Peter Murphy – Love Hysteria (Expanded Edition) (1988/2013) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Peter Murphy - Love Hysteria (Expanded Edition) (1988/2013) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz] Download

Peter Murphy – Love Hysteria (Expanded Edition) (1988/2013)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 59:21 minutes | 1,23 GB | Genre: New Wave, Post Punk
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Beggars Banquet

Having assembled, for touring purposes, what would soon be his formal backing band, the Hundred Men, and more specifically, having found a new key songwriting collaborator in ex-B. Movie keyboardist Paul Statham, Murphy created his most elegant post-Bauhaus effort to date. Love Hysteria had definite Bowie echoes, though the feeling was more late-’70s Berlin-era than Ziggy glam. That said, with his band turning in a variety of bright, lively performances and with sympathetic production from ex-Fall member/arranger Simon Rogers, Murphy matched the music with flair, his voice even more of a passionate croon than a powerful howl. Lead single “All Night Long” was something of an American breakthrough hit; its upbeat rock drive and lush keyboards are a perfect bed for Murphy’s performance. Other moments, such as the ringing acoustic/electric guitar combinations on “Indigo Eyes” and “Dragnet Drag,” take Murphy even further away from Bauhaus’ shadow, though “His Circle and Hers Meet” and “Blind Sublime” have a brusquer energy. The definite highlights of the album are two majestic ballads: “Time Has Got Nothing to Do With It,” with a fine Statham synth line matching Murphy’s soaring vocals; and “My Last Two Weeks,” a simply wonderful romantic sentiment. If his lyrics now sometimes have the feeling of formal philosophical pronouncements, the sense of style with which he sings them saves the performances more often than not. Closing with a fun romp through Iggy Pop’s “Funtime,” saluting another one of Murphy’s old heroes with an appropriately strong vocal and amusing horror-movie samples, Love Hysteria shows Murphy fully coming into his own as a performer.
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Peter Murphy – Should the World Fail to Fall Apart (Expanded Edition) (1985/2011) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Peter Murphy – Should the World Fail to Fall Apart (Expanded Edition) (1985/2011)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 02:02:36 minutes | 2,43 GB | Genre: New Wave, Post Punk
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Beggars Banquet

Following the collapse of Dali’s Car, Murphy embarked on a solo career in earnest, fortuitously hooking up with Howard Hughes, who had been working with fellow cult artists the Associates. With 4AD label head Ivo Watts-Russell drafted in to produce and guest musicians popping in as desired, Murphy and Hughes created a slightly fragmentary but still intriguing record. Caught between his recent past (the use of fretless bass on “Canvas Beauty” was a dead giveaway that he missed working with Mick Karn) and his eventual solo successes, Murphy concentrates here mostly on breaking free of the goth stereotype in which he had found himself trapped. His vocal passion isn’t diminished in the slightest, but this time the music over which he sings is generally lighter and freer in tone; he himself handles drum programming, core guitar parts, and keyboard lines while Hughes takes care of the rest. The quietly anthemic title track and “God Sends” stand out as thorough successes on these lines. Two covers also crop up, both worthy of note: A solid run-through of Magazine’s “The Light Pours Out of Me” with that band’s guitarist John McGeoch; more noteworthy is a fierce rip on Pere Ubu’s “Final Solution.” The ghosts of Bauhaus do crop up at points, most notably “Never Man,” with haunting backing vocals and a generally creepy feeling. Meanwhile, “The Answer Is Clear” has a more direct connection, with none other than Bauhaus guitarist Daniel Ash contributing some fine feedback squalls. Ironically enough, the song itself is a pointed response to Ash’s own recent Tones on Tail song “The Movement of Fear,” which Murphy took as an attack on himself!

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