Mirror Moves

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (144 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
  • Artist: The Psychedelic Furs (See All Albums by The Psychedelic Furs)
  • Date Released: Aug 21, 1984

  • Genre: Alternative/Punk, Style: Indie Rock, Alternative, Commercial Alternative, Rock

  • Label: Columbia

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 37:28

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Not Their Best But Still Worthwhile

menaceto

Best tracks are "The Ghost in You" and "Highwire Days". BTW, these guys put on one of the best shows I ever saw back in the 1984-85 period, so you might want to check them out live if they pass through your town.

user avatar

Awesome!!!

EMUSIC-020733BE

The Psychedelic Furs raised the bar with the release of Forever Now; on their next release, Mirror Moves, they up the ante even more. Songs such as "Heaven" and the gorgeous "The Ghost In You" prove they could be accessible and still retain most of their arty ways. Though not as angular as earlier releases, Mirror Moves shows they wear gloss well.

user avatar

a perfect album

sixstringsdown

Alt pop albums do not get any better than this one. Every single song is great.

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They Say All Media Guide

Having made tentative inroads toward a wider American audience with Forever Now, the Psychedelic Furs’ profile-raising and partial transformation continued with Mirror Moves. Very much a product of its mid-’80s time — Keith Forsey produced, his drum machine providing the beats while synths played an even more prominent role than before — it may not be the classic sound of the band but it is an often rewarding and inspiring listen. It didn’t hurt that some of the band’s best songs made an appearance here, either. Both “The Ghost in You” and “Heaven” balanced off a warm sound that managed to be radio-friendly on the one hand — John Ashton’s guitar mixed in surprisingly well with the fine if often conventional keyboard arrangements — and surprisingly barbed on the other. Richard Butler’s lyrics were some of his slyest and sharpest, a tone maintained throughout the album, while his one of a kind speak/sing clipped rasp kept things from being too lost even at the album’s least inspired. Unlike the following Midnight to Midnight album, however — where everything the Furs had going for them turned into a screeching halt — Mirror Moves holds up fairly consistently. “Here Come Cowboys,” with its combination guitar/string chug (or so it sounds!) and a brilliant slow descending chorus, and the driving, nervous piano and massed vocals on “Alice’s House” are two particular winners. The secret highlight of the album is also its closer — “Highwire Days,” as brilliant a meditation on ’80s-era political paranoia and fears as was done at the time. Butler’s imagery is to the point without moralizing or dumbing down, while the tense arrangement suggests a more synth-based equivalent to the Chameleons, at once scaled for epic heights and almost uncomfortably close. – Ned Raggett

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