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Album Review

By the release of their second album, Replicas, Gary Numan was the undisputed focal point and leader of icy electro-punkers Tubeway Army. And the move proved to be massively successful back home in the U.K., where both the album and the single "Are 'Friends' Electric?" topped the charts. The band had made a conscious effort to streamline the sound heard on its 1978 self-titled debut — the distorted guitar riffs were played on Moog synthesizers instead, and Numan had perfected his faux-space-age persona. And the paranoia that is very evident in the lyrics and vocals on Numan's next release, The Pleasure Principle, can be detected on Replicas. Another near-perfect album by the band, highlights are many — "Me! I Disconnect from You," "The Machman," "You Are in My Vision," and one of the most underrated new wave/synth-driven compositions of the whole era, the chilling ballad "Down in the Park." And out of all the Gary Numan/Beggars Banquet reissues, Replicas contains the strongest bonus tracks, such as never heard outtakes from the recording sessions, including "The Crazies," "Only a Downstat," and the B-side to the original "Are 'Friends' Electric?" single, "We Are So Fragile." [Note: In addition to bonus tracks, all of the Gary Numan/Begggars Banquet re-releases contain classic photographs and informative liner notes by Numan biographer Steve Malins.]

Customer Reviews

It must have been years...

This album is classic. It blurs the line between punk and electronic, a prelude to the upcoming New Romantic movement Numan would start with "The Pleasure Principle". Gary Numan is at one of his finest moments right here.

Nothing quite like it

An excellent melding of punk, new wave, sci-fi, and sexual curiosity/ambiguity. This record fueled many a night driving around our town on hot summer nights with nothing to do but explore the shadows and push our own 16-year-old limits. It will never be a popular record, but this music was New Wave Goth before the Goth scene ever existed. I think it was recorded in 1979 or 1980. If you like dark, pulsing synths, big guitars and lots of atmosphere, you may dig this.

One of the best

If I could only keep 50 albums to be stranded on a desert island with, this would be one of them.

Replicas, Gary Numan & Tubeway Army
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Customer Ratings

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