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Laurie Anderson - Bright Red
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Laurie Anderson - Bright Red

Facts

Artist(s)Laurie Anderson
StudioWarner Bros UK
Release DateOctober 25, 1994
UPC Code093624553427
 

Tracks

  1. Speechless
  2. Bright Red
  3. The Puppet Motel
  4. Speak My Language
  5. World Without End
  6. Free Fall
  7. Muddy River
  8. Beautiful Pea Green Boat
  9. Love Among the Sailors
  10. Poison
  11. In Our Sleep
  12. Night in Baghdad
  13. Tightrope
  14. Same Time Tomorrow

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User Reviews

Average user review: 4.5 (7 reviews)

rating: 5 QuoteOne of Laurie Andersons bestQuote
I also find this album extremely well done. One of my most played in my collection, as well. When Ms. Anderson hits the nail on the head, it's a direct hit! Two tracks, in particular, are my favorites. 'World Without End' and 'Tightrope' are both tracks that I play over and over. They have the ability to grab you by your soul. The album has an overall dark characteristic (maybe Ms. Anderson needs to get out of the city occasionally?), but that same darkness is what makes these two tunes, in particular, so mesmerizing. Here voice is very immediate, right in your ear, as if she is speaking quietly just to you.
I am also a big fan of Brian Eno, and his work on this album is the perfect compliment to Lauries keyboard work and lyrics. The magic is in the subtleties.
I have liked most of Lauries albums previous to this one, but `Bright Red' shows how polished she has become over the years.
This is one hard act to follow. September 16, 2005

rating: 5 QuoteThe best of the bestQuote
I don't normally write reviews (in fact, this is my first one!) however, having read some of the negative reviews for this album, I feel I must add my two cents.

This is possibly the most played cd in my 500-strong collection. There are no dud tracks and it really is quite unlike other Anderson albums: generally her soundscapes are awesomely sparse, but Eno's influence on this is unmistakable and provides a richer, more musical 'background'.

The two-tiered track Night in Baghdad/Tightrope is possibly the most incredible song(s) of all time. Her grasp of the profundities and inanities of life astound me. This song is the only one in my 30 years to have made me cry ("'Did you ever really love me?' 'Only when we danced'").

Bright Red is perhaps not the ideal introduction to Anderson (for that I'd recommend Home Of The Brave or Strange Angels, far and away her most 'accessible' album), but if you've heard and liked some of her previous output and are tossing up whether to make the purchase, do it. Definitely go for this rather than the more recent Life On A String which, for me, is a mediocre replica.
October 21, 2004

rating: 5 QuoteLaurie Anderson Has No EqualQuote
Quite possibly one of the most innovative musical/performance artists around, Laurie Anderson never disappoints, and Bright Red is no exception. Sonically amazing, that's just window dressing to the incredible lyrics through which Anderson weaves amazing stories. Listen carefully, for hers is a land in which meanings shift subtly with repetition or revelation. Whether she's telling us of a shawl owned by her grandmother or a dream involving her ex-boyfriends, their new girlfriends and a water-logged ferris wheel, every number here is full of new surprises on each listening. If you're an Anderson fan, this CD is a must-add to your collection. If you have no idea who she is, this is a good place to start before moving on to her more intricate works, such as "O, Superman" and "USA Parts I-IV."

Way back in the day, friends and I used to enjoy watching Anderson's "Home of the Brave" concert tape while... um... under the influence, but it's a true tribute to her talent that you require no chemical enhancements in order to enter an alternate reality while experiencing her work. Rarely do words and music mesh in such a transcendent way, but with Anderson they always do, and this CD is no exception. She truly is a goddess of art. April 29, 2002

rating: 3 QuoteHard to warm to this...Quote
Up to this release, there was always something to Laurie Anderson's releases that seemed to emphasize a connection to the listener and/or their experiences. But "Bright Red" seems to be much more about dis/misconnection...and somehow, this thematic imperative has gotten into the works here to the point that I, myself, have some real trouble listening to this one. Maybe there's something that's rubbing me the wrong way here, or maybe Laurie's doing her job a bit _too_ well in communicating the underlying themes. At any rate, this also marks something of a return to a more stripped-down style, more akin to her early work, yet retaining some of the pop complexity of later albums in the playing. I just couldn't connect with this, though...and it doesn't seem to want to connect with me. April 11, 2000

rating: 4 QuoteAnderson Walks A Tightrope on Bright RedQuote
Ten years after recording her most optimistic album, "Mr. Heartbreak", Laurie Anderson released the brooding, haunted "Bright Red". The name itself seems bitingly ironic; there isn't a "bright" song in the bunch. Rather, these tracks are suffused with a pervading darkness, courtesy of Brian Eno's atmospheric textures. Anderson's voice, usually an inviting, conversational one capable of inducing subtle sparks of emotion, now seems strange, confrontational and ghostly. Her love interest at the time, Lou Reed, participates in a grave duet with the artist on "In Our Sleep", and Adrian Belew turns in appropriately subtle guitar work, but the entire CD is permeated with a creeping sense of inevitability. As if to underscore this undercurrent of dread, Anderson's lyrics speak of lost control, isolation and lost threads of sanity. For those unaquainted with her work, neophites may find such a description unappealing; even so, this is an uncompromising, mature work that ranks as one of Anderson's best. Personal Favorites: the gauzy feeling of dislocation evident in "Speechless" and the creeping insanity of a scorned lover in "Poison". Representative Lyrics: "Daddy daddy, it was just like you said/ Now that the living outnumber the dead." ("Speak My Language"); "A small bullet, a piece of glass/ And your heart just grows around it." ("Poison"); "If this is the work of an angry god/ I want to look into his angry face./ There is no pure land now./ No safe place." ("Love Among the Sailors") March 24, 2000

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