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Barnes and Noble

Short Stories for Pauline

Current price: $21.99
Short Stories for Pauline
Short Stories for Pauline

Barnes and Noble

Short Stories for Pauline

Current price: $21.99
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When working toward a fourth album for his softly tumultuous post-rock predicting unit
Durutti Column
in 1983,
Vini Reilly
collaborated with
Tuxedomoon
viola player
Blaine L. Reininger
on a gorgeously sad piece called "Duet," a short and filmic song that found
Reininger
's restless viola swells in a lover's quarrel with
Reilly
's pleading piano. The song was one of many pieces under construction for an album to be titled
Short Stories for Pauline
, but upon hearing the song,
Factory Records
head honcho
Anthony Wilson
insisted
the Durutti Column
make an album based entirely around its neo-classical leanings, and "Duet" expanded into 1984's turbulent
Without Mercy
while the rest of the songs were put on ice. Seeing its first widescale release in 2012 (though several tracks have appeared in various forms over the years),
sheds light on an important early phase of what would prove to be
's extensive development over the next several decades. Recorded at the height of the
scene, the echoey drums and detached, icy emotional veil that was a trademark of many of the artists on the label saturate much of the album.
's unique direct guitar tones and affinity for moody instrumental compositions set him apart from some of the more rock-rooted bands on the label, and
sees him on a creative hot streak, melding classical underpinnings with the minimal rhythms of some of his goth rock contemporaries like
Section 25
and
Joy Division
. The reverb-coated drums of "College" and "Invitations" blend into bleak instrumental landscapes guided by
's brittle guitar tones and held in place by chorus-heavy basslines. "Take Some Time Out" has a dour vocal not unlike
Genesis P-Orridge
's more gentle work in
Psychic TV
, and along with "A Silence" and the ghostly female vocals on "Mirror A," it's one of the few songs that's not completely instrumental.
's 14 songs don't feel like an unfinished collection of sketches as much as they do a sadly shelved lost album. While "Duet" is certainly beautiful enough to merit basing an entire album around its sound, the rest of these forgotten songs find the still young
in a creative flourish that could have spun an album's worth of material out of any of these songs, from the sad-hearted jazz experiment of "Cocktail" to the gorgeous harp-heavy sounds of the tentative album closer, "A Room in Southport." ~ Fred Thomas

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