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Systems Of Romance
Systems Of Romance

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Artist: Ultravox!
Label: Commercial Marketing
Category: Music

List Price: £8.99
Buy Used: £4.49
You Save: £4.50 (50%)



New (44) from £4.63

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 27476

Media: Audio CD
Running Time: 42 minutes
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

UPC: 602498379509
EAN: 0602498379509
ASIN: B000EU1PWS

Release Date: July 10, 2006
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Slow Motion
  • Can't Stay Long
  • Someone Else's Clothes
  • Blue Light
  • Some Of Them
  • Quiet Men
  • Dislocation
  • Maximum Acceleration
  • When You Walk Through Me
  • Just For A Moment
  • Cross Fade
  • Quiet Men

Similar Items:

  • Ha! Ha! Ha!
  • Ultravox!
  • Metamatic: Special Edition
  • Vienna
  • From Trash

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Third, Last & Best   May 3, 2007
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

After the hit 'n miss debut album and the punky, raucous second album, Ultravox finally defined their sound with Systems of Romance - and delivered the masterpiece of which we knew they were capable .

Systems will be remembered by most as the last Foxx album but it's also first time the band worked with German producer Conny Plank and in him Ultravox appear to have found a kindred spirit, someone who could help them create their remarkable blend of electronic, experimental and traditional instrumentation. It's surely no coincidence that Plank oversaw all of the band's best work (and U-Vox, but we'll quickly skip over that).

Despite the fact that this album was years ahead of its time, its sound was, and is still, very commercial, packed with hooks and riffs and all sorts of wierd and wonderful sounds. Any one track has more great ideas than any number of songs by their rivals (Kraftwerk aren't in the same league) and, in hindsight, it seems odd that this album achieved so little commercial success.

Systems of Romance is a truly masterful piece of work, one that would be bettered only by its immediate successor, and is light years away from the plinky-plonk sound that was typical of 70s/80s electronica. The fact that it was, and is, routinely ignored by the music press and those "in the know" whilst vastly inferior work is venerated, should give you some idea of just how good it is. Genius.



4 out of 5 stars Foxx end   April 28, 2007
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

I remember this album being released. The publicity surrounding it, though not over-generous, suggested that there was a lot more to come from Foxx and co. Instead, Gary Numan stole their commercial thunder, admitting as much at the time, with his sci-fi fantasies, before Ultravox underwent a major personnel change and a more commercial approach. This album, it must be said, suffered from being a few years ahead of its time. In general, this band were always out of place, a bit like a group of sophisticated Germans plunged into Clash-era Hammersmith. 'Systems Of Romance' pulses at times with the same fire as much of contemporary new wave, but without the street-cred of the era. Meanwhile, David Bowie's higher-profile music was charting overlapping territory. Ultravox, wedged in a gap somewhere between the two, were shoved to the margins.
In truth, though this is a brave, innovative record for its era, it is not one of the greatest albums ever made when it comes to content. The tortured guitars, eerie keyboard backgrounds and Foxx's defiant delivery, coupled with some beautiful lyrics, can't hide some mediocre instrumental arrangements. 'Slow Motion' and 'Can't Stay Long' fill the senses, but the three tracks that follow are more like bad new wave.
The second half of the album is a different matter. Unusually, this is much stronger, varying between the hard-hitting industrial beat of 'Maximum Acceleration' and the eerie closing track, 'Just For A Moment'. In the year of Grease and The Boomtown Rats, Ultravox took risks and paid for them, but they delivered potent images of what was to come.



5 out of 5 stars You should buy this album   April 22, 2007
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

There are some albums that are universally acclaimed as works of greatness, others for some reason should be rated as such, but for whatever reason they are criminally overlooked, this is such an album.
I bought this on lp when it first came out, and keep getting drawn back to it nearly 30 years later, it has not aged, it still sounds great, and without this album the likes of Gary Numan would not have become what they did, this was the greatest album ever made that nobody mentions but is an essential in any collection, just buy and enjoy.



4 out of 5 stars Worth purchasing   September 10, 2006
 6 out of 9 found this review helpful

I thought this album was deeply pretentious in 1982 - but thanks to this good remaster I can now look at it freshly. Yes, it is pretentious, but it is also full of some great sonic ideas, good and awful lyrics, messy but interesting rhythmic pulses and innovation but I am not surprised that it was the last gasp for this version of Ultravox...

Where do you go next after an album like this? What actually happened was that Ultravox took the whole dead-end Euroromantic thing on to "Vienna" with a another dramatic, but more commercially astute, lead singer [I got bored of them pretty fast, but I suspect they did too...] and Foxx went off to develop the nihilistic thing further on "Metamatic" [I still listen to this] and then took "Systems of Romance" as a template and recorded "The Garden".

The bits of "Systems of Romance" that are great are really great - Maximum Acceleration, Dislocation - but funnily enough, none of the songs are individually stunning. On "The Garden" John Foxx recorded the title track that didn't appear on this album "Systems of Romance" some years later, which would have been the best track if it had appeared here.

Why would you buy this if you didn't know anything about this era of music or the background to Foxx/Ultravox? Well, it is a niche release and somewhat dated. However, it is interesting and, like the works of Prince Carlo Gesualdo di Venosa, is a backwater that is worth a journey now and then.



5 out of 5 stars 'Systems of Romance - A Retrospective by welbourn TEKH   August 10, 2006
 31 out of 31 found this review helpful

Whenever I begin to champion this album, I always commence with an apologetic disclaimer and this review will not diverge from that well-trodden path. It must be stated, that the original Ultravox line-up, fronted by John Foxx, bore no resemblance to the later, `Slick' - Viennese-rollers fronted by that chameleon of popular culture - Midge Ure.

When `Systems of Romance' was released in the late summer of 1978, Ultravox had already released two previous albums. The first being; `Ultravox!' (1977) released at the height of punk. This Eno produced, Bowie influenced record saw the band slated for their unfashionable cyber-punk stance. The follow up `Ha! Ha! Ha!' released in the latter end of the same year was a harder, `punkier' affair, but the final track `Hiroshima mon Amour', revealed a new, romantic element to the band, out went the pseudo-goth lyrics, and in came European, mechanic sensibility.

I had loved the cover of `Ha! Ha! Ha!' the misaligned, 3D starkness of the band, reeked of un-Romanised punk imagery, but yet it contained a psychedelic aloofness that was despised by the music press. John Foxx had planted a seed in my head at the end of Ultravox's last album and I anticipated, what I hoped would be the greatest album ever recorded. My wish that this new album would follow the direction of `Hiroshima mon Amour', was fuelled by the fact that Stevie Shears, the `punk' guitarist had been replaced by a - `long-hair' Robin Simon. On the day of its release, I was not disappointed.

`Systems of Romance' was recorded by Conrad Plank at the legendary Krautrock producer's own studio near Cologne. At the time of recording (1978), no one was producing music like this for it was considered pretentious and unfashionable in the post-punk rock climate. `Systems of Romance' brought together Plank's Krautrock sensibility, a seasoned live-band, technology and a poet who had recently broken through into a pool of words and images that were fresh and meaningful.

`Systems of Romance' is a `stand-alone' album, for it is difficult to place it into any given category. Its influences are diverse and it emerged out of nowhere and led to nothing, in the fact that the band split shortly after its release. Foxx's first solo album `Metamatic' was intentionally cold and mechanical and like many of his later solo albums, lacked the passion created by a band. Foxx's muse was at its height on `Systems of Romance', A heightened awareness of his surroundings, was embroidered with Renaissance influences, creating a tapestry of beautiful words that shone and glimmered over the thick, rich sound created by his band. His words influenced many, no more so than Gary Numan, who, in my view, stole his whole act, commercialised it and made a million.

Foxx's greatest mistake was leaving the band, for together their union was the key to their success. Although he did have a post-Ultravox hit with the single `Underpass' his inability to move on, or to develop upon the enchanting lyrics he created for `Systems of Romance' was to be his greatest bugbear. It is sad that the band is remembered only for its post-Foxx releases. So, rid yourself of images of pointy sideburns, Carol Reid imagery from post-war Vienna and take another listen to this `Krautrock' masterpiece, that influenced many including, Japan and many of the `80's new romantic acts.

Slow Motion: The album begins with the single `Slow Motion' and the introduction of Robin Simon into the band reveals a guitarist, whose ability is multi-dimensional. As we are welcomed to John Foxx's blurred, moonlit world, we hear crazy freak-outs in the depth of the song, reminiscent of something off Amon Duul II's `Yeti'. Yet somehow, Plank has managed to merge the synths and the guitars to create a distinctive, rich wall of sound, unique to this album. The thin sound of previous albums is immediately dispensed with and this thick synthetic haze is underpinned by Warren Cann's solid metronomic drumming. Layered themes emerge and then disappear to form a rich, textured brew.

I Can't Stay Long: The riffy guitar rides over strange loops and a krautrock bass and the track reveals Foxx as a true poet. Lines like "In wintertime, overcoats close in, and the snow tastes of tin on the steps of any station. I need to glide, in the long green light of July afternoon...." Create for us a duel consciousness that creates for us a desire to experience the extremes of winter, but to experience them from the relative safety and security of a warm place. Again Cann's metronomic drumming adds to the security theme, but his flourish of symbols at the end, reminds us of the human behind his discipline.

Someone Else's Clothes: A backward cymbal leads us into this shimmering track. Foxx's unnerving, thin voice sound is accompanied by Simon's choppy guitar, but unlike Ultravox's previous guitarist Stevie Shears, Simon brings a multi-dimensional, looser sound to the band. Big bass notes accompany Cann's unrelenting beat. This European sound is brought closer to home with Foxx's quintessential Englishness. "Transfer me into the Saturday crowds, or merge me back into the factory towns..." is reminiscent of Priestley and the northern mill towns of yore.

Blue Light: The odd track out, in that the lyrics are not reproduced on the sleeve and the track is strangely out of place musically. It lacks the depth of quality and production of the other songs and is reminiscent of tracks off later Foxx solo albums. Here Chris Cross' tight bass playing dominates the subdued screaming guitar madness behind Foxx's words. The song ends in a metaphoric rumble and suggests to me that this was one on Foxx's later songs that crept onto the album, and suggested a mechanic direction that the rest of the band didn't wish to follow?

Some of Them: The greatest start to a track ever!? A choppy dysfunctional guitar creates the intro for a real rock out and reveals Ultravox as a tight unit. Guitars and synths fuse to create a tub-thumping track reminiscent of a `Ha! Ha! Ha!' outtake.

Quiet Men: Side Two starts with the second single from the album and is a stripped down track that burbles along to a Euro-beat, overlaid by Simon's abrasive guitar and Foxx's camp vocals. Billy Currie's eerie synth introduces layered themes that drift in and out of the track, often slowing down and speeding up creating a richness and longing.

Dislocation: A track built around strange metallic plucking, which hosts layered voices and bass synth. Foxx's nonchalant, droning voice describes a disconcerting world between sleep and consciousness, set against the background rumble of the universe.

Maximum Acceleration: One of the strongest tracks on the album begins as Foxx delivers the casual line "I thought you knew me by now". Embellished by Simon's shimmering, loose guitar that flows over a rock steady beat. Cann's occasional tom-tom flourishes, especially at the end create feeling of total exhilaration.

When You walk Through Me: From a rising synth, the songs bursts into life. Simon's pivotal guitar rises over Cann's fluid drumming which rises and then falls back into the tight disciplined performance, which has now become the trademark of this recording. The music drops away to a mechanic beat and over a fading synth, Foxx delivers his words as Chris Cross introduces a Krautrock bass line that leads us back into the song.

Just For A Moment: Just like ``Ha! Ha! Ha!', `Systems of Romance' closes with a track that takes the band into a different dimension. Here, unwittingly, Foxx delivers the final broadcast. His voice is thin and filled with longing, set against a heartbeat pulse and he wears the hat of the `outsider'. "We'll never leave here - ever, let's stay in here forever" he pleads as his voice, on the edge of distortion, calls from some distant womb like space. A discordant piano shatters the security of the track, breaking it into pieces, pieces that are quickly assembled as a church organ penetrates the gloom. As the organ floods the track, Foxx can be heard humming like a stranger in an old town square, somewhere in an old European city - maybe post-war Vienna?




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