Originally Posted by: Spotnick If you ask me, it sounds like an Electronic record.
Would fit just right after Twisted Tenderness.
No offense to Johnny Marr of course, but New Order without Hooky will always sound like Bernard's side projects.
Not saying it's not good, I loved all 3 Electronic albums.
I can't say I loved all 3 Electronic albums -- each iteration got progressively worse. The first one was absolutely classic -- just take away the song with Bernard's terrible rapping and there's not a single bad song. The second one had "Forbidden City" and "For You." (And maybe "Dark Angel" wasn't bad.) The third had the eponymous song, and that was it.
But I totally, utterly agree with you here, Spotnick, regarding the new album. I think it's actually kind of crazy that people listen to the bassline of "Singularity" or "Plastic" and think that the sound that comes out of Tom Chapman is close to what Hooky does (paraphrasing here, but one journalist specifically wrote he didn't really miss him on this album)...just for comparison, I was listening to "60 Miles an Hour" last night, and that fatness, that richness of Hooky's sound...we all know he's an ass, but we should still give credit where credit is due. Nobody else sounds like him, not even Simon Gallup (maybe especially Simon Gallup!).
I think Music Complete is a very good album with some very good songs. But is this a New Order record? Sadly (and I really mean that emotion), no. Then again, I would only consider a few songs in Waiting for the Sirens' Call New Order songs, too ("Krafty," "Turn," possibly "Guilt Is a Useless Emotion" on some days). Even Get Ready had Electronic/Bernard's stamp on songs like "Rock the Shack" (god, that song is so terrible). I don't mean to support Hooky and his delusions, but unless you have his bass, it just doesn't add up. It doesn't sound like New Order. Just like how Electronic and Monaco and The Other Two don't sound like NO, either. I really wish it could be otherwise, because we know we'll never have these four people work together again...
Of course, I'm not saying that NO has to sound the same with every album...Brotherhood and Technique are so wonderfully different in their own ways...but there is something very much missing -- incomplete -- with Music Complete. Is it progress? I don't know. It is different, I'll give them that much, and maybe for musicians who have been around for this long, just that they were able to craft a different sound is a triumph of sorts. But for me, for the fan who's loved this band for a very long time, I'm just filled with, oh yes, regret.
p.s. My favorite song on the album is, strangely enough, "Superheated." Of all the songs, it seems to have the most structure. But you're right here, too, Spotnick -- I can totally imagine Neil Tennant singing this song.
- Sung