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Chairs Missing: Remastered
 
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Chairs Missing: Remastered [CD]

Wire Audio CD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
Price: £11.52 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Chairs Missing: Remastered + Pink Flag: Remastered + 154: Remastered
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Product details

  • Audio CD (27 Mar 2006)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: CD
  • Label: Harvest
  • ASIN: B0006G87Z8
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  Vinyl
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 37,913 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Practice Makes Perfect (2006 Digital Remaster)
2. French Film Blurred (2006 Digital Remaster)
3. Another The Letter (2006 Digital Remaster)
4. Men 2nd (2006 Digital Remaster)
5. Marooned (2006 Digital Remaster)
6. Sand In My Joints (2006 Digital Remaster)
7. Being Sucked In Again (2006 Digital Remaster)
8. Heartbeat (2006 Digital Remaster)
9. Mercy (2006 Digital Remaster)
10. Outdoor Miner (2006 Digital Remaster)
11. I Am The Fly (2006 Digital Remaster)
12. I Feel Mysterious Today (2006 Digital Remaster)
13. From The Nursery (2006 Digital Remaster)
14. Used To (2006 Digital Remaster)
15. Too Late (2006 Digital Remaster)

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
35 of 38 people found the following review helpful
By Jason Parkes #1 HALL OF FAME
Format:Audio CD
Wire were one of the few pioneers who took punk as an ethos rather than a fashionable uniform, 1977's classic debut 'Pink Flag' is remembered for the minimal songs which lasted a minute, or in some cases seconds (it's probably celebrated lots for having the original version of Elastica's 'Connection' on - 'Three Girl Rhumba'). But there were hints of things to come on 'Pink Flag' - the catchy-bleakness of 'Lowdown', the sinister rock of 'Reuters' & the whirring avant-pop of 'Strange' (later murdered by REM). 'Chairs Missing' followed these oblique directions and those advanced by 'I am the Fly' and 'Dot Dash' - though at the time Wire were probably tagged prog by those who didn't understand (Magazine also suffered from this with their great second LP 'Secondhand Daylight').

'Chairs Missing' these days seems to me one of the most influential albums, its blend of the angular, the avant, and something like pop can be detected in records found in its immediate wake - 'Dirk'-Adam & the Ants, Gang of Four, the Pop Group, 'No New York', Matt Johnson ('Burning Blue Soul' even featured Newman & Lewis) etc - and many that came after : Elastica, Blur, Franz Ferdinand, Minor Threat (who covered 12XU), Spoon, Radiohead, R.E.M. Wire are now cited as one of the key acts of the post-punk era alongside Pere Ubu, The Fall, Joy Division, Cabaret Voltaire, Throbbing Gristle & PIL. And why not???

Opener 'Practise Makes Perfect' opens with hypnotic guitar Gilbert & Newman's composition the definition of angular as the song builds around repetition: WAITING, WAITING...and they tap into another world. Drones, metronomic-basslines and chiming riffs populate this record, 'French Film Blurred' shifting from warm avant-guitars to hints of feedback - a record that blurs from avant to disturb. 'Another the Letter' shows the band embrace synths, something they would advance on with the follow-up '154', the single 'A Question of Degree' (Depeche Mode's 'A Question of Time' obviously influenced) and the years on Mute that saw great albums like 'The Ideal Copy', 'A Bell is a Cup Until It Is Struck' & 'Manscape.' Wire here don't care about duration, and were duly viewed as prog - 'Practice Makes Perfect' about four-times as long as the average 'Pink Flag' track, while 'Mercy' pushes the six-minute mark and pushes towards later joys like 'A Touching Display' and 'Mutual Friend.'

There is pop, of sorts, here - including the bizarre (yet ineffably catchy) 'I Feel Mysterious Today', Lewis' math-glam-rocker 'Sand In My Joints' (imagine The Sweet after 'Marquee Moon'), and the gorgeous 'Outdoor Miner'- which is as sweet as a pop-song by Squeeze and predicts catchy later joys like 'Eardrum Buzz', 'Map Ref...', 'The 15th' and 'Kidney Bingos' (Lush would also cover it, if that means anything to you?). Single 'I am the Fly' is another key pop-moment, that metronomic-angular rock-pop in motion, I always think of Sparks' 'This Town Ain't Big Enough for Both of Us' as it starts, though as seasoned riff-watchers will tell you, Blur's 'Girls & Boys', Elastica's 'Line Up', & Menswear's 'Daydreamer' all owe this one a bit of a debt (the sound of the mid 1990s, in the late 1970s!). The legendary Lester Bangs even wrote of this album's joys in the article 'A Bellyful of Wire' which is collected in 'Mainlines, Blood Feasts & Bad Taste.'

The highlight for me remains 'Heartbeat', one of the more epic tracks and a song that was later covered by Big Black (on the free single with the 'Headache' e.p.) and Low (a version was recorded in the early 1990s and was later reworked in 2004 to appear on box-set 'A Lifetime of Temporary Relief'). Bangs' saw Beckett here and reminded us of the bleak/minimal lyrics: "I feel icy/I feel cold/I feel old/Is there something behind me?/I'm sublime/I'm empty/I feel dark, I remark/I am mesmerised by my own beat/Like a heartbeat-" Great stuff and leading towards the darker, wider climes of 1979's masterpiece '154.'

'Chairs Missing' is the second part of the great trilogy Wire recorded for Harvest and a highlight of the late 1970s, as important as 'Unknown Pleasures', 'Metal Box', 'Cut', 'Y', 'Fear of Music', 'Real Life', 'Entertainment!' & lots of other records namechecked in lists and covered in 'Rip It Up and Start Again.' A great trilogy that was followed, after the art-**** of 'Document & Eyewitness' by Colin Newman's fantastic 'A/Z', the A.C Marias-Dome & He Said-projects and the return of a muter Wire (later Wir). Fantastic stuff, though Wire's recent work is as vital, as is Newman's label Swim...

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Damn. What a masterpiece. After listening to the highly addictive, but (dare I say it?) somewhat shallow Pink Flag, I was impressed with Wire. I decided to venture further into their discography, but before I bought Chairs Missing, I was constantly listening to "Outdoor Miner" (illegally). Seriously, I must have played it a hundred times and it still sounds genius everytime. So I certainly had high hopes for this album. And it didn't disappoint. In fact, it's one of the best albums I have ever heard. On the first play, I didn't get it. At all, apart from their lead single and a couple of accessible traditional punk songs. But the more I listened to it, the more it sank in. The second half the album in particular, started to completely grow on me, and has gradually, but deservedly so earned the title as my favourite "side" of an album of all time.

This album visits every cornor of the punk genre. The sheer diversity of this album is immense. Where as Pink Flag was a perfect punk album, Chairs Missing is a perfect 'album'. The guitarwork is exceptional, which can't be said for many punk albums (even the classics), and the vocals are sensational, which varies from aggression fueled climaxes, and even some wonderful singing in the ballady pop songs. With what I consider the greatest short single of all time (only singles 2 minutes and under can qualify) "Outdoor Miner", the catchiest hook I have ever heard in "I Am the Fly", the epic sprawling masterpiece "Mercy", the darkly eeriness of "Practice Makes Perfect", the mysteriously sinister "Heartbeat" (the way it builds... just WOW), the all-out in-your-face punk of "Sand In My Joints", and the sublime sudden guitar licks of "Marooned", there's something here for everyone. And if you have an open minded approach to music, you'll like every single track here. This is not only Wire's most rewarding album, it's also them at their most technically brilliant, and shows them stretching beyond punk's limitations.

As for the debate of Pink Flag vs. Chairs Missing, whereas most have difficulty to decide which one they prefer, I can safely say without hesitation Chairs Missing is the better album.

Key track: Outdoor Miner
Personal faves: I Am the Fly, Heartbeat, Mercy
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Chairs Missing (1978) sits right in the middle between the 'short, sharp shock' faux punk aesthetic of Pink Flag (1977) and the quirky, fractured pop of 154 (1979). Its sonic palette owes more to Brian Eno's 'Taking Tiger Mountain By Strategy' (released just over 3 and a half years earlier in Nov 74) than to the contemporaneous punk thrash that underpinned Pink Flag favourites like Surgeon's Girl, Mr Suit and 12XU.

There's a bit of banging and shouting on tracks like 'Sand in my Joints' and 'I Am the Fly' to keep the gobbing and pogoing faction happy, but the overall feeling of the album is one of slow-burning, spine-tingling menace. The music is by turns beatiful, dangerous, exciting and uplifting, and the album sounds just as fresh and stimulating as it did more than 3 decades ago - almost perfect, with barely a wasted moment. If only their newer stuff was this good.
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