Showing posts with label Television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Television. Show all posts

Friday, January 10, 2014

Mojo Magazine’s 100 Greatest Albums

Mojo Magazine:

The Top 100 Albums

Mojo is a British music magazine. Over the years, they’ve put out a number of best-of-all-time album lists. This DMDB exclusive list aggregates 13 of Mojo’s lists together (see resources for all the lists at the bottom of the page).

Also, check out Mojo’s annual picks for album of the year from 1950 on.

Check out other publications and organizations’ best-of album lists here.

1. The Beach Boys Pet Sounds (1966)
2. The Beatles Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967)
3. The Beatles Revolver (1966)
4. The Jimi Hendrix Experience Are You Experienced? (1967)
5. The Clash London Calling (1979)
6. Marvin Gaye What’s Going On (1971)
7. Stevie Wonder Innervisions (1973)
8. Radiohead The Bends (1995)
9. The Rolling Stones Exile on Main Street (1972)
10. Jeff Buckley Grace (1994)

11. David Bowie The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1972)
12. Patti Smith Horses (1975)
13. Ramones Ramones (1976)
14. The Doors The Doors (1967)
15. Pulp Different Class (1995)
16. The Stone Roses The Stone Roses (1989)
17. Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band Trout Mask Replica (1969)
18. Led Zeppelin Led Zeppelin IV (1971)
19. Television Marquee Moon (1977)
20. Oasis Definitely Maybe (1994)

21. Bruce Springsteen Born to Run (1975)
22. Bob Dylan Blonde on Blonde (1966)
23. Velvet Underground & Nico Velvet Underground & Nico (1967)
24. Nirvana Nevermind (1991)
25. Joni Mitchell Blue (1971)
26. Fairport Convention Liege and Lief (1969)
27. Richard & Linda Thompson I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight (1974)
28. Radiohead OK Computer (1997)
29. Bob Dylan Time Out of Mind (1997)
30. Bob Dylan Highway 61 Revisited (1965)

31. Love Forever Changes (1967)

32. The Jimi Hendrix Experience Electric Ladyland (1968)
33. Bob Dylan Blood on the Tracks (1975)
34. The Rolling Stones Sticky Fingers (1971)
35. New York Dolls New York Dolls (1973)
36. Neil Young Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (1969)
37. Lou Reed Transformer (1972)
38. Pink Floyd The Piper at the Gates of Dawn (1967)
39. Steely Dan Can’t Buy a Thrill (1972)
40. U2 Achtung Baby (1991)

41. Neil Young Tonight’s the Night (1975)
42. The Band Music from Big Pink (1968)
43. Frank Zappa Hot Rats (1969)
44. Bob Dylan Bringing It All Back Home (1965)
45. The Strokes Is This It (2001)
46. The Libertines Up the Bracket (2002)
47. Tricky Maxinquaye (1995)
48. The Rolling Stones Let It Bleed (1969)
49. Nirvana In Utero (1993)
50. The Rolling Stones Beggars Banquet (1968)

51. The Velvet Underground The Velvet Underground (1969)
52. Blur Blur (1997)
53. Nick Drake Five Leaves Left (1969)
54. Van Morrison Astral Weeks (1968)
55. The Flaming Lips The Soft Bulletin (1999)
56. The Beatles The Beatles (aka “The White Album”) (1968)
57. The Beatles Abbey Road (1969)
58. DJ Shadow Endtroducing… (1996)
59. Pink Floyd Dark Side of the Moon (1973)
60. Black Sabbath Black Sabbath (1970)

61. James Brown Live at the Apollo Volume 1 (live, 1962)
62. The Band The Band (1969)
63. Miles Davis Kind of Blue (1959)
64. David Bowie Hunky Dory (1971)
65. R.E.M. Automatic for the People (1992)
66. Portishead Dummy (1994)
67. The Stooges Fun House (1970)
68. Spiritualized Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space (1997)
69. Sex Pistols Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols (1977)
70. Fleetwood Mac Rumours (1977)

71. Air Moon Safari (1998)
72. Oasis (What’s the Story) Morning Glory (1995)
73. The Byrds The Notorious Byrd Brothers (1968)
74. Jesus and Mary Chain Psychocandy (1985)
75. Prince Sign ‘O’ the Times (1987)
76. John Lennon Plastic Ono Band (1970)
77. Various Artists Buena Vista Social Club (1997)
78. The Clash The Clash (1977)
79. Roxy Music For Your Pleasure (1973)
80. Blur Parklife (1994)

81. Otis Redding Otis Blue (1965)
82. Donald Fagen The Nightfly (1982)
83. Bruce Springsteen Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978)
84. Gram Parsons Grievous Angel (1974)
85. Joy Division Unknown Pleasures (1979)
86. The Beatles A Hard Day’s Night (soundtrack, 1964)
87. Tom Waits Swordfishtrombones (1983)
88. Carole King Tapestry (1971)
89. Kate Bush Hounds of Love (1985)
90. Led Zeppelin Physical Graffiti (1975)

91. R.E.M. Murmur (1983)
92. Underworld Second Toughest in the Infants (1996)
93. Johnny Burnette & the Rock ‘N’ Roll Trio Johnny Burnette and the Rock ‘N’ Roll Trio (1956)
94. PJ Harvey To Bring You My Love (1995)
95. Derek and the Dominos Layla & Other Assorted Love Songs (1970)
96. King Crimson In the Court of the Crimson King (1969)
97. Free Fire and Water (1970)
98. The Slits Cut (1979)
99. Jethro Tull Stand Up (1969)
100. John Cale Music for a New Society (1982)


Resources and Related Links:


First posted 1/10/2014; last updated 3/13/2024.

Monday, July 30, 2001

The Strokes released Is This It

Is This It

The Strokes


Released: July 30, 2001


Peak: 33 US, 2 UK, 50 CN, 5 AU


Sales (in millions): 1.0 US, 0.6 UK, 2.05 world (includes US and UK)


Genre: garage rock revival


Tracks:

Song Title [time] (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to singles charts.

  1. Is This It [2:35]
  2. The Modern Age [3:32] (1/29/01, --)
  3. Soma [2:37]
  4. Barely Legal [3:58]
  5. Someday [3:07] (9/14/02, 17 MR, 27 UK)
  6. Alone, Together [3:12]
  7. Last Nite [3:17] (11/10/01, 5 MR, 14 UK, 47 AU)
  8. Hard to Explain [3:47] (6/25/01, 27 MR, 16 UK, 66 AU)
  9. New York City Cops [3:36]
  10. Trying Your Luck [3:27]
  11. Take It or Leave It [3:16]

All songs written by Julian Casablancas.


Total Running Time: 36:28


The Players:

  • Julian Casablancas (vocals)
  • Albert Hammond Jr. (guitar)
  • Nick Valensi (guitar)
  • Nikolai Fraiture (bass)
  • Fabrizio Moretti (drums)

Rating:

4.231 out of 5.00 (average of 25 ratings)


Quotable: “A pop version of the Velvet Underground with totally 21st-century lyrics,” ZS it was “crucial in the development of other alternative bands and of the post-millennial music industry.” – Wikipedia.org


Awards: (Click on award to learn more).

About the Album:

“If there’s one album…[from the 21st century] you could say ‘saved’ rock and roll, this might be it.” GL “When Y2K arrived, MTV VJs and saccharine-pop enthusiasts told us rock ’n’ roll was dead. But then, out of nowhere, came this back-to-basics guitar-driven record made by five leather-clad hipsters (before that was a thing).” GQ Rolling Stone’s Joe Levy said their debut album was “the stuff of which legends are made” WK while NME’s John Robinson called it “one of the best debut LPs by a guitar band during the past 20 years.” WK

“The Strokes didn’t so much pick it up off the floor but rather thrashed around in the gutter a bit, and aside from the rhythmic brilliance that splashing about in the mire produced, they very importantly made it cool again.” FO “The Strokes took the world by storm with their underground and lo-fi sensibilities, paving the way for bands like The White Stripes and The Yeah Yeah Yeahs to take their similar sounds right to the top of the music world.” GL

“It takes a keen eye on culture and a depth of originality to seize the seething passions of youth, thrives on naïve recklessness, colour it in the sound of the New York rock music that inspired you in the first place, and make the sort of art that usurps the status quo and spawns a new generation of its own.” FO

These “mod ragamuffins” RS “mixed Velvet Underground grime and skinny-tie New Wave jangle” RS with “late-‘70s New York punk.” AMG The music was “sometimes acidic, always full of great melody,” RS and marked by “off-kilter guitar solos,” EW “primitive tom-tom rhythms (shades of the Velvets’ Moe Tucker),” EW and “an insistently chugging backbeat.” AMG On top of it all were the “raw, world-weary” AMG and “half-buried vocals (à la ‘Louie, Louie’)” EW and “attitude-heavy slurring” EW of singer Julian Casablancas.

The Strokes intentionally sought out “the raw, muddy sonics of garage-band 45s.” EW Casablancas said they wanted to sound like “a band from the past that took a time trip into the future to make their record.” WK Electronica duo Daft Punk said the Strokes “followed in the footsteps of the Velvet Underground, Television, Suicide, the Ramones, and Blondie, creating the fresh, distinctive sound we’d been waiting for over a decade.” GQ THe Strokes updated “the propulsion of the Velvet Underground and the jangle of Seventies punk with Casablancas’ acidic dispatches mixed to the fore and ringed with distortion like he was singing from a pay phone.” RS’20 However, “the Strokes don’t rehash the sounds that inspire them,” AMG but “remake them in their own image.” AMG

“They inspired a ragged revolt in Britain, led by the Libertines and Arctic Monkeys.” RS’11 The Strokes became “the most hyped band [in the UK] since Oasis in the mid 1990s,” TB the New Musical Express “placed the Strokes at the head of its ‘new rock revolution.’” TB In response, “haters threw whatever they had at them” SY scoffing that these scruffy posers were actually straight out of “the exclusive Dwight School in Manhattan” TB and decked out in “expensive leather and denim.” SY However, “the Strokes prove to be one of the few groups deserving of their glowing reviews.” AMG This was “the rare case where the advance buzz was warranted.” EB Is This It showcased a band that was more than just a handful of pretty faces and privileged New York City brats.” PM The band’s “daily twelve-hour practices are…blindingly evident” SY on an album marked by “unfussy arrangements and skillful approach to pop songcraft.” PM “As it stands, the hype proved well deserved” PM as the Strokes “surpassed all expectations with the release of this instant garage-rock classic.” EB “The measure of it now is that it’s just about the work of the century where many people listen to the whole album more often than a single song from it.” FO

“Is This It”

The subject matter behind their songs “reflected their own early-twenties lust for life” AMG and made “the timeworn themes of sex, drugs, and rock & roll and the basic guitars-drum-bass lineup seem new and vital again.” AMG The title track “sets the joys of being young, jaded, and yearning to a wonderfully bouncy bassline.” AMG It also “features a simple, metronomic drum line, a recurring feature in the rest of the record. Containing one of the slowest tempos, Is This It is the Strokes attempt at a ballad.” WK

“The Modern Age”

“The band mix swaggering self-assurance with barely concealed insecurity on The Modern Age,” AMG “a rant about the oddness fo modern life.” WK It “includes a prominent guitar riff accompanied by a complementary drum line. Its staccato verse is followed by an upbeat, singalong chorus and a technically difficult guitar solo.” WK

“Barely Legal”

The band “reveal something akin to earnestness on Barely Legal,” AMG which “concerns the subject matter of a girl who has just arrived at the age of consent.” WK It also “containes some of the album’s softer guitar melodies inspired by Britpop as well as drumming patterns that evoke the sound of primitive 1980s drum machines.” WK

“Alone Together” / “Trying Your Luck”

Alone, Together continues the sexual theme by dropping hints about cunnilingus” WK and is “driven by a staccato rhythm, and climaxes first with a guitar solo, then a repeat of the central guitar hook.” WK That song and “Trying Your Luck develop the group's brooding, coming-down side.” AMG The latter is “the album’s mellowest point…and shows more melancholic vocals.” WK

“Last Nite”

Last Nite is another “guitar-driven song, but leans towards pop music influences. At its core, there are reggae-inspired rhythm guitar lines played by Hammond, and studio noise effects. The rhythm section plays simple interlocking notes and beats.” WK

“Hard to Explain” / “Soma”

The Strokes combine “their raw power and infectious melodies on Hard to Explain, arguably the finest song they've written in their career.” AMG “Explain” and Soma both contain “processed drum tracks using dynamic range compression and equalization studio techniques to make them sound like a drum machine.” WK The latter “incorporates jerky rhythms and starts and ends with the same guitar and drum chimes.” WK

“New York City Cops”

“Explain” and New York City Cops incorporate “spliced ad-libbing extras from Casablancas.” WK The latter is a “pastiche of rock band Aerosmith,” WK which also “revamps [Iggy Pop’s] ‘Lust for Life.’” AMG

“Someday” / “Take It or Leave It”

Meanwhile, “Someday “is infused with rockabilly elements and interlocking guitar lines, …a recurrent element of Is This It.” WK That song and “Take It or Leave It capture the Strokes at their most sneeringly exuberant,” AMG both managing to “overcome the muddy, low-budget production.” EW The latter “is the only song in which Hammond used the bridge pickup of his Fender Stratocaster guitar.” WK


Notes: Despite being New York-based, the Strokes’ Is This It was released in the U.K. a month earlier than in the U.S. In between, New York’s World Trade Center towers were destroyed by terrorists and the less than flattering New York City Cops was pulled in favor of B-side When It Started. In addition, the initial cover photograph was deemed too sexualy explicit for the U.S. market and replaced with a “microscopic close-up of particle collisions.” WK

Resources and Related Links:


First posted 3/29/2008; last updated 4/28/2022.

Tuesday, February 8, 1977

Television released Marquee Moon

Marquee Moon

Television


Released: February 8, 1977


Peak: -- US, 28 UK, -- CN, -- AU


Sales (in millions): -- US, -- UK, -- world (includes US and UK)


Genre: punk rock


Tracks:

(Click for codes to charts.)
  1. See No Evil [3:56]
  2. Venus [3:48]
  3. Friction [4:43]
  4. Marquee Moon [9:58] (4/1/77, 30 UK)
  5. Elevation [5:08]
  6. Guiding Light [5:36] (Tom Verlaine/Richard Lloyd)
  7. Prove It [5:04] (7/22/77, 25 UK)
  8. Torn Curtain [7:00]

All songs written by Tom Verlaine unless noted otherwise.


Total Running Time: 45:54


The Players:

  • Tom Verlaine (vocals, guitar, keyboards)
  • Richard Lloyd (guitar)
  • Fred Smith (bass)
  • Billy Ficca (drums)

Rating:

4.445 out of 5.00 (average of 33 ratings)


Quotable: “A trailblazing album — it's impossible to imagine post-punk soundscapes without it.” – Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AllMusic.com


Awards:

(Click on award to learn more).

Setting the Scene

“The NYC post-punk scene in the late ‘70s was unmatched, with figureheads like Talking Heads, Blondie and, of course, Television, at its vanguard.” PM Robert Christgau of the Voice declared Television the “most interesting of New York’s underground rock bands.” BW-119 They trekked across what Rolling Stone’s Ken Tucker called “the same cluttered, hostile terrain as bands like the Velvet Underground and the New York Dolls.” OB Regarding the Velvets’ influence, Television “soaked up…John Cale’s conceptual clarity and Lou Reed’s guitar tone.” CM

They were one of the first bands to play CBGB’s in 1974, ahead of other club luminaries such as Blondie, the Ramones, Patti Smith, and the Talking Heads. While “it’s impossible to imagine post-punk soundscapes without it,” AM Television “never officially considered themselves a part of punk.” OB “Television were in almost every sense an exemplary rock n’ roll band—the sound was raw and uncompromising yet melodious and in some ways sweet.” JSH “This owes more to Tom Verlaine’s not-exactly-smooth vocals than anything else; as an instrumental band, they were probably better than any other punk band (and a fair number of rock bands.” PK

“Their predecessors…had fused blues structures with avant-garde flourishes” AM and their “peers turned up the distortion, revved up the tempo, and stripped their songs down to tight three-chord anthems.” AZ They took “a much different approach to rock than its jokey counterparts,” RV the Ramones. “While Joey Ramone deconstructed rock, Television tried to set it free and inspired R.E.M., Sonic Youth and Pavement in the process.” RV

Television’s sound is built on “an incongruous, soaring amalgam of genres.” RS “They were the King Crimson to hard rock’s Led Zeppelin, Funkadelic to soul’s Otis Redding.” OB Television “distinguished themselves as the math nerds of punk,” OB gaining the attention of Brian Eno, who’d recently bolted from Roxy Music for a solo career. They recorded a demo with him, but weren’t satisfied with the sound. They ended up watching their peers land record deals, while Television didn’t release their first full-length LP until 1977.

Background

“Mercurial frontman” PF Tom Verlaine “took his surname from a renowned French poet.” OB He had “that rare combo of street-poet ala Dylan or Reed, and certified guitar genius.” JSH The latter was sparked by a “love of raw garage rock and challenging free jazz.” PF

He met bassist Richard Hell in New York in the early ‘70s. Hell “was the first to sport the ripped and safety-pinned clothing – soon copied by the Sex Pistols – that would become the punk uniform.” CS They formed the band Neon Boys with drummer Billy Ficca. They reformed as Television in late 1973 with second guitarist Richard Lloyd. He and Verlaine traded “long and winding solos like all the great mythic duos.” JSH They didn’t “bludgeon listeners” TM with their guitar interplay, but used the two guitars to, as Lloyd said, “play rhythm and melody back and forth.” TM “Verlaine would establish a rhythmic phrase, against which Lloyd would splatter defiant, often deliriously dissonant, melodies.” TM

Verlaine and company weren’t just part of the CBGB scene, but its founders. Verlaine was the one to convince Hilly Kristal, the bar’s owner, to let unsigned local bands play at CBGB’s. Television “launched the punk and new-wave scences in New York when they played their first gig at CBGB on March 31, 1974.” CS

Hell left the group in 1975. Verlaine reportedly thought Hell upstaged him with his frenzied stage presence and sometimes refused to play his songs. Hell was replaced by Fred Smith, previously with Blondie.

The Debut Album

Marquee Moon, Television’s debut album, “is a vivid distillation of the milieu that its bandmates inhabited.” PM “Though the band's rough and ragged beginnings made them a centerpiece of the mid-70s CBGB's New York punk scene, you wouldn’t know it from the album, which is every bit as tight and slick as any other classic rock album of the era.” PK Verlaine “demonstrated a particular affinity for mid-1960s psychedelic jam bands like Moby Grape and the Grateful Dead, but with a strong Velvet Underground influence.” CS

“You can hear its influence throughout the ages, from the noisy, howling dynamism of the Pixies to the hooky, synthy guitar tones of The Strokes.” PM It is comprised…of tense garage rockers that spiral into heady intellectual territory.” AM It is as “exhilarating in its ambitions as the Ramones’ debut was in its simplicity.” RS Television “completely strip away any sense of swing or groove” AM and smartly “avoid the cursory punk snarl” TM by employing “a radical rethinking of rock guitar.” TM

Verlaine supplied “an excellent set of songs that conveyed a fractured urban mythology unlike any of his contemporaries.” AM The lyrics were “fueled by puns and double-entendres, filled with riddles and word games, inside jokes.” BW-161 The songs “were thought-provoking, memorable, danceable” AZ and “sounded as if they might have come from a Mike Hammer pulp detective novel.” RS

“Smith’s warm basslines and Ficca’s stern playing” CM created the foundation for “Verlaine’s edgy, upper atmosphere vocals.” CM Peter Laughner said Verlaine’s “singing voice has this marvelous quality of slurring all dictions into what becomes distortions of actual lines.” BW-161 The rest of the group “flesh out Verlaine’s poetry into sweeping sonic epics” AM via “long, interweaving instrumental sections.” AM

It is “a record of ecstatic repetition and grave guitar solos offset by spectral characters and theatrical asides.” CM “There is simply not a bad song on the entire record.” AM

Production

The album was recorded over three weeks in November 1976 at A & R Studios, where legends such as John Coltrane, Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, and Velvet Underground had recorded. BW-156 It was produced by Andy Johns, who’d worked with Led Zeppelin, Mott the Hoople, and the Rolling Stones. Television wanted to work with him because he kept arrangements minimal and “the result would approximate their live sound.” BW-157

The band initially found themselves at odds with Johns. Lloyd said, “he was used to being with people who are also rock ‘n roll…You know: you’ve got a 2 o’clock start, and the engineer shows up at 4:30, and the guitarist shows up at 5 and the singer rolls in at midnight. But Television were not like that. We were punctual. And serious.” OB Meanwhile, Johns said, “My first impression was that they couldn’t play and couldn’t sing and the music was very bizarre.” BW-157

“Once they got on the same page, Johns and Television created a literal master’s class in the kind of crisp yet sharp production that enhanced the angularity of their rhythms without losing their sense of melody and pop appeal.” OB “There's an energy and edge that shines through the album's solid production.” PK

The Album’s Impact

This is one of those albums with sales “inversely proportional to the outsize influence it had on generations of disillusioned youth.” EW’12 It is “a trailblazing” AM “classic bit of punk rock,” AZ “one of the most beloved punk albums of all time.” PK It “paved the way for every ambitious rock record to follow in the next 40 years.” OB It is “a sinuous, entrancing and gorgeous debut” ZG and “a revolutionary album, but it’s a subtle, understated revolution.” AM

Clinton Heylin, author of Babylon’s Burning: From Punk to Garage, says this is one of American punk’s four “most enduring landmarks;” BW-9 the others being Patti Smith’s Horses, Pere Ubu’s The Modern Dance, and Richard Hell and the Voidoid’s Blank Generation. BW-9 New Musical Express’s Nick Kent called it “a 24-carat inspired work of pure genius, a record finely in tune and sublimely arranged with a whole new slant on dynamics.” PF However, not everyone was a fan. Critic Lester Bangs said, they “reminded me so much of the Grateful Dead, just boring solos, y’know.” PF


The Songs

Here are thoughts on the individual songs on the album.

“See No Evil”

The “raw rip” JSH of See No Evil makes for “one of the great starts to a rock ‘n’ roll album ever.” BW-163 “Like most Television songs this one starts with an extended introduction, a sense of anticipation, hesitation, building tension.” BW-164 “The music is repetitive, churning, the sounds of machinery.” BW-164 “The territory we’re in is nervous, angular.” BW-165 The song is about “a desire to exit, a fantasy of escaping to the hills.” BW-165

“Venus”

“If the opening track suggested urban out-of-doors, on ‘Venus’ the landscape is explicity defined as New York’s.” BW-169 The song dates back to even before the Neon Boys. Its “opening structure lends to storytelling, stage-setting: here the streets are bright, the nocturnal atmosphere established by contrast, as if you need to escape the more brightly lit parts of town and find some darker quarter downtown in which to take solace.” BW-170 Solace, however, is elusive considering the song’s central refrain: “I fell into the arms of Venus de Milo,” a reference to the famous statue which has no arms at all. BW-174

“Friction”

As its title would suggest, the third song offers “counterpoint and conflict.” BW-174 “Like the music’s evocation of train crossings and warning bells, the lyrics tell us we’re in dangerous territory.” BW-176 In one example of wordplay, Verlaine sings “you complain of my DICK…shun.,” illustrating that “words (diction) are no substitute for nagging sexual desires unevenly fulfilled.” BW-176

“Marquee Moon”

The “intoxicating, effortlessly epic title trackCM has been “routinely praised…as one of the great guitar songs of all time.” BW-177 “For precedents, we’d have to go back to the expansive West Coast psychedelia of the Paul Butterfield Band’s “East-West” or even the Grateful Dead’s twin epics ‘Dark Star’ and “The Other One.’” PF

“Ffeaturing an exploratory Verlaine guitar solo,” PF “is a 10-minute guitar fantasia, enveloping tricky hooks and cacophony with a spare drum and bass groove.” RV “The song builds and abates, growing in intensityuntil a crescendo that feels final but instead returns to where it all began.” CM It is “miles away from the Ramones’ minimalist rock antics or Blondie’s ironic pop moves.” PF It is “the Grateful Dead filtered through a Velvet Underground/Stooges backdrop.” PK

“Elevation”

Critic Nick Kent called “the jazzed up” PK Elevation “beautiful, proudly contagious with a chorus that lodges itself in your subconscious like a bullet in the skull.” BW-183 It “has a sighing guitar refrain that informs the song’s melancholy.” CM

There’s a rumour that Verlaine substitutes the word “television” for the word “elevation” in the refrain, making for an interesting meditation on the line “elevation (Television) don’t go to my head.” BW-183

The song also has an interesting story regarding its recording. Lloyd said, “We wanted to rent a rotating speaker to get the sound…but the rental people wanted way too much. So Andy came up with an idea. He took a microphone, and while I did the guitar solo to ‘Elevation,’ he stood in front of me in the studio, swinging this microphone around his head like a lasso. He nearly took my fucking nose off. I was backing up while I was playing.” OB

“Guiding Light”

Guiding Light “is a tremulous ballad that finds Verlaine dedicating himself with quiet ardour.” CM It is a “quietly soulful tune that glimmers through the darkness like a distant lighthouse.” BW-186 Everything on the song – “the slower tempo, the delicate guitar work and drums, lights bells that chim in the background, the piano part dangling above the chorus – suggests and earnest attempt to escape the urban out-of-doors and retreat.” BW-186

“Prove it”

This is a “faithful fan favorite since the band first performed it in 1974.” BW-187 It is “one of the clearest examples of how intensely this band can focus together, put each part into a perfectly moving whole.” BW-187-8 The song’s “opening over a vaguely Latin rhythm…references the Brill Building’s golden era, the sound Leiber and Stoller brought to the Drifters and, later, the Shangri-La’s, or that Phil Spector created for the Crystals or the Ronettes.” BW-188 However, the song “can’t be reduced to Brill Building nostalgia or pastiche…we’re on much more tormented ground.” BW-189

“Torn Curtain”

This “is the one song fans of this album divide over.” BW-192 It “turns the ballad on its head in seven heartbreaking minutes,” RV playing “like a requiem for a tragedy.” CM “It drags. It’s melodramatic. It certainly could have been sacrificed to make room for other, more popular songs from Television’s live set.” BW-192 Nonetheless, “there’s something thematically appropriate about finishing the album with a funeral dirge.” BW-192

The title references “an apocalyptic miracle in the wake of Jesus’ crucifixion” in which, as Matthew 27:51 says, “At the moment the curtain of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom. The earth shook and the rocks split.” BW-192 However, it can also be viewed as a reference to live theater and the notion that a torn curtain would let the audience see behind the scenes. BW-193


Notes:

A 2003 reissue added alternate versions of “See No Evil,” “Friction,” and “Marquee Moon” as well as an untitled instrumental and the single “Little Johnny Jewel (Parts 1 & 2).”

Review Sources:


First posted 2/8/2012; last updated 9/3/2024.