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Systems of Romance

 
Album Review: Systems of Romance

  • Artist: Ultravox
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1978 12
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

With 1978's Systems of Romance, Ultravox! left punk behind and single-handedly blue-printed the entire New Romantic movement to come -- well, with a little help from co-producers Conny Planck and Dave Hutchins. Gone was the brittleness of Ha!-Ha!-Ha!, replaced by a rich lushness of sound that would define the forthcoming genre. Shifting from the political to the inter-personal, gone too was the overwhelming sense of looming Armageddon, replaced by more generalized (and mundane) feelings of alienation, "Dislocation," and unease. "Quiet Men" is a Lowry painting brought to life, the chorus of "Slow Motion" a swaying field painted by Renoir, "I Can't Stay Long" a Degas ballet, while "Maximum Acceleration" is as lavish in sound as Botticelli was with paint. The rhythms still remained dangerous, however, and Robin Simon's guitar gives the set a tough edge, but it's the swirling, swooping synths and keyboards that predominate within. ~ Dave Thompson, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Slow Motion (Lyrics) Ultravox, Midge Ure, Billy Currie Ultravox (3:29)
I Can't Stay Long (Lyrics) Ultravox Ultravox (4:16)
Someone Else's Clothes (Lyrics) Ultravox Ultravox (4:25)
Blue Light Ultravox Ultravox (3:09)
Some of Them (Lyrics) Ultravox Ultravox (2:29)
Quiet Men (Lyrics) Ultravox Ultravox (4:08)
Dislocation (Lyrics) Ultravox Ultravox (2:55)
Maximum Acceleration (Lyrics) Ultravox Ultravox (3:53)
When You Walk Through Me (Lyrics) Ultravox Ultravox (4:15)
Just for a Moment (Lyrics) Ultravox Ultravox (3:10)

Credits

Warren Cann (Drums), Billy Currie (Keyboards), Billy Currie (Synthesizer), Dave Hutchins (Engineer), Dave Hutchins (Producer), Chris Cross (Vocals), Ultravox (Producer), Billy Currie (Violin), Chris Cross (Synthesizer), Konrad Plank (Producer), John Foxx (Vocals), Warren Cann (Percussion), Chris Cross (Bass)
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Wikipedia: Systems of Romance
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Systems of Romance
Studio album by Ultravox
Released 8 September 1978
Recorded Conny’s Studio, Cologne, Germany 1978
Genre New Wave, electronic
Length 36:09
Label Island Records
Producer Conny Plank, Ultravox, Dave Hutchins
Professional reviews
Ultravox chronology
Ha!-Ha!-Ha!
(1977)
Systems of Romance
(1978)
Vienna
(1980)

Systems of Romance, released on 8 September 1978,[1] is the third album by British band Ultravox (an exclamation mark having been dropped from the moniker earlier in the year). It was the final recording for the group with original lead singer, lyricist and co-composer John Foxx, and their first album without guitarist Stevie Shears, who had been sacked from the band (in 1980 he joined Cowboys International). Shears was replaced by Robin Simon, making his first and only appearance on an Ultravox album. Though not a commercial success, Systems of Romance had a significant influence on the electropop music that came after it.

Contents

Production and style

Co-produced by Conny Plank and Dave Hutchins, Systems of Romance featured the band's heaviest use of electronics to date. More New Wave orientated than the glam- and punk-influenced tunes that characterised their first two albums, Ultravox! and Ha!-Ha!-Ha!, its style was partly inspired by German band Kraftwerk, whose first four albums were produced by Plank. Among Ultravox's own repertoire, antecedents included Billy Currie's distinctive synthesizer work on "The Man Who Dies Every Day" and the romantic balladry of "Hiroshima Mon Amour", both from Ha!-Ha!-Ha!.

The opening song, "Slow Motion", was indicative of the band's direction on the new album. Though based around conventional rock guitar, bass and percussion instrumentation, it featured a number of rich synthesizer parts throughout the piece rather than simply a discreet solo or special effect. For drummer Warren Cann, "it perfectly represented our amalgamation of rock and synthesizer, many of the ideas and aspirations we had for our music gelled in that song".[2]

The subject matter of "Quiet Men" grew out of an alternate persona developed by John Foxx, 'The Quiet Man', who embodied detachment and observation. Musically, like the earlier "Hiroshima Mon Amour", the track dispensed with conventional drums in favour of a Roland TR-77 rhythm box. "Dislocation" and "Just for a Moment" eschewed all acoustic and synthetic drums, relying on treated ARP Odyssey sounds for their percussive effects. The former song was imbued with a heavy proto-industrial flavour; the latter featured church-like vocal and keyboard effects that would be echoed on Foxx's second solo album, The Garden. "When You Walk Through Me" displayed psychedelic touches that Foxx also developed in his solo career; Cann later admitted to lifting its beat from The Beatles' "Tomorrow Never Knows".[3] "Some of Them" was one of the few tracks that harked back to the band's previous hard rock sound.

Release and aftermath

The album's September 1978 release was book-ended by two singles, "Slow Motion" in August and "Quiet Men" in October. Like Ultravox's previous albums, Systems of Romance received mixed reviews at the time and failed to chart. The band was dropped by their label Island Records just prior to a 1979 tour of the US. During the tour Foxx, tired of rows with another members,[4] and of being in a group,[5] announced his intention to leave Ultravox when he returned to England. Guitarist Robin Simon also left, electing to stay in New York. Chris Cross, Billy Currie and Warren Cann worked on other projects while recruiting a new lead singer/guitarist (Midge Ure, in the event).

Influence

Systems of Romance has been cited as a major influence on electropop and on the New Romantic movement of the 1980s. It was the sonic prototype for the re-formed Ultravox featuring Midge Ure who, in his own words, "loved that album".[6] John Foxx's first record as a solo artist was the almost fully-electronic Metamatic; however his next release, The Garden, took Systems of Romance as its starting point, to the extent of re-recording the earlier album's previously-unpublished title song, utilising Robin Simon on guitar, and displaying a similar sense of European romanticism. Gary Numan, himself often called the "godfather of electropop", described the record as his single biggest musical inspiration; he invited Billy Currie to tour with him in 1979 and contribute to his album The Pleasure Principle, prior to Ultravox's second incarnation.

Track listing

  1. "Slow Motion" (Chris Allen, Billy Currie, John Foxx, Robin Simon, Warren Cann) – 3:29
  2. "I Can't Stay Long" (Currie, Simon, Allen, Cann, Foxx) – 4:16
  3. "Someone Else's Clothes" (Foxx, Currie) – 4:25
  4. "Blue Light" (Allen, Currie, Foxx, Simon, Cann) – 3:09
  5. "Some of Them" (Foxx, Currie) – 2:29
  6. "Quiet Men" (Foxx, Currie, Allen) – 4:08
  7. "Dislocation" (Currie, Foxx) – 2:55
  8. "Maximum Acceleration" (Foxx) – 3:53
  9. "When You Walk Through Me" (Foxx, Simon, Currie) – 4:15
  10. "Just for a Moment" (Currie, Foxx) – 3:10

Chris Cross's writing credits are under his real surname of Allen.

Bonus tracks on 2006 CD re-release

  1. "Cross Fade" (Cann, Allen, Currie, Foxx) – 2:53
  2. "Quiet Men (Full Version)" (Foxx, Currie, Allen) – 3:55

The 'Full Version' of "Quiet Men" is not longer than the original but features a different mix with more instruments.

Personnel

Notes

  1. ^ www.metamatic.com
  2. ^ Warren Cann & Jonas Warstad (1997). "Ultravox: The Story - Warren Cann interviewed by Jonas Warstad": p.20
  3. ^ Warren Cann & Jonas Warstad (1997). Ibid: p.23
  4. ^ Warren Cann & Jonas Warstad (1997)
  5. ^ Systems of Romance reissue CD sleeve notes, 2006
  6. ^ Midge Ure (2004). If I Was... The Autobiography

 
 

 

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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 Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Systems of Romance" Read more

 

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