Architecture & Morality
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Average customer review:Product Description
Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark's eponymous debut and itsfollow-up, ORGANISATION, were pioneering synth-pop albums. However, some of the sonic experiments sounded forced and the band's ideas occasionally seemed to outstrip their abilities. That's definitely not the case here. Andy McCluskey and Paul Humphreys integrate their electronics gracefully into the format of the pop song, and Malcolm Cooper's live drums do much to keep the album from sounding too machine-made.
The album's centerpiece is the two-part "Joan of Arc"/"Maid of Orleans" suite, OMD's most memorable, as well as prettiest, achievement at that point. The single "Souvenir" is nearly the equal of those two songs, and the eight-minute atmospheric exploration "Sealand" shows the duo's experimental bentremains strong.
Track Listing
Disc 1:
- New Stone Age
- She's Leaving
- Souvenir
- Sealand
- Joan Of Arc
- Joan Of Arc (Maid Of Orleans)
- Architecture And Morality
- Georgia
- Beginning And The End
- Extended Souvenir
- Motion And Heart
- Sacred Heart
- Romance Of The Telescope
- Navigation
- Of All The Things We've Made
- Gravity Never Failed
Disc 2:
- Souvenir
- Joan Of Arc
- Maid Of Orleans (The Waltz Of Joan Of Arc)
- Almost
- Mystereality
- Joan Of Arc
- Motion And Heart
- Maid Of Orleans
- Statues
- Souvenir
- New Stone Age
- Enola Gay
- Bunker Soldiers
- Electricity
- She's Leaving
- Julia's Song
- Stanlow
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #16135 in Music
- Released on: 2007-04-30
- Number of discs: 2
- Formats: Extra tracks, Original recording remastered
- Dimensions: .25 pounds
Customer Reviews
OMD's great leap forward.
Returning to Architecture and Morality after a 26 year gap is quite an enlightening experience.
By the time this album was released in 1981 OMD were on the way to becoming a regular chart act and this album was in effect the bands great leap forward.With an impressive three U.K. hit singles,it could be argued that Architecture And Morality was merely the latest in a long line of very impressive electronic albums released around the same time,but that would be doing the band and their music a disservice.
A product of its time, Architecture And Morality has a slightly urban feel that connects well with the dark days of the early Eighties,and whilst arguably it has a cold heart the songwriting and vision has a certain charm that still resonates to this day.Classic singles like "Joan Of Arc",and the irrepressible"Souvineer" still sound great,whilst supporting tracks like"The New Stone Age" and the albums title track show that OMD would comfortably overcome any notions that they were merely a disposable chart act.
An obvious reference throughout this set is Kraftwerk's "Radioactivity" album,but fortunately OMD were shrewed enough to avoid being completely overcome by the German's influence,and this album sounds more like a northern British relation rather than a carbon copy.Consequently the real strength of Architecture And Morality lies in its willingness to acknowledge its influences,not replicate them.
Now expanded to include lost 'b'sides [although i am finding it difficult to tell the difference between the two versions of "Souvineer" on this set!] and a very impressive dvd[including tv appearances and a live concert from 1981],this is a brilliant package that offers a full insight into OMD at the most crucial time in their career.
Ultimately this is a great example to other artists on how to reissue their most important albums, breathing new life into established work,whilst offering the punter enough value and reasons to buy the album again.
Deluxe reissue of third LP from O.M.D.
Despite the tragic association with the second series of Alan Partridge, which has helped assist a snobbish response to O.M.D. by default, I feel the need to defend the band mostly known as Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark. 'A&M' took its title from a book entitled 'Morality & Architecture', the title suggested by Martha Ladly once of Martha & the Muffins and later associated with the Associates. The title fits perfectly the brilliant cover from Peter Saville Associates, who designed the majority of their sleeves (many of these are in an excellent book on Saville, well worth tracking down).
This version of 'A&M' is an extension of the extended/remaster from a few years ago, the major addition being the second disc which has DVD elements (video/live), mostly culled from a performance at Drury Lane. This is the deluxe version of the best-selling OMD album, one the fan's will have to get - if you're less certain, plump for the single disc remastered version which has all the b-sides/bonus tracks. I am one of the few who are hoping their masterpiece, 1983's 'Dazzle Ships' gets the same treatment.
The original nine-track LP is pretty perfect, advancing on the promise of the previous two albums and proving that the perfect pop of 'Enola Gay' was no one-off (which some might think when hearing the bleak electronic soundscapes of 'Organisation'). There is subversive pop, akin to 'Enola Gay', the subject this time being Joan of Arc, a figure who has been read in many ways (perhaps they had just overdosed on 'The Passion of Joan of Arc'?). 'Joan of Arc' is a gorgeous pop single, though it is the relative 'Joan of Arc (Maid of Orleans)' that seems more powerful, taking the ambient synths that are also found on 'Souvenir' and 'Sealand', prior to a huge classical synth motif and military drums whacked out by robots. The other single was the huge hit 'Souvenir', sung not by Andy McCluskey, but by Paul Humphreys who wrote it with Martin Cooper - more sublime pop perfection, the 'Extended Souvenir' is pretty similar, just a few extra words you might not require...
Things start more oddly with 'The New Stone Age', which has a minimal guitar sound (like Joy Division with banjos!), a metronomic drum machine and whoozy ambient drones as McCluskey sounds possessed, barking out the words: "Oh my god, what have we done this time?" The song goes into overload at the end, feeling like an advance on the Joy Division inflections of 'Organisation.' Following the dark opener, we get some more gorgeous electronic pop in the form of 'She's Leaving', which probably should have been a single - amusingly enough it would be ripped-off for 'Number One' by Goldfrapp, a band who are hip where OMD definitely aren't...
The centrepiece of the LP remains 'Sealand', which may or may not be a nod towards 'Seeland' by Neu! (OMD paid tribute to the Krautrock gods with b-side '4 Neu' a few years later), but advances on the 'Organisation'-epic 'Stanlow.' Just under eight-minutes in duration, it's a fan favourite and OMD at their most ambient, this direction would conclude with Dazzle-joys like 'International', 'The Romance of the Telescope', & 'Silent Running.' The title track predicts large aspects of the follow-up album, leading the way to the concluding tracks 'Georgia' (industrial electronic pop about a state of the Soviet Union, which like 'Enola Gay' sounds perky!) and 'The Beginning and the End' which blends Philip Glass-style minimal elements with guitar and percussion. Still great stuff, a definite perky LP and the choice OMD album (though I remain a 'Dazzle Ships' fellow myself).
The bonus tracks are another reason to buy this reissue, including a re-recorded 'Motion and Heart', tracks that would appear on 'Dazzle Ships' ('Romance of the Telescope', 'Of All the Things We Made'), and the fantastic 'Navigation', which would later give its title to a b-side collection of OMD works - one cd well worth tracking down.
Despite the later descent into stock 80s pop, session musicians and John Hughes soundtracks, OMD were once a great band, like Simple Minds, I tend to plump for the early stuff, picking only a handful of tracks after 1983. A key LP of the era, 'Architecture & Morality' feels as significant as 'Big Science', 'Dare!', 'Music for Parties', 'Non Stop Erotic Cabaret', & 'Penthouse & Pavement.' A key electronic album, even if Alan Partridge digs it!
The Beginning Of The End
This was OMD's third album and, for me, their finest moment. This remastered issue is exactly the same musically as the 2003 remastered release. What makes this version so special is the inclusion of the bonus DVD.
The DVD contains the video for "Souvenir" and a couple of TOTP performances, but more importantly the "Live At The Drury Lane" concert from December 1981. I used to have this concert on VHS and I remember it being one of those "big box" jobs, videos were like that in them days.
Anyway, it's the music that counts and the music CD is as close to perfection as you're likely to get. This was OMD going through their choral voice stage and a lot of the songs are layered with the eerie sounds of chopped up human voice. Singles abound: "Joan Of Arc", "Maid of Orleans" and the top-tenner "Souvenir". To be honest, I've never been a big fan of that track as I always thought Paul's voice was a little weak, says me who can't even talk in tune!
Me and my mate went to see the band on this tour in Birmingham (it seemed only five minutes since we'd seen them on the "Organisation" tour at the same venue) and it remains one of the best concerts I've been too, even 26 years later. The band had a vibrant energy that they never captured again.
The finest moment for me on here is the sublime "She's Leaving". Why this was never released as a single still puzzles me all these years later, but I guess they didn't want to release too many from the same album. Still, that's a testament to the quality on offer.
There are a raft of extra tracks, some essential, some not so, but all in this is a wonderful package. And all for under a tenner too.




