''Electronic'' is the debut studio album by the British group
Electronic, consisting of
Bernard Sumner, the former guitarist and keyboardist of
Joy Division and the lead singer and guitarist of
New Order and
Johnny Marr, the former guitarist of
the Smiths. It was first released in May 1991 on the
Factory label.
The album was a commercial and critical success, reaching number 2 in the United Kingdom and selling over a million copies worldwide. By the year 2000, ''Electronic'' had sold 240,000 copies in the US.
Recording
The bulk of ''Electronic'' was written in 1990, with sessions beginning that January at Johnny Marr's home studio in
Manchester
Manchester () is a city and the metropolitan borough of Greater Manchester, England. It had an estimated population of in . Greater Manchester is the third-most populous metropolitan area in the United Kingdom, with a population of 2.92&nbs ...
.
[''Q'', July 1991] "Gangster" dated from an aborted solo album that Bernard Sumner had begun working on in the mid-eighties,
while "Reality" was written around 1988 when he and Marr first began working together. "The Patience of a Saint" also predated the album, having been written with
Pet Shop Boys soon after their collaboration with singer
Neil Tennant on "
Getting Away with It" in 1989.
Several other songs were also completed by August 1990 (namely "Idiot Country", "Tighten Up", "Soviet", "Get the Message" and "Try All You Want"), as they were performed live at
Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles when Electronic supported
Depeche Mode
Depeche Mode are an English electronic music, electronic band formed in Basildon, Essex in 1980. Originally formed with the line-up of Dave Gahan, Martin Gore, Andy Fletcher (musician), Andy Fletcher and Vince Clarke, the band currently consists ...
(although "Try All You Want" was played as an instrumental and several songs had
working titles).
The LP subtly fused Marr's guitar playing with Sumner's
synthesiser expertise, most prominently on "Idiot Country", "Feel Every Beat", "Tighten Up" and "Get the Message". Lyrically the subject matter was varied, from the aggressive targeting of rave culture by police in Britain ("Idiot Country" and "Feel Every Beat"
) to monogamy and emotional ambivalence ("Reality", "Try All You Want"). "The Patience of a Saint" featured a witty, sardonic duet between Sumner and Tennant.
Equipment
In an interview with ''
Sound on Sound'' in October 1991, Bernard Sumner revealed the following technology was used during the making of the album. He stated that the album "took 200 days from beginning to end" in the same interview.
*
Akai S1000
*
Korg T3
*
Roland Juno-106
*
Sequential Circuits Prophet-5
*
Voyetra-8
*
Yamaha DX5
*
Roland JD-800
*
Moog Source
*
Roland SH-101
*
Roland TR-909
*
Roland MT-32
*
Roland D-110
*
Macintosh SE
*
Macintosh IIcx
*
Sound Tools
Artwork
The album cover was designed by Johnson/Panas (
Trevor Johnson), featuring two separate photographs superimposed with a computer screen effect. The hand-rendered lettering was based on
typographer Wim Crouwel's
Stedelijk Museum alphabet. The 1994 remaster used the design from a 1991 promotional poster with the typeface (
Avenir) from the sleevenotes.
Critical reception
Upon its release, the album was unanimously praised in the mainstream music press. Writing in ''
Melody Maker'',
Paul Lester stated that "Each song is crammed with elaborate details and merits a treatise... Very basically, we're talking Europop, my all-time favourite genre. The overall effect is one of swirling magnificence". He concluded that ''Electronic'' was "one of the greatest albums ever made".
In the ''
NME'',
David Quantick wrote, "This is a pretty 1990s sort of a record, fresh as a daisy and wearing huge new oxblood
Doc Martens".
Keith Cameron in ''
Vox'' said, "''Electronic'' is simply a 100 per cent pure distillation of Marr and Sumner's respective talents. The hit single 'Get the Message' has it in a nutshell: it breaks no new ground; it simply achieves perfection".
The album received the maximum five stars in ''
Q'' from Phil Sutcliffe, who wrote, "its strength is in conflict ... The inexorable pounding of the beatbox versus the fragile sadness of Sumner's voice and the he's/she's leaving stories; the symmetry of the synthesized or sampled sounds versus the sheer blood and bone physicality of Marr's guitar".
''Electronic'' also received praise in the United States. In ''
Spin'' magazine, Ted Friedman regarded the album as "impressive", while ''
Entertainment Weekly
''Entertainment Weekly'' (sometimes abbreviated as ''EW'') is an American online magazine, digital-only entertainment magazine based in New York City, published by Dotdash Meredith, that covers film, television, music, Broadway theatre, books, ...
'' called it "irresistibly tuneful".
At the end of 1991, ''NME'' and ''Melody Maker'' ranked it 13 and 15 respectively in their top albums of the year.
Promotion
"
Get the Message" was released in April 1991 as the
lead single and performed well in both Britain (number 8 on the
Top 40
In the music industry, the Top 40 is a list of the 40 currently most popular songs in a particular genre. It is the best-selling or most frequently broadcast popular music. Record charts have traditionally consisted of a total of 40 songs. "To ...
) and the United States (number 1 on
Modern Rock Tracks). In July, "
Tighten Up" was released as a
promo in the US and reached number 6 on the same chart.
"
Feel Every Beat" was the next international single in September and was a modest hit.
Three songs from this era were released as
B-sides: "Free Will" (on "Get the Message"), and "Lean to the Inside" and "Second to None" (on "Feel Every Beat"). A number of
remixes were also released, by
DNA, Winston Jones/Dave Shaw and
Danny Rampling/Pete Lorimer.
Sumner and Marr gave a slew of interviews in the mainstream British music press, and appeared on ''Friday at the Dome'' and
MTV's ''
120 Minutes'' to support the album. "Get the Message" was also promoted with two mimed performances on ''
Top of the Pops''.
Electronic performed at the
Cities in the Park festival in August, where Pet Shop Boys guested on "Getting Away with It", and played three dates in Paris,
Glasgow
Glasgow is the Cities of Scotland, most populous city in Scotland, located on the banks of the River Clyde in Strathclyde, west central Scotland. It is the List of cities in the United Kingdom, third-most-populous city in the United Kingdom ...
and London in December 1991. (A tour of North America in October/November with dance acts as support was cancelled.) Pet Shop Boys joined Sumner and Marr for three numbers in the last concert, namely "Getting Away with It", "The Patience of a Saint" and the then-unreleased song "
Disappointed".
Track listing
All songs written by Bernard Sumner and Johnny Marr, except "The Patience of a Saint", by Sumner, Marr,
Neil Tennant and
Chris Lowe, and "Getting Away with It", by Sumner, Marr and Tennant.
Standard edition
The standard edition of ''Electronic'' was released initially in 1991, internationally (with the noticeable absence of "Getting Away with It" on the original UK release). It was remastered and reissued many times in different regions, such as in Europe in 1992, with the non-album single "Disappointed" being added as a bonus CD, in the UK in 1994 (remastered by the album's engineer
Owen Morris), and Japan in 1995.
2007 iTunes release bonus tracks
In 2007, ''Electronic'' was released as a download-only on the
iTunes Store, with the first half of the release containing the original 11 songs from the 1994 remastered UK release, and the other half featuring B-sides of singles and remixes of Electronic songs by third parties.
2013 special edition CD bonus tracks
The 2013 special edition re-release of the album contains two CDs, with the first CD containing the standard album and the second CD containing 11 edits and mixes of various songs, mostly from the ''Electronic'' recording sessions. However, some songs were produced outside the time-frame in which the album was recorded, such as "Until the End of Time", "Visit Me" and the B-side of "
Second Nature", called "Turning Point", which originated from the ''
Raise the Pressure'' recording sessions. Furthermore, "Twisted Tenderness" is the title track of
the album of the same name, which was released eight years after the release of ''Electronic''.
Personnel
Electronic
*
Bernard Sumner – vocals, keyboards and
programming
*
Johnny Marr – guitars, keyboards and programming
Additional musicians
*
Neil Tennant – vocals on "The Patience of a Saint" and backing vocals on "Getting Away with It"
*
Chris Lowe – keyboards on "The Patience of a Saint", synth-bass on "Getting Away with It"
*Donald Johnson – drums and percussion on "Tighten Up" and "Feel Every Beat"
*David Palmer – drums on "Feel Every Beat" and "Getting Away with It"
*Denise Johnson – vocals on "Get the Message"
*Helen Powell –
oboe
The oboe ( ) is a type of double-reed woodwind instrument. Oboes are usually made of wood, but may also be made of synthetic materials, such as plastic, resin, or hybrid composites.
The most common type of oboe, the soprano oboe pitched in C, ...
on "Some Distant Memory"
*Andrew Robinson – additional programming
Technical
*Bernard Sumner – producer
*Johnny Marr – producer
*
Owen Morris – engineer
*Todd Fath – photography
*
Johnson Panas – artwork
Charts
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Electronic
1991 debut albums
Electronic (band) albums
Factory Records albums