CD
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| CD - Remastered | $11.59 |
| CD - Special Edition | $12.29 |
| Vinyl LP - Special Edition | $20.99 |
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Glittery but not 100 percent glam, artful but not really art rock, Roxy Music possessed a voracious appetite for cultural influences that landed them on the periphery of many different -- and sometimes conflicting -- movements but never detracted from their unique and passionate music. With this 1972 debut recording, they brought a sense of style to music two decades before Versace began outfitting rock stars. The '50s haircuts and animal print jackets worn in their inner sleeve photos notwithstanding, Roxy Music were far from poseurs, and their songs introduced the British dandy tradition to rock. Lead singer and principal songwriter Brian Ferry sang odes to love that were fraught with heavy, almost self-mocking irony, and his full-tilt rockers featured clashes between Andy McKay's '50s-styled saxophone licks and Brian Eno's futuristic synthesizer fills. One of the best songs, "The Bob," is a montage (years before deejays made tuneful deconstruction into pop fodder) of England during the war. At a moment when most rockers only looked forward, Roxy Music drew on a wealth of musical antecedents to create a futuristic sound. Many classics or near-classics would follow during the band's on-again, off-again decade together. Martin Johnson, Barnes & Noble