Legendary Hearts

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 37:33

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Great 80's Release By Lou

Nyabinghi

I disagree with Deming from AMG. This record is better than the Blue Mask. Lou really hits a nerve with his songwriting here and affected me emotionally on this one. There are some poignant moments here; Lou's lyrics are superb. Anyone who's struggled with substance abuse can relate to Last Shot. Bottoming Out is affecting with it's portrayal of self destructive tendencies. Home Of The Brave with its undercurrent of distortion and depiction of life in this USA is harrowing. A beautiful, sometimes humorous and scary effort.

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1980s Lou Reed

Pikg

I'm sure I'm in the minority --- but, Lou Reed's 80s output is absolutely amazing --- he's a fully mature and focused artist at this stage --- nothing is wasted and nothing's there that isn't essential.

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Long-Overdue Release

LouwKee

I've been looking for this on CD since the 1990s after my cassette wore out. Download #07 "Pow Wow" and #09 "Bottoming Out" and #11 "Rooftop Garden" if you want a sample, whole album if you're a Lou fan. Holds up extremely well. Hey eMusic!?! Where is "Street Hassle"? Please put it up!

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A soundtrack of sorts...

NSPDave

It's 1985...dead-end job within a kiss hiney corporate circus and buddies getting married left and right. So I did what any self-fulfillment seeking 26 year old male would do with his new company-provided station wagon ("Yes, that is genuine fake wood on the side.")--took a road trip to Graceland. Unfortunately, Graceland was closed though a woman in the gift shop tried to sell me a paintbrush that was used to "touch up" the Lisa Marie (The Big E's private jet) for $50. This album provided the perfect soundtrack as I headed back north on I-55, less the conqueror.

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eMusic Features

Icon: Lou Reed

By Michaelangelo Matos

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

If Legendary Hearts seemed like a disappointment in 1983, that was largely because the year before Lou Reed had released The Blue Mask, one of the finest albums of his career, and Legendary Hearts just wasn’t quite as good. But pull it off the shelf today, give it a listen, and Legendary Hearts easily shuts down nearly anything Reed released in the 1970s; if it’s a less obvious masterpiece than The Blue Mask, it makes clear that Reed was once again in firm command of his strengths, and making the most of them in the studio. Guitarist Robert Quine and bassist Fernando Saunders were both back on board from The Blue Mask, and they reaffirmed their status as the linchpins of the strongest band of Reed’s solo career, and drummer Fred Maher rocked harder (and with fewer frills) than Doane Perry. The bracing cross-talk of Reed’s and Quine’s guitars had lost nothing in the year separating the two albums, and if Reed didn’t seem to be aiming quite as high as a songwriter this time out, most of the tracks were every bit as intelligent and soul-searching as The Blue Mask’s lineup; if there were a few moments of comic relief, like “Don’t Talk to Me About Work” and “Pow Wow,” no one could argue that Reed hadn’t earned a few laughs after songs like “Make Up Mind,” “The Last Shot,” and “Betrayed.” On Legendary Hearts, Reed was writing great songs, playing them with enthusiasm and imagination, and singing them with all his heart and soul, and if it wasn’t his best album, it was more than good enough to confirm that the brilliance of The Blue Mask was no fluke, and that Reed had reestablished himself as one of the most important artists in American rock. – Mark Deming

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