December 26, 2020

Joy Division - Unknown Pleasures (1979)

Unknown Pleasures is the debut studio album by English rock band Joy Division, released on 15 June 1979 by Factory Records.
The album was recorded and mixed over three successive weekends at Stockport's Strawberry Studios in April 1979, and was produced by Martin Hannett, who incorporated a number of unconventional production techniques into the group's sound. The cover artwork was designed by artist Peter Saville, using a data plot of signals from a radio pulsar
It is the only Joy Division album released during lead singer Ian Curtis's lifetime.

It even looks like something classic, beyond its time or place of origin even as it was a clear product of both -- one of Peter Saville's earliest and best designs, a transcription of a signal showing a star going nova, on a black embossed sleeve. 
If that were all Unknown Pleasures was, it wouldn't be discussed so much, but the ten songs inside, quite simply, are stone-cold landmarks, the whole album a monument to passion, energy, and cathartic despair. 
The quantum leap from the earliest thrashy singles to Unknown Pleasures can be heard through every note, with Martin Hannett's deservedly famous production -- emphasizing space in the most revelatory way since the dawn of dub -- as much a hallmark as the music itself. 
Songs fade in behind furtive noises of motion and activity, glass breaks with the force and clarity of doom, and minimal keyboard lines add to an air of looming disaster -- something, somehow, seems to wait or lurk beyond the edge of hearing. But even though this is Hannett's album as much as anyone's, the songs and performances are the true key. Bernard Sumner redefined heavy metal sludge as chilling feedback fear and explosive energy, Peter Hook's instantly recognizable bass work was at once warm and forbidding, and Stephen Morris' drumming smacked through the speakers above all else. 
Ian Curtis synthesizes and purifies every last impulse, his voice shot through with the desire first and foremost to connect, only connect -- as "Candidate" plaintively states, "I tried to get to you/You treat me like this." Pick any song: the nervous death dance of "She's Lost Control"; the harrowing call for release "New Dawn Fades," all four members in perfect sync; the romance in hell of "Shadowplay"; "Insight" and its nervous drive toward some sort of apocalypse. 
All visceral, all emotional, all theatrical, all perfect -- one of the best albums ever. 


Side one
1. "Disorder" - 3:36 
2. "Day of the Lords" - 4:48 
3. "Candidate" - 3:05 
4. "Insight" - 4:30 
5. "New Dawn Fades" - 4:48 

Side two
1. "She's Lost Control" - 3:56 
2. "Shadowplay" - 3:54 
3. "Wilderness" - 2:38 
4. "Interzone" - 2:16 
5. "I Remember Nothing" - 5:53 

All tracks are written by Ian Curtis, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris and Bernard Sumner.


Joy Division

Production


Companies, etc.

Notes
Released: 15 June 1979 
Recorded: April 1979 Studio Strawberry, Stockport 
Genre:  Post-punk 
Length: 39:28 

Label - Factory Records

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