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Utopia - Adventures In Utopia CD (album) cover

ADVENTURES IN UTOPIA

Utopia

Eclectic Prog


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daveconn
PROG REVIEWER
4 stars UTOPIA arrived at a compressed cuteness on "Adventures In UTOPIA" that would serve them well over the next few years. The change was necessary: 1980 was a watershed moment in music, as artists anticipated the futureworld of "1984", so many moved forward lest they be left behind. RUNDGREN wasn't a musical groundbreaker like DAVID BOWIE, PETER GABRIEL or TALKING HEADS, but he did share their interest in video as a new frontier, creating a television video (called simply "UTOPIA") to accompany this album. I haven't seen it, but the standalone nature of these songs doesn't require a visual explanation anyway. The story here isn't what you're missing but what you're getting: ten tightly conceived tracks that finally deliver on the band's UTOPIAn ideal of four engines simultaneously humming (and pulling their share of the weight). Earlier UTOPIA albums seemed to rise and sag as they corresponded to TODD's level of participation, but here Todd (and the rest of the band) seem to be equally engaged on every track. Some of its consistency stems from the decision to mask the vocals using effects, so all four members end up sounding about the same. And catchy choruses (long a RUNDGREN hallmark) abound, seemingly spreading RUNDGREN's influence evenly over the entire album. Despite a couple of slow moments, like the synthetic torch song "Love Alone", "Adventures In UTOPIA" is memorable for its swift, contagious energy. "The Road To UTOPIA" provides an intoxicating entrypoint, and the inevitable hissing of air from the balloon never happens. Playful pop songs rendered with new wave stylishness ("You Make Me Crazy", "Shot In The Dark"), crowd-pleasing kiss-off songs ("The Very Last Time", "Set Me Free"), and spacey stories ("Caravan", "Last of the New Wave Riders") follow, all of them keepers in the canon. As an outside producer, RUNDGREN was certainly aware of the new direction in popular music established by acts like THE CARS and GARY NUMAN; in adopting a similar approach for UTOPIA, Todd mapped out a new future for the band that discarded the outmoded prog rock approach for a cleaner, quirkier sound.

To my tastes, this ranks right up there with the best UTOPIA has to offer; in fact, it's the UTOPIA album I play most often.

Report this review (#26498)
Posted Tuesday, May 4, 2004 | Review Permalink
ClemofNazareth
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Prog Folk Researcher
3 stars Adventures in Utopia was part of a kind of whirlwind of activity for Todd Rundgren in the late 70s and early 80s. He had this, Deface the Music, and Swing to the Right with Utopia; Hermit of Mink Hollow, Healing and The Ever Popular Tortured Artist Effect as solo works; and production credits for albums like Meat Loaf’s mega-platinum Bat Out of Hell and the Psychedelic Furs Forever Now. He was indeed a very busy man, but his own musical works would consistently fall short of the success of those he produced. Part of the reason, particularly with Utopia, was that the band couldn’t seem to find a purpose and stick with it. It’s one thing to be experimental in progressively developing sounds as a band, but with Utopia the feeling was more like they were trying on other people’s clothes to see which persona they wanted to adapt. Adventures in Utopia, like Deface the Music, reflects this attitude in spades.

“You Make Me Crazy” is a blatant rip-off of Ric Ocasek and the Cars. I’ve heard this song hundreds of times, and it’s still amazing that an innovator like Todd Rundgren would release such a transparent attempt at piggy-backing on someone else’s sound. The guitar riff sounds like it was lifted right off of “Let’s Go” from the Cars 1979 Candy-O album. I guess it’s not surprising that Rundgren has recently replaced Ocasek in the reformed ‘New Cars’ touring lineup.

On “Second Nature”, Rundgren adopts a bit of a falsetto to give this song a feel that’s very much in the vein of some of the earlier disco divas and crooners such as Maxine Nightingale, Chaka Khan, the Sylvers, and the Ohio Players. He adds some spacey keyboards, but these can’t mask the true pop undertone of the song. It’s an okay song and the band is tight in their execution, but this is pure pop all the way, and not particularly original at that.

One of the bright spots on the album is “Set Me Free”, which of course was a pop hit, but a very catchy and original one. The trademark Utopia vocal harmonies, funky keyboards, simple and grooving rhythm will get your toes tapping no matter how hard to try to stop them. Kasim Sultan’s voice is pleading as he begs his girl to let him go and “go find some other man”. Roger Powell adds some trumpet as well, used to good effect.

“Caravan” is actually almost an art rock work, with some very good vocal interplay among all four band members, a mesmerizing synth riff, and some interesting tempo changes as it chugs away toward a climax. One problem though is that there is no climax, as Rundgren takes the easy way out and simply fades the song to black.

The back of the album does get a little more interesting. “Last of the New Wave Riders” is closer to the big psychedelic sound that was so appealing on the band’s debut and Ra albums. I guess this is Utopia’s last blast to the past as the 80s decade began. They wouldn’t generate another throwback like this again. Six or seven other songs like this one would have made for a very good album.

“You Make Me Crazy” starts off like it’s going to be an “Obladee Obladah” kind of tune, and the comparisons to the Beatles are justified (as they are for much of this band’s career). This sounds more like the kind of Beatles clone that would be attributed to someone like Klaatu though – not distinguished in any way.

“The Very Last Time” is another Rundgren ‘girl-done-me-wrong’ song, but a decent one. Musically this is a very simple song – straightforward pop rhythm and simple keyboards, but the strident backing vocals and Rundgren’s own just-left-of-normal voice give this one a little bit of an edgy feel.

The first time I heard “Love Alone” I thought it was Barry Manilow. This kind of reminds me of when Neil Young did his Everybody’s Rockin’ album. I saw this on tour back in 1983 (two days before the rest of the tour was canceled due to lack of interest), and the loafer-light glee club guys in pink tuxedos and doo-wap vocals caused a number of old hippies in the crowd to swear off the hard stuff that night. This one is kind of like that; kind of a “what the f*!k was that?!”. ‘Nuff said.

“Rock Love” is a slightly Motown-tinged pop tune to close out the album. This song has always reminded me of the Gap Band – disco beat, shout-and-response vocals, accentuating brass at all the appropriate places. Very catchy beat and a solid disco work, but ultimately forgettable as anything else.

Adventures and Deface the Music came out about the same time. The latter was a kind of tribute/spoof of the Beatles, and wasn’t particularly well-received. Adventures fared quite a bit better thanks to the hit single “Set Me Free” and the fact that the band spread their style cloning around instead of just parroting the Beatles. But in the end this album would not leave a long-lasting impression, and the band would never again achieve the level of creativity they did with Ra. The band is a tighter unit here, but one of the things that made their debut and Ra work so well was that there was an aura of unpredictability about what was going to come out of them next that is sadly lacking here. There are a few surprises (“Love Alone”, “You Make Me Crazy”), but more of the ‘shocked’ variety than the ‘what a delight’ kind.

I’m going to give this three stars, largely for “Set Me Free”, “Last of the New Wave Riders”, and “Caravan”, but if you are looking to experience Utopia for the first time, don’t make this the album you do it with – try the 1974 debut first, then Ra, then maybe this one if you are still interested.

peace

Report this review (#79522)
Posted Saturday, May 27, 2006 | Review Permalink
Easy Livin
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
3 stars No sense of adventure

One of two Utopia releases in 1980, "Adventures in Utopia" continued the trend established on the previous "Oops wrong planet" where the band moved inexorably in a pop direction. The vast majority of the ten tracks here are short pop based songs. Fortunately, the Rundgren stamp of quality remains, but both he and the other band members are writing and performing so far inside themselves they are coming out the other side.

The album contains a rare hit single for the band in "Set me free" sung by Kasim Sultan, a song very much in the mould of Todd's "I saw the light". The other songs are a predictable mix of upbeat pop rock and ballads. Tracks such as "Second nature" and "Love alone" fall neatly into the latter category, such songs would have been equally at home on the prolific Todd's concurrent solo output.

There are occasionally forays into something a little more interesting. The opening title track for example attempts to deceive us into thinking that Utopia have decided to revert to their prog roots, the striking intro and slightly more complex arrangement offering hope to those of us who craved for another album to match the bands first release. Such digressions are all too rare though. "Caravan" may run for nearly 7 minutes, but it never strays from the new wave pop pleaser it starts out as. The quality of the pop here is undeniable, but pop it is.

"The last of the new wave riders" has echoes of Todd's "Sons of 1984", clearly being designed to be used as a crowd anthem in a live setting. The track is worth hearing though for the fine Todd guitar solo it contains. "The very last time" is more of the same with Todd in good voice up front and the band providing the massed chorus backing.

With Rungren running a parallel solo career, the boundaries between that and his work with Utopia were becoming very blurred. Instead of taking the opportunity to use the band environment as an opportunity to explore other styles, he simply used both vehicles to attack on the same front. As a result, Utopia albums such as this can only be described as frustratingly wasted opportunities.

Report this review (#135290)
Posted Wednesday, August 29, 2007 | Review Permalink
Tom Ozric
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars Initially, UTOPIA was the boundary pushing vision of POP Icon Todd Rundgren - for sure his solo work is superb, interesting Pop/Rock-music (though his Soul-inspired material of the late-80's loses this listener) - For Utopia, Todd enlisted a troupe of experienced musicians to fulfill his complex musical ideas (at the time, Todd was obsessed with the Yes album 'Fragile', particularly the song 'Roundabout'). A few years on (and minor line-up shuffling), the option of commercial radio/video priveleges and his own growing popularity as a solo artist won him over. This 1980 release, 'Adventures In Utopia', offers a fine melding of accessible tunes, with the instrumental integrity of well-seasoned musicians, enabling some of the tracks to go beyond the average fare. I have always thought highly of this record, (by chance, being the first red coloured vinyl LP I acquired) and with the focus on catchy arrangements (some bordering on cheezy - 'Love Alone' and 'The Very Last Time' are pieces I've never really appreciated...), each member sings lead on various tracks and their respective instruments can be heard clearly, courtesy of Todd and his band-mates production know-how. This record can be enjoyed by many music-lovers regardless of their pre- conceptions of Prog-Rock. I am only stating this because this album veers on the overtly 'Pop' side of things, with light Proggy touches here and there, but I certainly can vouch for Roger Powell's varied Keyboard playing (especially on 'Caravan'), Kasim's melodic and busy Bass-playing, the solid, punchy Drum-work of John Wilcox (albeit more straight-forwardly approached, but he's previously proven he can tackle complex patterns with a degree of ease...) and Todd will always be a marvellous, profound Lead-Guitarist/Vocalist and quite sentimental to me. 'Adventures In Utopia' may not be as reknowned as it should be, but features tremendous musicianship, and a handful of memorable and fun tunes, regardless. 3 stars
Report this review (#163405)
Posted Saturday, March 8, 2008 | Review Permalink
ghost_of_morphy
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars The prog was sucked out of Utopia fairly early, but this is still one of the bands most solid offerings. This talented quartet still offers up some quality songs (indeed, only the tracks Second Nature and Love Alone are weak,) even if they have forgotten most of their prog roots. Still, Todd and Company are on their game in cranking out great songs, and if you like good music this is a good album.

Three stars for the best non-prog Utopia album (with the possible exception of Oblivion.)

Report this review (#166571)
Posted Monday, April 14, 2008 | Review Permalink
4 stars This is my favorite Utopia release. Lots of cool, high school memories go along with this album. The highlights are "The Road to Utopia" and "Caravan" which are 2 of the best numbers in the Utopia catalog. These are accessible to all, and still hold some "proggy' values. The only poor song for me here is "Second Nature' which could have easily been on a Todd solo poppy album. Everything else is good with notable being (besides the above mentioned), "Love Alone" and "Rock Love". The last is cheesy but I can't help loving it. This is not a perfect album, but Utopia really never made one, in my mind, but this is close. It's a far cry from their first album but it is still an epic effort. This is an example of how good "pop" music can be. 4 stars.
Report this review (#280724)
Posted Thursday, May 6, 2010 | Review Permalink
Evolver
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR
Crossover & JR/F/Canterbury Teams
3 stars For a few years, Todd Rundgren's Utopia was an extremely good prog rock band. But once they solidified into the line up of Rundgren, Roger Powell, Kasim Sultan and John Wilcox, they immediately began drifting toward power pop. Excellently produced and extremely well played power pop, but pop nonetheless.

This album, ushering in the awful eighties, is almost completely devoid of the prog elements that made their previous albums so much fun. Sure, there are some good songs (Rundgren made a few of them into videos for a pre-MTV show he worked on with Mike Nesmith), but prog, uh-uh.

The best of this set are Caravan, and the two hardest rocking songs, The Last Of The New Wave Riders and Rock Love, that almost get ruined by a disco beat, but is too good a song to be kept down.

The worst song is Love Alone, which, with heavily layered vocals, brings to mind some of the dismal Queen eighties songs, where they mistakenly thought that layering vocals over a lame romantic ballad could bring back the success of Bohemian Rhapsody.

On a better note, many of these songs fared better in concert, where the band could stretch the songs out, and make them better.

2.5 stars, rounded up (because it won't leave enough room at the bottom for the albums to come).

Report this review (#323019)
Posted Tuesday, November 16, 2010 | Review Permalink
DangHeck
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars As with my recent-enough listen-thru of Oops! Wrong Planet, it's been a long while since I've heard and/or appreciated Adventures In Utopia front-to-back. This now feels a bit more significant, and maybe even more understandable, too, with Oops! truly being the last Utopia album that left any lasting impression on me (regardless of its own weaknesses). Adventures marked the beginning of Utopia as moreso the thing Todd was doing most steadily and consistently from this point through to the mid-80s, to their final album; they put out about an album a year until the end, his solo output being significantly less than '70s Todd.

AOR sounds off this release in a most effective manner to my ears on "The Road to Utopia", a minute and a half in calling Rush to mind to me, most surprisingly. The vocal style (Todd fronting) and melody is very them though. Clear, pop-oriented, even still apparently Blue-Eyed-Soul melodies give it its strength. The progginess is limited, and coming out just over two years after Oops! in 1977, the same year as their final Progressive Rock statement, Ra, definitive changes to their sound were pretty clearly made. Anyways, solid opener in my opinion, and this second-wave era sound works pretty well, even if it is a Pop Rock track far more than it is Prog. Continuing in a not-too-surprising direction even glancing back to Ra, the Willie Wilcox-lead "You Make Me Crazy", not exactly the AOR Pop Rock sound I associate with him, seems to directly reference The Cars sonically--and now thinking back to when Todd fronted The New Cars whenever the hell that was, that puts an interesting spin on things. I've been listening to a lot of Power Pop over the past few years, so I am so for this track; I don't recall really enjoying it much before today. Another I'm already keenly suspecting I'll enjoy, with Philly Soul vocals from Todd, is "Second Nature", sporting some soft keys, and Todd's sweet falsetto (or simply upper register). And with all the tastiness herein from the start, we then get this beautiful Disco Jets-esque synth solo. Spacy, imaginative feature for such a now-Adult Contemporary-type track. I like labels. And I like this song. Will you? I have no idea.

Mixing it up, Kasim Sulton fronts "Set Me Free" next, another poppy number which will have limited miles here. Really enjoying it, though, it has an upbeat, swinging lilt you might find on an ELO tune. And even the group vocals may evoke them, as well as others. "Caravan", the only track lead vocally by Roger Powell, begins much like "Determination" from Todd's Hermit of Mink Hollow (1978). What it has far more in common to my ears, though, is early-80s America. It's very radio-friendly, at least before you notice its 7 minute track length. It's a fairly interesting song, and the guitar solo nearing the halfway mark feels a lot like a Utopia solo of yore. In that, it's awesome, and is followed by an equally excellent, far shorter solo from Powell. And then it's John's turn on the drums; this section alone I found very successful, clearly making for the most progressive thing thus far. There's a second jam-out solos trade from the final chorus to the end, lasting a good 2 minutes or so. Very cool. Kasim and Todd trade off vocals as they're apt and welcomed to do on "Last of The New Wave Riders", a meta-lyric about New Wave musicians(?) turning to "New Age"? I don't understand it much on my own; Genius.com also lacks an answer. This is a chunky, metal-inflected AOR song through and through, like Styx from around this time perhaps. It's a pretty cool sound, with Todd's guitar once again the ever-shining entity, from his long-held melodic strikes to his lead work. Yet another I don't remember enjoying so much; to say it, though, not Prog.

Our vocal duo sticks together on "Shot in the Dark", a song with a pretty daring and surprising sonic mix. It reads very Art Rock to these ears (Sparks? 10cc?). Kasim's vocals are so high, matched fittingly with this bright, chiptuney chirp from the keys. The guitars are... heavy? Sometimes. Now this is the most progressive thing so far haha; the first I can really recommend. Then we're back to AOR form, with the Todd-lead "The Very Last Time". I like it, but it is approaching Meatloaf. Jerkin' us around once again, but with the lightest touch possible, Kasim Sulton croons over Roger's faux-organ on "Love Alone". Very soulful, it's also sort of hymn-like. The group vocals are of course standout. Finally we have "Rock Love", of course yet another genre pastiche. It's like disco and... whatever it is, it is hokey, [pause for effect] schlock. I like how it doesn't seem to take itself all that seriously, at least. But the line "Get thee behind me Satan" certainly rings out strong. As celebrated throughout this release, the solos are quite nice. If anyone can schlock incredibly well, next to the likes of Sir Paul, Utopia's got the chops.

An odd, but not totally untethered album from a favorite band.

True Rate: 2.75

Report this review (#2599200)
Posted Monday, October 4, 2021 | Review Permalink

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