New Order — Shellshock 12 inch

Posted by Tracy Sigler, March 20, 2008 3:23 pm - Permalink   

New Order -- Shellshock 12 inch

  • Artist: New Order
  • Title: Shellshock
  • Year: 1986
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 7
  • Owner: Mary
  • Acquired: 1987? - Plan 9

We seem to have an endless supply of 12 inches. Almost all of them are Mary’s; she’s quite the completist collector. Here is another piece of pop art from New Order. This version of “Shellshock” is almost 10 minutes long. “Original version appears on the original picture soundtrack Pretty in Pink” is printed on the typically minimalist back cover. The flip side has an instrumental version of “Thieves Like Us.” Why do we keep these things? Is my wife leading a secret second life as a DJ for ’80s dance parties?

More data

Nine Nine Nine — Concrete

Posted by Tracy Sigler, January 30, 2008 12:22 am - Permalink   

Nine Nine Nine -- Concrete

  • Artist: Nine Nine Nine
  • Title: Concrete
  • Year: 1981
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 10
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1981? Maybe a little later.
  • Keeper: Yes

I’m throwing out a lot of “10″ ratings but these records all deserve it. This right here is the greatest band you’ve probably never heard of. Nine Nine Nine. Concrete is one of the most fun, sing-along, punk pop rock and roll records ever. It includes two great covers: “Little Red Riding Hood” and “Fortune Teller.” But the best songs are the originals. A couple favorites are “So Greedy” and “Break It Up.” The musicianship and song craft are tops. Every song leaves me wanting more. Hearing damage or blown speakers, which will come first?

Nine Nine Nine is still kicking it. I need to get their latest.

Nine Nine Nine official site
Punk 77 article (with recent interview)

New Order — Technique

Posted by Tracy Sigler, September 5, 2007 7:11 pm - Permalink   

New Order -- Technique

  • Artist: New Order
  • Title: Technique
  • Year: 1989
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 6
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1989 - A promo at our store
  • Keeper: Yes

If I have any attachment to this record, New Order’s Technique, it’s that I got it when my brother and I had a record store in Norfolk, VA. And that’s about it because this is not an album I played a lot. I’m not a huge New Order fan, but I love some of their stuff. Technique is a little bland and maybe too pop for me. My favorite song by far is the last one, “Dream attack.” And the lower case “a” is how they spell it.

The second pic is from the liner. The back of the jacket is the usual NO minimalism with just a bar code in the center.

New Order — Confusion

Posted by Tracy Sigler, June 16, 2007 3:34 pm - Permalink   

New Order -- Confusion

  • Artist: New Order
  • Title: Confusion
  • Year: 1983
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 9
  • Owner: Mary
  • Acquired: ?
  • Keeper: Yes

“Confusion” has always been my favorite New Order song. I first it heard it when my friend Jeff Arthur played it for me. Anyhow, the truth is out: I’m a natural-born metallist that likes to dance. And this is a great dance song. There are a number of “Confusion” 12 inches out there. This version has four tracks:

“Confusion”
“Confusion Beats”
“Confusion (Instr.)”
“Confusion (Rough Mix)”

It was published by Streetwise and according to the very thorough New Order Discography site it’s pretty rare:

Q: What’s the deal with the Streetwise testpressing from the New Music Seminar?
A: The Streetwise testpressing (SWRL 2213) with blank, handwritten and/or stamped labels was made for the “New Music Seminar” in New York. As a part of the new Music Seminar New Order played at the Garage on July 7, 1983. Approximately 400 of these 12 inchers were made.

New Order — The Perfect Kiss

Posted by Tracy Sigler, March 24, 2007 8:28 pm - Permalink   

New Order -- The Perfect Kiss

  • Artist: New Order
  • Title: The Perfect Kiss
  • Year: 1985
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 7
  • Owner: Mary
  • Acquired: Unknown
  • Keeper: Yes

I think I’ve left that Mano Negra record cover up there long enough for everyone to enjoy it. This cover for New Order’s “The Perfect Kiss” is also handsome, if not as irresistible. Typical of New Order the cover is minimalist but also refined. This is only a 12 inch single and the cover is a metallic silver with the title embossed along the edge. The dust cover is swanky too with one side colored a deep blue and the other listing the tracks in, again, a very minimalist graphic design.

I like the song. I’m pretty sure “The Perfect Kiss” and Bon Jovi’s “You Give Love a Bad Name” were separated at birth. They’re not identical twins stylistically, but I’m here to tell you the melodies are very similar. Now, I’m guessing that few people are fans of both bands, which may be why no one seems to have noticed. But I was working in a chain record store when the Bon Jovi track was a hit. We had a number of teenagers at the store, I was only 19 or 20, and I got to listen this one more times than I care to remember.

Fac 123

Naked Raygun — Vanilla Blue

Posted by Tracy Sigler, December 23, 2006 7:07 pm - Permalink   

Naked Raygun -- Vanilla Blue

  • Artist: Naked Raygun
  • Title: Vanilla Blue
  • Year: 1987
  • Format: Vinyl 7 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 7
  • Owner: Tracy
  • Acquired: 1987? — Maybe when I was working at Mother’s Records in Hampton, VA
  • Keeper: Maybe

Christmas has made me so slack. We’re on the road now, but I played a buncha records and loaded up the pics right before we left. This one is Naked Raygun’s “Vanilla Blue.” For no particular reason I never really got into this band, but I like this song. I’m not sure how to describe it other than to say it’s interesting. The flipside is called “Slim” and it’s not so interesting. I think it’s just some samples of Slim Pickens from some old movies with some silly music backing it up. That’s three somes in one sentence y’all. Check out that sweet colored vinyl!

New Order — Ceremony (Later pressing)

Posted by Tracy Sigler, October 13, 2006 11:45 pm - Permalink   

New Order -- Ceremony (Later pressing)

  • Artist: New Order
  • Title: Ceremony (Later pressing)
  • Year: 1981
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 8
  • Owner: Mary
  • Acquired: ?

I’m posting from the east coast of Virginia tonight. We rolled in after midnight last night, and we’re here to see my friend Chris Hunter get married tomorrow!

You know, we have another pressing of this New Order 12 inch Ceremony and according to this article at Wikipedia it is supposed to be a different recording. I played them back to back and I can’t tell any difference. The cover is completely different, there is nothing etched in the run off margins on this one, and the songs are credited to the band members instead of Joy Division like the earlier pressing. Musically they seem identical, but for some reason I liked it a little better this time.

New Order — Ceremony

Posted by Tracy Sigler, August 22, 2006 10:45 pm - Permalink   

New Order -- Ceremony

Both of these New Order songs, “Ceremony” and “In a Lonely Place”, were written when the band was still Joy Division. This was the first single by the new band. I didn’t recognize “Ceremony.” Mary says it because I “didn’t go to enough dance nights” at the clubs. Anyhow, it sounds like New Order to me, while “In a Lonely Place” sounds a lot darker, slower.

Etched in the margins:

  • Side A: “How I Wish We Were Here With You Now”
  • Side B: “Watching Love Grow — Forever”

Wikipedia has an article with a lot of trivia about this single. It seems we have the original pressing of this 12 inch.

New Order — 1981-1982 New Order EP

Posted by Tracy Sigler, July 11, 2006 8:46 pm - Permalink   

New Order -- 1981-1982 New Order EP

  • Artist: New Order
  • Title: 1981-1982 New Order EP
  • Year: 1982
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 8
  • Owner: Mary
  • Acquired: 1984 ? - Olsson’s in D.C.
  • Keeper: Yes

“Factus 8″

It’s hard to know exactly what that means. It doesn’t necessarily mean this five song EP, “1981-1982 New Order”, by New Order is the eighth release by Factory Records. Read more about Factory’s curious numbering system.

This collection of singles is not as synth-heavy as their later stuff. I like it a lot more than I remembered. There are more details here.

New Model Army — The Ghost of Cain

Posted by Tracy Sigler, June 5, 2006 11:23 pm - Permalink   

New Model Army -- The Ghost of Cain

  • Artist: New Model Army
  • Title: The Ghost of Cain
  • Year: 1986
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 6
  • Owner: Mary
  • Acquired: 1986 - When she worked at Plan 9 Records in Richmond, VA.
  • Keeper: Yes

I liked this New Model Army record more than I remember. Lotsa energy, and you can feel the anger. I don’t know much about the band, but I always thought frontman Slade The Leveller was too intense to be taken seriously. If there was a “hit” on “The Ghost of Cain” I think it must’ve been “51st State”, or at least I remember a video. Mary got to see them live in Richmond. My favorite song is “Lights Go Out.”

Here’s an article about the band at Wikipedia.

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