Vintage Violence

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (64 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
  • Artist: John Cale (See All Albums by John Cale)
  • Date Released: Feb 13, 2001

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Rock

  • Label: Columbia/Legacy

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 44:13

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Fantastic

Schmts

Anyone looking to explore John Cale's solo material should start right here. Not sure why Fairweather Friend appears twice, but its almost worth downloading both.

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A Gem

spacemodular

This is one of my favorite Cale albums. Now can we get Paris 1919 and Church of Anthrax? Both are in the Columbia library...

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Highly recommended

flo-nominal

To fans of the Velvet Underground and Lou Reed. Although Cale had left the group by then this record is very familiar to the sound of the later VU records. Some really nice stuff going on here.

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They Say All Media Guide

John Cale had the strongest avant-garde credentials of anyone in the Velvet Underground, but he was also the Velvet whose solo career was the least strongly defined by his work with the band, and his first solo album, Vintage Violence, certainly bears this out. While the banshee howls of Cale’s viola and the percussive stab of his keyboard parts were his signature sounds on The Velvet Underground and Nico and White Light/White Heat, Cale’s first solo album, 1970′s Vintage Violence, was a startlingly user-friendly piece of mature, intelligent pop whose great failing may have been being a shade too sophisticated for radio. Cale’s work with the Velvets was purposefully rough and aurally challenging, but Vintage Violence is buffed to a smooth, satin finish, with Cale and his group sounding witty on tunes like “Adelaide” and “Cleo,” pensive on “Amsterdam,” and lushly orchestrated on “Big White Cloud.” (Cale also gets a lot of production value out of his backing group, credited as “Penguin” but actually members of Garland Jeffreys’ band, Grinder’s Switch.) And anyone expecting the fevered psychosis that Cale let loose on later albums like Fear and Sabotage/Live is in for a surprise; Cale has rarely sounded this well-adjusted on record, though his lyrical voice is usually a bit too cryptic to stand up to a literal interpretation of his words. If Cale wanted to clear out a separate and distinct path for his solo career, he certainly did that with Vintage Violence, though it turned out to be only one of many roads he would follow in the future. [The 2001 CD reissue adds two bonus tracks: a previously unreleased alternate version of "Fairweather Friend," and the previously unreleased "Wall."] – Mark Deming

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