John Foxx
Modern Art
Label ©  Music Club
Release Year  2001
Length  1:12:49
Genre  Synthpop
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  J-0058
Bitrate  (various) Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Underpass (1980 Single Edit)  
       3:18  
      2.  
      No-One Driving (1980 Single Edit)  
       3:42  
      3.  
      Burning Car (1980 Single Edit)  
       3:09  
      4.  
      20th Century (Burning Car B-Side)  
       3:02  
      5.  
      Miles Away (1980 Single)  
       3:15  
      6.  
      Europe After The Rain (1981 Single Edit)  
       3:35  
      7.  
      Dancing Like A Gun (1981 Single Edit)  
       3:43  
      8.  
      Endlessly (1982 Original Single Version)  
       3:46  
      9.  
      Your Dress (1983 Single Edit)  
       3:56  
      10.  
      Like A Miracle (1983 DJ Edit)  
       4:49  
      11.  
      Stars On Fire (1985 Single Edit)  
       4:52  
      12.  
      Enter The Angel (1985 Single Edit)  
       3:58  
      13.  
      Sunset Rising (1995 From Cathedral Oceans)  
       2:36  
      14.  
      The Noise (1997 From Shifting City)  
       4:14  
      15.  
      Nightlife (2001 From The Pleasure Of Electricity)  
       5:47  
      16.  
      Shifting City (1997 From Subterranean Omnidelic Exotour)  
       8:39  
      17.  
      My Face (1980 Previously Available On Smash Hits Flexidisc)  
       3:22  
      18.  
      He's A Liquid (1980 B-Side Of Underpass Promo-Only 12")  
       3:06  
    Additional info: | top
      18 classic, rare & unreleased tracks from the founding member of Ultravox. 2001 release.

      Review by Dan LeRoy

      His affection for cool synth soundscapes enriched by a love of nature and a strong Catholic mysticism, John Foxx has always been a man of more depth than the new romantics he once inspired. Fortunately, the many facets of Foxx's complex persona get a fair representation on Modern Art, the second retrospective of his long but interrupted career and a superior collection to the previous Assembly. The remastered album manages to hit most of the essential highlights, making it a fine introduction, yet won't be superfluous to more dedicated fans thanks to a handful of sought-after offerings from throughout Foxx's two decades as a solo artist after leaving Ultravox. The former group of listeners will find the one-two punch of "Underpass" and "No-One's Driving," off Foxx's first album, Metamatic, a revelation, as both songs take Kraftwerk's chilly precision to even colder, more alienated extremes. From there, a slight warming trend is audible, as real instruments began to support the singer' s stylish, Bowie-influenced romanticism: his finest single, the sweeping "Europe After the Rain," and even more prominently on Beatlesque follow-ups like "Your Dress" and "Like a Miracle." For casual Foxx fans, the story ended shortly thereafter when the singer retreated from pop music in the mid-'80s. But he broke his long silence by teaming with fellow synthesist Louis Gordon for a pair of albums -- represented here by the excellent, atmospheric "The Noise" and "Nightlife" -- that revisited Foxx's minimalistic early-'80s output. Even aficionados who own those two discs should find Modern Art of interest, however, as it contains an eight-minute version of "Shifting City" from Foxx and Gordon's mega-rare 1997 live CD, Subterranean Omnidelic Exotour. And veteran collectors will be delighted with the inclusion of "My Face," a robotic, Metamatic-era outtake previously available only on a flexi-disc, as well as the original single version of one of Foxx's biggest hits, "Endlessly." Most importantly, despite its mixture of the familiar and obscure and the 20-year time span of its contents, Modern Art offers a surprisingly coherent play from beginning to end -- a testament to the peculiar timelessness of Foxx's synthetic sound and spiritual devotions.
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