The Golden Section
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The Golden Section | |||||
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Studio album by John Foxx | |||||
Released | 26 September 1983 | ||||
Recorded | The Garden, London 1983 | ||||
Genre | New wave, Synthpop, Psychedelic rock | ||||
Length | 44:49 | ||||
Label | Virgin | ||||
Producer | Zeus B. Held, John Foxx | ||||
Professional reviews | |||||
John Foxx chronology | |||||
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The Golden Section is a 1983 album by English musician John Foxx. A progression from the sound of The Garden (1981), Foxx called The Golden Section "a roots check: Beatles, Church music, Psychedelia, The Shadows, The Floyd, The Velvets, Roy Orbison, Kraftwerk, and cheap pre-electro Europop".[1] His first work with a producer since his final Ultravox album, Systems of Romance with Conny Plank in 1978, The Golden Section was co-produced by Zeus B. Held, well known in the Krautrock scene of the 1970s. In addition to Foxx's wide array of synthesizers, the production made extensive use of vocoder effects and sampling.
Contents |
[edit] Production and style
Foxx's two previous solo albums, Metamatic (1980) and The Garden (1981), had included a number of compositions written for earlier projects but shelved for one reason or another, such as "He's a Liquid" and "Touch and Go", originally performed live with Ultravox, and "Systems of Romance" and "Walk Away", written during sessions for the album Systems of Romance. In contrast The Golden Section was almost wholly made up of material written especially for the album in 1983, the exception being "Endlessly", an early version of which Foxx had released as a single in mid-1982. Another eight songs he recorded around the same time as "Endlessly", that were to have formed an album, were scapped.[2]
The album's psychedelic rock flavour was evident on tracks like "Someone" and "Endlessly". The latter was described by Trouser Press as "the album's clear standout, a magnificent multi-level pop creation".[3] "Ghosts on Water" opened with vocal samples from the embers of "Endlessly", the preceding track on the album. It utilised sitar, backwards cymbals, a shehnai, and a reversed string arrangement at the end, set to an adaptation of The Beatles' "Tomorrow Never Knows" drum pattern.
"Sitting at the Edge of the World" evoked sounds from "Strawberry Fields Forever", whilst "Running Across Thin Ice With Tigers" utilised Beatlesque harmonies and the sound of a tiger's roar. The final track, "Twilight's Last Gleaming", shared its title with a 1977 World War III film, a William S. Burroughs short story, and a phrase from "The Star-Spangled Banner", though it did not overtly reference any of them.
[edit] Release and aftermath
The Golden Section spent three weeks in the UK charts, peaking at #27. "Endlessly", released as a single in July 1982 in a different mix to the album version, made #66 in the UK. "Your Dress" was issued concurrently with the album in September 1983, reaching #61. The album's final single, "Like a Miracle", was released in October but did not chart. Foxx embarked on a tour to promote the album in late 1983, and live recordings from the Dominion and Lyceum Theatres in London were released in 2002 as part of the double concert CD The Golden Section Tour + The Omnidelic Exotour.
[edit] Track listing
All songs written by John Foxx.
- "My Wild Love" – 3:45
- "Someone" – 3:30
- "Your Dress" – 4:26
- "Running Across Thin Ice With Tigers" – 5:37
- "Sitting at the Edge of the World" – 4:23
- "Endlessly" – 4:18
- "Ghosts on Water" – 3:12
- "Like a Miracle" – 5:10
- "The Hidden Man" – 5:44
- "Twilight's Last Gleaming" – 4:24 Produced by Mike Howlett
[edit] 2001 reissue bonus tracks
- "Dance With Me" – 3:29
- "The Lifting Sky" – 4:28
- "Annexe" – 3:10
- "Wings and a Wind" – 5:15
- "A Kind of Wave" – 3:37
- "A Woman on a Stairway" – 4:29
[edit] Personnel
- Kevin Armstrong – guitar
- Blair Cunningham – drums
- Jo Dworniak – bass
- John Foxx – vocals, guitar, keyboards, Magnetic Choir
- Zeus B. Held – keyboards
- Mike Howlett – bass, drums
- J. J. Jeczalik – Fairlight CMI programming
- James Risborough – choirboy
- Robin Simon – guitar
- Paul "Wix" Wickens – drums, keyboards
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
- ^ John Foxx (1992). Assembly CD liner notes
- ^ "A Secret Life" Q&A
- ^ Steven Grant & Brad Reno (2003). Trouser Press retrospective