CABARET VOLTAIRE - ANIMATION

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Комментарии • 56

  • @soulminer
    @soulminer 5 лет назад +27

    One of the most influential bands ever from my perspective. They covered so much musical ground.

  • @daveansell6212
    @daveansell6212 2 года назад +7

    This song's been on loop in my head for decades...

  • @dpiedra1520
    @dpiedra1520 11 лет назад +16

    I can listed to CV anytime and the sounds are as complex and intricate today as they were then. It shows how far ahead they were. Absolutely under-appreciated as an influence on so many other bands.

  • @Azkrav47
    @Azkrav47 2 года назад +7

    R.I.P Richard H Kirk.

  • @soulminer
    @soulminer 6 лет назад +16

    Awesome dudes. The Crackdown was one of the hippest albums in the British underground music scene in 1983.

  • @Arc.hitectureMusic
    @Arc.hitectureMusic 16 лет назад +4

    CV never cease to amaze! Easily one of the most unique bands of the 80's, and to this date. I've always have loved whatever they've made, everything from their early years to their last years, yes even their 90's stuff too. They need to put these videos on a DVD badly!!! The visual experience is half the experience.

  • @MrGeissbockfan
    @MrGeissbockfan 6 лет назад +11

    Brilliant track, 30 years ahead of time. The drums are classic Jaki Liebezeit motorik-style!

    • @horesnhold5960
      @horesnhold5960 4 года назад +2

      come on. it was perfect back then...but 30 years ahead of time? hahaha

    • @kelechi_77
      @kelechi_77 Месяц назад

      @@horesnhold5960 I agree, this sounds 80s as hell, what's ahead about this? Hell Brian Eno could have released this song in 1977

  • @markgreen7378
    @markgreen7378 Год назад +2

    Before anybody tries likening them to any other UK bands.
    CV were formed in 1973.

  • @justahappygardener
    @justahappygardener 2 года назад +1

    I watched them live at Riverside in Newcastle and they were hypnotically stunning

  • @annthorpe8411
    @annthorpe8411 9 лет назад +8

    Blancmange without the hooks. I love both bands by the way. The Crackdown and Covenant are both great albums.

  • @BOMInsights
    @BOMInsights 13 лет назад +2

    From the 1983 "The Crackdown" LP ... great!

  • @Azkrav47
    @Azkrav47 16 лет назад +2

    This is great!!! This is the good music!!!

  • @lose8447
    @lose8447 Год назад

    This is definitely the best version. That guitar is perfect

  • @khorrumg
    @khorrumg 13 лет назад +2

    I liked the Cabs....their guitars were very much similar to Burchill ala Minds Sons of Fascination Album...a very under rated band

  • @antunivanovic
    @antunivanovic 11 лет назад +5

    In terms of influence, yes, Cabaret Voltaire were there first, but I was referring to the post-avantgarde era Cabs, when they turned more towards electro-funk stuff (like this one). If you listen to some Simple Minds tracks from "Empires & Dance", it is not that far from the actual fact that Simple Minds did help informing The Cabs going in a certain direction... But then again, only The Cabs can tell :)

  • @martinquarton184
    @martinquarton184 Год назад

    Fantastic song. Love Red Mecca album which i have on vinyl.

  • @pigknickers
    @pigknickers 9 лет назад +6

    One of my favourite bands - I've not seen this before. Sounds great compared to LP version. And Ann Thorpe, I'm still laughing at Blancmange without the hooks ! ! ! ! ! ! !

  • @fstop77
    @fstop77 14 лет назад

    Awesome! Cheers mate.

  • @NoelArtMedia
    @NoelArtMedia 16 лет назад +1

    Awesome. I love this song! It's good to see the Cabs performing it live. Triva: the line "okay,you can take this from me and then get out of here" is from the Bruce Lee film "The Chinese Connection". I don't know if was Lee's actual voice or someone else dubbing for him, tho.

  • @dpiedra1520
    @dpiedra1520 11 лет назад +3

    Not sure about that ... CV came up through the mid -seventies and were even involved with Factory Records who promoted many pioneers of the post-punk industrial sounds coming out of Sheffield and Manchester. The work of Wendy Carlos and other synth pioneers had a lot to do with CV's sound. Bands like Kraftwerk, BEF, Human League, Throbbing Gristle, Fad Gadget, etc. I think Simple Minds were wore influenced by New Romantic sounds like Ultravox and others.

  • @calaverasgrande
    @calaverasgrande 15 лет назад +1

    I think the movie with the Neu! track must be Master of the Flying Guillotine.
    Awesome movie BTW

  • @shaft9000
    @shaft9000 15 лет назад +2

    this sounds like Ferry singing on TH's 'Fear of Music' or something....crazy!!!

  • @sclr
    @sclr 6 лет назад +21

    Cabs were not proto fascists! All their songs are about liberation. This one especially!!! I guess there are endless interpretations but c'mon they are named after a birthing of Dadaism which itself was anti fascist. And they were kicking against Thatcherism. Remember:
    'The nature of your oppression is the aesthetic of our anger'
    V true for this eras music.

  • @darylcumming7119
    @darylcumming7119 Год назад

    The eighties.

  • @RJJNY
    @RJJNY Месяц назад

    The tracks from The Crackdown were much funkier played live.

  • @heatherdl8792
    @heatherdl8792 6 лет назад +2

    He's hot!

  • @grahamburns8809
    @grahamburns8809 12 лет назад

    the start of the revolution..

  • @craigdamage
    @craigdamage 15 лет назад

    This is really funky....if you are brooding in a dark basement somewhere.

  • @ixis99
    @ixis99 12 лет назад +1

    @TheMercyBeat Just to let you know-that's an early 70's Microfrets Husky Bass(short scale)he's playing here,not a Thundermaster bass.which was an earlier Microfrets longscale design.

  • @salvomirabilia3134
    @salvomirabilia3134 2 года назад

    Genius

  • @khorrumg
    @khorrumg 13 лет назад +1

    @PradaWilly Not alternative....Futurists!!! In England this was the genre which was begun 1979 or so...bands such as Cabaret Voltaire, Human League, Simple Minds, Ultravox, Gary Numan/Tubeway Army, D.Mode, Japan, John Foxx etc German bands such as DAF, Kraftwerk, the latter who were pioneers. The term was coined as a 'throw back' to the defunct Italian quasi Fascist art movement. Many sleeve designs by Peter Saville were emotive of that era. Even the clothes were ala 1930's/ 40's

  • @nachitienemail
    @nachitienemail 2 года назад

    fuck i love those drums

  • @thegoldenyear
    @thegoldenyear 15 лет назад

    Alan Fish's got cool hair.

  • @westerncivilization
    @westerncivilization Год назад

    How was that guitar sound achieved? There's nothing like it.

  • @emile235
    @emile235 12 лет назад

    @khorrumg yes at last someone acknowledges the Cabs Burchill connection !!

  • @dampergoldenrod4156
    @dampergoldenrod4156 2 года назад +3

    Sad to read that this lead singer passed away .he looks so young here too

    • @robotronique
      @robotronique Год назад +4

      Stephen Mallinder is still very much alive. It was Richard H. Kirk, the other member, that passed.

  • @sofiatsa6232
    @sofiatsa6232 11 лет назад

    αγοοορι μουυυ !

  • @g-plan9future204
    @g-plan9future204 Год назад

    Out on another limb

  • @daviddavis3155
    @daviddavis3155 3 года назад

    God like

  • @loverofsith
    @loverofsith 17 лет назад

    where was this? nice bass.

  • @franciscoalmonacid5520
    @franciscoalmonacid5520 2 года назад

    La cancion tiene un aire a un tema de nitzer ebb

  • @antunivanovic
    @antunivanovic 12 лет назад +1

    I do believe (and also read somewhere) that early-era Simple Minds in many ways influenced Cabaret Voltaire's post-Red Mecca sound (early pre-Crackdown singles like "The Dream Ticket" and "Safety Zone" sound dangerously close to what would have become of the Simple Minds themselves if they ever followed similar electronic path)... Both, "Empires & Dance" and "Sons & Fascination" on one hand and the Cabs' "Crackdown" album, indeed sound informatively close. And all are masterpieces, of course...

  • @qc2sb
    @qc2sb 3 года назад

    Does anyone know the source of the sampled audio which plays at the beginning of the song?

    • @linejoce4605
      @linejoce4605 3 года назад +1

      like Noelartmedia said (12 years ago), a Bruce Lee movie named The Chinese Connection.

  • @calaverasgrande
    @calaverasgrande 15 лет назад

    what kind of bass is that?

  • @classicgrooves
    @classicgrooves 6 лет назад

    Is this from Switch?

    • @Krystian88able
      @Krystian88able 5 лет назад +1

      Classic Grooves no, it's from Crackdown

  • @jasonritchie8475
    @jasonritchie8475 6 лет назад +1

    Great vid but awful sound quality

  • @montypeno4620
    @montypeno4620 12 лет назад +2

    didn't know the futurists had fascist tendencies. 80's bands sure like to use art movement names; cabaret voltaire, bauhaus, Glad the reactionary attitudes did not affect the music. It's some of my favorite especially CV, Ultravox, and Japan :)

    • @johnschindler8433
      @johnschindler8433 2 года назад

      Futurism, with it's clean lines, as a art movement, was glommed onto by Fascist groups, most notably in Southern Europe, but CV was Dadaist, which is completely different, childlike, chaotic, and defiant, based in Northern Europe.

  • @khorrumg
    @khorrumg 12 лет назад

    yes....decadence....the 1930's...40's pastiche was very much 'in vogue' back then. An 'interesting' time....strange how, with the exception of Joy Division people NEVER saw these bands as proto-fascist?? Anyway, ...whats in a label anyway! Take care

  • @IndustrialFan666
    @IndustrialFan666 Год назад

    Sounds like Nitzer Ebb