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John Foxx - Metamatic album

John Foxx - Metamatic album

  • Performer: John Foxx
  • Genre: Electronic
  • Title: Metamatic
  • Released: 1993
  • Style: Synth-pop
  • Country: UK
  • MP3 version size: 1364 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1567 mb
  • Other: AU MPC AU AC3 WMA MP2 AHX
  • Rating: 4.5
  • Votes: 777

Description

50+ видео Воспроизвести все. Воспроизвести.

Country: UK & Europe. Released in a clamshell box with 40 page booklet and 6 photo cards. A limited number autographed by John Foxx. The discs are housed in individual cardboard sleeves. Drawings and handwritten lyrics taken from John Foxx's 1980 notebooks. P) & (C) 2018 Metamatic Records.

Complete your John Foxx collection. Metamatic ‎(LP, Album). Vendi questa versione. Metamatic ‎(Cass, Album, RE). Virgin.

By: John Foxx (1980, Electronic). More albums from John Foxx: Cathedral Oceans III by John Foxx. Booty Butt, Sidewinder by John Foxx. A New Kind Of Man by John Foxx. The Garden by John Foxx. Vapor City Archives by John Foxx. London Overgrown by John Foxx. Translucence + Drift Music by John Foxx. Burning Car by John Foxx. View all albums . Metamatic. By: John Foxx (1980, Electronic).

Listen free to John Foxx – Metamatic (Plaza, He's A Liquid and more). The Original Album Metamatic 1980 only has 10 tracks and it was reissued in 1993, 2001, and 2007 with added bonus tracks 4 separate albums. This therefore is not Metamatic 1980. Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue online at Last.

John Foxx And The Maths are back in the studio working on a new album, this time with Robin Simon on guitar. com/watch?v SGPKNB7ctyE. John Foxx and the Maths at Memetune Studios, featuring the legendary Robin Simon on six strings. 30 April ·. Tickets are now on sale for this Q&A featuring John in Manchester on Saturday 6 July.

John Foxx (born Dennis Leigh, 26 September 1948) is an English singer, artist, photographer and teacher. He was the original lead singer of the band Ultravox, before leaving to embark on a solo career (with Midge Ure eventually taking his place in Ultravox).

This album has an average beat per minute of 131 BPM (slowest/fastest tempos: 68/178 BPM). See its BPM profile at the bottom of the page. BPM Profile Metamatic. Album starts at 128BPM, ends at 126BPM (-2), with tempos within the -BPM range. Try refreshing the page if dots are missing). Recent albums by John Foxx. Evidence of Time Travel.

Redirected from My Face (John Foxx song)). Metamatic is the debut solo album by John Foxx, released in 1980. It was his first solo project following his split with Ultravox the previous year.

Album · 1980 · 23 Songs.

Tracklist

1 Plaza 3:55
2 He's A Liquid 3:03
3 Underpass 3:57
4 Metal Beat 3:02
5 No-One Driving 3:48
6 A New Kind Of Man 3:41
7 Blurred Girl 4:20
8 030 3:18
9 Tidal Wave 4:17
10 Touch And Go 5:39
11 Young Love 3:11
12 Film One 4:01
13 20th Century 3:06
14 Miles Away 3:20
15 A Long Time 3:50
16 Swimmer 1 4:09

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Virgin Records Ltd.
  • Copyright (c) – Virgin Records Ltd.
  • Published By – Island Music Ltd.
  • Recorded At – Pathway Studios
  • Glass Mastered At – EMI Swindon

Credits

  • Bass [Additional] – Jake Durant
  • Design [Cover] – John Foxx
  • Engineer – Gareth Jones
  • Layout – Assorted Images, M. Garret*
  • Photography By – C. P. Gabrin*
  • Producer, Written-By, Composed By, Synthesizer, Electronics [Rhythm Machines] – John Foxx
  • Synthesizer [Additional] – John Barker

Notes

Tracks 11 to 16 are bonus tracks.

Jewel Case with 4 page lyric booklet.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 0 77778 78222 3
  • Label Code: LC 3098
  • Matrix / Runout (Variant 1): 787822 2 1:3:1 EMI SWINDON
  • Matrix / Runout (Variant 2): 787822 2 . 1:1:2. EMI SWINDON
  • Rights Society: B.I.E.M. / STEMRA
  • Price Code: PM 500

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
V2146, v 2146 John Foxx Metamatic ‎(LP, Album) Virgin, Metal Beat V2146, v 2146 UK 1980
2473 795 John Foxx Metamatic ‎(LP, Album) Virgin 2473 795 France 1980
VIP-6949, VIRG-6051 John Foxx Metamatic ‎(LP, Album, Promo) Virgin, Virgin VIP-6949, VIRG-6051 Japan 1980
META63BX John Foxx Metamatic ‎(CD, Album, RE, RM + 2xCD, RM + Box, Dlx) Metamatic META63BX UK & Europe 2018
VV 33.036 Y John Foxx Metamatic ‎(LP, Album) Vadeca VV 33.036 Y Portugal 1980

Video

Comments

Llbery Llbery
John Foxx's debut album, synthetically speaking, is one of the truest in the genre's history - sounding so dehumanized and cold, separating itself from flesh and blood with surgeon's precision, definitely a new kind of man he sings about in one of the songs - the contents so clinical, the synthesizer is more of a scalpel.While its sound is so 1980, 'Metamatic' offers a fine palette of childishly morbid sound experiments, observed in a pop context, crafted well ahead of its time. The involvement of producer Gareth Jones here, speaks for itself in that respect. Both, drum machine and melody proudly display their black and white sharp teeth, minimalism at its finest. The only human presence is in modest but effective bass sounds played by Jake Durant. Each piece here is a hit single in itself - while the album's most considerable example of 'Underpass' still enjoys massive exposure, pieces like 'Plaza', extraordinary 'Metal Beat' standing up perfect to its title, featuring amazing 'kling-klang' sounds (in a way a necessary ode to Kraftwerk, while at the same time think Front 242 and Depeche Mode some years away from their own synthetic epiphany), equally brilliant 'He's a Liquid' and 'Blurred Girl' are just several examples in a row that provide the album's perfect synthetic geometry.Listening to it, one can feel how frustrated Foxx might have been during his Ultravox days - during their original line up, Ultravox were flirting with futurism but their use of synthetics at that point was still too obscured by real instruments. I guess, the group's 'Hiroshima Mon Amour' was the obvious click inspiring Foxx more than others, who became obsessed with creating pure, almost fascistic, synthesized solo record. And being so, 'Metamatic' is the result. 'Touch and Go', the original album's closing number contains a melody line identical to the Ultravox song 'Mr. X' - it is said elsewhere, none of the two camps credit each other in any of these songs. Lyrically speaking, both seem to be unpleasant farewell notes (Warren Cann speaks coldly in 'Mr. X'; "I think I know who he is... Mr. X", the name referring to an unknown, irrelevant but intriguing character in their own story, while Foxx goes more angrily with "Just whose face is this and could we ever be friends?"Ironically, both Foxx and Ultravox's musical stylings didn't differ much at this point. Albeit purely synthetic, Foxx still flirted with the group's typical string-slide variations into his own songs. This is especially evident in one of the CD's additions to the original album - his earlier track called 'Young Love'. And speaking of this particular 1993 CD re-issue, some of the extra material on it doesn't fit either stylistically or chronologically. For some reason, instead of adding more relevant material that came around the time of the original 1980 release (a double 7" single 'No-One Driving' for instance) besides two lonesome examples chosen ('Film One' and '20th Century'), Virgin confusingly placed transitional pieces like 'Miles Away' and 'A Long Time' on the playlist, both conceptually drifting away from the clinical coolness of 'Metamatic' and also 'Swimmer 1', the obscure 1981 b-side to one of the singles from the following album 'The Garden'. In all these three songs, the Ultravox trademark sound is more present than anything Foxx achieved on his debut album. 'Miles Away' is the weakest song here, lost somewhere between a childishly clichéd Gary Numan wanna-be and Ure-era Ultravox.Later 2xCD remaster by Edsel Records corrects this mistake with a far more proper presentation of bonus material. Still, no matter which edition you stumble upon, 'Metamatic' alone is worth possession, a true masterpiece, despite some tiny limitations - these limitations address mostly Foxx's vocals which can be exaggerating in order to achieve robotic perfection.
Gri Gri
"Touch + Go" had been played live during 1979 Ultravox tours so the song had already been written. Probably by Foxx and members of Ultravox. When the split came, they each gave a different take on it and apparently had a "gentlemen's agreement" that was probably the absolutely right thing to do. Foxx did not change the lyrics. His music bed sounds less like a track from "Man Machine." More abrupt and stark. Ultravox wrote completely different lyrics for "Mr. X" [the component they did not create when Foxx was in the band] and I think the lyrics cheekily refer to Foxx, but that's just my opinion. The Ultravox music bed was tweaked to recall "Man Machine" very strongly so it's more of a Kraftwerk pastiche.
Delagamand Delagamand
Nice review Crijevo.Do you have any further information regarding Touch And Go & Mr. X?Clearly someone copied someone. My gut instinct says that John Foxx demoed the track to the rest of Ultravox, who then went on to create Mr. X in his "honour". But of course I could be wrong, and John heard Mr. X on Vienna and created Touch And Go.But no, I don't believe that.It would be interesting to get more info on this striking (uncanny) similarity.