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Roxy Music

 
Album Review: Roxy Music
 

  • Artist: Roxy Music
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1972
  • Total Time: 45:37
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Falling halfway between musical primitivism and art rock ambition, Roxy Music's eponymous debut remains a startling redefinition of rock's boundaries. Simultaneously embracing kitschy glamour and avant-pop, Roxy Music shimmers with seductive style and pulsates with disturbing synthetic textures. Although no musician demonstrates much technical skill at this point, they are driven by boundless imagination -- Brian Eno's synthesized "treatments" exploit electronic instruments as electronics, instead of trying to shoehorn them into conventional acoustic patterns. Similarly, Bryan Ferry finds that his vampiric croon is at its most effective when it twists conventional melodies, Phil Manzanera's guitar is terse and unpredictable, while Andy Mackay's saxophone subverts rock & roll clichés by alternating R&B honking with atonal flourishes. But what makes Roxy Music such a confident, astonishing debut is how these primitive avant-garde tendencies are married to full-fledged songs, whether it's the free-form, structure-bending "Remake/Remodel" or the sleek glam of "Virginia Plain," the debut single added to later editions of the album. That was the trick that elevated Roxy Music from an art school project to the most adventurous rock band of the early '70s. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Re-Make/Re-Model Bryan Ferry Roxy Music (5:14)
Ladytron Bryan Ferry Roxy Music (4:26)
If There Is Something Bryan Ferry Roxy Music (6:34)
Virginia Plain [*] Bryan Ferry Roxy Music (2:58)
2HB Bryan Ferry Roxy Music (4:30)
The Bob (Medley) Bryan Ferry Roxy Music (5:48)
Chance Meeting Bryan Ferry Roxy Music (3:08)
Would You Believe? Bryan Ferry Roxy Music (3:53)
Sea Breezes Bryan Ferry Roxy Music (7:03)
Bitters End Bryan Ferry Roxy Music (2:03)

Credits

Bryan Ferry (Piano), Bryan Ferry (Keyboards), Bryan Ferry (Vocals), Bryan Ferry (Art Direction), Bryan Ferry (Cover Art Concept), Phil Manzanera (Guitar), Brian Eno (Synthesizer), Brian Eno (Keyboards), Brian Eno (Tape), Brian Eno (Tapes), Rik Kenton (Guitar (Bass)), Bob Ludwig (Digital Remastering), Andy Mackay (Oboe), Andy Mackay (Saxophone), Roxy Music (Arranger), Roxy Music (Main Performer), Graham Simpson (Bass), Graham Simpson (Guitar (Bass)), Peter Sinfield (Producer), Paul Thompson (Drums), Andy Hendriksen (Engineer), Andy Henderson (Engineer), Simon Puxley (Liner Notes), Anthony Price (Clothing/Wardrobe), Anthony Price (Make-Up), Anthony Price (Hair Stylist), Anthony Price (Stylist), Anthony Price (Wardrobe), Nicholas Deville (Artwork), Karl Stoecker (Photography), Kaz Akaiwa (Liner Notes), Wragg (Transportation)
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Wikipedia: Roxy Music (album)
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Roxy Music
Roxy Music cover
Studio album by Roxy Music
Released 16 June 1972 (1972-06-16)
Recorded 14 March 1972 (1972-03-14) – 29 March 1972 (1972-03-29) at Command Studios, London
Genre Glam rock/art rock
Length 45:37
Label Island, Polydor (UK)
Reprise, Atco (U.S.) [1]
Producer Peter Sinfield
Professional reviews
Roxy Music chronology
Roxy Music
(1972)
For Your Pleasure
(1973)
Singles from Roxy Music
  1. "Virginia Plain
    (not included on original pressings of album)"

    Released: July 1972

Roxy Music is the debut album by art rock band Roxy Music, released in June 1972. It was generally well-received by contemporary critics and made #10 in the UK charts.

Contents

Style and themes

The opening track, "Re-Make/Re-Model", has been labelled a post-modernist pastiche, featuring solos by each member of the band echoing various touchstones of Western music, including The Beatles' "Day Tripper", Duane Eddy's version of "Peter Gunn" and Wagner’s "Ride of the Valkyries"; the esoteric chorus "CPL 593H" was supposedly the license number of a car, spotted by Bryan Ferry, driven by a beautiful woman. Eno produced some self-styled 'lunacy' when Ferry asked him for a sound "like the moon" for the track "Ladytron". "If There Is Something" was covered by David Bowie's Tin Machine, and was later featured in the British film Flashbacks of a Fool.

A number of songs were thematically linked to movies. "2HB", with its punning title, was Ferry’s tribute to Humphrey Bogart and quoted the line "Here’s looking at you, kid" made famous by the film Casablanca (1942); "Chance Meeting" was inspired by David Lean's Brief Encounter (1945). "The Bob" took its title from Battle of Britain (1968) and included a passage simulating the sound of gunfire.

Discussing the music, Andy Mackay later said "we certainly didn’t invent eclecticism but we did say and prove that rock 'n' roll could accommodate - well, anything really".

Production

The band had been rehearsing and re-working the songs for a couple of months before they finally found a recording place, after which the entire album was recorded in the space of a single week. This was necessary because there was no record deal as yet, and their managers at EG were financing the sessions themselves. The album was produced by King Crimson's lyricist, Peter Sinfield, who recently had left that band. In May 1972, a few weeks after the recording sessions, a contract was signed with Island Records and in June the album was released.

The band's penchant for glamour was showcased both in the lyrics and in the 1950-style album cover, with photography, hair dressing and art work credits detailed on the sleeve. The photographer, Karl Stoecker, shot the cover featuring model Kari-Ann Muller, who later married Chris Jagger, brother of Mick Jagger. The album was dedicated to Susie, a drummer who auditioned for Roxy Music in the early days.

Packaging

Roxy Music, particularly the album's LP incarnation, has been released in different packages over the years. The album's original cover, as issued in 1972 by Island Records (catalog no. ILPS 9200), featured a gatefold sleeve picturing the band (including original bassist Graham Simpson) in stage attire designed by Antony Price,[2] and as discussed below did not include "Virginia Plain." The album's original U.S. release, in late 1972 on Warner Bros. Records' Reprise subsidiary (catalog no. MS 2114), included "Virginia Plain," which had been issued as a single in the UK prior to the album's U.S. release. The original U.S. release also featured a gatefold sleeve, but replaced Simpson's photo with that of Rik Kenton, who played bass on "Virginia Plain" following Simpson's departure from the group.

U.S. distribution of Roxy Music was transferred from Reprise to their affiliated company Atco Records in 1976, and back to Reprise in the mid-1980s. LP editions of the album pressed in these timeframes were without the gatefold sleeve and band photographs, instead providing liner notes on the rear album cover.

Single

The original LP release did not contain any singles. In July 1972, a few weeks after the contract was signed, Roxy Music recorded two more songs, "Virginia Plain" and "The Numberer", that were released as a single. It peaked at #4 in the UK charts and helped push sales of the album, which itself went to #10. In most later repressings of the album, including CD versions, the song "Virginia Plain" has been included.

Track listing

All songs written by Bryan Ferry.

Side One

  1. "Re-Make/Re-Model" – 5:14
  2. "Ladytron" – 4:26
  3. "If There Is Something" – 6:34
  4. "Virginia Plain" – 2:58 (not included on the original British release)
  5. "2HB" – 4:30

Side Two

  1. "The Bob (Medley)" – 5:48
  2. "Chance Meeting" – 3:08
  3. "Would You Believe?" – 3:53
  4. "Sea Breezes" – 7:03
  5. "Bitters End" – 2:03

Personnel

References

  • David Buckley (2004). The Thrill of it All: The Story of Bryan Ferry and Roxy Music

Notes

  1. ^ Strong, Martin C. (2006). The Essential Rock Discography. Edinburgh: Canongate. p. 930. ISBN 1841958603. 
  2. ^ Stump, Paul (1998). Unknown Pleasures: A Cultural Biography of Roxy Music, Quartet (UK)/Thunder's Mouth (U.S.), ISBN 1-56025-212-X, p. 48.

External links



 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Roxy Music (album)" Read more

 

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