Power, Corruption & Lies (Collector's Edition)
11/11/2008 | Rhino / Wea
Songs from Power, Corruption & Lies (Collector's Edition)
Videos from Power, Corruption & Lies (Collector's Edition)
All Music Guide Review
A great leap forward from their funereal debut album, Power, Corruption & Lies cemented New Order's place as the most exciting dance-rock hybrid in music (and it didn't even include the massive "Blue Monday" single, released earlier that year). Confident and invigorating where Movement had sounded disconsolate and lost, the record simply pops with energy from the beginning "Age of Consent," an alternative pop song with only a smattering of synthesizers overlaying an assured Bernard Sumner, who took his best vocal turn yet. Unlike the hordes of synth pop acts then active, New Order experimented heavily with their synthesizers and sequencers. What's more, while most synth pop acts kept an eye on the charts when writing and recording, if New Order were looking anywhere (aside from within), it was the clubs -- "The Village" and "586" had most of the technological firepower of the mighty "Blue Monday." But whenever the electronics threatened to take over, Peter Hook's grubby basslines, Bernard Sumner's plaintive vocals, and Stephen Morris' point-perfect drum fills reintroduced the human element. Granted, they still had the will for moodiness; the second track was "We All Stand," over five minutes of dubbed-out melancholia. Aside from all the bright dance music and production on display, Power, Corruption & Lies also portrayed New Order's growing penchant for beauty: "Your Silent Face" is a sublime piece of electronic balladry. [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 Power, Corruption & Lies, that means the huge "Blue Monday" single, plus A-sides and B-sides of the singles "Confusion," "Thieves Like Us," and "Murder."] ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
Power, Corruption & Lies (Collector's Edition) Track Listing
Power, Corruption & Lies (Collector's Edition) Notes
“Few rock bands have had as daunting a past to live up to, and overcome, as New Order. But Power, Corruption & Lies is a remarkable declaration of independence.”
- Steve Pond, Rolling Stone Magazine, 1983
Originally released in 1983, POWER, CORRUPTION & LIES was the second album from New Order, and the one on which they found their voice. The band leapt out of Joy Division's shadow and established their own indelible identity with electronic dance-pop stunners including “Your Silent Face” and “Age Of Consent.”
Disc One of Rhino's new 2-CD COLLECTOR'S EDITION features the newly remastered U.K. version of the original album which, unlike its U.S. counterpart, didn't include the breakthrough track “Blue Monday.” Released only as a single in the U.K., that song went on to become the U.K.'s best-selling independently released 12” single ever. It's featured as one of the eight cuts on bonus Disc Two, which compiles a choice selection of vintage rarities also including “The Beach” - the B-side for “Blue Monday” - and the Arthur Baker-produced dance classic “Confusion,” both in original and alternate versions.
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 Power, Corruption & Lies (Collector's Edition)
- Henri Fantin-Latour
- Cover Art
- Saville Parris Wakefield
- Design
- Barry Sage
- Assistant
- Peter Saville
- Art Direction
- Mark Boyne
- Assistant
- Martin Orpen
- Digital Imagery
- Michael "Mike Dee" Johnson
- Engineer
- Daniel Masson
- Research
- Ian Harrison
- Liner Notes
- New Order
- Producer


















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