (vocals, keyboards); Phil Manzanera, Neil Hubbard (guitar); Andy Mackay (saxophone); Paul Carrack (keyboards); Alan Spenner, Neil Jason, Gary Tibbs (bass); Allan Schwartzberg, Andy Newmark, Simon Phillips (drums). Digitally remastered by Bob Ludwig (Gateway Studio, Portland, Maine). Roxy Music: Bryan Ferry (vocals, keyboards); Phil Manzanera (guitar); Andy Mackay (oboe, saxophone); Alan Spenner (bass instrument); Andy Newmark, Paul Carrack, Simon Phillips, Allan Schwartzberg (drums). What's remarkable about Roxy Music's final three albums is how each one builds on its predecessor. FLESH & BLOOD was the middle of this triptych (which ended with AVALON, the group's peak achievement). Where its predecessor, MANIFESTO, still had ties to the band's pre-hiatus first era, FLESH & BLOOD heads ever further into the lush romanticism that singer Bryan Ferry was to explore fully as a solo artist in the '80s. Where an earlier Roxy Music may have embraced an element of camp in a cover of "In The Midnight Hour, here Ferry nods to the camp factor only fleetingly. Reduced to a trio of Ferry, guitarist Phil Manzanera, and saxophonist Andy MacKay, Roxy Music brought in a range of session players as needed. This, in effect, freed the band to follow the songs wherever they needed to go, which was straight into gorgeously produced romantic landscapes. The song's rich melodies cast Ferry as a matinee-idol leading man, a role he adapted to so successfully that songs like "My Only Love" sound like part of his own solo career.
Like Bowie, Roxy Music delivered art-rock with a heavy dose of irony, a scarce commodity in the mid-'70s. Bryan Ferry's lounge-lizard persona meshed with Brian Eno's pioneering electronics and Phil Manzanera's highly textured guitar work to create a decadent but humorous sound that influenced many '80s new wave bands on both sides of the Atlantic, from the Cars to Duran Duran.
Also Appears On:
Similar Genres:
Art Rock |