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Rolling Stone: the 100 Greatest Debut Albums of All time.
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http://www.rollingstone.com/mus...known-pleasures-19691231At #20, Unknown Pleasures This breathtaking 1979 set was to punk what The Velvet Underground & Nico was to psychedelia – a reveal of the seething dark underbelly of a cultural movement. Produced by Martin Hannett, who makes the band sound like they're performing in a meat cooler, it introduces Ian Curtis, who wails the Manchester existential blues with a despair so powerful, it somehow transcends hopelessness (when he sings "I've got the spirit," on the amazing Arctic-chunnel of an album-opener "Disorder," it's as thrilling as it is blood-chilling). A model for countless brooding rock bands to come. Edited by user 25 March 2013 07:13:31(UTC)
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I promise to make you so alive that the fall of dust on furniture will deafen you. Nina Cassian |
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Dry 201 Message Pub
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Rolling Stone: the 100 Greatest Debut Albums of All time.
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