Big Science: 25th Anniversary Edition/Remastered & Expanded
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- From The Air
- Big Science
- Sweaters
- Walking And Falling
- Born Never Asked
- O Superman
- Example #22
- Let X = X
- It Tango
- Walk The Dog
- O Superman
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #7919 in Music
- Released on: 2007-06-18
- Number of discs: 1
- Formats: Enhanced, CD+DVD, Original recording remastered
Editorial Reviews
SUNDAY TIMES June 24, 2007
The early 1980s were a strange time for pop.It seemed as though
punk really had swept away all before it, and suddenly anything could be a
hit. Novelty songs, songs with silly titles such as Is Vic There?, Where's
Captain Kirk? and O Superman. Except O Superman wasn't a novelty song. It
was, in fact, one of the most unlikely crossover hits of all time, a taster
of an album by the performance artist Laurie Anderson. The secret of her
broadening appeal was that, while her work is challenging, it's never
"difficult". Her voice is soothing, her music is haunting, and the themes
of Big Science - fear, alienation, disconnection - are sadly still
relevant.
Customer Reviews
Nice to see it re-mastered, but...
Big Science is one of my favourite Laurie Anderson albums, possibly because it was my first encounter with her music, but mainly because of the raw simplicity underlying the technology. There can't be too many songs that include bagpipes, violin and human voice all trying to emulate each other, but Sweaters does it with gusto creating an incredibly muscial cacophany. The tremendous, thundering percussion on this track adds a dramatic dash of arrhythmia to the mix.
The CD itself contains just the original tracks, with the additional material available as CD-Rom content, as previously mentioned. This means that the CD itself is no different to the original - except that in the cleanup process, the analogue hiss was removed. Unfortunately, this has necessitated the removal of the first howl from the title track, following which there was a period of silence before the second howl and the vocals beginning. A very small edit, but it just doesn't feel right this way. On an "ideal" version of an album, it is strange to have bits removed. Interestingly, I remember Laurie herself commenting on the instruments used on her tour during the autumn of 2001 - where she added some old synths to the list of instruments used in order to add some "analogue dirt". I like the analogue dirt! I'll stick to the original version of the album, I think, and keep the new version for the O Superman video and the studio version of "Walk the dog".
A Record For All Times.
It's twenty-plus years since I first heard it, but I still come back to this album and find it as fresh now as it ever was. The music on this album is full of striking sounds and imagery and at its centre the cool, crisp, mostly spoken vocal delivery, and I do love that voice. The thing I feel that is most often overlooked is the humour in the imagery, many of the tracks raise a smile or a chuckle and may confound your expectations.
The music can be wonderfully calming one moment but will have you bolt upright the next. Surprisingly for a mostly 'electronic' album it hasn't dated at all, perhaps because it's all done with a delicate touch and great melodies will always stand the test of time.
This CD release is a nice repackaging effort. The sound does seem a little sharper and the disc is accompanied by a booklet containing some insightful notes from Laurie Anderson, the lyrics(which were also included with the previous edition) and some photos not present on the previous edition.
The video to 'O Superman' and its B-side, the(audio only)track 'Walk the Dog', are included in the 'Enhanced' section of the disc, which means you can only play them on a computer(although it gives you the option of Wave/MP3 download). To be honest neither added anything to the original album but I suppose it's nice to have them here.
If you already own a copy of this album and, like me, love it, it is probably just about worth buying this new edition. If you don't own it: Why not?
Incidentally: I found this note from Nonesuch Records which shouldn't, if correct, affect new purchasers of the album but be aware...
"**NOTE** The initial run of Laurie Anderson's Big Science reissue on compact disc contained a slight problem in the mastering that has now been resolved. On the 2nd track, "Big Science," the introduction to the song was missing the first of two wolf howls. If you purchased one of the CDs that contains the 'dropped' wolf howl, please return it (disc only!) to Nonesuch, 1290 Ave of the Americas, New York, NY 10104, attn: Big Science Reissue Exchange, with a return address, and we will send you the revised version."
1982's cult classic = the sound of the future...
Laurie Anderson's roots were clearly in art, her years prior to the release of 'Big Science' taking in performance, art criticism, unreleased avant garde music, and her path crossing with such luminaries as Philip Glass, William S Burroughs, Timothy Leary & Allen Ginsberg. The album itself was an odd one, a major label distillation of Anderson's stage presentation 'United States I - IV' - all of which were eventually released as a box set of live recordings a few years later (...something I'd like to see reissued on compact disc). 'Big Science' is a record that sounded revolutionary and forward thinking back then, in between, and right about now. This remastered edition sounding even better, sounding like the future, and the kind of record that you can use to dismiss major label pseudo-experimentation like 'Kid A' by Radiohead.
In the UK, 'Big Science' and Laurie Anderson are probably best known for the accidental hit single 'O Superman (For Massanet)', which was a hit after being championed by the late, great John Peel. It also had a very odd video that I found strangely reassuring - 'O Superman' has to be one of the strangest hit singles of all time, from its central loop of someone taking a half-breath (...uhuhuhuhuhuhuhuhuhuhetc...) to Anderson's oblique spoken word, to the vocoding effects on the vocals, and music that shifts in from the background to the fore (...one part really reminds me of parts of the soundtrack to 'Koyaanisqatsi' by Philip Glass). It's hypnotic stuff and I can understand completely why a 60-something co-worker of mine used to play it taped off the radio in the car (& nothing else) back in the 80s. It connects with people, proving that this type of avant garde/avant classical music isn't just for pretentious types, hip snobs, or those au fait with the usual suspects: Cage, Glass, Reich...
But there is more to Big Science than 'O Superman', which is only one of its nine delights. The LP opens with the very strange 'From the Air', which fuses Anderson's use of vocoder and farfisa and her central rap, with some tight alien funk worthy of the second side of Remain in Light and jazz elements played by Bill Obrecht and Peter Gordon. The jazz elements, spoken word approach and the tale of a descending plane were to be influential, would The The's 1986 single 'Sweet Bird of Truth' exist without it? Anderson does some great call/response thing, shifting from the Captain of a falling plane to playing a game of 'Anderson Says' - a black box recorder on the dancefloor? I recall reading an American review of this LP that saw it as a prediction of 9/11, which is rubbish, but it's interesting how words can anticipate events, or be read around them, words like: "We are all going down, together", "And then catch yourself from falling," and " I am in a burning building and I got to go..."
The title track sounds like a more electronic take on the aforementioned Philip Glass soundtrack, with an opening werewolf moan, and lyrics that feel like relatives of books like America by Baudrillard and City of Quartz, the kind of thing that Jeff Tweedy tried on a few tracks on 'a ghost is born', like "Golden cities. Golden towns." Anderson was saying "This must be the place" before Talking Heads did with their charming 'Naive Melody', the description of new shopping malls, locale for the new sports center, and a drive-in bank sound like the future that was making itself more apparent in the 1980s. I recall walking around a bright, white shopping arcade in Cheltenham in 1984 and being amazed at its white brightness, the mirrors, the vast escalator, the glass lifts etc Not that's what the song is about, or is it? Any song that has the refrain "Big science/Hallelujah/Yodellayheehoo" has to be wonderful, hasn't it?
Next up is 'Sweaters', a song that may throw some, sounding like the bagpipe nonsense Tom Waits experimented with on Swordfishtrombones a year later and the odder parts of Kate Bush's quite odd The Dreaming, another wonderfully strange (and strangely wonderful) LP released in 1982. Anderson raps "I no longer..." against certain factors...'Sweaters' is brief as is the next track 'Walking & Falling', which is just Anderson alone speaking over a minimal electronic soundtrack, sounding like cut-up poetry, this song is most effective at night, round about dreaming...
Another highlight of Big Science remains 'Born, Never Asked', which is effective after the minimal track that precedes it, Anderson opening the piece with the kind of spoken words you'd expect from David Lynch: "It was a large room. Full of people. All kinds. And more has all arrived at the same building at more or less the same time. And they were all free. And they were all asking themselves the same question: What is behind the curtain?" The song itself is pretty much the same minimilist violin/marimba piece, suitably hypnotic as it shifts from the spoken word section to the minimal classical, aided with Anderson's vocal, "You were born. And you're so free. So happy birthday." 'Born, Never Asked' does have parts that sound a little like the drones of bands like Silver Apples and Spacemen 3, so it's not surprising that Jason Pierce - a member of the latter, influenced by the former - cited this LP and later covered this track on Spiritualized Electric Mainline's 'Pure Phase.'
Following 'O Superman' is the very odd 'Example # 22', which is probably the most complex track here, a mass of jazz und woodwind, with what sound like cut-in tapes akin to what Holger Czukay was doing on 1979's Movies. I recall people being confounded by some of the lyrics to Tilt by Scott Walker when that LP was released in 1995, what did people think of lines on this track like "Beispiele paranormaler Tonbandstimmen" or "Beispiel Nummer zweiundzwanzig", even if they spoke some German, or read the translations beneath? There is poetry, some discourse on language and sound, ringing bells, and a feeling like pop. & a feeling like art too - there is no way, like 'O Superman', that 'Example #22' could be considered pop. But it sounds like pop to me; and when everyone is reminding us how out there Bjork is, remind them of 'Big Science' and Laurie Anderson. Just for me...
'Let X=X', which originally appeared in ARTFORUM in February 1982, has similar marimba to the title track and the closest vocal to 'O Superman' here, seeming to fuse with the closing 'It Tango' though I love the tromobones that come in towards the end. Reminding you that in part, this is a jazz album, or jazz of the future, coming from the place where Coleman, Get Up With It-Miles, and Cecil Taylor were maybe voyaging to. You know, just before jazz died and Sting hired all the musicians. This reissue on Nonesich comes remastered, with a tweaked cover, liner notes, and a few bonus tracks in the form of an alternate version of 'O Superman' and 'Walk the Dog', which also featured on the United States box-set and in performances pre-Big Science.
Big Science is one of those albums that I knew I'd like, from the cover alone: it looked like the future, of more accurately, a future I would like to be a part of. Big Science sounded great the first time I heard it, which would have been on a tape. Big Science sounded great when I upgraded to CD, and sounded great everytime I played it...and sometimes more. Big Science is one of those albums that I can play from beginning to end and repeat over and over. Big Science influenced Spacemen 3, Jarvis Cocker, Peter Gabriel, Spiritualized Electric Mainline, Prince, The The, Radiohead, Bjork, The Art of Noise and a mass of others. Big Science is a classic if we're talking about influence, and a classic if we're not. Big Science, a cult classic from 1982 and still the sound of the future; a definite Desert Island Disc and an album I'll be more than happy to buy again. As William S Burroughs said, "Wouldn't you?"





