Erasure • Features • Biography
Union Street (2006)
Erasure have always been full of surprises. In two decades of plugging in and wigging out, Vince Clarke and Andy Bell have sold millions of albums around the world, staged Broadway-style live spectaculars, and topped the charts with outlandish cover versions. The latest Book of British Hit Singles ranks the duo among the Top 100 Most Successful Acts of All Time and in 2005 The Times proclaimed them more important than Kraftwerk in the great history book of rock.
On their brand new album Union Street, Vince and Andy have delivered their biggest surprise yet. In a boldly experimental step for an electronic band, they have unplugged themselves, bringing new soulful new depths and acoustic textures of 11 songs spanning their entire career.
Union Street was recorded in the Brooklyn studio of the same name, which is owned by guitarist Steve Walsh, who previously played on Erasure's 2003 covers collection Other People's Songs and produced their 2005 album Nightbird. Walsh is currently assembling musicians for Erasure's first ever live-band tour. "We found this cool guitarist with a cool studio and decided to use both," says Vince.
The album is dominated by revamped album tracks and born-again B-sides that the band felt best suited an extreme makeover. All sound refreshingly different to their original blueprints. "It was great going back through those songs, some of which I hadn't listened to properly since we made them," Vince recalls. "Suddenly you heard some of the naivety that was in there in the first place."
The Erasure story began in 1985, when former Depeche Mode and Yazoo founder member Vince advertised to find a singer for his new project. Then just 21, ex-butcher Andy was the 41st candidate that Vince auditioned, but their creative chemistry clicked instantly. Before long the pair were scoring the first of five number one albums and started racking up an incredible 32 consecutive singles in the Top 40.
With more than 14 million albums sold so far, Erasure have always been proudly, defiantly, shamelessly pop - they even named their chart-topping greatest hits collection Pop! in 1992. But behind all those impressive sales figures and kitsch stage costumes, it has sometimes been overlooked just what consistently great songwriters Vince and Andy have been throughout their career.
Indeed, Andy insists one motivating factor behind Union Street was to "show the songs in a different light, and show that they could work on whatever instrument, synthesisers or guitars. Vince agrees: "We just felt there were songs on our albums that had been missed as songs."
And what fine songs they are. Originally recorded for the Cowboy album in 1997, Boy and Love Affair are both bittersweet farewells sung from the aftermath of ruined relationships. The former now packs an extra emotional punch from Andy's vaulting falsetto harmonies and generous dollops of Walsh's honeyed slide guitar, while the latter becomes a more graceful chamber music affair swept along by exquisite string arrangements.
Some tracks on Union Street have been completely transformed by their radical new arrangements. Spiralling, which started life on The Circus in 1987, is now a crisp marriage of finger-picking guitar and melancholy introspection. And Blues Away, taken from the 1994 album I Say, I Say I Say, is a rich, warm, sleep-eyed strum about yearning for that elusive perfect lover. "It's nearly bedtime, and I'm getting lonely..."
There is more heart-tugging slide guitar woven into Home, first heard in its electronic versions on the 1991 album Chorus, and Tenderest Moments, which featured on the b-side to Run To The Sun. This latter tune twinkles and shimmers like a desert sunset, overlaid with Andy's sublime harmonies as he follows the angels on a celestial mystery tour across the starry night sky.
The pared-down, organic textures of Union Street also create enough space for Andy to showcase the richer, more soulful depths of his vocal range. "It makes such a different singing with acoustic instruments, Andy says. "There's more space, it seems. When you're using electronics they soak up part of the voice. Whereas with strings, the voice seems to vibrate off of them."
Andy's mournful timbre on the languid, heartbroken Piano Song and the strikingly stark, regretful ballad How Many Times? are pure Nashville Noir. "We're going to be the first band ever to cross over from pop to country," Andy jokes. "We want to play the Grand Old Opry."
First heard on the 1995 album Erasure, Stay With Me is the former Top 20 hit once called "more beautiful than this world deserves" by The Guardian. Now it has been been transformed into a sun-kissed serenade with a lively Spanish feel and a bubbling undertow of rapturous desire. Another former single from the same album, Rock Me Gently is reborn as the shiny celestial lullaby that closes Union Street. "There's more to life than thrills and spills and dollar bills", Andy swoons as a velvet chorus of gospel voices lulls him softly to sleep.
Union Street proves there has always been much more to Vince and Andy than shiny pop thrills. Unplugged, both musically and emotionally, they have never before sounded so graceful or so heartfelt. This is an album full of pleasant surprises. But coming from Erasure, that is no surprise at all.
