Brotherhood [Collector's Edition]

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Brotherhood [Collector's Edition] album cover
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Total Tracks: 18   Total Length: 98:32

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J. Edward Keyes

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J. Edward Keyes has been writing about music for nearly 15 years, a fact he occasionally finds terrifying. His work has appeared in Rolling Stone, the Village V...more »

03.01.10
The two sides of New Order on full display
2008 | Label: Rhino/Warner Bros.

Much of New Order's career was a balancing act, a struggle to retain their ash-colored post-punk past while edging warily into the high-gloss computer age. Nowhere is this better exemplified than Brotherhood, an album that so ably illustrates the band's competing impulses that it's actually divided into two sides: a 'rock' side and a 'synth' side.

Which is not to say the two are mutually exclusive. One of the first sounds on Brotherhood is that of a fat-bottomed synth, and there's an electronic haze hovering behind even the album's most rollicking songs. But what New Order are starting to get a better handle on here is the kind of lean-guitar hurtle that would define later hits like "Regret" and "Run." Peter Hook, who was just beginning to figure out the virtue of melodic basslines on Power, Corruption and Lies is in full bloom here: He seizes "Weirdo" by the throat and hurls it into the stratosphere, running one breathtaking low-end loop-de-loop after another. They even abandon some of their trademark aloofness; "As It Is When It Was" is ushered in by an acoustic strum, and Sumner's plainspoken approach to lyrics is well-suited to the song's emotional candor.

Brotherhood's biggest hit comes dead… read more »

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so good!!!!!!

starbearer

bizarre love triangle... such a huge classic song. you have to download this album, if you don't... well... don't even think of calling yourself an eighties music fan. this is a MUST!!!

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They Say All Music Guide

New Order had been so good at integrating synth and guitars (often on the same song) that fans who greeted 1986′s Brotherhood with the realization that it was split into a rock side and a dance side couldn’t help but be a little disappointed. Still, the songs and the band’s production had reached such a high level that the concept worked superbly, without calling undue attention to itself. The rock side comes first, revealing more of the emotional side of Bernard Sumner’s singing and songwriting, even leading off with acoustic guitar for one song. But Brotherhood was also a little harder than what had come before; Sumner often sang with a come-on sort of brio, matching Peter Hook’s seething work on the bass. The songwriting was excellent, and the album was delivered with great pacing, especially on the first four tracks — sensuous and roiling for “Paradise,” bright and emphatic on “Weirdo,” reflective for “As It Is When It Was,” then back to direct and upbeat on “Broken Promise.” The synthesizer side was similarly assured, beginning with one of their brightest singles (and biggest transatlantic hits), “Bizarre Love Triangle.” There was no dark side to Brotherhood, as there was with Low-life; after “Bizarre Love Triangle” came only the Middle Eastern fusion of “Angel Dust” and the simple, pastoral synth pop of “All Day Long” and “Every Little Counts.” For better and worse, this was a New Order with nothing more to prove — witness the tossed-off lyrics and giggles on “Every Little Counts” — aside from continuing to make great music. [Rhino's 2008 remastering of New Order's first five albums, subtitled The Factory Years, provided complete remastering of each original LP plus a bonus disc that included a good sampling of the band's non-album material contemporary to the album. For Brotherhood, that included remixes of "Bizarre Love Triangle" and the 1988 version of "Blue Monday," plus the singles "1963," "True Faith," and "Touched by the Hand of God," with attendant remixes.] – John Bush

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