Gary Numan - I, Assassin
Facts
| Artist(s) | Gary Numan |
| Studio | Beggars UK - Ada |
| Release Date | December 10, 2002 |
| UPC Code | 607618004026 |
| Buy this item | $11.98 at Amazon.com As of Jul 6 5:46 EDT (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered |
About Gary Numan - I, Assassin
Tracks
- White Boys and Heroes
- War Songs
- Dream of Siam
- Music for Chameleons
- This Is My House
- I, Assassin
- 1930's Rust
- We Take Mystery to Bed
- War Games [*]
- Glitter and Ash [*]
- Image Is [*]
- This House Is Cold [*]
- Noise, Noise [*]
- We Take Mystery [Early Version][*]
- Bridge? What Bridge? [*]
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Another whacky cover, another excellent album |
The album is very funky, due to Pino Palladino's fretless bass. It's a fluid, funky sound absent from his previous albums, and way better than the Janet Jackson-obsessed era of The Fury and beyond. It's a way more organic dance album, with We Take Mystery To Bed and Music For Chameleons two of the strongest he's done. The whole business is good. War Songs has the same guitar effect as U2's Numb, and a whole lot earlier. Plenty of synth, before it was buried by synths and sax on later albums. Plenty of Numan's signature voice. And another new image, which he talks about in the liner notes. Yes, there is some sax, but not the obsession that later developed.
The bonus tracks are excellent and make this is an extremely valuable disc. Noise Noise, now a live staple in modern form appears along with The Image Is, a very Bowie-esque track that starts slowly, builds with sax (it works here), and goes into an interesting, oddly timed chorus. This House Is Cold is a real gem, a driving rock number with improvised lyrics and big, fat arena-style sythn. Yes, there is white man funk, but it has songs.
Highly recommended to Numan fans straightaway, absolutely takes some getting used to, but not a bad song on the album proper. Way better than the following Warriors and a few other 80s albums. Barely heard in the US, yet way ahead of its time for 1982. As usual, nobody paying attention... March 30, 2007
| "This House is Yours Like Friends of Mine" |
| Numan's best |
The other reviewer's reference to Mick Karn, who is so-so in this bassist's opinion, does not warrant mention for this album.
That mention should have gone to the amazing Pino Pallidino, without whom, this would be just another Numan album.
If you have 1 Numan album (purists will disagree) this is the one.
4 1/2 to 5 stars, this one. December 9, 2003
| "Like a see-through song in disguise" |
| Numan learns to dance |
I Assassin represented a move away from the trademark synthesizer-heavy sound that characterized such songs as ?Car? to a more bass-heavy, Electro-Dance sound. The synthesizer is still a prominent instrument on this record but it shares the stage with Pino Palladino?s fretless bass playing. This lends a warmer more human sound to the songs (despite the subject matter) in contrast to the colder, more machine-like feel of his prior records. The bass line is immediately evident in the opening track, ?White Boys and Heroes?. A similar sound and feel continues through most of the songs through the closing tune ?We Take Mystery to Bed?. The lyrics from this record rely very little on Numan?s characteristic science fiction elements, but the trademark feel of isolation and alienation permeates the music. An example from ?I, Assassin?: ?I?ve never felt good/I?ve never felt bad/I?ve never felt much at all?. All eight of the original tracks are strong and rank among the best of Numan?s output. This record marked the beginning Numan?s move toward the Electro-Dance sound that would characterize the rest of his recordings from the 80?s (oddly enough, the album released prior to this, titled Dance, was surprisingly sedate). Just as Numan had been a pioneer with New Wave and Electronic music, he was also one of the pioneers in this area, though he rarely receives credit for it. Aspects of the ?80?s Sound? from the mid to later 80?s that was characterized by such groups as Duran Duran, Depeche Mode, and Tears for Fears can be traced back to the work Numan was doing in the early 80?s.
The re-release also includes seven bonus tracks. There is nothing spectacular to be found from the additional tunes, but they do not detract from the overall record. The early (and much different) version of ?We Take Mystery to Bed? is interesting and ?Glitter and Ash? is a nice instrumental piece. January 17, 2003
