Waiting for the Sirens Call

Editorial Reviews
Album Details
The Eigth Studio Album from the Morphed Joy Division is their First Full Length in Four Years and the First Since 2001’s "Get Ready". The Leadoff Single, "Krafty", Shows a Return to their Dance-electronic Roots and Sets the Tone for These Proceedings. Songs Like "i Told You So" and "Morning Night and Day" Show a Progression from the Guitar-edginess Rock of "Get Ready", Replacing it with Electro Elementals, While "Working Overtime" Recalls their Postpunk Roots. Peter Hook's Melodic Bass Lines Run Through the Whole of the Album. The Song "Jetstream" Includes a Cameo Appearance from Scissor Sister Ana Matronic. The Album was Produced by Tore Johansson (Franz Ferdinand, the Cardigans).

Waiting for the Sirens' Call (U.S. Bonus Track)
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Smashing
  • Greatest Album since Beatles White Album
  • SUMNER
  • The Comeback Continues...
  • Grows On You...
Waiting for the Sirens' Call (U.S. Bonus Track)
New Order
Manufacturer: Warner Bros / Wea
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
New WaveNew Wave | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
Alternative DanceAlternative Dance | Alternative Styles | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
BritainBritain | British Isles | Europe | International | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
Adult AlternativeAdult Alternative | Pop | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Dance Pop | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Playing the Angel
  2. Get Ready
  3. Technique
  4. Low-Life
  5. Brotherhood

ASIN: B0007WFYD4
Release Date: 2005-04-26

Tracks:

  1. Who's Joe?
  2. Hey Now What You Doing
  3. Waiting for the Sirens Call
  4. Krafty
  5. I Told You So
  6. Morning Night & Day
  7. Dracula's Castle
  8. Jetstream
  9. Guilt Is A Useless Emotion
  10. Turn
  11. Working Overtime
  12. Guilt Is A Useless Emotion - U.S. Bonus Track

Amazon.com

The Killers. Interpol. Franz Ferdinand. Without New Order's influence they could have all ended up making albums of country & western ballads. Since the demise of Joy Division in 1980, the British synth-pop quartet has been diligently changing the course of popular music, lobbing unlikely but inventive hits like "Blue Monday" and "True Faith" into the charts. Twenty-five years on, New Order remains shockingly vital. Its eighth proper album overflows with shimmering melodies, anchored by Peter Hook's spine-tingling bass lines and Bernard Sumner's thin but emotive voice in thrilling new songs like "Krafty" and "Dracula's Castle." -- Aidin Vaziri

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Smashing.......2007-02-08

I'd drifted away from New Order in the past decade or so. Even the inclusion of Billy Corgan wasn't enough to pique my interest, 'cause the music didn't seem to be as good as their old stuff. I finally got around to checking out this album a couple of months ago, and was blown away. It's a terrific collection of songs that on any other album would be highlights. Catchy, clever, compulsive, and classic - and that's just the compliments beginning with 'C'. Great stuff.

5 out of 5 stars Greatest Album since Beatles White Album.......2006-11-14

It is now November 2006 and I still can't take it out of my deck. I also have it in my MP3 player. I went to the Concert in May 2005 and believe the band keeps getting better and better. I await their next album. Buy this one though.

5 out of 5 stars SUMNER.......2006-11-03

what a great band. I have been a fan of this band since republic came out and now i have everything by them i am a fanatic when it comes to them. this is a great album with great catchy songs. great music from manchester england. this is classic music , not the crap you hear in america the top forty crap. great music from manchester, when i think of now order i always think of england. bernard sumner has one of the greatest voices ever and peter hook is a classic. my favorite songs on this album are KRAFTY, WAITING FOR THE SIRENS CALL , WHO"S JOE and so many others great songs. can't wait for the new album.

5 out of 5 stars The Comeback Continues..........2006-10-31

Great album - more synth-heavy and musically diverse than 2001's GET READY, but not as cohesive or moving. Possibly not the best choice to start with for new fans, tho. Try LOW-LIFE instead. Here's a quick breakdown:

Who's Joe (8/10): Excellent opener saved from mediocrity by spectacular bass riffs during the chorus.

Hey Now (7/10): Unfortunately, Hooky didn't save this bland rocker (oxymoron?) from relative mediocrity. Sounds more like Electronic (Barney's side project with former Smith's guitarist Johnny Marr) than NO. Not that Electronic's so bad...

Krafty (10/10): Possibly their greatest single ever (and this is really saying something!). Absolute New Order heaven. Reminds me of their criminally unknown track, Such A Good Thing.

Waiting For The Siren's Call (10/10): Another all-time classic - better than virtually anything since 93's Regret. One of Hook's most distinctive and addictive licks ever, and a masterful performance by the entire group. It's flabbergasting they're this good 25 years on!

I Told You So (8/10): An abrupt switch to pure techno, which would not have worked if the song wasn't so good. Like many NO tunes, this one's a grower. Dark, swaggering, sophisticated, & sexual.

Morning Night And Day (7/10): Here's where the album starts sagging. Nothing awful, but the next few don't even compare to tracks 3 and 4. Still, pretty good ear candy.

Dracula's Castle (7/10): Run of the mill. Too synth- heavy and melodically meandering. Should have been a b-side for Krafty.

Jetstream (8/10): Not bad - this one was a minor hit - but something about it leaves me cold. This dancy, druggy collaboration with Ana Matronic didn't really need to be a single.

Guilt Is A Useless Emotion (9/10): Great title, great song. Pure, stomping techno, the likes of which we haven't heard from NO since 89's TECHNIQUE. Unlike some of the previous numbers, this time the electronica really works for them. The first in a trilogy of whoppers that close out SIREN'S CALL.

Turn (9/10): Cited by many online fans as the best track, this one's a driving and emotional pop gem - elegiac, catchy, and more rock-oriented like the first four tracks.

Working Overtime (9/10): Adrenalized punk-pop, Green Day-style. It all comes together on this fantastically alive rocker that leaves you grinning as the disk stops. NO have a long history of closing their albums in grand style, and this is one of their best. Along the same lines as Rock The Shack, but distinctly better.

Overall grade: 9/10. Heed the call.

4 out of 5 stars Grows On You..........2006-10-28

I've had this album for quite some time now, and after initially being disappointed,the album has steadily grown on me. The songs are incredibly catchy and seem to linger...and somehow the album returns to the CD player.

**** out of 5.



Waiting for the Sirens' Call
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Worth the Wait for the Sirens' Call
  • Homecoming Day
  • THEIR FINEST HOUR
  • Krafty!
Waiting for the Sirens' Call
New Order
Manufacturer: Wea/London
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
New WaveNew Wave | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Dance Pop | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
BritainBritain | British Isles | Europe | International | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
Adult AlternativeAdult Alternative | Pop | Styles | Music
Alternative RockAlternative Rock | Imports | Stores | Music
Dance & DJDance & DJ | Imports | Stores | Music
RockRock | Imports | Stores | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Get Ready
  2. Fundamental
  3. Are You Listening

ASIN: B0007TF0T0
Release Date: 2005-04-05

Tracks:

  1. Hey Joe
  2. Hey Now What You Doing
  3. Waiting For The Sirens Call
  4. Krafty
  5. I Told You So
  6. Morning Night & Day
  7. DraculaS Castle
  8. Jetstream
  9. Guilt Is A Useless Emotion
  10. Turn
  11. Working Overtime

Album Description

The new New Order album was recorded in several British studios throughout 2004 and features a ''dancier'' angle as opposed to the guitar-heavy Get Ready. This is New Order's first record made without founding keyboardist Gillian Gilbert. Gilbert left the band amidst the 2001-02 world tour for Get Ready to care for her ill daughter and has been permanently replaced by Phil Cunningham. London Recordings. 2005.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Worth the Wait for the Sirens' Call.......2005-04-20

In my opinion, this is by far the best thing New Order has ever put out. It's so many lightyears ahead of Get Ready that it's hard for me to even think of it as the same band. Please forgive me if you liked Get Ready, but I couldn't stand it. To be honest, though, I've never been a huge New Order fan. I loved the big classics of course ("Blue Monday," "Bizarre Love Triangle," and "True Faith"), but I much preferred Sumner's work in Electronic. To me, this album almost sounds more like Electronic than New Order. But in any case, it's an amazing piece of work. Every track is killer, except for the last one, which is a piece of blah Britrock that just doesn't do anything for me. The majority of the album is upbeat and full of hooks, synths, and guitars. A few of the songs are even club-ready. Though first single "Krafty" and next single "Jetstream" are more than worthy to be singles, I seriously think ANY track (other than "Overtime") could be a single. They're that good. Therefore, it's very tough to pick favorites. But to throw a few out there, "Hey Now What You Doing," "Morning Night and Day," "Dracula's Castle," the title track (my absolute favorite - maybe my favorite song of the year), and of course "Krafty" might be in the lead. I'm so thrilled that there is finally an album that is making me love New Order as much as I've always WANTED to love them. This, along with the new Fischerspooner album, are making 2005 a momentous year for this synthpop/electro/new wave fan.

4 out of 5 stars Homecoming Day.......2005-04-10

Because New Order both created and perfected its own genre of dance-oriented rock, each new release is greeted with anticipation and trepidation. How can they top themselves? Will they disappoint us? They answers are simple: They can't. And, most likely you'll feel let down. But that anxiety lasts for half of the opening song ("Who's Joe?") on their eighth studio release, Waiting for the Sirens' Call, until Bernard Sumner's syncopated bar chords lock step with Peter Hook's ubiquitous bass runs and the effortless drumming of Stephen Morris. And from then on it's homecoming day. True, there's nothing new here. No dark groove breakthrough like "Temptation". No proto-techno like "Blue Monday". Yet here is the sound of a band doing what they do at the top of their game. Think of the Rolling Stones on Some Girls or Tattoo You, and you're halfway there. Waiting for the Sirens' Call is the sound of a band enjoying its own fantastic company. Let go of your anticipatory expectations, and chances are it'll thrill you, too.

5 out of 5 stars THEIR FINEST HOUR.......2005-03-29

Hands down to a band whose members are approaching middle age yet leave their contemporaries trailing in the dust. This is how a band SHOULD sound after 4 decades of songwriting. There is something here on this album for everyone, the perfect blend of melodic pop, rock and techno from start to finish. I can't say enough about how great this album is. Get it and feel like your 19 again.

4 out of 5 stars Krafty!.......2005-03-28

"You've gotta look at life the way it oughta be." Such is the simple lesson at the center of "Krafty," the leadoff single for New Order's first studio creation in 4 years. Through the band's eyes, it seems life oughta be a warm place with hooks that instantly engage the mind and possibly the dancing feet.

Steering away from 2001's guitar-heavy Get Ready, on Waiting For the Sirens Call New Order once again embrace a universe of instantly memorable pop hooks infused with an ever-present, but never oppressive, air of melancholy. It is music that is slow to sink in and possibly will even seem ephemeral at first listen, but when heard multiple times it is an album you will want to hear again and again. From the shiny pop-rock of "Morning Night and Day" to the Kraftwerkian electronics of "Krafty," Waiting For the Sirens Call is a pop masterpiece that ranks with the band's best work.

When New Order first emerged from the ashes of Joy Division, Bernard Sumner's tentative vocals were frequently buried deep in the band's densely electronic mix. In the intervening two decades Sumner's confidence as a vocalist has grown consistently. On Waiting For the Sirens Call his voice is central to every song and shines as a gorgeous instrument that effortlessly reflects the varying emotional colors encountered in daily interactions with people from the most intimate of relationships to a more generalized sense of the human race.

Waiting For the Sirens Call is infused with perhaps the warmest, most organic, sound atmosphere yet heard on a New Order album. The cautionary "Hey Now What You Doing" and the jangly "Turn" revel in equal echoes of mid-80's R.E.M. and mid-70's California rock. The dreamy "Who's Joe" goes down smoothly as well. However, New Order haven't completely abandoned their heavily electronic roots. "I Told You So" is built on an engaging techno-reggae beat and leadoff single "Krafty" is such a perfect recreation of the band's classic electronic feel that you may check the calendar to ensure it's not actually 1983.

In the past, New Order have influenced if not wholly shifted the direction of pop and dance music with their own releases. Their classic "Blue Monday" is often cited as a groundbreaking landmark. With its warm, comforting, organic feel, Waiting For the Sirens Call is unlikely to break new ground, but once heard a few times it will linger long on personal playlists. Jangly guitars, crystalline synths and the mellow longing of Bernard Sumner's voice will stir emotion. Like the best in pop music, it first settles into a comfortable place in the head then ultimately comes to rest in the heart
Waiting for the Sirens' Call
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Great song
  • Perfect!
Waiting for the Sirens' Call
New Order
Manufacturer: Wea/London
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
Alternative DanceAlternative Dance | Alternative Styles | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Dance Pop | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
BritainBritain | British Isles | Europe | International | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Pop RockPop Rock | CD Singles | Pop | Styles | Music
Adult AlternativeAdult Alternative | Pop | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Krafty
  2. Jetstream
  3. Jetstream/Krafty
  4. New Order - A Collection
  5. Krafty, Pt. 2

ASIN: B000BH4Y2C
Release Date: 2005-10-04

Tracks:

  1. Who's Joe?
  2. Hey Now What You Doing
  3. Waiting for the Sirens' Call
  4. Krafty
  5. I Told You So
  6. Morning Night and Day
  7. Dracula's Castle
  8. Jetstream - Ana Matronic, New Order
  9. Guilt Is a Useless Emotion
  10. Turn
  11. Working Overtime
  12. Guilt Is a Useless Emotion [Mac Quayle Vocal Mix][*]

Album Description

Limited edition special 2 track cdsingle. Features Richey Costey mix and a Jacknife Lee remix

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great song.......2005-11-15

I actually bought this just to complete my New Order collection but now I'm surprised how this has become one of my favorites. The Jacknife Lee mix in particular is a great complement to the Glimmers 12" mix of Krafty.

5 out of 5 stars Perfect!.......2005-10-28

I was hoping to get a good remix of track 2 ... I was lucky ;-). What surprised me more, was the fact that the single version (as we know it from Singles & A Collection (DVD)) here is just as long as the album version, but it has all the good things of it AND more... I actually heard a short voice singing after 2:20min. and I think that and more small changes makes this version richer/fuller than the album version (which I already loved). Hooky's bass takes a small step backwards and the synths are more in the front compared to the original album version and Barney sings clearer here. Rich Costey did a tremendous job... a must buy for every serious New Order fan and for me, the BEST single of 2005. Period.
Waiting for the Sirens' Call
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Waiting for the Sirens' Call
    New Order
    Manufacturer: Wea
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
    New WaveNew Wave | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
    BritainBritain | British Isles | Europe | International | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Dance Pop | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
    Adult AlternativeAdult Alternative | Pop | Styles | Music
    Alternative RockAlternative Rock | Imports | Stores | Music
    Dance & DJDance & DJ | Imports | Stores | Music
    ASIN: B0007TURBQ
    Release Date: 2005-04-04

    Tracks:

    1. Who's Joe?
    2. Hey Now What You Doing
    3. Waiting For The Sirens Call
    4. Krafty
    5. I Told You So
    6. Morning Night & Day
    7. Dracula's Castle
    8. Jetstream
    9. Guilt Is A Useless Emotion
    10. Turn
    11. Working Overtime

    Album Details

    The Eigth Studio Album from the Morphed Joy Division is their First Full Length in Four Years and the First Since 2001's "Get Ready". The Leadoff Single, "Krafty", Shows a Return to their Dance-electronic Roots and Sets the Tone for These Proceedings. Songs Like "i Told You So" and "Morning Night and Day" Show a Progression from the Guitar-edginess Rock of "Get Ready", Replacing it with Electro Elementals, While "Working Overtime" Recalls their Postpunk Roots. Peter Hook's Melodic Bass Lines Run Through the Whole of the Album. The Song "Jetstream" Includes a Cameo Appearance from Scissor Sister Ana Matronic. The Album was Produced by Tore Johansson (Franz Ferdinand, the Cardigans).
    Waiting for the Sirens' Call
    Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    • NOT BAD
    • Best Work In Years
    • excellent evolution of a great band
    • Why do I like these guys anyway?
    Waiting for the Sirens' Call
    New Order
    Manufacturer: Wea International
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
    New WaveNew Wave | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
    BritainBritain | British Isles | Europe | International | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Dance Pop | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
    Adult AlternativeAdult Alternative | Pop | Styles | Music
    Alternative RockAlternative Rock | Imports | Stores | Music
    Dance & DJDance & DJ | Imports | Stores | Music
    RockRock | Imports | Stores | Music
    ASIN: B0007RTFKW
    Release Date: 2005-04-05

    Tracks:

    1. Who's Joe
    2. Hey Now What You Doing
    3. Waiting For The Sirens Call
    4. Krafty
    5. I Told You So
    6. Morning Night & Day
    7. Dracula's Castle
    8. Jetstream
    9. Guilt Is A Useless Emotion
    10. Turn New Drum
    11. Working Overtime

    Album Details

    Produced by Tore Johansson (Franz Ferdinand, the Cardigans).

    Customer Reviews:

    4 out of 5 stars NOT BAD.......2006-03-25

    This would make a good workout tape to get the heart going. I agree with reviewer "BUZZ" that the lyrics are sometimes nonsensical and silly. The music is very interesting.
    I get the same feeling listening to this fresh stuff as I did when I heard REM for the first time live in Madison 20 years ago. It has a freshness much like Morrisey's latest.

    5 out of 5 stars Best Work In Years.......2005-12-11

    I will admit to being a hardcore New Order fan, so anyone reading this should go in knowing that -- there's not a lot I don't like about them, have just about everything they've ever done, CD singles, bootlegs, live, you name.

    Having said that, I have to admit I thought their last few albums have been a touch weak -- though I loved "Regret," the rest of the album was, well, uneven. Republic needed something, and the Soccer thing was okay, but not up to them. Crystal? Well, again, okay.

    Again, my favorite NO album is Technique, probably a contrarian view to the Blue Monday folks, or the Substance - post JD crowd. But it hangs together as an album quite well. Hence, after a lot of verbiage, I can say I was extremely pleased by "Waiting for the Sirens Call." It's not old New Order, it's just New Order and a whole lot of talent -- Barney's voice is as it is, not the range of Mariah Carey, thank God, but it has so much character I really like, maybe it's presumptuous of an American to say, but it sounds like Manchester working folks.

    The songs are catchy, though not quite pop, and maybe it's just me, but I love the lyrics -- "writing songs on your computer," evidently some others don't like that, I think it's self-consciously ironic and sardonic, even a bit self-deprecating.

    My only quibble is that the weakest song on the album comes first -- the whole "Joe" effort was more a B-side work and should have been left to a CD-Single, the album would have been better without it.

    I do hope this isn't their swan song, they don't really churn out the albums like some other bands, though they all have side-projects, which keep some folks going (Love'em all actually).

    One last thought -- Hook's innovative bass sometimes is a little strong in the mix, but it really has held up over time, I'm surprised he hasn't been copied more, and of course the NO synth, though maybe influenced heavily by Kraftwerk, was really a new thing back then and they probably helped create everything from Electronica to Drums and Bass to Techno and Technometal.

    Not a bad decades work for a band.

    5 out of 5 stars excellent evolution of a great band.......2005-11-07

    I disagree with the previous review and I really have grown to like WFTSC. Actually, I think the lyrics are very good on this CD. I listened to NO 20 years ago, and I appreciate how the band has evolved and grown up (along with myself). We're all 20 years older since then and I give NO great credit for not trying to just re-hash an earlier era like so many bands.

    Perfect Kiss and Confusion were fantastic songs in their day - and still timelessly hold their own. But the Summer of Love was 20 years ago. Ian Curtis died 25 years ago. And 1963 was...

    Get this CD if you're a NO fan. It's a solid work in my opinion with no "filler".

    4 out of 5 stars Why do I like these guys anyway?.......2005-05-07

    Okay let's be honest: While instrumentally these guys are talented and their music is fun, Bernard Sumner's singing is barely passable and his lyrics are often embarassing ("You have the brightest future/writing songs on your computer...." I mean, give me a BREAK). And yet, I give the CD four stars. Hmmmm......well, did I mention that instrumentally they are talented and their music is fun? Bottom line: if you have enjoyed the last couple of releases from NO, you will enjoy this as well. But there is nothing new here, nothing that will change your life or inspire you to save the world. This is not a genius-level work of art. What it is: solid, fun rock that makes me happy as I crank it up and sing along as I drive home from work at the end of the day. So maybe it will change my life after all: perhaps it is an antidote against road rage. One word of warning: as with previous NO releases, if you are a fan of Joy Division (which I am, big time), do not buy this or any NO release based on their former affiliation with that band. Sumner is a decent musician, but the brutal truth is that neither his lyrics nor his voice hold a candle to Ian Curtis. Nope. New Order is a different and--let's be honest--lesser musical animal than JD was. So I give it four stars, and even that may be a stretch (if Amazon had half stars I would give it 3.5), but hey, being happy while singing on the way home from work is worth something, right?
    Waiting for the Sirens' Call
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Waiting for the Sirens' Call
      New Order
      Manufacturer: Wea/London
      ProductGroup: Music
      Binding: Audio CD

      GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
      BritainBritain | British Isles | Europe | International | Styles | Music
      GeneralGeneral | Jazz | Styles | Music
      GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
      Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
      Adult AlternativeAdult Alternative | Pop | Styles | Music
      RockRock | Imports | Stores | Music
      ASIN: B0007INYFS
      Release Date: 2005-04-11

      Tracks:

      1. Who's Joe?
      2. Hey Now What You Doing
      3. Waiting For The Sirens Call
      4. Krafty
      5. I Told You So
      6. Morning Night & Day
      7. Dracula's Castle
      8. Jetstream
      9. Guilt Is A Useless Emotion
      10. Turn
      11. Working Overtime
      12. Krafty (Japanese Version) (Bonus Track)
      13. Krafty (The Glimmers 12"Extended) (Bonus Track)
      14. Krafty (Phones Reality Remix) (Bonus Track)

      Album Description

      Japanese edition of their 2005 album includes three bonus tracks, 'Krafty' (Japanese Version - Exclusive to this pressing,) 'Krafty' (The Glimmers 12-inch Extended) and Krafty (Phones Reality Remix). The album was recorded in several British studios throughout 2004 and features a 'dancier' angle as opposed to the guitar-heavy 'Get Ready'. This is New Order's first record made without founding keyboardist Gillian Gilbert. . London Recording. 2005.

      Album Details

      The Eigth Studio Album from the Morphed Joy Division is their First Full Length in Four Years and the First Since 2001's "Get Ready". The Leadoff Single, "Krafty", Shows a Return to their Dance-electronic Roots and Sets the Tone for These Proceedings. Songs Like "i Told You So" and "Morning Night and Day" Show a Progression from the Guitar-edginess Rock of "Get Ready", Replacing it with Electro Elementals, While "Working Overtime" Recalls their Postpunk Roots. Peter Hook's Melodic Bass Lines Run Through the Whole of the Album. The Song "Jetstream" Includes a Cameo Appearance from Scissor Sister Ana Matronic. The Album was Produced by Tore Johansson (Franz Ferdinand, the Cardigans). This Special Edition Includes Three Bonus Mixes of "Krafty", Including an Exclusive Japanese Mix as Well as the Glimmers Mix and the Phones Reality Mix.

      Music:

      1. Walking To Paradise
      2. What Hits!?
      3. 7
      4. Abbey Road EP [CD-single] [EP]
      5. Acoustic
      6. Airwaves Vol I
      7. Aladdin Sane [Enhanced]
      8. All Mine [CD-single]
      9. All the Best [Original recording reissued]
      10. Alone with Everybody

      Music

      music

      Music

      Naughty But Nice [Enhanced] [Import]

      Piano [Original recording remastered]

      Petrouchka / Polovtsian Dances

      The Bad Side of Otis Ave.

      Eden in Ashes

      Suicidal Days [Explicit Lyrics]

      The Hit Singles Collection

      Schumann: Spanisches Liederspiel Op74; Spanische Liebeslieder Op138

      Randy California [Import]

      Prokofiev: The Complete Symphonies and Concertos [Box set]

      Soular Energy

      Sam Suffy [Import]

      Sus Exitos Con Acuna, Lago Y Amor [Import]

      Memory of Thomas Becket

      Jazz at the Blackhawk