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Adventure

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (112 ratings)
Adventure album cover
01
Glory
3:11
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02
Days
3:14
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03
Foxhole
4:49
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04
Careful
3:18
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05
Carried Away
5:12
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06
The Fire
5:56
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07
Ain't That Nothin'
4:53
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08
The Dream's Dream
6:37
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09
Adventure
5:36
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10
Ain't That Nothin'
3:52
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11
Glory
3:37
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12
Ain't That Nothin'
9:48
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 60:03

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Suffers Only When Compared to Marquee Moon

Jeff415

Television's creative burst lasted only a few short years and produced two superb albums. Adventure does not reach the heights of perfection captured on Marquee Moon, although it has lots of highlights that would have fit onto an extended version of MM. Glory is sublime. Days is one of the most melodic songs in the Television catalog. Those two songs stand out for me, and the others are also very good. I their live performances, all the songs from MM and Adventure just blended into a singular expression that was uniquely Television. The guitar interplay between Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd was brilliant.

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Re: Criminally Overlooked

MMitch59

I agree. I always considered MM and Adventure to be equally great and essential. Both albums together form the classic Television catalog.

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Criminally Overlooked

cuckoo

The unfortunate curse on this album is that it will be forever compared to the singular masterpiece Marquee Moon. And that has always diminished its reputation. But if you look at this album itself on it's own merits, you realize it's a really strong and original rock/pop album with inventive guitar work.

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Television’s groundbreaking first album, Marquee Moon, was as close to a perfect debut as any band made in the 1970s, and in many respects it would have been all but impossible for the band to top it. One senses that Television knew this, because Adventure seems designed to avoid the comparisons by focusing on a different side of the band’s personality. Where Marquee Moon was direct and straightforward in its approach, with the subtleties clearly in the performance and not in the production, Adventure is a decidedly softer and less aggressive disc, and while John Jansen’s production isn’t intrusive, it does round off the edges of the band’s sound in a way Andy Johns’ work on the first album did not. But the two qualities that really made Marquee Moon so special were Tom Verlaine’s songs and the way his guitar work meshed with that of Richard Lloyd, whose style was less showy but whose gifts were just as impressive, and if you have to listen a bit harder to Adventure, it doesn’t take long to realize that both of those virtues are more than apparent here, and while one might wish the sound had a bit more bite on “Foxhole” or “Ain’t That Nothin’,” the quieter, more layered sound is just what the doctor ordered for “Glory” and “The Dream’s Dream.” Sure, Marquee Moon is a better album, but Adventure has one of the greatest guitar bands of all time playing superbly on a set of truly fine songs, and albums like this come along far too infrequently for anyone to ignore music this pleasurable simply on the grounds of relative evaluation; it’s not quite a masterpiece, but it’s a brilliant record by any yardstick. – Mark Deming

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