Nightbird [Enhanced]

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
This album arrived shortly after singer Andy Bell's revelation that he had been living with HIV for more than six years, suffering from debilitating pain. It's no wonder the music carries a more somber tone than the sugar-smacked synth-pop of '80s hits "Chain of Love" and "Blue Savannah." But it's hardly a gloomy affair. Yes, there is a more ominous tone to lyrics like "The tears that are falling, there's no room for doubt." And yes, the choruses aren't quite as chaotic. But for the most part this is vintage Erasure, right down to the Casio-sounding keyboards that permeate tracks like "Here I Go Impossible Again" and the ABBA imbued cheek of "Don't Say You Love Me." Erasure is clearly a band too engrossed by life to be knocked down by its mundane realities. --Aidin Vaziri

Music Review:

  1. One by One [Enhanced]
  2. Paul's Boutique
  3. Pretenders
  4. Rattle and Hum [Live]
  5. Scarlet's Walk
  6. Seven Metals Singing Bowls of Tibet
  7. Shabooh Shoobah
  8. Shenanigans
  9. Singles
  10. Specials [Enhanced] [Original recording remastered]

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Brooke Allison [Enhanced]

Adagio Veneziano

Andreas Hallen: Swedish Rhapsody No.2/Toteninsel/Harald der Wiking

Music: The Best of Disco One Hit Wonders

Anjali [Import]

Ain't No Mountain High Enough, Pt. 1 [CD-single] [Import]

20 Super Sucessos [Import]

Be Bop or Be Dead

40 Anni Di Canzoni [Import]

Atlantis Nath

A Memorial

360 Degrees

9th Wonder (Blackitolism) [CD-single]

Masters of Classical Music, Vol. 2: Bach

Wild in the Streets