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White Light/White Heat
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Barnes and Noble
White Light/White Heat
Current price: $17.99
Barnes and Noble
White Light/White Heat
Current price: $17.99
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Size: CD
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The world of pop music was hardly ready for
The Velvet Underground
's first album when it appeared in the spring of 1967, but while
The Velvet Underground and Nico
sounded like an open challenge to conventional notions of what rock music could sound like (or what it could discuss), 1968's
White Light/White Heat
was a no-holds-barred frontal assault on cultural and aesthetic propriety. Recorded without the input of either
Nico
or
Andy Warhol
,
was the purest and rawest document of the key
Velvets
lineup of
Lou Reed
John Cale
Sterling Morrison
, and
Maureen Tucker
, capturing the group at their toughest and most abrasive. The album opens with an open and enthusiastic endorsement of amphetamines (startling even from this group of noted drug enthusiasts), and side one continues with an amusing shaggy-dog story set to a slab of lurching mutant R&B (
"The Gift"
), a perverse variation on an old folktale (
"Lady Godiva's Operation"
), and the album's sole "pretty" song, the mildly disquieting
"Here She Comes Now."
While side one was a good bit darker in tone than
the Velvets
' first album, side two was where they truly threw down the gauntlet with the manic, free-jazz implosion of
"I Heard Her Call My Name"
(featuring
Reed
's guitar work at its most gloriously fractured), and the epic noise jam
"Sister Ray,"
17 minutes of sex, drugs, violence, and other non-wholesome fun with the loudest rock group in the history of Western Civilization as the house band.
is easily the least accessible of
's studio albums, but anyone wanting to hear their guitar-mauling tribal frenzy straight with no chaser will love it, and those benighted souls who think of
as some sort of folk-rock band are advised to crank their stereo up to ten and give side two a spin. ~ Mark Deming
The Velvet Underground
's first album when it appeared in the spring of 1967, but while
The Velvet Underground and Nico
sounded like an open challenge to conventional notions of what rock music could sound like (or what it could discuss), 1968's
White Light/White Heat
was a no-holds-barred frontal assault on cultural and aesthetic propriety. Recorded without the input of either
Nico
or
Andy Warhol
,
was the purest and rawest document of the key
Velvets
lineup of
Lou Reed
John Cale
Sterling Morrison
, and
Maureen Tucker
, capturing the group at their toughest and most abrasive. The album opens with an open and enthusiastic endorsement of amphetamines (startling even from this group of noted drug enthusiasts), and side one continues with an amusing shaggy-dog story set to a slab of lurching mutant R&B (
"The Gift"
), a perverse variation on an old folktale (
"Lady Godiva's Operation"
), and the album's sole "pretty" song, the mildly disquieting
"Here She Comes Now."
While side one was a good bit darker in tone than
the Velvets
' first album, side two was where they truly threw down the gauntlet with the manic, free-jazz implosion of
"I Heard Her Call My Name"
(featuring
Reed
's guitar work at its most gloriously fractured), and the epic noise jam
"Sister Ray,"
17 minutes of sex, drugs, violence, and other non-wholesome fun with the loudest rock group in the history of Western Civilization as the house band.
is easily the least accessible of
's studio albums, but anyone wanting to hear their guitar-mauling tribal frenzy straight with no chaser will love it, and those benighted souls who think of
as some sort of folk-rock band are advised to crank their stereo up to ten and give side two a spin. ~ Mark Deming