Real Life (Magazine album) explained

Real Life
Type:studio
Artist:Magazine
Cover:Magazine - Real Life.jpg
Released:June 1978
Recorded:March–April 1978
Studio:Virgin Mobile and Abbey Road Studios, London
Length:41:24
Label:Virgin
Producer:John Leckie
Next Title:Secondhand Daylight
Next Year:1979

Real Life is the debut studio album by English rock band Magazine. It was released in June 1978 by record label Virgin. The album includes the band's debut single "Shot by Both Sides", and was also preceded by the non-album single "Touch and Go", a song from the album's recording sessions.

Real Life has received critical acclaim and is considered a pioneering post-punk record. It has also been described as new wave and art rock.[1]

Background and recording

The album was written over the preceding year by the band, with Howard Devoto providing all of the lyrics. The two earliest songs, "Shot by Both Sides" and "The Light Pours Out of Me", were co-written with Devoto's former Buzzcocks bandmate Pete Shelley. The majority of the material on the album was written by Devoto in collaboration with guitarist and founding member John McGeoch. "Motorcade" was co-written with the group's keyboardist, the classically trained composer Bob Dickinson, who played with the group in mid-1977 before being dismissed without warning at a meeting convened by Devoto in November of that year. Dickinson has cited the influence of Satie on elements of the keyboard part in this song. In early January 1978, Dickinson was invited by Devoto to play for a few gigs but he declined the offer due to his ongoing postgrad electronic music research at Keele University. The music for the album's final track, "Parade", was written by Dickinson's replacement, Dave Formula, with bassist Barry Adamson. "Definitive Gaze" was recorded for a Peel session as "Real Life" on 14 February 1978.

Having toured much of the album through 1977 and early 1978, the group's then lineup of Devoto (vocals), McGeoch (guitar and saxophone), Adamson (bass), Formula (keyboards) and Martin Jackson (drums) recorded the album in sessions using the Virgin Mobile and at Abbey Road Studios between March and April 1978. The album was produced and engineered by John Leckie.

The original artwork and monoprint for the album were designed by Linder, with photography by Adrian Boot.

Release

Real Life was released on LP and cassette in June 1978. It peaked at no. 29 on the UK Albums Chart. "Shot by Both Sides", the album's only single, peaked at no. 41 on the UK Singles Chart.[2]

The album was reissued in remastered form by Virgin/EMI in 2007, along with the other three of the band's first four studio albums, and included four bonus tracks and liner notes by Kieron Tyler.

Reception

Real Life has received critical acclaim since its release.

On its release, Jon Savage said in Sounds: "A commercial, quality rock album then, with deceptive depths. All is not revealed."

The album was ranked at no. 20 among the top "Albums of the Year" for 1978 by NME, with "Shot by Both Sides" ranked at no. 9 among the year's top tracks.[3]

Legacy

Real Life is included on several "best of" lists.

Personnel

Magazine
Personnel

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Monroe . Jazz . 12 March 2015 . Radiohead's The Bends At 20: The Story Of An Anti-Capitalist, Anti-Cynicism Classic . https://web.archive.org/web/20150822195103/https://www.nme.com/features/radioheads-the-bends-at-20-the-story-of-an-anti-capitalist-anti-cynicism-classic . Aug 22, 2015 . 1 September 2015 . NME.
  2. Web site: Magazine . . 24 October 2020.
  3. Web site: 1978 Best Albums And Tracks Of The Year . . 10 October 2016 . 25 November 2016.
  4. Book: 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die . . 2010 . 978-0-7893-2074-2 . Dimery . Robert . revised and updated . registration.
  5. Web site: Artists Beginning with M (part 1) . . 20 November 2007 . 15 February 2012.