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The Sky's Gone Out

Bauhaus

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Album Review

More fragmented in origin than it might appear on first glance — the leadoff track, a phenomenal, nuclear-strength rip through Brian Eno's "Third Uncle," featuring some fantastic soloing from Ash, came from a BBC radio session performance — The Sky's Gone Out was caught between the expectations of an audience now thoroughly embracing the incipient goth genre, with all the built-in limitations such expectations often provide, and a band which wanted to please them while still following its own muse. On balance it's quite a fine album, but unlike Mask it misses the infusion of a more positive energy, and simply doesn't gel as perfectly, more notable for individual songs than as a whole. Old, pre-recording-career songs like the strong but already dated "In the Night" were revived and balanced against experiments and attempts to further develop the band's sound, ultimately making The Sky's Gone Out feel more like a compilation than anything else. Piece by piece, though, the songs still often showed Bauhaus in excelsis. Ash's elegant, haunting acoustic guitar work received two great showcases — "Silent Hedges," adding a more familiar electric explosion to a fine Murphy performance detailing a desperate mental collapse, and "All We Ever Wanted Was Everything," a sympathetic, nostalgic reflection on dreams of the past, again matched by a perfectly balanced Murphy vocal. Other standouts include the brooding lope of "Swing the Heartache," with a skeletal rhythm matched against some of Ash's best guitar work, and "Spirit," a live standout inspired by the performance vibe the band received from its fans.

Customer Reviews

Essential Bauhaus

I can't believe no one has written a review about this album yet. Bauhaus are the unofficial fathers of what some people would call "Gothic Rock" before there was such a thing as "Goth." Considering the other music being made during the mid 80's, they were really breaking some ground. I don't think that this is the best Bauhaus album ever - I sort of prefer Mask's early 80s disco feel and the introspective "Burning from the Inside" - but "The Sky's Gone Out" is definitive Bauhaus. After listening to it for the first time in about 10 years or so, I realize it still totally rocks.

Bloody Excellent

It may not be the absolute best Bauhaus album, but that doesn't take away from how truly amazing it is. A solid outting, only brought down to four stars in my book by a couple of weak tracks. Doesn't help that the recording of "The Three Shadows, Pt. 2", is of far higher quality on the "Swing the Heartache" BBC sessions. Even then, the Three Shadows trilogy is truly epic, and brings a brief sense of continuity in an otherwise fragmented album. But don't think that fragmented means it's great then horrid in parts. It just means it has a varying degree of sound to it, which with Bauhaus is truly for the best. The album definetly grows on you the more you listen to it as a whole, but if you must for some reason only buy a few tracks instead of the whole thing, I recommend: "Third Uncle" "Silent Hedges" "All We Ever Wanted Was Everything" (arguebly the best song Bauhaus have recorded.) It's not quite as good as Mask, but still a beautiful, dark outting. Bauhaus is in my opinion the best music goth rock has to offer, and even if you're not a fan of genre I recommend them (hell, I'm not a huge goth band.) They're simply innovative and talented, and any true fan of music as a whole would be delighted by these pioneers.

A life-long favorite

I remember when I was 6 years old, playing this album in my little cessette player in my room (looking back I was maybe a little too young for Bauhaus at the time, I don't know what my mother was thinking). 13 years later, this album is still one of my favorites. A nostalgic indulgence, often a cathartic release. A brilliant piece of art.

Biography

Formed: 1978 in Northampton, England

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s

Bauhaus are the founding fathers of goth rock, creating a minimalistic, overbearingly gloomy style of post-punk rock driven by jagged guitar chords and cold, distant synthesizers. Throughout their brief career, the band explored all the variations on their bleak musical ideas, adding elements of glam rock, experimental electronic rock, funk, and heavy metal. While their following...
Full Bio

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