BrotherhoodNew Order (UK)
Release Date: 02/02/1988
Original Release:
1986
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 129426_CD
UPC # 075992551120
Label: Qwest
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: New Order (UK)
Engineer: Michael Johnson Producer: New Order Distributor: WEA (Distributor) Notes: New Order: Bernard Sumner (vocals, guitar); Peter Hook (vocals, bass); Gillian Gilbert (keyboards, synthesizer); Stephen Morris (drums, background vocals). Recorded at Jam Studios, London, England; Windmill Lane Studios, Dublin, Ireland; Amazon Studios, Liverpool, England. Composer: New Order . Recording information: Amazon Studios, Liverpool, England; Jam Studios, London, England; Windmill Lane Recording Studio, Dublin, Ireland. Photographer: Trevor Key. Unknown Contributor Role: Peter Hook. BROTHERHOOD is a document of growth for New Order's ever-expanding sonic landscape. Packaged in the stark, utilitarian style that was the Factory label's trademark, the album belies its minimalist presentation with a sprawling, intricately crafted collection of pop gems, inspiringly diverse, yet uniformly infused with the band's trademark sincerity and off-kilter melodic sense. The album opens with the deceptively straight drum hits of "Paradise," which quickly adopts an intense double-tracked vocal and with it, an air of danger that offsets its soaring melody. New Order developed into masters of intellectually stimulating dance music, an elusive combination of qualities. The album's biggest hit "Bizarre Love Triangle" exemplifies this rare mixture--atop a throbbing, heavily sequenced dance beat is played out a drama complete with consistently engaging musical shifts, dramatic lyrical turns, and a chorus that's instantly memorable and nothing short of gorgeous. The wistful vulnerability of "All Day Long" dissolves into a sprawling, regal affair and the supremely sweet "Every Little Counts" show yet another dimension to New Order's sonic richness.
Mojo (Publisher) (9/01, p.86) - "...Vastly underrated....Exuberantly, all-over-the-shop..."
Blender (Magazine) (p.66) - 5 stars out of 5 -- "BROTHERHOOD is another step forward, with the band's warmest tunes and zippiest beats."
Born in the early 1980s out of the ashes of U.K. post-punk pioneers Joy Division, New Order became one of the first electro-pop bands to find mainstream success in the US. Their single "Blue Monday" was a landmark in dance music, and subsequent recordings achieved a perfect balance between technology and pop songcraft. They were a standard choice of club DJs through the '80s & '90s and even snuck onto the pop charts occasionally with catchy hits like "True Faith" and "Regret." Leader Bernard Sumner sporadically records with Johnny Marr as Electronic, and occasionally reconvenes the famed quartet.
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Influences:
Baker, Arthur Bambaataa, Afrika Bowie, David Can Eno, Brian Kraftwerk Mantronix Moroder, Giorgio Neu! Numan, Gary Roxy Music Suicide Ultravox Velvet Underground (The) Wire
Similar Genres:
Synth Pop |