Technique (Collector's Edition)
11/11/2008 | Rhino / Wea
Songs from Technique (Collector's Edition)
All Music Guide Review
Tastes and sounds were changing quickly in the late '80s, which prompted New Order's most startling transformation yet -- from moody dance-rockers to, well, moody acid-house mavens. After the band booked a studio on the island hotspot of Ibiza, apparently not knowing that it was the center of the burgeoning house music craze, New Order's sure instincts for blending rock and contemporary dance resulted in another confident, superb LP. Technique was the group's most striking production job, with the single "Fine Time" proving a close runner-up to "Blue Monday" as the most extroverted dance track in the band's catalog. Opening the record, it was a portrait of a group unrecognizable from its origins, delivering lascivious and extroverted come-ons amid pounding beats. It appeared that dance had fully taken over from rock, with the guitars and bass only brought in for a quick solo or bridge. But while pure dance was the case for the singles "Fine Time" and "Round & Round," elsewhere New Order were still delivering some of the best alternative pop around, plaintive and affecting songs like "Run" (the third single), "Love Less," and "Dream Attack." Placed in the perfect position to deliver the definitive alternative take on house music, the band produced another classic record. [Rhino's 2008 remastering of New Order's first five albums, subtitled The Factory Years, provided complete remastering of each original LP plus a bonus disc that included a good sampling of the band's non-album material contemporary to the album. For Technique, that included remixes of "Fine Time" and "Round & Round," plus an instrumental version of "Vanishing Point" and a mix of "World in Motion," the theme to 1990's World Cup held in Italy.] ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
Technique (Collector's Edition) Track Listing
Technique (Collector's Edition) Notes
New Order closed its brilliant run throughout the '80s with 1989's TECHNIQUE, an album epitomizing the exploding popularity of the U.K.'s acid house scene. It debuted at #1 in the U.K. and climbed to #32 on the Billboard 200 - making it the group's first non-compilation Top 40 pop album. TECHNIQUE also introduced the singles “Run,” “Fine Time” and “Round & Round,” as well as “Vanishing Point,” a song later used as the theme for a high-profile British TV show. Disc One of Rhino's new 2-CD COLLECTOR'S EDITION features the newly remastered original nine-song album, while bonus disc Disc Two compiles nine additional rarities including non-album singles, B-sides and alternative versions.
Bonus track highlights include the 12” single “World In Motion,” the official song of the English national football team in 1990's World Cup competition. Also featured is “Fine Line,” an instrumental version of the album track “Fine Time” and the B-sides “Best & Marsh” and “MTO.”
Comprised of Bernard Sumner (guitar, vocals), Stephen Morris (drums), Peter Hooks (bass) and Gillian Gilbert (keyboards), Manchester, U.K.-based band New Order was formed in 1980 by the remaining members of Joy Division after lead singer Ian Curtis' suicide. They went on to develop a groundbreaking sound mixing synthesizer-driven pop, electronic dance beats and alt-rock, releasing five influential albums during the '80s that changed the course of alternative music.
Credits of Technique (Collector's Edition)
- Richard Gretton
- Assistant
- Alan Meyerson
- Mixing
- Andrew Robinson
- Assistant
- Peter Saville
- Art Direction
- Trevor Key
- Artwork
- Martin Orpen
- Digital Imagery
- Aaron Denson
- Assistant
- Michael "Mike Dee" Johnson
- Engineer
- Daniel Masson
- Research
- Ian Harrison
- Liner Notes
- New Order
- Producer
















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