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Chairs Missing

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (26 ratings)
Chairs Missing album cover
01
Practice Makes Perfect (2006 Digital Remaster)
4:12
$1.29
02
French Film Blurred (2006 Digital Remaster)
2:35
$1.29
03
Another The Letter (2006 Digital Remaster)
1:08
$1.29
04
Men 2nd (2006 Digital Remaster)
1:44
$1.29
05
Marooned (2006 Digital Remaster)
2:22
$1.29
06
Sand In My Joints (2006 Digital Remaster)
1:51
$1.29
07
Being Sucked In Again (2006 Digital Remaster)
3:15
$1.29
08
Heartbeat (2006 Digital Remaster)
3:17
$1.29
09
Mercy (2006 Digital Remaster)
5:46
$1.29
10
Outdoor Miner (2006 Digital Remaster)
1:44
$1.29
11
I Am The Fly (2006 Digital Remaster)
3:08
$1.29
12
I Feel Mysterious Today (2006 Digital Remaster)
1:58
$1.29
13
From The Nursery (2006 Digital Remaster)
2:58
$1.29
14
Used To (2006 Digital Remaster)
2:24
$1.29
15
Too Late (2006 Digital Remaster)
4:14
$1.29
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 42:36

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eMusic Review 0

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Douglas Wolk

eMusic Contributor

Douglas Wolk writes about pop music and comic books for Time, the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Wired and elsewhere. He's the author of Reading Comics: How Gra...more »

07.14.11
Dropping punk's dogmas through a trap door and feeding them to the sharks
2006 | Label: CAROLINE WORLD SERVICE

Where Pink Flag had been about refining and mutating punk, Chairs Missing was concerned with dropping punk’s dogmas through a trap door and feeding them to the sharks. The streamlined, monolithic charge of Wire’s debut were almost totally replaced by other textures and techniques: rhythms that stalk or slither, arrangements that hover angelically (“French Film Blurred”) or explode into curlicues of noise (“Sand In My Joints”). The all-for-one songwriting credits of the debut were replaced by an unexpected division of labor between guitarists Colin Newman and Bruce Gilbert and bassist Graham Lewis: In this band, as it turned out, the person who wrote the words wasn’t necessarily the person who sang them. And the band’s guitar-bass-drums lineup was augmented by some jolting splashes of keyboard, especially on “Another the Letter,” a speed-drill song about a suicide note (presumably so called because the Box Tops had already staked a claim to the title “The Letter”).

Wire’s songcraft had blossomed too. Newman’s “Heartbeat” is all restraint: two notes, a melody that eats its own tail, and no chorus, eventually diminishing to silence. (They used to end their sets with it, to freak out audiences who expected a grand finale.) Bruce Gilbert’s… read more »

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Find the Restless reissues from the 80s

Kingpriapus

These reissues of the first three albums do not include the bonus singles and b-sides that the Restless Records reissues had. I couldn't live without "Go Ahead" and the weird soundscape (I can't remember the title) that samples an Armed Forces Radio interview with the band.

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They Say All Music Guide

Chairs Missing marks a partial retreat from Pink Flag’s austere, bare-bones minimalism, although it still takes concentrated listening to dig out some of the melodies. Producer Mike Thorne’s synth adds a Brian Eno-esque layer of atmospherics, and Wire itself seems more concerned with the sonic textures it can coax from its instruments; the tempos are slower, the arrangements employ more detail and sound effects, and the band allows itself to stretch out on a few songs. The results are a bit variable — “Mercy,” in particular, meanders for too long — but compelling much more often than not. The album’s clear high point is the statement of purpose “I Am the Fly,” which employs an emphasis-shifting melody and guitar sounds that actually evoke the sound of the title insect. But that’s not all by any means — “Outdoor Miner” and “Used To” have a gentle lilt, while “Sand in My Joints” is a brief anthem worthy of Pink Flag, and the four-minute “Practice Makes Perfect” is the best result of the album’s incorporation of odd electronic flavors. In general, the lyrics are darker than those on Pink Flag, even morbid at times; images of cold, drowning, pain, and suicide haunt the record, and the title itself is a reference to mental instability. The arty darkness of Chairs Missing, combined with the often icy-sounding synth/guitar arrangements, helps make the record a crucial landmark in the evolution of punk into post-punk and goth, as well as a testament to Wire’s rapid development and inventiveness. [The original 1989 CD issue by Restless Retro features three bonus tracks: the fine non-LP single "A Question of Degree" and the B-sides "Go Ahead" and "Former Airline."] – Steve Huey

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