- The Velvet Underground (album)
Infobox Album |
Name = The Velvet Underground
Type =Album
Artist =The Velvet Underground
Released = March 1969
Recorded = November-December 1968 TTG Studios,Hollywood
Genre =Rock and roll ,folk rock
Length = 42:56
Label =MGM Records ,Verve Records
Producer =The Velvet Underground
Reviews =
*Allmusic Rating|5|5 [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:apfpxql5ldhe link]
*"Blender" Rating|5|5 [http://www.blender.com/guide/reviews.aspx?id=4281 link]
*"Rolling Stone " Rating|4|5 [http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/thevelvetunderground/albums/album/96200/review/6068150/the_velvet_underground March 1985]
*Robert Christgau (A) [http://www.robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?name=the+velvet+underground link] |
Last album = "White Light/White Heat "
(1968)
This album = "The Velvet Underground"
(1969)
Next album = "Loaded"
(1970)"The Velvet Underground" is the third album by American rock group
The Velvet Underground . It was their first record to featureDoug Yule ,John Cale 's replacement in the band. It was recorded in 1968 at TTG Studios in Hollywood,California . It marks a radical shift in sound and approach.Lou Reed said "I really didn’t think we should make another "White Light/White Heat ". I thought it would be a terrible mistake, and I really believed that. I thought we had to demonstrate the other side of us. Otherwise, we would become this one-dimensional thing, and that had to be avoided at all costs."Maureen Tucker said, "I was pleased with the direction we were going and with the new calmness in the group, and thinking about a good future, hoping people would smarten up and some record company would take us on and do us justice." Doug Yule said the album "was a lot of fun. The sessions were constructive and happy and creative, everybody was working together."About the album
"The Velvet Underground" was the band's first album for
MGM Records , the band's first two albums having been issued by MGM subsidiary and legendaryjazz label,Verve Records . The previously strongAndy Warhol influence is diminished, with the most notable ties toThe Factory being the cover and backphotograph s taken by WarholiteBilly Name , and opening track "Candy Says," written aboutCandy Darling (who would later appear inLou Reed 's 1972 song, "Walk On The Wild Side").The record was produced by the band themselves, and issued in two different stereo mixes. The more widely distributed version is the one done by TTG staff
recording engineer Val Valentin . The other mix was done byLou Reed , and was dubbed the "Closet Mix" by guitaristSterling Morrison .The "Closet Mix"
Sterling Morrison thought Reed's mix had a small, closed in, cramped sound. With the music so muted, the phrase "Closet Mix" was coined by Morrison, who said, "We did the third album deliberately as anti-production. It sounds like it was done in a closet – it’s flat, and that’s the way we wanted it. The songs are all very quiet and it’s kind of insane. I like the album." Overall, the songs on Reed's mix of the album sound different from the Valentin Mix in that the vocals are brought to the foreground, as opposed to the more "even" mix of Valentin's version. Drums and percussion on the Closet Mix are generally panned to one stereo channel only (typical of many other 1960's rock recordings.) On the Valentin mix drums are usually placed in the center.
Notable differences in the music can be heard on the 2 different versions. "Some Kinda Love" is a completely different performance. The Closet Mix uses a slower, quieter take, while the Valentin Mix is a slightly more upbeat and closer to the way the band performed the song in concert. The Valentin version of "Some Kinda Love" is about 20 seconds longer. There are different guitar solos on "What Goes On". "Jesus" is slightly longer in the Closet Mix, with a noticeable echo on the final refrain of "Jeeee-sus." "Beginning to See the Light" fades out 15-20 seconds later in the Closet Mix. On "The Murder Mystery," the vocals in the Closet Mix are brought to the front in an even more extreme fashion, drowning out the music almost entirely. There are also other less obvious differences.
Release history
Early copies were on MGM, but most re-issue versions are on Verve. Upon initial release the album was somewhat more popular in the U.K. than in the U.S. The first U.S. version had the Reed mix, however the track times listed on the first U.S. issue more closely match the Valentin mix, possibly indicating that the Reed mix was issued by mistake. The original U.K. release used the Valentin mix. The 1985 U.S. re-issue LP used the Valentin mix. Other LP re-issues vary but most use the Valentin Mix. CD issues of the album use the Valentin mix, however, the Closet Mix is available on disc 4 of the 1995 CD box set "
Peel Slowly and See ". RS500|314Track listing
All tracks written by Lou Reed and arranged by The Velvet Underground. Times shown are for the 1996 CD remastering of the Valentin mix.
ide one
#"Candy Says" – 4:04
#"What Goes On" – 4:55
#"Some Kinda Love" – 4:03
#"Pale Blue Eyes " – 5:41
#"Jesus" – 3:24ide two
#"Beginning to See the Light" – 4:41
#"I'm Set Free" – 4:08
#"That's the Story of My Life" – 1:59
#"The Murder Mystery" – 8:55
#"After Hours" – 2:07Personnel
*
Lou Reed - lead andrhythm guitar ,piano , leadvocal s except as noted, verse vocals on "The Murder Mystery"
*Sterling Morrison - rhythm and lead guitar, verse vocals on "The Murder Mystery", backing vocals
*Doug Yule -bass guitar , organ, lead vocals on "Candy Says", chorus vocals on "The Murder Mystery", backing vocals
*Maureen Tucker - percussion, lead vocals on "After Hours", chorus vocals on "The Murder Mystery", backing vocals
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