Systems of Romance [Import]

Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Part of the 'New Wave Renaissance' series. Japanese reissue of 1978 album features 11 tracks including 1 bonus track, 'Cross Fade'. Island/Universal. 2004.

Systems of Romance, Music, Ultravox, Pop, Rock/Pop
Systems of Romance
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • A landmark recording
  • Stylish Alienation, Synthesized for Your Enjoyment
  • memories
  • The Birth of Eighties Music
Systems of Romance
Ultravox
Manufacturer: Ume Imports
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Ultravox!
  2. Ha!-Ha!-Ha!
  3. Vienna
  4. Quartet
  5. Rage in Eden

ASIN: B000EU1PWS
Release Date: 2006-08-29

Tracks:

  1. Slow Motion
  2. Can't Stay Long
  3. Someone Else's Clothes
  4. Blue Light
  5. Some Of Them
  6. Quiet Men
  7. Dislocation
  8. Maximum Acceleration
  9. When You Walk Through Me
  10. Just For A Moment
  11. Cross Fade
  12. Quiet Men

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A landmark recording.......2007-03-23

I was captivated by this album in the late 1970s. Some of the songs continue to impress me today. I think that this album represents the most consistent, coherent and succinct musical, emotional, intellectual and stylistic statement on recording of Ultravox under John Foxx. Midge Ure took the band in a quite different direction around two years later.

The things I like most about "Systems of Romance" are the imaginative and expressive lyrics for the songs and the endeavour to present the songs from different and unconventional (for the time) angles. For instance, the acoustic drums were recorded through fuzz boxes in places. The electric violin and guitars were subject to "treatments" through synthesizers, too. What we hear is a "Punk Rock" sound in transition or metamorphosis - "evolving", if you like.

Some have said that the songs on this album represent alienation and the use of synthesizers makes the music cold in some way. I strongly disagree. I feel that "Systems of Romance" presents us with some very personal and, indeed, beautiful poetry from John Foxx. The songs present us with feelings of yearning, desire, regret and, sometimes, wild flights of the imagination. The synthesizers and piano actually warm up the sound and make it much more "cushy", colourful and luxurious than the previous Ultravox albums. "Just for a moment" could be considered the "Genesis point" of the whole concept of "New Romantics", however, that does rather trivialise this beautiful and unconventional song.

The album, "Systems of Romance", ended John Foxx's work with Ultravox, but he continued the ideas, themes and styles of this album on his own solo album, "The Garden", several years later.

John Foxx performed and, perhaps, still performs, some of the songs from Systems of Romance in concert. I have live recordings of some of them and they do suggest how Ultravox may have sounded if John Foxx had stayed with the group. In retrospect, "Vienna" was good, "Rage In Eden" was inspired in places and every subsequent Ultravox album was less and less interesting. A pity, really.

5 out of 5 stars Stylish Alienation, Synthesized for Your Enjoyment.......2007-02-07

It was November of '78, punk was dead as proclaimed by Mr. Lydon, and Joy Division's fame in the US was still several years away. Entering the scene was Ultravox with this, their third album, which received airplay on a recently revived KROQ in Pasadena. As a college sophomore working late nights, I listened to many hours of Chuck Randall ("The Midnight Lobotomist") on KROQ. On one such occasion I happened to hear the track "Quiet Men" from this album, and I was so taken with the sparse sound of synthesizers and soaring guitars that I went out the next day and bought the LP. Listening to the album start to finish was a riveting experience. On this album, the raw rage of punk has been replaced by the cold alienation of synthesizers and detached vocals. Even now, nearly 30 years later, the music has a stark power that serves it well.
From the start of Side 1 (now moot with the CD) "Slow Motion" begins the experience with a detached, spacey chorus. "Someone Else's Clothes" is a paranoiac fantasy sung with borderline hysteria by John Foxx, the creative genius behind Systems of Romance (he left after this album and the subsequent Midge Ure-fronted albums never managed to achieve one tenth of the power of this post-punk masterpiece). It is on Side 2 (tracks 6-10) where this album really works its magic. "Quiet Men" is a hypnotic gem, "Dislocation" puts into words the cold disorientation of alienation, "Maximum Acceleration" is possibly the most "drugged out" song of the era (in the words of one of my friends), "When You Walk Through Me" is the blueprint that Gary Numan would follow a few years later to commercial success and "Just for a Moment" is a plaintive coda, slipping into regret and loss while bringing the album to a close.
The album is a seamless whole with very few weak moments and remains an underappreciated masterpiece from its time. John Foxx likewise is today virtually unknown despite making several quintessential New Wave albums. Along with "Unknown Pleasures" this album brilliantely describes the bleak landscape of alienation in late '70s Great Britain and is a must purchase for anyone who is listening to Interpol, Franz Ferdinand or The Editors today.

4 out of 5 stars memories.......2007-01-05

Simply a classic. Had to get it on CD as a necessity to a collection. This was the type of synth rock we used to wish was on MTV. "Dislocation" and "Just For A Moment" are two of the best songs ever written and recorded. If you are an old Tubeway Army fan like me you will love this CD.

5 out of 5 stars The Birth of Eighties Music.......2006-09-06

On this seminal 1978 record, Ultravox and producer Conny Plank ingeniously cut soaring guitar lines across electronic currents, creating a detached, stylish, expansive sound that just about everyone else would mimic until Nirvana released "Nevermind." "Systems of Romance" is basically the Rosetta Stone of new wave, putting everything Bowie tried to achieve with the Eno trilogy and the subsequent contributions of groups like Wire, Joy Division, and Tubeway Army into perspective. Its songs are strong and stunning enough, both lyrically and musically, to convey originality and wonder even today.
Systems of Romance
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • The ultimate art rock band
  • Lost Classic
  • Best Synth Album of the 70's
  • A forgotten masterpiece
  • Wistful and Alienated; An Overlooked Masterpiece
Systems of Romance
Ultravox
Manufacturer: Umvd Import
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
Hardcore & PunkHardcore & Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music | Vinyl Records | American Punk | British Punk | Emo | Garage Punk | Hardcore | Post Hardcore | Proto Punk | Punk | Punk Revival | Punk-Pop | Riot Grrl | Ska Punk | Straight Edge
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Similar Items:
  1. HA! HA! HA!
  2. Vienna
  3. Metamatic
  4. Rage in Eden
  5. Quartet

ASIN: B000025WXM
Release Date: 2004-08-09

Tracks:

  1. Slow Motion
  2. Can't Stay Long
  3. Someone Else's Clothes
  4. Blue Light
  5. Some Of Them
  6. Quiet Men
  7. Dislocation
  8. Maximum Acceleration
  9. When You Walk Through Me
  10. Just For A Moment

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The ultimate art rock band.......2007-02-02

How incredibly great to hear this album again after all these years. And on a decent stereo this time around! The music sounds incredible, this is the mother lode -- this album is fantastic, perfect, powerful, creative, beautifully produced and makes you dance around the room AND think. Maximum acceleration...

Ultravox ought to be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. And by that I mean the ONLY version of Ultravox worth listening to, that being the John Foxx era. Incredible music. Literally perfect. You have a heard a thousand excretable imitations of this music. This is the real thing, the source of the Nile, a piece of the True Cross.

Taut, focused, experimental. It just doesn't get better than this. Truly original and creative. Early Roxy Music and the all-too-brief John Foxx era of Ultravox bookend the 70s. Undeservedly unknown. You must hear this.

5 out of 5 stars Lost Classic.......2006-01-18

This album was so different from everything Ultravox did I am guessing people just ignored it. Too bad, it is brilliant. The songs are full of energy and enveloped by an atmosphere that is magical. A masterpiece from beginning to end.

5 out of 5 stars Best Synth Album of the 70's.......2005-09-08

This is my favorite John Foxx era Ultravox Album. I played this repeatedly for over a year back in 78/79'. Back then i was getting into those bands who were trying out the new synth sounds like 'Human League' & 'Devo' & who along with 'Ultravox' were among a select few bands taking punk into a whole new direction & a whole new feel without being New Wave & overly radio friendly. That would be left to Gary Numan i suppose. Long droning synth lines might sound passe & quaint nowadays with Trance/IDM using complex programming to give intricate soundscapes but sometimes less is more & in the hands of those who know what they're doing it can really bring out a powerful atmosphere in the music, just take 'Slow Motion's' opening drone which lifts to a Roxy Music like Chorus. John Foxx's lyrics are alway's interesting and imaginative & the whole album seems very introspective and perhaps even depressing to me. At least it would be if you go purely on the lyrics alone. But the music saves the songs from being too maudlin & is beautifully executed. For the most part the album is upbeat, save for 'Just for a Moment' & 'Dislocation'. Simple synth lines, quick sharp guitar licks (check out 'Blue Light') & Mr Foxx's distinctive voice. Everything on this record sounds crisp and sharp. Great car music for my money on those long trips. Remember that this was released in 1978 and what else back then was sounding anything like this rock/synth mix back then, not a whole lot. It's definitely up there in my top 10 favorite albums. Give it a listen why don't you and it may become one of yours too.

5 out of 5 stars A forgotten masterpiece.......2004-01-23

Sometimes one stumbles across a 'forgotten' album by accident, listens to it, and wonders why it didn't get the huge ground breaking success it truly deserved. 'Systems of Romance' is one such album.

In my quest for having a complete collection of Ultravox albums I also bought (when I could find them) back catalogue recordings on vinyl of their previous incarnation with John Foxx. That 'Systems of Romance' was the last album I found was a rather cruel twist of fate.

Ultravox mk1 were very much 'arty' and experimental, leaning more to bands like early Roxy Music, David Bowie and to a lesser extent The Velvet Underground. The first album - 'Ultravox!' was pure 'art rock' weirdness, whereas their second 'Ha! Ha! Ha!' succumbed more to the influence of the then current Punk/New Wave movement.

With 'Systems of Romance', their third and final album with John Foxx, they seemed to say to hell with everything and all that was around at the time. Locking themselves away in Germany with some primitive synths, electronic musical equipment, guitars, bass, drums and the guidance of the late lamented German producer Conny Plank they came up with a master piece.

The year was 1978. Punk was still spewing bile, Disco was big and only bands like Kraftwerk were allowed to make electronic music. Then along came this album....

From the opening strains of 'Slow Motion', Systems of Romance proves its significance. Fat synth lines cavort with drums, guitars and the 'extremely English' vocals of John Foxx. It sounded totally unique, and only when Gary Numan (a fan of this album) came along a year later with 'Are Friends Electric?' and 'Cars' did this electro crossover musical style become accepted.

Every track on this album is worthy of a listen. `Quiet men' and `Dislocation' are pure electronica, whereas `Some of Them' is pure New Wave. Others fall somewhere between these two. The mix here is dancey, uplifting, surreal and at times very dark. That Ultravox can move so easily between different musical styles and instruments yet still retain their signature sound proves what a unique band they were.

The stand out tracks amongst a collection that is already superb can be picked simply because of the influence they had on the forthcoming New Romantic movement.

Slow Motion:

Rich with heavy, fat synths, neurotic guitars and a disjointed drum pattern. Foxx's vocals fly high above this to make a compelling, weird, yet strangely catchy song.

I Can't Stay Long:

Driving, rhythmic, lush synths and mournful guitar. A strangely moving song with some brilliant vocals and lyrics. Also quite surreal in places: `I want to glide the long green light of a July afternoon, sliding down a vague conversation'. Lyrically beautiful.

Quiet Men:

Kraftwerk like, also similar to pre `Dare' Human League. Strangely danceable, catchy and infectious. Must have influenced early Depeche Mode, Soft Cell and OMD.

Dislocation:

Bowie like vocals, eerie electro music, thunderous synth. Not the sort of song to listen to in the dark........

When You Walk Through Me:

Great Warren Cann drum pattern, Robin Simon's guitar also shining brightly. Strange rhythm, great vocals and unsettling lyrics.

Just For A Moment:

Haunting, eerie, creepy, downright disturbing electro track with beautiful short piano piece in the middle. Foxx's vocals have been `treated' to make it sound even weirder. The sort of song that leaves you with a shiver down your spine.

John Foxx has a fantastic voice that is both emotional and powerful, as well as embodying `English eccentricity'. His lyrics are artistic, at times moving, at others surreal; all the while painting a lush landscape of imagery that is both light and dark. A line from `I can't stay long' sums up his lyrics perfectly - `Everywhere seems to be, just a flicker, from a silent screen'.

Robin Simon's guitar style is unusual, moving and powerful without ever resorting to standard rock clichés. His playing on this album is revelatory, eccentric, pure genius. He later went solo, and also played in Howard Devoto's Magazine. He should have gone on to be a guitar great.

Billy Curry brought in keyboard skills, violin, viola, and classical music training. He fused `pop' with his classical style and made it work, such as interjecting the short, beautiful piano piece into the disturbing `Just for a moment'. On other songs he added lush synthesized strings, or fat, rumbling, quirky analogue synth sounds.

Chris Cross' bass playing is simplistic, yet rhythmical and at times unusual. It is also worth noting that the bass synthesizer lines were played by him. He creates a backbone to which the band can attach themselves to.

Warren Cann is like Chris in that his drum lines are simple yet unusual. Note as well in the fade out of `When you walk through me' he used the same drum pattern again in the fade out to `Reap the Wild Wind' a few years later! He also deserves recognition for the electronic drums and rhythms, using primitive programming and ingenuity. The `drums' on `Dislocation' are in actual fact a synthesizer being looped onto tape!

Overall this album is quite simply ahead of it's time. Had it been released in 1981 maybe it would have gone huge, but sadly it was just too advanced for 1978's listening ears. Comparisons with Midge Ure era Ultravox are unfair, though in all respects Systems of Romance set the blueprint that Ultravox mk2 would use to have greater success.

The quality of recording and mixing is excellent as well as unique, as can be expected with Conny Plank producing. Sadly it sounds as if Island simply dumped it onto CD without any re-mastering. One wonders how much better it could be with some modern technology bringing out the best of an already brilliant album.

Whatever, this is a must have for anyone interested in the early pioneers of electronic fusion. To listen to it one can hardly believe this was released in 1978, and the creativity, songwriting and musicianship shine through. A true gem.

5 out of 5 stars Wistful and Alienated; An Overlooked Masterpiece.......2003-10-10

Quite simply, this it the finest album that Ultravox produced.
Recorded in 1979, it is best understood in the context of its contemporaries, and it owes more to Eno, < > era Bowie and Cluster than it does to the overwrought pomposity Ultravox produced once Midge Ure joined. John Foxx, the original lead singer, has a voice lacking Ure's power, but it is far more expressive and is the perfect timber for Foxx' laments about the Alienation of Post-war European urban life. Foxx has the ability to occupy a moment, especially in "Dislocation" with the chant echoing the rhythmic motions of of a swimmer and recalling the detatched quality of being cocooned in water while swimming.
Far more dependant upon synths than the punkier and more abrasive "Ha-Ha-Ha", it has a distant coolness and ethereal sense of longing which has after 24 years, the quality of still sounding new.

"Systems" lacks the baroque Poppieness of "Vienna" and is a far more introspective and less melodic. Though the melodies, including the sweeping Synth in Slow Motion and the ostinato in "Quiet Men" are eminently hummable and infectious.

I first heard this record while living alone in New York in 1979, having just been dumped by my girlfriend and spent the Summer working nights. It was the the perfect soundtrack for wallowing-for beneathe the angst of "Dislocation" with it's pounding pipe rhythm was the glimmer of hope of "Just for a Moment".

If you like Bowie's Low and Heroes, or Bill Nelson's more cerebreral work you will love this album. Fans of Vienna may see it as a crucial part of the path to Ultravox' later success. Fans of mindless and cheery Synth Pop will find it too austere.
For me, its the perfect expression of longing and wistfulness.
Its been on my top 10 list for more than 20 years.
Systems of Romance
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Systems of Romance
    Ultravox
    Manufacturer: Universal
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    Hardcore & PunkHardcore & Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music | Vinyl Records | American Punk | British Punk | Emo | Garage Punk | Hardcore | Post Hardcore | Proto Punk | Punk | Punk Revival | Punk-Pop | Riot Grrl | Ska Punk | Straight Edge
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    ASIN: B000FDF28M
    Release Date: 2006-08-28

    Tracks:

    1. Slow Motion
    2. I Can't Stay Long
    3. Someone Else's Clothes
    4. Blue Light
    5. Some of Them
    6. Quiet Men
    7. Dislocation
    8. Maximum Acceleration
    9. When You Walk Through Me
    10. Just for a Moment
    11. Cross Fade [*]
    12. Quiet Men [Full Version][*]

    Album Description

    Exclusive Japanese limited edition digitally remastered reissue of their 1978 album, packaged in a miniature LP sleeve. Features two bonus tracks: Cross Fade and Quiet Man (Full Version). This was the final album by the original line-up before Midge Ure took over as vocalist and steered the band to world-wide chart success. Island. 2006.

    Album Details

    Japanese Digitally Remastered Limited Edition Issue of the 1978 Album Classic of the Group's Third Album for Island Records in a Deluxe, Miniaturized LP Sleeve Replica of the Original Vinyl Album Artwork. The Original Set (Produced by Conny Plank) Has Been Augmented with the Addition of Two Bonus Tracks and the 16 Page Booklet Includes Sleeventoes and Full Lyrics. Plank was a Most Appropriate Choice to Helm this Outing with Four Kraftwerk and Numerous Krautrock Albums as Well as Work with David Bowie and Brian Eno to his Credit. Highlights Include "Slow Motion", "Quiet Men", "Dislocation" and "Just for a Moment". The Bonus Tracks Added to this Edition Include the NON-LP Track "Cross Fade" and the Full Version of "Quiet Men" that Appeared on a Rare 12" Single.
    Systems of Romance
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • WOW! No-one has reviewed this yet!
    Systems of Romance
    Ultravox
    Manufacturer: Universal
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
    Hardcore & PunkHardcore & Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music | Vinyl Records | American Punk | British Punk | Emo | Garage Punk | Hardcore | Post Hardcore | Proto Punk | Punk | Punk Revival | Punk-Pop | Riot Grrl | Ska Punk | Straight Edge
    New WaveNew Wave | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
    Post-PunkPost-Punk | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Pop | Styles | Music
    Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
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    Dance PopDance Pop | Compilations | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
    Alternative RockAlternative Rock | Imports | Stores | Music
    RockRock | Imports | Stores | Music
    ASIN: B0001FACCU
    Release Date: 2004-03-24

    Tracks:

    1. Slow Motion
    2. Cant Stay Long
    3. Someone Elses Clothes
    4. Blue Light
    5. Some Of Them
    6. Quiet Men
    7. Dislocation
    8. Maximum Acceleration
    9. Whn You Walk Through Me
    10. Just For A Moment
    11. Cross Fade (Bonus Track)

    Album Description

    Part of the 'New Wave Renaissance' series. Japanese reissue of 1978 album features 11 tracks including 1 bonus track, 'Cross Fade'. Island/Universal. 2004.

    Album Details

    Japanese Release featuring a Bonus Track

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars WOW! No-one has reviewed this yet!.......2005-07-16

    This album is without doubt my favourite of the punk-new wave era. This was their 3rd album, the last with John FOXX aqnd first with producer Konny Plank. It is a fine progression from the raw energy that pervaded much of Ha!Ha!Ha! Robin Simon's guitar is superb, providing drive and energy where required but equally able to fill in the spaces with shimmering menace on some of the slower pieces. It is very hard to pick stand-out tracks but I would have to say that Slow Motion and Maximum Acceleration are my favourites. If you are a fan of either Midge Ure era Ultravox or John FOXX's later work you will find this to be the perfect fusion of the two.
    Systems of Romance
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Systems of Romance
      Ultravox
      Manufacturer: Musicrama, Inc
      ProductGroup: Music
      Binding: Audio CD
      ASIN: B00000DYFH
      Release Date: 1994-10-31
      Systems of Romance
      Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
      • A Forgotten Masterpiece
      • Best of Ultravox with a !
      • This is the record Gary Numan would have KILLED to make
      • One I'm taking to my desert island.
      • The Crest of The New Wave
      Systems of Romance
      Ultravox
      ProductGroup: Music
      Binding: Audio CD

      GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
      New WaveNew Wave | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
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      Pop RockPop Rock | Pop | Styles | Music
      GeneralGeneral | Soundtracks | Styles | Music
      ASIN: B00005674S

      Customer Reviews:

      5 out of 5 stars A Forgotten Masterpiece.......2004-01-25

      Sometimes one stumbles across a 'forgotten' album by accident, listens to it, and wonders why it didn't get the huge ground breaking success it truly deserved. 'Systems of Romance' is one such album.

      In my quest for having a complete collection of Ultravox albums I also bought (when I could find them) back catalogue recordings on vinyl of their previous incarnation with John Foxx. That 'Systems of Romance' was the last album I found was a rather cruel twist of fate.

      Ultravox mk1 were very much 'arty' and experimental, leaning more to bands like early Roxy Music, David Bowie and to a lesser extent The Velvet Underground. The first album - 'Ultravox!' was pure 'art rock' weirdness, whereas their second 'Ha! Ha! Ha!' succumbed more to the influence of the then current Punk/New Wave movement.

      With 'Systems of Romance', their third and final album with John Foxx, they seemed to say to hell with everything and all that was around at the time. Locking themselves away in Germany with some primitive synths, electronic musical equipment, guitars, bass, drums and the guidance of the late lamented German producer Conny Plank they came up with a master piece.

      The year was 1978. Punk was still spewing bile, Disco was big and only bands like Kraftwerk were allowed to make electronic music. Then along came this album....

      From the opening strains of 'Slow Motion', Systems of Romance proves its significance. Fat synth lines cavort with drums, guitars and the 'extremely English' vocals of John Foxx. It sounded totally unique, and only when Gary Numan (a fan of this album) came along a year later with 'Are Friends Electric?' and 'Cars' did this electro crossover musical style become accepted.

      Every track on this album is worthy of a listen. 'Quiet men' and 'Dislocation' are pure electronica, whereas 'Some of Them' is pure New Wave. Others fall somewhere between these two. The mix here is dancey, uplifting, surreal and at times very dark. That Ultravox can move so easily between different musical styles and instruments yet still retain their signature sound proves what a unique band they were.

      The stand out tracks amongst a collection that is already superb can be picked simply because of the influence they had on the forthcoming New Romantic movement.

      Slow Motion:

      Rich with heavy, fat synths, neurotic guitars and a disjointed drum pattern. Foxx's vocals fly high above this to make a compelling, weird, yet strangely catchy song.

      I Can't Stay Long:

      Driving, rhythmic, lush synths and mournful guitar. A strangely moving song with some brilliant vocals and lyrics. Also quite surreal in places: 'I want to glide the long green light of a July afternoon, sliding down a vague conversation'. Lyrically beautiful.

      Quiet Men:

      Kraftwerk like, also similar to pre 'Dare' Human League. Strangely danceable, catchy and infectious. Must have influenced early Depeche Mode, Soft Cell and OMD.

      Dislocation:

      Bowie like vocals, eerie electro music, thunderous synth. Not the sort of song to listen to in the dark........

      When You Walk Through Me:

      Great Warren Cann drum pattern, Robin Simon's guitar also shining brightly. Strange rhythm, great vocals and unsettling lyrics.

      Just For A Moment:

      Haunting, eerie, creepy, downright disturbing electro track with beautiful short piano piece in the middle. Foxx's vocals have been 'treated' to make it sound even weirder. The sort of song that leaves you with a shiver down your spine.

      John Foxx has a fantastic voice that is both emotional and powerful, as well as embodying 'English eccentricity'. His lyrics are artistic, at times moving, at others surreal; all the while painting a lush landscape of imagery that is both light and dark. A line from 'I can't stay long' sums up his lyrics perfectly - 'Everywhere seems to be, just a flicker, from a silent screen'.

      Robin Simon's guitar style is unusual, moving and powerful without ever resorting to standard rock clichés. His playing on this album is revelatory, eccentric, pure genius. He later went solo, and also played in Howard Devoto's Magazine. He should have gone on to be a guitar great.

      Billy Curry brought in keyboard skills, violin, viola, and classical music training. He fused 'pop' with his classical style and made it work, such as interjecting the short, beautiful piano piece into the disturbing 'Just for a moment'. On other songs he added lush synthesized strings, or fat, rumbling, quirky analogue synth sounds.

      Chris Cross' bass playing is simplistic, yet rhythmical and at times unusual. It is also worth noting that the bass synthesizer lines were played by him. He creates a backbone to which the band can attach themselves to.

      Warren Cann is like Chris in that his drum lines are simple yet unusual. Note as well in the fade out of 'When you walk through me' he used the same drum pattern again in the fade out to 'Reap the Wild Wind' a few years later! He also deserves recognition for the electronic drums and rhythms, using primitive programming and ingenuity. The 'drums' on 'Dislocation' are in actual fact a synthesizer being looped onto tape!

      Overall this album is quite simply ahead of it's time. Had it been released in 1981 maybe it would have gone huge, but sadly it was just too advanced for 1978's listening ears. Comparisons with Midge Ure era Ultravox are unfair, though in all respects Systems of Romance set the blueprint that Ultravox mk2 would use to have greater success.

      The quality of recording and mixing is excellent as well as unique, as can be expected with Conny Plank producing. Sadly it sounds as if Island simply dumped it onto CD without any re-mastering. One wonders how much better it could be with some modern technology bringing out the best of an already brilliant album.

      Whatever, this is a must have for anyone interested in the early pioneers of electronic fusion. To listen to it one can hardly believe this was released in 1978, and the creativity, songwriting and musicianship shine through. A true gem.

      4 out of 5 stars Best of Ultravox with a !.......2003-04-10

      This is apparently the album that inspired Gary Numan to focus on electronics. He heard this album at party held by a friend and the rest, as they say, is history. You can hear the results of this influnce on both the Replicas album (Are Friends Electric?) and the Pleasure Principle (Cars). He later took Billy Currie on tour with him for Pleasure Principle when this incarnation of Ultravox went belly-up.

      I had always thought that there was only one line-up of Ultravox as I had come in when Vienna went big. This album was re-released when the Midge Ure line-up went huge. Of course, all but Ure had been in the John Foxx mk1 version. A friend introduced me to this and I wasn't expecting much from this version of the band as I was hooked on Midge & co. Whilst not as sublime as the albums that followed it, you can certainly see the progression from one version to the other.

      Billy Currie's keyboard work is as haunting as ever and the band sound pretty tight compared to previous output, which while quite good isn't good enough for me to replace my old vinyl. The group also had an exclamation mark in their name at this point, dropped when Midge came in.

      Outstanding tracks: Slow Motion, Someone Else's Clothes, Quiet Men, Maximum Acceleration.

      5 out of 5 stars This is the record Gary Numan would have KILLED to make.......2002-07-14

      This is, by far, WITHOUT A DOUBT, the BEST album ever issued under the Ultravox name. As a previous reviewer stated, neither part of Ultravox has been able to replicate this album since the 1979 split.

      I won't go into the details of the sound (it has been covered much better in previous reviews), but would like to mention how influential this early version of Ultravox, and this LP, were on the New Wave music of the late '70s--early '80s.

      This is the album that inspired synth-rock pioneer Gary Numan to make "The Pleasure Principle", which featured the international hit single "Cars". Interestingly enough, Billy Currie, Ultravox's keyboardist/violinist, played on The Pleasure Principle and also toured in Numan's band after John Foxx and Robin Simon left the group (for a solo career and ex-Buzzcock Howard DeVoto's band Magazine, respectively). If you listen to both LPs in succession, you can certainly tell where Numan got many his ideas (it becomes even clearer if you listen to any pre-PP LPs by Numan-- especially from the Tubeway Army days!).

      "Systems" was one of the first post-punk LPs to successfully fuse the sound of dance beats, rock guitars and keyboards/synthesizers into a synth-based music that's completely different from the Yes/Emerson Lake & Palmer keyboard acrobatics that were popular in the '70s. Check the track "Quiet Man" for an excellent example of this: robotic electronic LinnDrum beats, wiry synthbase and keys, and Robin Simon's arty guitar are pointing the post-punk way, even before the term post-punk was in heavy circulation!

      Wait a minute,.... electronic dance beats, guitars, synthesizers? Did somebody say "New Romantic", that early 80s craze that gave us the likes of Duran Duran, ABC, Spandau Ballet, and countless others bands with bad haircuts? Ultravox was pointing the way three years before any "New Romantic" had even bought a puffy shirt or put on eye liner.

      I first encountered this record (yes, record!) in 1983 when I was a wee lad of 14. I'd been a fan of Midge Ure-era Ultravox, and saw this oddity in a record store in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA-- incidentally, it was the US release on Antilles, an Island subsidiary. I was floored then, and now, almost 20 years later, I still find myself listening to it at least once a month. Even though pop music has changed quite a bit since 1978, "Systems of Romance" still hasn't lost its magic.

      5 out of 5 stars One I'm taking to my desert island........2001-10-12

      I love this record. What is it that makes it so great? It's the fusion of John Foxx's artiness (a double-edged sword), Billy Currie's synths and violin (what a talent!), Robin Simon's guitar work (whatever happened to that guy?!) and an atmosphere that exists on no other record (except for a couple of tracks on "Ha! Ha! Ha!"). Of course, John Foxx's vocal style isn't everyone's cup of tea, so I can't guarantee you'll like this record, but it does deserve a place in the hall of fame. Stand-out tracks: Slow Motion, I Can't Stay Long, Just for a Moment.

      5 out of 5 stars The Crest of The New Wave.......2001-02-28

      Ultravox had 2 distict phases. The first (and better) with John Foxx fronting the band, and the second which has been totally forgettable. Their first CD, ULTRAVOX! showed a great deal of promise, and with Brian Eno producing, it was an auspicious debut. Ultraxox seemed to fall apart with "Ha Ha Ha" (theirn2nd release), but came back very strong and convincingly with SYSTEMS OF ROMANCE. Produced by Steve Lillywhite (U2, Tom Petty, and others), this CD seemed to signal that the band was on its way. Then, John Foxx and the others split up, and neither apart was equal to the sum of the parts together.

      SYSTEMS OF ROMANCE was Ultravox' 3rd, and by far their best, CD. Musically, they were somewhere between David Bowie, the Talking Heads (but without that band's quirkiness) and the Cars (but with a much more intelligent set of lyrics and far more interesting musical ideas). Visually (with John Foxx) they were a lot like Japan and David Bowie.

      I reluctantly gave this CD 5 stars for its music, but caution listeners: the engineering and sound quality is abysmal by today's standards. This is one CD that absulutely screams to be remastered from the original master tapes, using today's state of the art technology. Because Ultravox was not a big selling group, the record company (Island) just grabbed some tape and whipped out a CD once vinyl LP's were no longer selling.

      While there are several experimental tunes, some of which work better than others, this CD has remained surprisingly contermporary and modern sounding since its release in 1980.

      Buy it, and then write a scathing letter to the people at Island Records telling them they need to improve their shoddy product quality. Or, write a scathing letter, and then wait for the remastered version to be issued.

      Outstanding tracks: SLOW MOTION, QUIET MEN, MAXIMUM ACCELERATION.

      Music:

      1. The Facts of Life [Import]
      2. The Numbers Game, VOL. I - Multiplication and its relationship to Division
      3. The Venom is Going Global [Explicit Lyrics]
      4. There Is A Way
      5. This Is the Sea [Import]
      6. Too Real [CD-single]
      7. Trajectories
      8. Underworld
      9. Venus Is a Boy [CD-single]
      10. We the People

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