Berlin

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ALBUM INFORMATION
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Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 49:14

eMusic Review

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

06.30.09
A controversial, well-written and elaborately produced LP about a love affair gone terribly wrong
1998 | Label: RCA Records Label

We're living in a musical world that Lou Reed helped create, a world that, through his influence as solo artist and leader of the Velvet Underground, has experienced glam, punk, goth, grunge and more. And so it's almost inconceivable in today's America that a well-written and elaborately produced LP about a love affair gone terribly wrong would be met with near-universal scorn. But that's just what happened in 1973, when Lou Reed followed his 1972 glam-rock breakthrough Transformer with this dramatic downer.

Unlike Reed's subsequent Metal Machine Music, Berlin wasn't meant as an anti-commercial gesture: Earlier that year, Cabaret made bisexuality in pre-WWII Germany an Oscar-approved subject, and Pink Floyd topped the charts with its madness-minded Dark Side of the Moon. Fresh from his Alice Cooper hit streak, producer Bob Ezrin joins Traffic's Steve Winwood, Cream's Jack Bruce and a slew of equally skilled session players who here merge glam with burlesque — a mix that would soon beget The Rocky Horror Picture Show. But Reed's tale of a relationship destroyed by depression, drug addiction, sexual compulsion and spousal abuse proved itself far more daunting for listeners just starting to process Watergate's shocks.

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Brilliant!

Jeff415

Following on the mainstream success of "Transformer", Lou Reed goes way out on a limb and creates a concept album that recaptures all the edgy qualities of the VU in a more poetic and emotional vernacular. It's a very intimate and personal cycle with characters and storylines. It's sad, powerful, deeply moving and very melodic. Interestingly, a few songs from Berlin transferred very well to "Rock and Roll Animal" and Lou's hard glam live show, although the entire "Berlin" album is quiet and subdued.

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Stark and Powerful

Pikg

Lou Reed's most emotionally aware, severe, and ambitious album --- everyone says it's a masterpiece because it is a masterpiece--- still, it's not for everyone.

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Most Overrated Album of All Time?

EMUSIC-0065200C

yes. this from a VU worshipper. embarrassingly awful

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Being Lou Reed all the time can't be easy. Especially when Lou Reed is, despite his fixed legend as the glowering poetic soul of the New York rock underbelly, a mighty changeable man. Not just as in celebrating "coming out of our closets" on his breakthrough album (1972's Transformer) only to turn around a decade later and insist that he's never been able to keep his hands off women (1982's The Blue Mask), but as… more »

They Say All Media Guide

Transformer and “Walk on the Wild Side” were both major hits in 1972, to the surprise of both Lou Reed and the music industry, and with Reed suddenly a hot commodity, he used his newly won clout to make the most ambitious album of his career, Berlin. Berlin was the musical equivalent of a drug-addled kid set loose in a candy store; the album’s songs, which form a loose story line about a doomed romance between two chemically fueled bohemians, were fleshed out with a huge, boomy production (Bob Ezrin at his most grandiose) and arrangements overloaded with guitars, keyboards, horns, strings, and any other kitchen sink that was handy (the session band included Jack Bruce, Steve Winwood, Aynsley Dunbar, and Tony Levin). And while Reed had often been accused of focusing on the dark side of life, he and Ezrin approached Berlin as their opportunity to make The Most Depressing Album of All Time, and they hardly missed a trick. This all seemed a bit much for an artist who made such superb use of the two-guitars/bass/drums lineup with the Velvet Underground, especially since Reed doesn’t even play electric guitar on the album; the sheer size of Berlin ultimately overpowers both Reed and his material. But if Berlin is largely a failure of ambition, that sets it apart from the vast majority of Reed’s lesser works; Lou’s vocals are both precise and impassioned, and though a few of the songs are little more than sketches, the best — “How Do You Think It Feels,” “Oh, Jim,” “The Kids,” and “Sad Song” — are powerful, bitter stuff. It’s hard not to be impressed by Berlin, given the sheer scope of the project, but while it earns an A for effort, the actual execution merits more of a B-. – Mark Deming

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