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New Order Stephen Hague ‡ Non-album single B-side to "True Faith" 1987 [1] "5 8 6" New Order Power, Corruption & Lies: 1983 [2] "60 Miles an Hour" New Order Get Ready: 2001 [3] "Academic" New Order [a] Music Complete: 2015 [4] "Age of Consent" New Order Power, Corruption & Lies: 1983 [2] "All Day Long" New Order Brotherhood: 1986 [5] "All the ...
The Best of New Order (stylised as (the best of) NewOrder) is a greatest hits album by English band New Order.It was released in the United Kingdom on 21 November 1994 by London Records and, with a different track listing, in the United States on 14 March 1995 by Qwest Records and Warner Bros. Records. [1]
New Order contributed a new song, "Here to Stay", and a re-recording of the Joy Division song "New Dawn Fades" with Moby, for the film's soundtrack. The compilation International and four-disc boxset Retro were released in winter 2002. New Order followed Get Ready with Waiting for the Sirens' Call in 2005. During this period Gilbert stepped ...
[65] [66] In July 2019 the performance was released as a live album titled Σ(No,12k,Lg,17Mif) New Order + Liam Gillick: So it goes.. (Live at MIF). [67] The collaboration between Gillick and New Order was the subject of the documentary feature New Order: Decades, directed by Mike Christie and broadcast in the UK by Sky Arts and Showtime in the US.
While Substance 1987 aimed to showcase New Order's 12-inch singles, Singles instead features mostly seven-inch versions, some of which are rare and differ from the album versions. The album includes three early singles that have never appeared on CD in their original form: " Ceremony ", " Everything's Gone Green " and " Temptation ".
"Blue Monday" is a song by the English rock band New Order. It was released as a 12-inch single on 7 March 1983 through Factory Records. It appears on certain cassette and CD versions of New Order's second studio album, Power, Corruption & Lies (1983). [4] The track was written and produced by Gillian Gilbert, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris and ...
Substance was released in August 1987 by Factory Records. [12] According to Sputnikmusic, it showcased New Order's mix of post-punk and dance styles with 12-inch singles remixed for club play and became the band's "most popular, well known, highly rated [record] and arguably their most influential". [10]
The music of "Love Vigilantes" forgoes most of the electronics that otherwise define New Order's typical sound. [4] After an opening of four hits on a snare drum, the music is built around multiple hooks, starting with the intro theme, which Spin magazine called "Beatlesque", [7] played by Sumner on a melodica followed by his acoustic guitar riff which repeats throughout the song. [3]