Waiting for the Man [*] - Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, Reed, Lou
Electricity [Hannett/Cargo Studios Version][*]
Almost [Hannett/Cargo Studios Version][*]
Out of print in the U.S., this is the first album byOrchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, first released on Virginin 1980. 10 tracks, including the new wave hits 'Messages'and 'Electricity'. The All-Music Guide gave this albu... more »m four& a half stars (out of five possible).« less
All Artists:Omd Title:Omd Members Wishing: 0 Total Copies: 0 Label:Virgin Records Us Original Release Date: 1/1/1980 Re-Release Date: 5/6/2003 Album Type: Extra tracks, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered Genres:Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock Style:New Wave & Post-Punk Number of Discs: 1 SwapaCD Credits: 1 UPC:724358274820
Synopsis
Album Description
Out of print in the U.S., this is the first album byOrchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark, first released on Virginin 1980. 10 tracks, including the new wave hits 'Messages'and 'Electricity'. The All-Music Guide gave this album four& a half stars (out of five possible).
+1/2 - Domestic reissue of 1980 UK synthpop landmark
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 07/18/2010
(4 out of 5 stars)
"OMD is one of the transitional entities that bridged early electronic music pioneers like Kraftwerk, Brian Eno and Wendy Carlos, with the synthpop bands that populated the New Wave and dominated the early years of MTV. The band's 1979 single, "Electricity," pushed its synthetic instruments and machine rhythms up front, but warmed them with Andy McCluskey's bass, a catchy electric pianotron riff and a duet vocal from McCluskey and Paul Humphries that celebrated the power source of their music. The flip, "Almost," is an equal combination of synthetics and warmth, but the keyboards are less angular and more expansive, with a soaring lead line and steam-like backing for the lush, Bryan Ferry-esque vocal of longing and indecision.
For this first full-length album, issued in 1980, McCluskey and Humphries followed the same template, using their primitive electronic instruments to create pulsating and jabbing backings for vocals that borrow the strident tone of mod and punk. Their lyrics are often impressionistic sketches of emotions and concepts, including a soldier's life (a theme they'd revisit to even greater effect on "Enola Gay"), the illusions of time, and fatalism. The new-wave "Red Frame/White Light" unspools a series of telephone box snapshots, and the album's most conventional lyric in "Messages" finds the singer recoiling from the unwanted contact of a departed lover. The boozy near-instrumental "Dancing" sounds like a record caught off spindle, and the atmospheric "The Messerschmitt Twins" brings to mind the Human League's first full-length, Reproduction.
"Obviously with their first long play album you get OMD here at their rawest. But that's why its so good. Innovative, pioneering, experimentative, and influencing in itself, this album belongs in any serious music collection. This is the foundation of masterful electro pop that Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphries (with or without each other later on) would create for quite some time. You will have your own stand out tracks, but I have to close by citing "Julia's Song" and going WOW! Oh my god!"
Totally unique experimentation
Tim Lagcher | Belhaven, NC USA | 07/02/2003
(4 out of 5 stars)
"I got this CD at a local outlet store, and i must tell you the content is a beautiful combination of dark, synth driven vocals and superb early 80s electronica. Unlike some of OMD's later albums, this one is much rougher and darker than any other i've heard. "Almost" is my favorite cut on the album, basically because of its fearful and cold driven synthline. "Bunker Soldiers" is one of those songs that really stick in your head for a while, as is "Red Frame/White Light". I also enjoy listening to "Dancing", which is kind of like a puzzle you keep trying to figure out but can't. "Mystereality" comes close to being too lighthearted for the album, though. But you can tell their experimentation pays off in the end with the very succesful "Electricity" and "Messages". Overall I was more than happy with the CD though. A wonderful debut album for OMD, I highly recommend it to anyone who are fans of McCluskey and Humphreys."
Ticks all the right boxes!
Kevin | 10/05/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)
"What a great item this is for any self respecting OMD fan or collector of Peter Saville designs. OMD's debut album has become an iconic piece of album design which is as innovative as the music contained therein.
Peter Saville's unique die cut sleeve failed to get the same treatment when the album was released on CD, something a lot of fans found disappointing. Yet here we are in 2010 with an American company giving us all what we once dreamed of.
It's a great album now housed in a great sleeve and the addition of bonus tracks from the Messages 10" UK release is an added bonus too.
If you like OMD, Peter Saville or genuinely funky CD sleeves then this is a must! Fantastic! Well done!
All we need now is the same treatment given to Architecture & Morality and Dazzle Ships...please?"