Travel Books
Search Advanced Search
 Location:  Home » Music » New Wave & Post-punk » Ultravox!  
Books By Country
France
Browse
Travel Books
Books
Films
Electronics
Outdoors
Software
Toys
Computer Games
VHS
Music
Home and Garden
Personal Care
Michael Palin
Electrical Travel Stuff
Software - Travel
Learn Languages SW
Learn with Rosetta Stone
Maps
Ultravox!
Ultravox!

 enlarge 
Artist: Ultravox!
Label: Commercial Marketing
Category: Music

List Price: £5.99
Buy New: £2.98
You Save: £3.01 (50%)



New (38) from £2.86

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 12561

Media: Audio CD
Running Time: 53 minutes
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

UPC: 602498379486
EAN: 0602498379486
ASIN: B000EU1PX2

Release Date: July 10, 2006
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Saturday Night In The City Of The Dead
  • Life At Rainbow's End (For All The Tax Exiles On Main Street)
  • Slip Away
  • I Want To Be A Machine
  • Wide Boys
  • Dangerous Rhythm
  • The Lonely Hunter
  • The Wild, The Beautiful & The Damned
  • My Sex
  • Slip Away
  • Modern Love
  • The Wild, The Beautiful & The Damned
  • My Sex

Similar Items:

  • Ha! Ha! Ha!
  • Systems Of Romance
  • Metamatic: Special Edition
  • Vienna
  • Rage in Eden: Remastered Definitive Edition

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars First and best   May 16, 2007
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

Though they made some great music later, Ultravox!, like many bands, were at their most vital on their debut. Suspended, in 1976, between the bold influences of the likes of Bowie and Roxy on one hand and a vision of new wave and early 1980s pop on the other, they were a band out of time. The first track possesses the no-nonsense attitude that The Stranglers would adopt and captures the edgy mood that pervades the album. This is the music of a band scraping the dirt out of the gutter in Iggy Pop's neighbourhood. Despite futuristic, sophisticated titles, on this album they are down on the street.
The two central tracks are 'I Want To be A Machine' which culminates in a startling violin-fest, and 'The Wild, The Beautiful And The Damned', which is five years ahead of its time. 'Wide Boys' opens with a 'Rebel Rebel' soundalike riff, 'Dangerous Rhythm' features John Foxx aping Bryan Ferry against a catchy reggae-style tune. 'My Sex', with its treated vocal is disarmingly reserved. Ultravox! matured after this, but they didn't make anything as exciting.



5 out of 5 stars Impossible to define -- A Genuine Curiosity, Well Worth Hearing   October 13, 2006
 9 out of 12 found this review helpful

If you come to this album expecting something like the Midge Ure-fronted
Ultravox of Vienna et al, you're in for something of a shock. Ultravox of the late
1970s were a much stranger, and frankly much more interesting outfit.
The music on this, their debut album, is as idiosyncratic as anything that
made it onto vinyl in that era. The list of influences is long: Berlin-era
Bowie and Eno-era Roxy Music are perhaps the most obvious, but more telling
is who they influenced. The fascination with Futurism is there ("I want to be
a machine"), the melodrama, androgyny and other-sexuality from goth
("my sex", "the wild the beatiful and the damned"), and there is a definite
punk flavour to the whole proceedings. Yet it would be wrong to pigeonhole
them in any of these categories. The sound really was unique, and I suspect
they didn't gain much of a following because it was just a little too different
for most listeners.

The album hasn't dated badly, except perhaps the cover (I can't help thinking
that a few of the band look like they know they'll regret it in a few years!), and
the lyrics are a little pretentiously overblown and sixth form-ish at times ("I'll bring
you truckloads of flowers/ from all the world that you stole from me/ I'll spin a
coin in a madhouse/ while I watch you drowning"). For me, though this is part
of the fun.

Overall, this really is an unusual and enjoyable album, as long as you can forgive
the odd flights of fancy. It's also interesting
to hear how they develop from this into the "Systems of Romance" ultravox, where
you can definitely hear lead singer John Foxx about to produce "Metamatic", and
where you can see the mittle-European fascination that spawned "Vienna". If you want to hear
something different from the era of The Clash and The Damned, it's well worth worth a visit.



5 out of 5 stars Give it a try. It will not dissapoint.   October 5, 2006
 10 out of 10 found this review helpful

From the neon plastic garage wails of "Satday nite" and "Wide boys", to the emotional dehumanisations of "I want to be a machine" and "My sex". Boy were Ultravox! a different creature under the guide of John Foxx in 76 compared to the slick sideburn pomposities of Midge in 1980.
Mind you, it was 'cos of "Vienna" (still a fantastic album, but that's another story) that I got into this album.
Expecting another epic synth rock soundtrip had been my mistake.
No, this album knocked me sideways with a gutsy bomblast of sheer rock noise experimentation. And I have to admit, at first I didn't know what the hell to make of it.
But you know, I went back to it time and time again. And each time I did, I found I was becoming more and more gripped.
The sardonic humour of "Satday night in the city of the dead" opens the way, pogoing its r'n'b backbeat to a pulp.
"Life at rainbows end" is carried along by Foxx's double vocal take, one a stylish croon, the other a distant whisper, great with headphones.
In "Slipaway" a lovely melody should get destroyed by the great slabs of distortion that tumble down upon it, but end up being the bits I look forward too. And in come the moogs, but warmer alongside the raw guitars and drums.
Another great melody comes in the "Dangerous rythmn" that could almost be Roxy attempting reggae.
The albums epics come in the forms of the lonely "I want to be a machine" and a real anthem "The wild the beautiful and the damned", both are brought to their peaks by fantastic fiddle flourishes making the early Ultravox! a kind of early futuristic new wave punk folk hybrid.
Keyboards dominate the ruined cityscape of the quasi-ballad "My sex", which is the song here most likely to please the old new romantics. But the grittier production brings to my mind images similar to say, a grundgier take of the sci-fi "Metropolis".
Some fun with more distortion and tape overload on the catchy "Wide boys" and the almost funky "Lonely hunter".
The story goes that the band got snuck into the Island studio when it was otherwise supposed to be closed and recorded this brilliant album amongst the mops and brooms of the cleaning ladies. With none other than Mr's Brian Eno and Steve Lillywhite in the production seats that's one rock 'n' roll story I will be hellava disappointed with if I find out it's not true.
True or not they still produced my favourite Ultravox album of the lot.




Learn how to have your own Amazon Shop


Travel Maps and Guides


zeugma


Holiday Travel

 

alpharooms.com for cheap holiday deals in spain and worldwide

Disneyland Paris for a great family holiday or short break.

Holday Cottages throughout Scotland, England, Wales, Ireland and France with Cottages4you

Hilton - need we say more, you will find Hilton Hotels in most areas throughout Britain, in cities and in the countryside.

 

Don't forget Travel Insurance

 

 

 

Airport Parking