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REVIEWS & TECHNOLOGY
180g Vinyl Pressed at Quality Record Pressings
Mastered by James Guthrie from Original Analog
Tapes
The
2LP 180-gram vinyl edition of Amused to Death features remastered audio
completed by long time Roger Waters / Pink Floyd collaborator and co-producer
James Guthrie and has been pressed at Quality Record Pressings. The cover and
gatefold art has been updated for 2015 by Sean Evans, the creative director of
Waters' 2010-2013 "The Wall Live" tour and movie.
Amused to Death sounded the alarm about a society
increasingly and unthinkingly in thrall to its television screens. Twenty-three years
later, Amused to Death speaks to our present moment in ways that could scarcely
have been anticipated two decades ago.
"I'm
remembering the record from [over] 20 years ago, that most of what I had to say
then sadly still pertains today and is maybe even more relevant to our
predicament as people in 2015 even than it was in 1992," says Roger
Waters.
An
unblinking look at an entertainment-obsessed society, Amused to Death addresses
issues that have only grown in complexity and urgency over the past two
decades. In 2015 television is just one option in an endless array of
distractions available to us anytime, anywhere, courtesy of our laptops,
tablets and smartphones. With eyes glued to our
screens, the dilemmas and injustices of the real world can easily recede from
view.
Produced
by Roger Waters and Patrick Leonard, Amused to Death is a musically ambitious
work featuring a stellar lineup of musicians. Guitar
legend Jeff Beck figures prominently on the album, bringing his signature
virtuosity to eight songs. Guest vocalists include Don Henley ("It's a
Miracle"), Rita Coolidge ("Amused to Death") and soul singer
P.P. Arnold ("Perfect Sense" Parts I and II).
"Jeff
was hugely important to the making of the record, and it was one of the peaks
of my musical life," says Waters. "To have
him sitting in my billiard room playing harmonics and then playing the melody
on the whammy bar which he does all the way through
the first song, 'The Ballad of Bill Hubbard' it was absolutely
extraordinary."
Also contributing were Waters' longtime
collaborators, guitarist Andy Fairweather Low and
drummer Graham Broad; percussionist Luis Conte; and Pat Leonard, who played
keyboards on several tracks. The album reunited Waters with composer/arranger
Michael Kamen, who supervised orchestral arrangements
for The Wall, Waters' semi-autographical concept album with Pink Floyd. Kamen arranged and conducted the National Philharmonic
Orchestra Limited's contributions to the songs
"Too Much Rope" and "What God Wants, Part III."
With
Amused to Death, Roger Waters painted a picture of a society serenely tethered
to its televisions and increasingly untethered to the realities of an unjust
world. Like most of Waters' work, it is a concept-driven album that revisits
themes and characters throughout its 14 songs. At its core, Amused to Death is
a timeless reflection on the potential dangers of human excess
whether it's consumerism, war, religion, or the vapidity of the 24-hour news
cycle all inching us closer to becoming
"amused to death."
Amused
to Death was inspired by Neil Postman's seminal critique Amusing
Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business. Postman
argued that electronic media had transformed all information, including news,
into entertainment. In such an image-driven culture, he warned, people were
less likely to give close thought to matters of real significance.
"Postman talked about a propaganda machine so powerful human intellect couldnt resist it," Waters
remarks. "Given all the distractions that there are in modern life, it is
very easy to take our eye off the ball."
When
Amused to Death was originally released, television was king and the digital
age was in its infancy. Today, of course, we have an ever-growing menu of
potential amusements at our fingertips, while circumstances in the world have
grown darker and more dangerous. There are lyrics on Amused to Death that could
easily describe recent events. "The Bravery of Being Out
of Range refers to "laser-guided
bombs" that "hit the target/and win the game/from bars 3,000 miles
away." Though written in the wake of the first Gulf War,
the song stings in this era of drone strikes. Comments Waters, "Now
that we have drones, I think that song is even more sinister."
Amused
to Death is a record that rewards close listening, for its sound no less than
its lyrical content. The songs are richly layered; sound effects course beneath
vocals, instruments, orchestras. The diverse elements work together to enrich
meaning and pure musical pleasure.
All
the album's nuances come through clear as a bell in the 5.1 surround mix and
remastered stereo mix by James Guthrie, who mixed the original release and has
worked with Waters since Pink Floyds
The Wall (1979). The restoration was no small task,
given the fact that Amused to Death was written and recorded over a period of
nearly five years, using three different formats (one analog,
two digital). Guthrie traveled to
The
effort was well worth it, says Guthrie. "This is such a rich album,
conceptually and musically. You have Jeff Beck playing on eight songs. Duets with Don Henley, P.P. Arnold and Rita Coolidge. Orchestral arrangements by Michael Kamen.
And you have Roger at his best, writing and singing his arse off. In my
opinion, this album contains some of Roger's finest work."
Continuing
his collaboration with Waters that dates back to 2005, visual artist/filmmaker
Sean Evans created new gatefold and cover art for the re-release. For the
gatefold, Evans sourced news footage and photographs from AP, and then used
digital tools to achieve the effect of distressed, low-bit images. "The
artwork is meant to complement the lyrics," Evans explains. "We never
identify where the images are taken from, but you get a sense of 'Something's
not right. We're doing something wrong.'"
The
updated cover art for Amused to Death focuses on a little boy bathed in the
glow of a giant TV screen, reflecting the sense of urgency Waters feels about
the album's themes. "In terms of the way we educate young people, I fear
we are encouraging our society to amuse itself to death at a greater rate than
we ever were," he comments. "What if we spent on the education the
money we spend on building weapons? What if children were asked not prepare
themselves for lives as consumers and producers, but to prepare themselves to
become adults who think about things, who have open minds, and care about the
rights of the human being? Can you imagine what the world might be like?"
Features
180g
Vinyl
Pressed
at Quality Record Pressings in the
Mastered
by James Guthrie
Mastered
from Original Analog Tapes
Gatefold
Jacket
Meticulous
Test Pressing Evaluation and Quality Control
Selections
LP1 - Side A:
The
Ballad of Bill Hubbard
What
God Wants, Part I
Perfect
Sense, Part I
Perfect
Sense, Part II
LP1 - Side B:
The
Bravery of Being Out of Range
Late
Home Tonight, Part I
Late
Home Tonight, Part II
Too
Much Rope
What
God Wants, Part II
LP2 - Side C:
What
God Wants, Part III
Watching
TV
Three
Wishes
LP2 - Side D:
It's
a Miracle
Amused
to Death