{{#invoke:Namespace detect|main}}

{{#invoke:Namespace detect|main}}

{{#invoke:Infobox|infobox}}{{#invoke:Namespace detect|main}} Berlin is a 1973 album by Lou Reed, his third solo album and the follow-up to Transformer. In 2003, the album was ranked number 344 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, though the magazine had called the album a "disaster" 30 years prior.[1]

Contents

Concept [link]

The album is a tragic rock opera about a doomed couple, and addresses themes of drug use, prostitution, depression, domestic violence, and suicide.

"The Kids" tells of Caroline having her children taken from her by the authorities, and features the sounds of children shouting for their mother. UK group The Waterboys takes its name from a line in this song.[2]

Musical themes [link]

Musically, Berlin differs greatly from the bulk of Reed's work, due to the use of heavy orchestral arrangements, horns, and top session musicians. Instrumentally, Reed himself only contributes acoustic guitar.

As with Reed's previous two studio albums, Berlin re-drafts several songs that had been written and recorded previously. The title track first appeared on Reed's solo debut album, only here it is simplified, the key changed, and re-arranged for solo piano. "Oh, Jim" makes use of the Velvet Underground outtake, "Oh, Gin". "Caroline Says (II)" is a rewrite of "Stephanie Says" from VU. The Velvet Underground had also recorded an alternate demo of "Sad Song", which had much milder lyrics in its original form. "Men of Good Fortune" had also been played by the Velvets as early as 1966; an archival CD featuring live performances of the band playing at Andy Warhol's Factory provides the evidence of the song's age. The CD featuring the early performance of "Men of Good Fortune" is not for sale and can only be heard at the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Critical reception [link]

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars{{#invoke:String|rep|1= 2=2
  }}{{#invoke:String|rep|1=
2=1
  }}[3]
Pitchfork Media (9.2/10)[4]
Robert Christgau C[5]
Rolling Stone (Very Unfavorable)[6]

Despite lukewarm reviews, Berlin reached No. 7 in the UK album chart (Reed's best achievement there until 1992's Magic and Loss). Poor sales in the US (#98) and harsh criticism made Reed feel disillusioned about the album; in subsequent years he rarely played any Berlin material in his live shows.

By 1979, The Rolling Stone Record Guide described the album as "grandiose, decadent", and finally "one of the most depressing records ever made, and oddly beautiful in its own awful way."

Live performance [link]

Reed and producer Bob Ezrin planned a stage adaptation of the album upon its initial release but shelved the plans due to mixed reviews and poor sales. In 2007 Reed fulfilled his original hopes by touring the album with a 30-piece band and 12 choristers.[7] Director Julian Schnabel filmed the concert and released it in 2008 as Lou Reed's Berlin, which opened to strong reviews.[8][9] The album was digitally re-mastered and re-released on compact disc to commemorate the event.

Covers [link]

"Caroline Says II" has been covered by several artists: Human Drama, Marc Almond, Suede and Siouxsie Sioux in 1993,[10] and Antony and the Johnsons.

Mark Doyon's group tvfordogs covered "How Do You Think It Feels" for the album After Hours: a Tribute to the Music of Lou Reed (2003). Alaska, Mexican and Spanish singer is named after the song "Caroline Says II".

Track listing [link]

All tracks composed by Lou Reed

Side one
No. Title Length
1. "Berlin"   3:23
2. "Lady Day"   3:40
3. "Men of Good Fortune"   4:37
4. "Caroline Says I"   3:57
5. "How Do You Think It Feels"   3:42
6. "Oh Jim"   5:13
Side two
No. Title Length
7. "Caroline Says II"   4:10
8. "The Kids"   7:55
9. "The Bed"   5:51
10. "Sad Song"   6:55

Personnel [link]

  • Lou Reed – vocals, acoustic guitar
  • Bob Ezrin – piano, mellotron, production, arrangement
  • Michael Brecker – tenor sax
  • Randy Brecker – trumpet
  • Jack Bruce – bass; except "Lady Day" & "The Kids"
  • Aynsley Dunbar – drums; except "Lady Day" & "The Kids"
  • Steve Hunter – electric guitar
  • Tony Levin – bass on "The Kids"
  • Allan Macmillan – piano on "Berlin"
  • Gene Martynec – acoustic guitar, synthesizer and vocal arrangement on "The Bed," bass on "Lady Day"
  • Jon Pierson – bass trombone
  • Dick Wagner – background vocals & electric guitar
  • Blue Weaver – piano on "Men of Good Fortune"
  • B.J. Wilson – drums on "Lady Day" & "The Kids"
  • Steve Winwood – organ & harmonium
  • Steve Hyden, Elizabeth March, Lou Reed, Dick Wagner – choir
  • Bob Ezrin – producer
  • Jim Reeves – engineer
  • Allan Macmillan – arrangement

References [link]

  1. https://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/berlin-19731220
  2. {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}
  3. Deming, Mark. Berlin (Lou Reed album) at Allmusic
  4. Ryan Schreiber, Pitchfork Media review
  5. Robert Christgau review
  6. {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}
  7. {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=news }}
  8. Lou Reed's Berlin (2007)
  9. Lou Reed's Berlin Movie Reviews, Pictures – Rotten Tomatoes
  10. "Caroline Says II" by Suede and Siouxsie Sioux in 1993 for Red Hot Aids

{{#invoke: Navbox | navbox }}


https://wn.com/Berlin_(Lou_Reed_album)

Gay Dad

Gay Dad were an English rock band formed in London that broke up in 2002. The line-up of the band has included Cliff Jones (guitarist/vocalist), Nick "Baz" Crowe (drummer), James Riseboro (keyboardist), Nigel Hoyle (bassist) and Charley Stone.

Musical career

Early history

Gay Dad were formed in 1994 by former Mojo and The Face journalist Cliff Jones and art magazine publisher Nick Crowe (drums), along with their Berkshire teenage friends Dominic Stinton (vocals), Tim Forster (keyboards), and bassist Nigel Hoyle, who had originally played in a band called Brutus with Stinton a year or two earlier. Jones, Stinton, Forster and Crowe had played together in various incarnations of Gay Dad ten years previously, such as The Timothy and the Astral Projection Society. Known recordings include the track 'Freaking out in Sunninghill Sky St' (sic) which was made available as a limited edition cassette in the late 1980s.

Their first Gay Dad demo was produced by Jim Irvin, (the writer and former frontman of Furniture) and funded by the Rolling Stones record producer, Andrew Loog Oldham and his original Immediate business partner Tony Calder. Jones had met with Calder and Oldham who were convinced by a performance at the band's rehearsal room to sign the band.

Podcasts:

PLAYLIST TIME:

Uva

by: Gay Dad

Sunshine burning, feel it hurting,
Mother can you heal me please, take the pain away.
Radiation, feel it aching,
I'm so far away from who I am and it's killing me inside,
Inside.
U, V, A, it's getting stronger every...
Day by day.
Blinded by the white lie, running for your life.
So kill tomorrow, kill tomorrow, oooh.
So far away from who I am and it's killing me inside,
Inside.
U, V, A, it's getting cooler every...
Day by day.
Blinded by the white lie, running for your life.
So kill tomorrow, kill tomorrow, oooh.
U, V, A, it's getting cooler every...
Day by day.
Blinded by the white lie, running for your life.




×