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Depeche
Mode - Violator
As
Edison might have put it, most great disco is one-percent inspiration,
ninety-nine-percent perspiration. Its unguarded vulgarity is what puts it
over – "I'm not the same/I have no shame," Madonna sang on her
first record. What's held back the artsy British synth technicians who've
been aping disco moves over the last decade isn't their narcissism or
irony as much as their tasteful fear of sweat. Put on almost any New Order
dance remix, and you'll be teased with opening electro-beats as obsessive
as any in Madonna's "Into the Groove" or Shannon's "Let the
Music Play." Stick around long enough to hear Bernard Sumner open his
mouth, and you'll wonder where the hell obsessive ness went. New Order is
far from the worst offender – lately the group has settled on life as an
ace pop band. "Getting Away With It," by Electronic, Sumner's
current collaboration with Pet Shop Boy Neil Tennant and onetime Smiths
tremolo terror Johnny Marr, is a lightly Latinized dance-schlock lullaby
with scrumptious string fills that articulate a reliable sort of
melancholy. But Revenge, the dreary side project by New Order bassist
Peter Hook, puts all its effort into its ominousness. Though thuggish
titles like "Kiss the Chrome," "Surf Nazis" and
"Fag Hag" are what you'd expect from a generic Midwestern
shock-punk squad, the theatrical bombast is more akin to Seventies
progressive rock. Hook reduces New Order's arrangements to a sluggish
drone, but his dirges manage none of the density that used to make Joy
Division so edgy. New Order broke pop only after it finally discarded Ian
Curtis's gloom, but Depeche Mode won its ever-growing audience the
opposite way – the group has been single-mindedly suffocating in Doorsy
depression ever since songsmith Vince Clarke left for Yazoo, and it's
becoming increasingly clear that the group will never again make a number
as compelling as the 1981 gleeful rubber-duckie disco tune "Just
Can't Get Enough." Teens too old or too kinky for New Kids on the
Block apparently find David Gahan's quavering moan sexy, but on Violator
he sometimes comes off as slimy and self-involved. Depeche Mode has got a
way with cute little mechanized blips, and the train whistles and raga
rhythms and air-traffic-control signals put monotony on hold. Depeche
Mode's more tranquil hymns do have an ambient charm. when the boys
in the band try to make you dance, they revert to morose pop psychology
and then never tell you how come they're so sad.Martin Fry of ABC explains
why he feels down, at least in Up's otherworldly track "Where Is the
Heaven?" he does – it has to do with the false promises of rich
people, which is as good a reason as any in the wake of Margaret
Thatcher's poll tax. Unfortunately, the rest of Up features the guy who
was once content to be the new Bryan Ferry struggling to prove he's now
the male Lisa Stansfield. The album's got house-music piano samples, but
the rhythm's got no roll to it. As a soul man, Fry's an art rocker. Since
The Lexicon of Love, in 1982, classy sarcasm has given way to universal
humanism and missed cues: One potentially clever line is "You know,
like I know, that rock will be fake." Wish I could say Fry was
chastising rock music, instead of just somebody's phony diamond.The new UK
duo the Beloved is as spirited as ABC or Depeche Mode ever was. Naming a
debut LP Happiness is a brash move in this dolorous genre, and this pair
isn't too bashful to show some vigor – its pretty keyboards and
multilayered ethnic-erotic-Euro-classical counterpoints exude a rich
warmth no Anglodisco group has dared since the last Pet Shop Boys set. The
most energetic cut on Happiness, "Scarlet Beautiful," is also
the most extravagant. The singing needn't be quite so wallflowerlike – a
concrete noun or two might flesh out the love sentiments, and when the
lyrics get ambitious, they get irritating. "Hello," the single,
is an affected name-drop list cataloging characters ranging from house
divas (Paris Grey, Kim Mazelle) to people who aren't house divas (Willy
Wonka, Jean-Paul Sartre). But the Beloved come naturally to disco, and in
this duo's country, that's a rarity.
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when
the boys in the band try to make you dance, they revert to morose pop
psychology and then never tell you how come they're so sad.Martin Fry of
ABC explains why he feels down, at least in Up's otherworldly track
"Where Is the Heaven?" he does – it has to do with the false
promises of rich people, which is as good a reason as any in the wake of
Margaret Thatcher's poll tax. Unfortunately, the rest of Up features the
guy who was once content to be the new Bryan Ferry struggling to prove
he's now the male Lisa Stansfield. The album's got house-music piano
samples, but the rhythm's got no roll to it. As a soul man, Fry's an art
rocker. Since The Lexicon of Love, in 1982, classy sarcasm has given way
to universal humanism and missed cues: One potentially clever line is
"You know, like I know, that rock will be fake." Wish I could
say Fry was chastising rock music, instead of just somebody's phony diamond. The
new UK duo the Beloved is as spirited as ABC or Depeche Mode ever was.
Naming a debut LP Happiness is a brash move in this dolorous genre, and
this pair isn't too bashful to show some vigor – its pretty keyboards
and multilayered ethnic-erotic-Euro-classical counterpoints exude a rich
warmth no Anglodisco group has dared since the last Pet Shop Boys set. The
most energetic cut on Happiness, "Scarlet Beautiful," is also
the most extravagant. The singing needn't be quite so wallflowerlike – a
concrete noun or two might flesh out the love sentiments, and when the
lyrics get ambitious, they get irritating. "Hello," the single,
is an affected name-drop list cataloging characters ranging from house
divas (Paris Grey, Kim Mazelle) to people who aren't house divas (Willy
Wonka, Jean-Paul Sartre). But the Beloved come naturally to disco, and in
this duo's country, that's a rarity
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