eMusic Review
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.
After the title track… read more »