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Upstairs At Eric's

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (128 ratings)
Upstairs At Eric's album cover
01
Don't Go
3:11 $1.29
02
Too Pieces
3:15
$0.99
03
Bad Connection
3:22
$0.99
04
I Before E Except After C
4:43
$0.99
05
Midnight
4:24
$1.29
06
In My Room
3:54
$0.99
07
Only You
3:16
$1.29
08
Goodbye Seventies
2:37
$1.29
09
Situation
5:47
$1.29
10
Winter Kills
4:05
$1.29
11
Bring Your Love Down
4:40
$0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 43:14

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best of the best

happyreaper

Really, really great album. If you need convincing, check Situation or Don't Go for upbeat/dance tracks, or Midnight/Only You for more soulful tracks. But of course, what makes this album great is the combination of the two...

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yaz

lisabones

great cd, loved it since the 80's, not much since compares in this genre

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Flashback

imk

A quintessential eighties album. When I hear this album, I'm instantly transported back to Fair Oaks Mall circa 1986. I'm wearing a shirt with a ridiculous collar that I bought at Le Chateau and no one has sideburns. It's several hours into my shift at the Art Explosion and I am hearing this album for the third or fourth time already (but I am still humming along).

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They Say All Music Guide

Vince Clarke can claim involvement in two stunning debuts in only two years: Depeche Mode’s Speak and Spell and Yaz’s Upstairs at Eric’s. While Speak and Spell is, by far, the more consistent record, Upstairs at Eric’s is wholly more satisfying, beating the Depeche record on substance and ambition, and is light years ahead in emotion. “Don’t Go” and “Situation” are absolutely killer with Clarke’s bubbling synth and singer Alison Moyet’s bluesy and powerful delivery. They’re both rightful dance floor staples, and have since undergone numerous remixes, both official and bootleg. “Bring Your Love Down (Didn’t I)” is just as good a thumper, adding a wonderful mumbled bridge that shows how much Clarke enjoyed messing with pop music. The softer “Only You” would have sounded silly and robotic if it had appeared on Speak and Spell, but Moyet’s vocals makes it bittersweet and engaging. The clumsier experimental tracks make most people head for the hits collection, but to do so would be to miss the album’s great twist. The loony tape loop of “I Before E Except After C,” the skeletal “Winter Kills,” and a disruptive phone call in the middle of the naïve “Bad Connection” offer up more complex and intimate moments. Like its curious cover, Upstairs at Eric’s presents a fractured, well-lit, and paranoid urban landscape. – David Jeffries

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