I'm starting a new thread that has nothing to do with shipping delays. This is about the box itself (once you've received your copy).
The box is very heavy card, reminiscent of Still. The front is debossed with Music Complete, and the back is debossed with New Order.
Lift the lid to find the album on top. I'm in the States, but the box contains EU pressings. It gave me a real nerd thrill to see a New Order album with a proper Mute Records "STUMM" catalog number, having grown up a huge fan of Mute's catalog.
There are two 4" stickers: a black and white one of the Mute logo (overhead view of a walking figure), and one of the Music Complete album cover with blue in the lower left corner (the CD format). There's also a business-sized card with the download instructions. The downloads come as both MP3 and FLACs.
There's a 12" divider card with Music Complete: New Order printed in the center.
Then there are six 12" singles. The spines all say Music Complete: Extended Mixes, and are labeled as BXSTUMM390 AB, CD, EF, GH, IJ, and K. The rear of each lists the tracks (Restless Extended Mix, Singularity Extended Mix).
The sleeves are printed with a glossy finish on the inside, and a rougher, textured finish (similar to Movement) on the outside. The inner sleeves are black paper lined with plastic.
Restless/Singularity = bright yellow translucent vinyl
Plastic/Tutti Frutti = deep green translucent vinyl (same as the UK press of the Restless 12")
People On The High Line/Stray Dog = orangish-pink translucent vinyl
Academic/Nothing But A Fool = clear vinyl
Unlearn This Hatred/The Game = deep blue translucent vinyl
Superheated = black vinyl
The labels all say to play at 33rpm, but the records actually play at 45.
Saville has described the artwork for this album as "techno Tudor", with the heavy black lines being based on Tudor designs. The etchings on side 12 carry over the Tudor aesthetic with pine cones, acorns, flowers, and leaves rendered in clean lines - the sort of things that would be woven into tapestries. I think the design of this album is perfect, in that, it doesn't look like anything else at the moment. Saville surprised us, and it works as a unified whole.
The extended mixes are amazing. They aren't remixed - there's nothing added that doesn't appear in the album versions. My favorites are Plastic, People On The High Line, and Academic. Academic sounds even more like Paradise with the sequencer pushed up louder in the mix. For me personally, People On The High Line and Academic have attained "classic New Order" status. I'd put them up against anything recorded during their imperial phase, and I have to say overall I find myself ranking Music Complete as the second best album they've ever made (behind Technique).
In 2015, did any New Order fan expect to find themselves saying "I couldn't be happier"? The box does nothing but add to an already brilliant album.
Edited by user 04 November 2015 11:03:07(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified