Architecture & Morality [Bonus Tracks/Bonus DVD] Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark

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CD - Remastered / Bonus Tracks / Bonus DVD / Reissue

  • Release Date: 06/12/2007
  • Original Release: 1981
  • Sales Rank: 124,323
  • Label: EMD INT'L
  • UPC: 094638907527

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Track List
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Architecture & Morality [Bonus Tracks/Bonus DVD]

Disc 1
1LISTENThe New Stone Age 3:22
2LISTENShe's Leaving 3:28
3LISTENSouvenir 3:39
4LISTENSealand 7:47
5LISTENJoan of Arc 3:48
6LISTENJoan of Arc (Maid of Orleans) 4:12
7LISTENArchitecture and Morality 3:43
8LISTENGeorgia 3:24
9LISTENThe Beginning and the End 3:48
10LISTENExtended Souvenir Bonus Track 4:16
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Disc 2
1Souvenir Promo Video
2Joan of Arc Top of the Pops Version
3Maid of New Orleans (The Waltz of Joan of Arc) Promo Video
4Almost Live
5Mystereality Live
6Joan of Arc Live
7Motion and Heart Live
8Maid of New Orleans Live
9Statues Live
10Souvenir Live
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

If there was a clear high point for OMD in terms of balancing relentless experimentation and seemingly unstoppable mainstream success in the U.K., Architecture & Morality is it. Again combining everything from design and presentation to even the title into an overall artistic effort, this album showed that OMD was arguably the first Liverpool band since the later Beatles to make such a sweeping, all-bases-covered achievement -- more so because OMD owed nothing to the Fab Four. All it takes is a consideration of the three smash singles from the album to see the group in full flower. "Souvenir," featuring Paul Humphreys in a quiet but still warm and beautiful lead role, eases in on haunting semi-vocal sighs before settling into its gentle, sparkling melody. The mid-song instrumental break, with its shifted tempos and further wordless calls, is especially inspired. "Joan of Arc," meanwhile, takes the drama of "Enola Gay" to new heights; again, wordless vocals provide the intro and backing, while an initially quiet melody develops into a towering heartbreaker, with Andy McCluskey and band in full flight. If that wasn't enough, the scenario was continued and made even more epic with "Maid of Orleans," starting with a quick-cut series of melancholic drones and shades before a punchy, then rolling martial beat kicks in, with Malcolm Holmes and technology in perfect combination. With another bravura McCluskey lead and a mock-bagpipe lead that's easily more entrancing than the real thing, it's a wrenching ballad like no other before it and little since. Any number of other high points can be named, such as the opening, "The New Stone Age," with McCluskey's emotional fear palpable over a rough combination of nervous electronic pulses, piercing keyboard parts, and slightly distorted guitar. "She's Leaving" achieves its own polished pop perfection -- it would have made an inspired choice for a fourth single if one had been forthcoming -- while the heartbreaking "Sealand" and "Georgia" hint at where OMD would go next, with Dazzle Ships. [The 2007 EMI edition includes the same 7 bonus tracks as the 2003 reissue but adds a DVD made up of the videos for "Souvenir" and "Maid of Orleans (The Waltz Joan of Arc)," their October 1981 performance on Top of the Pops and 14 songs from a 1981 live performance at the Theatre Royal.] Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

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