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Send

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01
In the Art of Stopping
3:35 $0.99
02
Mr Marx's Table
3:02 $0.99
03
Being Watched
2:58 $0.99
04
Comet
3:18 $0.99
05
The Agfers of Kodack
3:12 $0.99
06
Nice Streets Above (full version)
3:45 $0.99
07
Spent
4:43 $0.99
08
Read & Burn
2:35 $0.99
09
You Can't Leave Now
3:42 $0.99
10
Half Eaten
1:59 $0.99
11
99.9
7:42 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 40:31

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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 »

10.07.08
The already lean post-punk band strips to skin and bones
2003 | Label: pinkflag / state51

When Wire reconvened circa 2000 for their third incarnation as a band, they did a brief tour where they played old material — the first time, really, they'd ever looked back at their career. Perhaps playing the hyper-compressed rockers from their earliest days got them interested in very loud, very tense music again, but after issuing the first two Read & Burn EPs as "status reports," they compiled parts of both of them (and a few new tracks) for Send, the most muscular album they'd ever made. It's blisteringly loud, fast and smart, ditching the chiming pop surfaces of their '80s incarnation in favor of a harsh, nearly relentless grind and slam.

The abstract lyrics, brief running times (aside from the seven-minute earthquake of a finale, "99.9") and skin-and-bones riffs have more in common with 1977's Pink Flag than any of their other records, but this is the Pink Flag aesthetic run through a CPU grinder — electronic editing and digital distortion are a big part of Wire mark III's sound.

The songs on Send are sometimes not much more than gestures to wrap an arrangement around — the title of "Nice Streets Above" is also the entire extent of its… read more »

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Nasty, Brutish & Fairly Short

Murgatroyd

Wire's resurgence continues apace with with this tough, industrial-tinged release. While not quite as sinuous and melodic as Object 47, those wonderful colors are still present. And Colin Newman's silky croon remains undimmed by time. I am eagerly awaiting the next sounds from these brilliant musicians.

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wired

soreEyes

In my opinion this release from WIRE fits nicely with their ealier releases like chairs missing and pink flag. "In the Art of Stopping" is one of my favorites off this album as well as "Mr Marx's Table" (even though it sounds like it could've come from love and rockets)

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Icon: Wire

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One way of describing Wire is to say that they've effectively been three different bands with (mostly) the same lineup: the blazing art-punk mutants of their 1976-80 incarnation, the monomaniacal electro-brainiacs of their 1985-91 renaissance, and the burly time-warping professors that reconvened in 2000 and are still recording now. Another way is to say that every record they've made has sounded like a hard-won consensus. Singer/guitarist Colin Newman, initially the band's voice of punk rock… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Send is a quasi-compilation and pseudo-new album from an older and much more ferocious Wire; it plucks seven songs from the two low-key Read & Burn EPs the group released on its own Pink Flag label in 2002 and adds four new ones. This is the culmination, perhaps, of the group’s 1999 re-formation — an outcome that only attendees of the terse performances and buyers of the EPs could have forecasted. Unlike a lot of re-formed groups, Wire chose not to be a jukebox with its old material while performing in front of its multi-generational crowds. The bandmembers didn’t merely run through pieces of their beloved discography, or even inject new life into them — they tore through them with a vigorous energy that teetered on the brink of violence. The new material collected and built on here takes on the same tightly wound, clenched-teeth direction. Thick walls of clamor are constructed on each song. The opening “In the Art of Stopping” is a relatively unassuming din of whipsaw guitars and percussion that could double as the sound of railroad ties being driven into the ground. Colin Newman’s voice hectors ominously as it slowly shifts from one channel to the other and back again. All the buzzing sets up the viscous and highly repetitive grinding of “Mr. Marx’s Table,” where Newman takes on a more hospitable tone. On “Spent,” Bruce Gilbert practically screams at the top of his lungs and fights to be heard over an overwhelming bank of industrial guitars that twist with agitated riffs and squeals. The only break from the onslaught comes during the closing “99.9,” which takes nearly four minutes to be worked into another rich lather of vibrating menace. Dynamic, taut, feisty, and clever as ever, Send is this group’s fourth-best album. – Andy Kellman

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