Spandau Ballet - Journeys To Glory

Spandau Ballet's debut album, "Journeys to Glory," released in 1981, received mixed reviews but is generally considered a significant and influential work in the New Romantic movement. While some critics found the album ordinary or unremarkable, others praised its style, innovation, and contribution to the emerging 80s sound. Despite the mixed reviews, "Journeys to Glory" remains an important album in Spandau Ballet's discography and a key example of the New Romantic movement. It's seen as a bold and experimental debut that paved the way for their later mainstream success. 

Review by Dan LeRoy
The roots of the complaint that British synth pop acts were all haircuts and no skill lie in the new romantic movement, despite the fact that several of its associated bands (Ultravox, Duran Duran, Visage) were musically quite credible. Spandau Ballet's first album, however, generally lived up -- or down, perhaps -- to that assessment, showcasing the sound of a group not quite ready for prime time. To be fair, the teenaged quintet did offer a hint or two of promise; the first single, "To Cut a Long Story Short," grooves along on a catchy electro riff, and "Musclebound," although far outdone by its video, does capture the new romantics' talent for making the even the mundane (a song about backbreaking labor!) exotic. But those two songs are still pretty skimpy in the melody department, and the half-dozen other tracks offer even less. Instead, you get crisp but tuneless dance-rock that at least offers plenty of leeway for Tony Hadley's dramatic tenor, which frequently wanders in search of a key. While most of the output from the band's peers now sounds dated, this is one album that suffers irreparable harm when separated from the accompanying costumes and visuals.


Ripped to MP3
A1 - To Cut a Long Story Short
A2 - Reformation
A3 - Mandolin
A4 - Muscle Bound
B1 - Age of Blows
B2 - The Freeze
B3 - Confused
B4 - Toys

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