The Correct Use of Soap

The Correct Use of Soap

After two late-‘70s albums of innovative music rooted in the new punk aesthetic, Howard Devoto and Magazine seemed to find solid footing in the fine lines between arty post-punk and smart, interesting pop music. Everything from the production (Joy Division’s Martin Hannett was at the controls) to the songwriting and track sequencing worked toward making The Correct Use of Soap a more cohesive and accessible album. There are not two or three, but four Magazine “greatest moments” here (the raging “Because You’re Frightened,” the wiry “Model Worker,” the wickedly fun “Sweetheart Contract” and the quasi-epic “Song From Under the Floorboards”) and their brilliance lends luster to the lesser tracks. “I Want to Burn Again” has a few plodding moments that turn languid and textural, and their cover of Sly Stone’s “Thank You” was a courageous crossover move at the time, but it’s a tad too soporific to be a true star here. Devoto dried up his spittle-spewing delivery in favor of a gentler tone, so that a line like “I am angry, I am ill, and I’m as ugly as sin” stung with unnerving calm. The original album was comprised of the first 10 tracks; the last four are singles, with the Magazine masterpiece, “The Light Pours Out of Me” also appearing on the first album, Real Life.

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