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Low-life
 
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Low-life

~ New Order
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
Price: £6.68 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Audio CD (4 Jan 2000)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: London
  • ASIN: B000046QAF
  • Other Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 19,360 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

With the 1985 release of Low Life, New Order put forth their most commercially accessible effort to date. While some of the dark-wave drippings of their Joy Division roots are evident, high-energy progressions, which would carry them for years to come, began to emerge here. Hits like "Perfect Kiss" and "Sub-Culture", with their synth hooks, club-stomping accents, and visceral lyrics, helped bridge the gap for growing synth-pop audiences who bolstered their success. Other refined techniques on the album became standard New Order conventions: sweeping analogue rolls, live and sequenced drum percussion, tight bass melodies, and edgy guitar leads. Sustained by a peerless level of emotional involvement, the vocals and lyrics further entice the listener with the obliquely nuanced style of Bernard Sumner. Standing the test of time, this release is a must-have in order to understand the origins of introspective pop-wave culture. --Lucas Hilbert


CD Description

With LOW-LIFE, New Order truly hit their stride with their highly individual combination of infectious rhythms, inventive composition and performances full of conviction. The vulnerable lyrics and earnest delivery of Bernard Sumner are in top form; his voice is at last a completely developed instrument, clear and comfortable as it wraps itself around such memorable tracks as the opening "Love Vigilantes", a solid, purely guitar-driven narrative.
Following immediately and in sharp contrast is LOW LIFE's biggest success, "The Perfect Kiss", a sequencer-fueled dance classic which boasts what is undoubtedly pop music's only frog sample solo. "Sunrise" has an epic feel, filled with driving leads and Sumner's signature scratchy, frenetic rhythm playing. The album takes a serene turn on "Elegia", a beautiful, airy composition of echoey guitar lines and swirling synth textures.

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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Low-life but high art, 4 Dec 2001
By sonik57 "sonik57" (London, UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
Awesome. There's no other word for it. I recall
buying the vinyl (yes albums still came out on
plastic in them days) in Hammersmith in 1985.

From the very start - and the album version has
the tracks in a different order! - it grabs you
and pulls you in. Love Vigilantes is a sarcasm-laced anti-war song which became a live
favourite for years afterwards. This lead onto
The Perfect Kiss (not the long version on the 12")
with its enigmatic lyric and funky Latin percussion (!) and then into darker territory with
a track I've often played myself, This Time Of
Night.

Ironically, the band were to include a vocal
sample of a famous tippling magazine columist,
Jeffrey Bernard, on the track's intro as he
uttered a sentance containing the album's
title. Jeff wasn't keen so Hooky voiced it instead and he can be heard quietly speaking the
offending line right at the start just before
the drum machine starts (mind your speakers if
you turn it up to hear him!).

Side two sees some total belters, as if things
could get any better: Sunrise an explosion of
energy following Elegia which at the time was
compared to the Cocteau Twins! Yes, there's
also the deliberate use of a scratched record
sometime through the track to keep your attention!

Sooner Than You Think is another bitingly sarcastic anthem against the inanities asked of
the band by music journalists.

The final pair of tracks take us out on a high.
Subculture is apparently about the joys of sex
(follow the lyrics) and Face Up ends the opus
with a joyous chorus of "oh, I cannot bear the
thought of you!": to see and hear hundreds of
people sign this live is quite something!

All this and a baking paper cover too (don't ask).
One of my favourite albums of all time, this. It's all here: the quality of the songs, the
production, the machines and the energy.

Like I said, awesome. SO BUY IT.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lowbrow genius!, 21 May 2006
By R. Nathan "rotatingflak" (Plymouth, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Entranced and aching, swathed in strings and coiling bubbles of beats, jabbed with jagged lines and scratchy frustrations, a deep booming of the most innocent yet ingenious melody and amongst it all a little child lost - giggling and raging and weeping at the world.

`Lowlife' was New Order toying with perfect pop songs and minimalist art and funny stories and deviant disco and grinding rock and grungy electro-funk and exquisite beats. It's both knowing and naïve, intricately complex yet effortlessly simple - an idiot savante lying in the gutter and inventing the stars.

Trying to encapsulate the majesty of Morricone with the primitive thrust of Iggy, the simple beauty and perfectionism of Kraftwerk with the ragged humanity and glory of Neil Young. Trying to put the past inside them and the future behind. It did all this and more, because somehow nothing quite explains where this music came from or where it belongs.

Many people won't quite get it, in fact, twenty years ago I didn't quite get it. I didn't pick up on `Love Vigilantes' poignant punchlines or brilliantly simplistic melodica solo. I somehow missed the awesome stillness of `Elegia' which builds from a fragile snowflake to an everest of ice. I overlooked the swaggering stance of `Sunrise'- a gothic spaghetti western shootout with God. I altogether ignored the glaring fact that the yearning, melancholy and menancing `This Time Of Night' is the best synth pop music ever made. Even now, even when it's possibly my favourite album of all, I still don't get it.....why I'm still singing and dreaming and wondering and buzzing.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A True Classic!, 8 Jul 2006
By Nik (Hull, East Riding Of Yorkshire United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
Low-Life was where I got onboard and 21 years later I'm still a fan! From the booming drum intro this album captures New Order at the top of their game.Love Vigilantes' story of war and religion now reminds you the more things change, the more they stay the same! The Perfect Kiss is both state of the art (in 1985!) and a tribute to Ian Curtis ("My friend he took his final breath, Now I know the perfect kiss is the kiss of death").This Time Of Night is hauntingly beautiful with Peter Hook's comic spoken intro ("I'm one of the few people I know who enjoys sports on television"). Sunrise, the best rocker since their Joy Division days with an intro that DEMANDS maximum volume.
Elegia is proof that New Order really were the 80's equivalent of Pink Floyd, a wonderful, slow building instrumental that may be their finest ever track. Sooner Than You Think still baffles me lyrically but it's a great track with the guitar - bass interplay effortlessly wonderful. Sub-Culture is epic, forget the AWFUL remix,the orginal version is where it's at. An awesome bass solo by Peter Hook reminds you just how good he can be, while Barney's lyrics are sharp and sour. Face Up is the archetypal New Order track; painfully sad and wonderfully joyful at the same time.If you only own one New Order album (you shouldn't there's several more you should have!), make it Low-Life.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic, but not perfect.....
Rating: 8/10

Best tracks: "This Time of Night", "Sunrise", "Elegia".

New Order's third album is possibly even better than Power, Corruption and Lies, and... Read more
Published 22 months ago by New Gold Dreamer

5.0 out of 5 stars new order for beginners!!!! part 1
new order where out when i was in my teens..but never a huge temptation! (pun!) i bought substance and thought that was all i would need! Read more
Published on 16 Feb 2007 by Mr. Nathan Armstrong

4.0 out of 5 stars Classic mid-eighties NO
Low-Life is perhaps not New Order's best album (Technique, I think takes that accolade), but its certainly one of the best, and it is definitely their most "eighties" sounding... Read more
Published on 1 Aug 2006 by Steve

5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding creative brilliance
Low Life is one of the few albums I can listen to in any mood. 8 incredible tracks which transcends all emotions: upbeat and fun, dark and moody, melancholy and reflective, angry... Read more
Published on 13 May 2004 by bucks74

5.0 out of 5 stars Electronica when no-one was expecting it!
If you consider this was released in 1984, it is so far ahead of it's time it's scary. For many this is THE New Order record, and it's easy to see why. Read more
Published on 9 Sep 2003 by sicole

5.0 out of 5 stars fantastic
The best new order album for me.

It's one of the most angry and disturbed albums I've heard, and it illustrates perfectly their way of singing songs about despair and hatred... Read more

Published on 23 Dec 2002 by daveyboyowales

5.0 out of 5 stars Another classic from the true greats
I'm in awe. Once again, New Order have grabbed me by the scruff of the neck and shaken me alive! I got this just last week and I've been in love with it ever since. Read more
Published on 22 April 2000

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