Spandau Ballet - Journeys to Glory
#114
By Julia Talbot
Spandau Ballet
March 6 1981
Journeys to Glory
Genre: New Romantic, meh
Allen’s Rating: 2 out of 5
Julia’s Rating: 3.5 out of 5
Highlights:
To Cut a Long Story Short
Musclebound
The New Romantic musical style was a short lived and not particularly celebrated style of music that served to glue glam rock, punk with a hint of northern/blue eyed soul thrown in (and then thrown out) to EDM and other synth and computerized music - and more ostentatious forms of musical and visual expressionism in later years. The term was coined by the British record producer Richard James Burgess, who is credited as the person invented the SDSV drum synthesizer and a pioneer in working with synthesizers, computers and sampling. None of these things are particularly elemental to the first album he produced, Spandau Ballet’s Journeys to Glory.
The album itself, while important to the continuum of both the band and the musical styles it represents, it not a particularly compelling listen. Spandau Ballet is best known in America for their number one hit: True and subsequent hits Gold and Through the Barricades. For most of us, that is kind of the beginning, middle and end of what we know about the band. Listening to this album did not compel me to dig a whole lot deeper – well I did anyway, but I didn’t find anything much to report out on. From a historical perspective Journeys to Glory is worth a listen- if only for context. It is a great example of a certain kind of music and listening to it and the two Spandau Ballet albums that followed is a great pocket history on the musical styles that were rapidly churning through British (and ultimately American) music.
So what is it to actually listen to this album? I must admit to not being a big fan of the new romantic style – it’s too pop-y and quite frankly even the best of it I find to be uninspired and kind of shallow (maybe that is the point though). After several listens, I decided that the best songs on this album are Musclebound and To Cut a Long Story Short, both of which made it into the top ten on the UK charts. However, in general, I found the songs to be largely anonymous if not forgettable. The musicianship is completely solid, the singing strong and the production value is even but overall, it is an album to listen to when you aren’t paying attention. It will not get the party going, however I did do a lot of raking leaves to it and that worked out pretty well.
https://open.spotify.com/album/1ytJ03C0RlfYdEDkFZ37aZ?si=-7CqCV3dRBWJ-hhn4DOILg
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