John Cale - Music for a New Society

John Cale - Music for a New Society
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Album Details

Title: Music for a New Society
Artist: John Cale
Release Date: 8/1982
Re-Released On: 5/10/1994
Label: Rhino Records
Duration: 44:12
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto
UPC: 081227174323
Genre: Rock
Styles: Experimental, Art Rock
Moods: Literate, Sophisticated, Wintry, Acerbic, Cerebral, Detached, Gloomy, Volatile, Hypnotic, Nostalgic, Plaintive, Poignant, Provocative, Refined/Mannered, Reflective, Restrained, Visceral, Bleak, Complex, Eerie, Elegant, Ironic, Quirky, Raucous, Reserved, Somber, Street-Smart, Swaggering, Aggressive, Intense, Tense/Anxious
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 7
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Taking Your Life in Your Hands
  2. Thoughtless Kind
  3. Sanities
  4. If You Were Still Around
  5. (I Keep A) Close Watch
  6. Broken Bird
  7. Chinese Envoy
  8. Changes Made
  9. Damn Life
  10. Risé, Sam and Rimsky-Korsakov
  11. In the Library of Force

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
1994CDRhino Records71743

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

The aural chaos and intense paranoia of John Cale's "comeback" albums Sabotage/Live and Honi Soit seemingly left him with very few places left to go, short of setting back-issues of Soldier of Fortune to music. 1982's Music for a New Society was, from a musical standpoint, a remarkable about-face, sounding calm, spare, and spectral where his last few albums had been all rant and rage; the arrangements were dominated by Cale's open, languid keyboard patterns, and there was far more aural "white space" in their framings than he had permitted himself since The Academy in Peril. But beyond the cool, reserved exteriors of Music for a New Society, one finds a handful of stories of terribly damaged lives; on close inspection, the ethereal opening cut "Taking Your Life in Your Hands" turns out to be the story of a mother gone on a killing spree, while "Sanities," "Thoughtless Kind," and "Damn Life" are full of dashed hopes and painful emotional betrayals. If the approach to the material is a good bit different than what most fans had been used to from Cale, the results were, if anything, among the most compelling music of his career; the open spaces of the arrangements are at once ambient and melodically compelling, and the songs have an emotional resonance that communicates on a deeper and more emotional level than the political hectoring of Sabotage or Honi Soit, intelligent as they may have been. Spare, understated, and perhaps a masterpiece. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Allen Lanier?, Multi Instruments, Keyboards
David LichtensteinEngineer, ?, Multi Instruments, Engineer
DJ Young?, Multi Instruments, Assistant Engineer
John CaleComposer, Guitar, Viola, Bass, Vocals, Keyboards, Producer
John Wonderling?, Multi Instruments
Mike McLintock?, Multi Instruments
Miles GreenRemastering
Pipe Major?
Pipe Major FitzGibbonMulti Instruments
Rise Cale?, Composer, Vocals
Rob O'ConnorCover Design
Robert ElkMulti Instruments, ?
Sam ShepardComposer
Thomas Fitzgibbon?
Tom Fitzgibbon?