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No Exit

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (109 ratings)

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No Exit album cover
01
Screaming Skin
5:35
02
Forgive and Forget
4:31
03
Maria
4:51
04
No Exit
4:19
05
Double Take
4:12
06
Nothing is Real But the Girl
3:13
07
Boom Boom in the Zoom Zoom Room
4:08
08
Night Wind Sent
4:40
09
Under the Gun (For Jeffrey Lee Pierce)
4:09
10
Out In the Streets
3:03
11
Happy Dog (For Caggy)
3:24
12
The Dream's Lost On Me
3:19
13
Divine
4:14
14
Dig Up The Conjo
4:55
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 58:33

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eMusic Review 0

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Ira Robbins

eMusic Contributor

Ira Robbins co-founded Trouser Press magazine in 1974. (Think of it as a pre-Internet music blog). He was later pop music editor at Newsday and has written for ...more »

11.06.07
Years later, Blondie picks up where they left off
Label: Eleven Seven Music

Reconvening after a generation of acrimony, illness and musical change all around them, Blondie picked up where they left off, in the wanton unpredictability of The Hunter. Spirited in mood and performance (drummer Clem Burke sounds like a man in a hurry), the album follows ska, rap, country, cabaret, rock and other styles, sometimes with fine results but also to some dead ends. Deborah Harry does a convincing impression of jazzy crooner Blossom Dearie on the verses of "Boom Boom in the Zoom Zoom Room" but recites tedious spoken sections elsewhere and sounds ridiculous rapping with Coolio on the impossibly confused title track. The inclusion of a Shangri-Las oldie, "Out in the Streets," reconnects Blondie to the vintage girl group sound from whence it arose, but ends up being just another passing fancy. Capping the handful of winning tracks here, No Exit finally triumphs with the memorable "Maria," the kind of knockout hit single that plays to Harry's strengths and made Blondie stars in the first place.

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Previews sound good...

Dr_Eclectic

Why can we not download these tracks in the UK? Is sterling so worthless these days?

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Good Album

hiddenfire88

There is some really good, juicy material on here, this is a fine reunion album that picks up the gauntlet of their previous work. But it's badly sequenced, the best tracks are buried. These tracks in this order make a better album : 1. Maria 2. Out in the Streets 3. Under the Gun 4. The Dream's Lost on Me 5. Forgive and Forget 6. No Exit 7. Screaming Skin 8. Double Take 9. Nothing Is Real but the Girl 10. Night Wind Sent 11. Divine 12. Dig Up the Conjo

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Can't Go Wrong Here

NetizenKen

If nothing else, download 'the dream's lost on me.'

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Icon: Blondie

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They Say All Music Guide

Once you’ve cherished Blondie you never really go back, even if for half of your life you must cherish them out of forgiveness, or just plain heartfelt concern. Debbie Harry loves to make curious decisions about her music, and it’s always important to listen to her work carefully and several times (while trying to keep her performance in John Waters’ Hairspray either firmly in, or out, of your mind as you do). In the old days, Harry and her guys covered terrific old blues and trippy, backwater pieces, popped up and pretty, punkified, otherwise unremarkable rock tunes, and flat out treated us to a show, whether live or Memorex. No Exit is a gritty downtown incarnation that almost sounds like a cutting room castaway, filled with raw and abject moments and digressions that suggest an improvised, irrelevant feel. The talkative “Screaming Skin” is a lyrically confused, stream of consciousness piece that sounds as if it was written on a paper bag on the subway — and some people really like this stuff. But some of the instrumental tracks have the veneer of an afterthought, particularly in the percussion department. Miss Debbie is always at her rockin’ finest when futzing with the blues (and country, really), which she does on most of the latter half of the disc like the consummate, crazy pro that she is. If nothing else, No Exit is a testament to authentic rock and roll durability, and, well, the abiding “wow” that is Debbie Harry. – Becky Byrkit

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