United States Live
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
United States Live | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Live album by Laurie Anderson | |||||
Released | 1984 | ||||
Recorded | Brooklyn Academy of Music, New York, February 7-February 10, 1983 | ||||
Genre | Avant-garde, Experimental, Pop | ||||
Length | 261:57 | ||||
Label | Warner Bros. | ||||
Producer | Laurie Anderson and Roma Baron | ||||
Professional reviews | |||||
Laurie Anderson chronology | |||||
|
United States Live was the third album release by avant-garde singer-songwriter Laurie Anderson. Released as a five-LP box set (later reissued on four CDs), United States Live was recorded at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York City in February 1983.
United States was Anderson's magnum opus performance art piece featuring musical, spoken word, and animated vignettes about life in America. Segments ranged from humorous, such as "Yankee See" which gently chided Anderson's record label Warner Brothers for signing her in the first place, to the apocalyptic anthem "O Superman" which had been an unexpected Top 10 hit for Anderson on the UK music charts in 1981.
Originally, United States (which was originally titled America on the Move) was presented over the course of two nights, running some eight hours. The United States Live box set is a truncated rendering of the performance, omitting many segments that were solely of a visual nature.
Among the songs performed on the album was "Language is a Virus (from Outer Space)", a pop-like song based upon a phrase attributed to William S. Burroughs. Anderson would later perform a modified arrangement of the song in her 1986 concert film, Home of the Brave.
Although Anderson has since created numerous other major performance pieces (i.e. Moby-Dick, Stories from the Nerve Bible, Happiness, The End of the Moon), United States Live remains, to date, the only serious attempt at producing anything approaching a full-length recording of any of these performances, although her previous album Big Science and her segment of the compilation You're the Guy I Want to Share My Money With consisted of studio-recorded excerpts from United States.
Contents |
[edit] Box set individual CD covers
[edit] Track listing
All tracks written by Laurie Anderson except as indicated.
[edit] Part One
[edit] Disc one
- "Say Hello" – 5:01
- "Walk the Dog" – 6:45
- "Violin Solo" – 2:13
- "Closed Circuits" For voice and amplified mic stand – 6:03
- "For a Large and Changing Room" – 2:50
- "Pictures of It" For acoustic Tape Bow – 1:32
- "The Language of the Future" – 8:02
- "Cartoon Song" – 1:12
- "Small Voice" For speaker-in-mouth – 2:03
- "Three Walking Songs" For Tape Bow Violin – 4:19
- "The Healing Horn" – 3:01
- "New Jersey Turnpike" – 11:19 see New Jersey Turnpike
- "So Happy Birthday" – 6:23
- "EngliSH" – 2:08
- "Dance of Electricity" – 3:02 see Nikola Tesla
- "Three Songs for Paper, Film and Video" – 6:02
[edit] Disc two
- "Sax Solo" for Tape Bow Violin – 0:55
- "Sax Duet" – 0:38
- "Born, Never Asked" – 5:16
[edit] Part Two
- "From the Air" – 2:46
- "Beginning French" – 2:16
- "O Superman" – 11:05
- "Talkshow" – 6:57
- "Frames for the Pictures" – 1:08
- "Democratic Way" – 1:41
- "Looking for You" – 1:19
- "Walking and Falling" – 1:21
- "Private Property" – 3:04
- "Neon Duet" For violin and neon bow – 3:52
- "Let X=X" – 6:17
- "The Mailman's Nightmare" – 0:46
- "Difficult Listening Hour" – 3:10
- "Language is a virus from outer space - William S. Burroughs" – 7:55
- "Reverb" – 0:26
- "If You Can't Talk About It, Point to It (for Ludwig Wittgenstein and Reverend Ike)" – 0:33
- "Violin Walk" – 2:44
- "City Song" – 3:34
- "Finnish Farmers" – 5:13
[edit] Part Three
[edit] Disc three
- "Red Map" – 1:57
- "Hey Ah" – 3:50
- "Bagpipe Solo" – 3:17
- "Steven Weed" – 1:07 see Patricia Hearst/Steven Weed
- "Time and a Half" – 2:14
- "Voices on Tape" – 1:28
- "Example #22" – 2:33
- "Strike" – 2:11
- "False Documents" – 1:59
- "New York Social Life" – 3:32
- "A Curious Phenomenon" – 1:06
- "Yankee See" – 7:58
- "I Dreamed I Had to Take a Test..." – 1:19
- "Running Dogs" – 0:38
- "Four, Three, Two, One" – 1:15
- "The Big Top" – 2:52
- "It Was Up in the Mountains" – 2:14
- "Odd Objects" For light-in-mouth – 4:03
- "Dr. Miller" (Anderson, Perry Hoberman) – 5:18
- "Big Science" – 7:20 see Big Science
- "Big Science Reprise" – 1:47
[edit] Part Four
[edit] Disc four
- "Cello Solo" – 2:44
- "It Tango" – 1:51
- "Blue Lagoon" – 9:38
- "Hothead (La Langue d'Amour)" – 4:47
- "Stiff Neck" – 1:33
- "Telephone Song" – 1:34
- "Sweaters" – 3:58
- "We've Got Four Big Clocks (and they're all ticking)" – 2:24
- "Song for Two Jims" – 2:56
- "Over the River" – 3:30
- "Mach 20" – 2:47 see Mach number
- "Rising Sun" – 3:25
- "The Visitors" – 3:01
- "The Stranger" – 1:57
- "Classified" – 5:25
- "Going Somewhere?" – 0:55
- "Fireworks" – 2:46
- "Dog Show" – 0:48
- "Lighting Out for the Territories" – 3:13 see The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
[edit] Personnel
- Laurie Anderson– mic stand, violin bows, Tape-bow violin, electric violin, Harmonizer, pillow speaker, toy saxophone, voice, Vocoder, neon violin, glasses, Oberheim OB-Xa, Synclavier, tamboura, telephone, jew's harp
- Peter Gordon – Prophet synthesizer, voice
- Geraldine Pontius – voice
- Joseph Kos – voice
- Chuck Fisher – clarinet, sax
- Bill Obrecht – flute, sax
- Ann DeMarinis – Oberheim OB-Xa, Synclavier
- David Van Tieghem – drums, percussion
- Roma Baran – accordion
- Rufus Harley – bagpipes
- Shelley Karson – soprano
[edit] Charts
Album
Year | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|
1985 | The Billboard 200 | 192 |