Enter the Angel

John Foxx Album Reviews

JOHN FOXX, one time lead singer of 80's synth icons Ultravox, electronic music pioneer and established solo artist in his own right.


Ultravox :
Ultravox !
Ha ! Ha! Ha!
Systems of Romance

Solo Artist

Metamatic
The Garden
The Golden Section
In Mysterious Ways
Cathedral Oceans

With Louis Gordon

Shifting City
The Pleasures of Electricity




Ultravox -- Ultravox !

Ultravox ! cover


A review of Ultravox ! will appear here shortly

Ultravox -- Ha ! Ha ! Ha !

Ha Ha Ha cover


Track Listing :

  • ROckwrok
  • Frozen Ones
  • Fear in the Western World
  • Distant Smile
  • Man Who Dies Everyday
  • Artificial Life
  • While I’m Still Alive
  • Hiroshima Mon Amour

Recorded at Phonogram Studios, late Summer 1977. Produced by Steve Lillywhite. Island Records IMCD 147

Personel :

  • John Foxx -Vocals
  • Stevie Shears - Guitar
  • Warren Cann - Drums
  • Billy Currie - Violins/Synths
  • Chris Cross - Bass
  • "CC" [quite definately NOT Chris Cross] - Saxophone

Ultravox’s second and let's face it, punk album. Recorded in the Summer of 77, with the Jubilee, The Pistol’s God Save The Queen riding high and the explosion of new music hitting the scene, it was no surprise that this rubbed off on the band as they went into the studio to record the follow up to Ultravox ! The guitar sound is certainly brasher, the music has a certain rough edge to it, and the artwork [particularly for the singles Young Savage and ROckwrok] grabs you by the throat and pogos you round the room. Running to 34 minutes and 44 seconds, it’s a trifle too long to be a true punk album though !

ROckwrok kicks off the album. I’ve always thought of this as a plain old rock’n’roll number and never really listened to the lyrics. But after reading Al Crawford’s review of this album, yes, it really is a tale of sexual hedonism that would get banned from the radio if it ever got the airplay.

Frozen Ones starts with nothing but clicking fingers, sparse vocals and builds up into huge thrashing guitars. The Buzzcocks with brains, even.

How can there be anything wrong ?
Are we the frozen ones ?

Fear in the Western World continues in the same vein, with a shouted 1-2-3-4 intro, punkish vocals that old ladies and vicars would find offensive and a guitar riff that digs right in. Then the mood changes completely with Distant Smile. A piano intro that seems to go on forever, before two and a half minutes it’s back to the loud guitars and another strong riff. This track lasts for five and a half minutes -- in the 1977 age of three minute heroes that was an eternity !

Track Five is The Man Who Dies Every Day, one of the classic early Ultravox songs, where everything just seems to gel into one spectacular whole. This leads into Artificial Life, another five minutes of strong guitars, intelligent lyrics about alienation, self-disgust. Powerful stuff with it’s “I’ve learned to be a stranger” lyrical motif. While I’m Still Alive continues the work in the same vein, leading into the album’s fabulous conclusion.

If there is a God of music, Hiroshima Mon Amour should have been the track that sent Ultravox to the top instead of the classic Vienna several years and personnel changes later. Warren Cann’s got the electronic percussion that would become the band’s trademark; and there's a mournful saxophone to go with Foxx's inspired vocals.

Somehow we drifted off too far
Communicate like distant stars
Splintered voices down the phone
The sun-lit dust, the smell of roses drifts along
Someone waits behind the door
Hiroshima mon amour
It’s incredibly beautiful, touching music and a stark contrast to the rest of the album. You wouldn’t get that kind of thing on “Never Mind The...” A fine pointer of things to come, both for Ultravox and for Foxx’s solo career.. Ha Ha Ha was never my favourite album until I listened to it again recently and rediscovered it in a whole new light. That difficult second album turned out quite well in the end. Julian Cope in his autobiography accused Ultravox ! of being “art school punks”. That’s his own criticism, but if they can make such a fine sweep of musical styles, all well and good. And the album covers are better and probably count towards course work as well.



Ultravox -- Systems of Romance

Systems of Romance cover


A review of Systems of Romance will appear here shortly

The Alistair Coleman Homepage Fiasco

Sign My Guestbook Guestbook by GuestWorld View My Guestbook