Progarchives, the progressive rock ultimate discography

BIG SCIENCE

Laurie Anderson

Crossover Prog


From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

Laurie Anderson Big Science album cover
3.93 | 70 ratings | 4 reviews | 23% 5 stars

Excellent addition to any
prog rock music collection

Write a review

Buy LAURIE ANDERSON Music
from Progarchives.com partners
Studio Album, released in 1982

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. From The Air (4:29)
2. Big Science (6:14)
3. Sweaters (2:18)
4. Walking & Falling (2:10)
5. Born, Never Asked (4:56)
6. O Superman (For Massenet) (8:21)
7. Example #22 (2:59)
8. Let X=X / It Tango (6:52)

Total time: 38:19

Line-up / Musicians

- Laurie Anderson / vocals, vocoder, synth, Farfisa organ, keyboards, violin, percussion, marimba, electronics, co-producer

With:
- Roma Baran / bass, glass harmonica, percussion, Farfisa organ, Casio keyboard, accordion, co-producer
- Bill Obrecht / alto sax (1)
- Peter Gordon / clarinet & tenor sax (1)
- Rufus Harley / bagpipes (3)
- Perry Hoberman / sax (6), flute (6,7), piccolo (7), percussion (2), backing vocals (7)
- Richard Cohen / clarinet & bass clarinet, baritone sax & bassoon (7)
- Chuck Fisher / alto & tenor saxes (7)
- George Lewis / trombone (8)
- David Van Tieghem / drums, percussion, timpani, marimba
- Leanne Ungar / backing vocals (7)

Releases information

Artwork: Perry Hoberman (art direction) with Greg Shifrin (photo)

LP Warner Bros. Records - BSK 3674 (1982, US)

CD Warner Bros. Records - 3674-2 (1984, US)
CD Nonesuch - 7559-79988-5 (2007, Europe) Remastered by Greg Calbi; CDROM section contains an mp3 of "Walk The Dog" and the video for "O Superman"

Thanks to chris s for the addition
and to Quinino for the last updates
Edit this entry

Buy LAURIE ANDERSON Big Science Music



LAURIE ANDERSON Big Science ratings distribution


3.93
(70 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(23%)
23%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(41%)
41%
Good, but non-essential (23%)
23%
Collectors/fans only (10%)
10%
Poor. Only for completionists (3%)
3%

LAURIE ANDERSON Big Science reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by octopus-4
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR RIO/Avant/Zeuhl,Neo & Post/Math Teams
5 stars A purple halo around a woman. she makes sex and the purple halo is now around a man. He injects him heroin together with friends and the purple halo is multiplied. The purple is the only visible color in a black and white film and the hypnotic vocoder of Laurie Anderson's "O Superman" permeates the first spot against AIDS put on air by the Italian TV.

This is how Laurie Anderson became very famous in Italy. Big Science had also a quite good commercial success despite the fact that's not an easy album. We all still associate that song with the purple halo.

Said so, this first album of this very unusual artist (there's a previous one but it was a 3 people collaboration effectively) was a surprise. Released in 1982, in the middle of the worst period of the music history this jewel appeared from nowhere. I don't know if she was already married to Lou Reed and what relationship she actually had with, but the first thing that her music makes me think about is Terry Riley.

Riley is a sort of modern classical composer and he wasn't using electronics when he composed "In C", but Laurie's approach to music is surely minimalistic and Riley is a recognized influence for Velvet Underground.

This album is weird and funny, too. There's a pilot calmly announcing the the aircraft is falling down to his passengers over a rocking electronic base "disturbed" by a jazzy sax a little out of tune so to create a strange dissonance which reminds me of Carla Bley.

There are melodic moments (track 2 and 8), the avantgarde of "Sweaters", played by pipes and drums, there's the hypnotic soundscape of violin and marimba on "Born, Never Asked" and a jazzy crazy patchwork made of spoken sentences in German which makes me think to the minimalistic period of Battiato (m.mlle Le Gladiatour) , there is some Basic language (LET X=X) ....well it could also be Fortran....so that "It Tango" could be interpreted as "IT" Tango.

However this album is amazing, especially thinking to the year of its release. A masterpiece? I don't know, but I don't think anybody will be upset if I round up my 4.5 stars

Review by Warthur
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars Laurie Anderson's debut solo album consists of her intoning her spoken word prose poems over a musical backing which reminds me of some of Brian Eno's ambient pop works (such as Another Green World). Essentially an edited extract from United States - a truly epic spoken word, music and performance art piece eventually issued in a 5-LP/4CD set some years after this came out - it's an intriguing album with a chilly, emotionless, analytical atmosphere. It certainly isn't the sort of material I can see myself spinning on a regular basis, but I can respect the musical vision at work here - it's just not going to hook you unless your aesthetic tastes happen to sync both with the minimalistic approach Anderson goes for and the stark production values.
Review by siLLy puPPy
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
4 stars Having fallen for the bizarre charm of LAURIE ANDERSON with "Bright Red" I recently lucked out and found her near complete studio output at our used music store for a very nice price. Having wondered if I only like her because of the Eno collaboration on that album, I thought i'd give her another try. I am surprised that I like her debut release BIG SCIENCE because when I listened to a couple tracks on YouTube a while back I was left unimpressed. Well the lesson for me is that never judge a book by only reading two pages. They happened to be the two tracks that I like the least. The rest of the album is very good. I am always impressed when an artist can carve out their own unique little nook in the musical universe and LAURIE ANDERSON has done just that and not only has she done so but she successfully throws together a diverse bunch of sounds, rhythms and melodies that play well together.

The first "From The Air" is one of tracks I didn't like when I heard it on YouTube, but now I find it humorous as i've warmed up to her sound. Next up is the title track where the album gets interesting. LAURIE displays her unique ability to use spoken word with strange musical backings. On here we get a drony synth line with sticks and harmonicas and percussion. Not gonna go into track by track but throughout this album we get bagpipes, bongo drums, saxophones, accordions, farfisa bass, casiotone, bottles, handclaps, piccolo, clarinet, rototoms, marimba and several instruments that LAURIE constructed herself. Despite being minimalist in terms of composition, there is great diversity in the sound textures which has made this a highly sampled album by hip hop artists.

For example, on her huge hit "O Superman" which actually hit #2 on the UK charts, she constructed a specially modified violin that has a recording head on it that makes weird sounds. She also uses a vocoder to alter her voice. Her lyrics are semi-hilarious and semi-serious just like her vocal style is kind of a semi-spoken, semi-sung type. This is a very strange album made all the stranger by realizing it came out in the 80s when there was nothing even remotely close to this. In fact there probably still isn't. LAURIE ANDERSON has found a place where no one else has dared to tread. Hypnotic, melodic, profound and downright silly. All these adjectives come to mind when i'm listening to this. An excellent taste of the avant-garde art pop that works on different levels.

Latest members reviews

5 stars When I noticed this CD in my father's collection, I was quite puzzled by the coverĀ : this short-haired woman, wearing suit and cravat and glasses painted in white, looked like an eccentric scientist trying to do her way through the bureaucracy... Or was she a former civil servant discovering the ... (read more)

Report this review (#646671) | Posted by CPicard | Monday, March 5, 2012 | Review Permanlink

Post a review of LAURIE ANDERSON "Big Science"

You must be a forum member to post a review, please register here if you are not.

MEMBERS LOGIN ZONE

As a registered member (register here if not), you can post rating/reviews (& edit later), comments reviews and submit new albums.

You are not logged, please complete authentication before continuing (use forum credentials).

Forum user
Forum password

Copyright Prog Archives, All rights reserved. | Legal Notice | Privacy Policy | Advertise | RSS + syndications

Other sites in the MAC network: JazzMusicArchives.com — jazz music reviews and archives | MetalMusicArchives.com — metal music reviews and archives

Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.