217 (tie). Chairs Missing – Wire (121 points)
@rockaction #7
@Barry2 #14
Chairs Missing is the second studio album by the English rock band Wire. It was released on 8 September 1978 through Harvest Records. It uses more developed song structures than the minimalist punk rock of the group's first album. The record was met with widespread critical acclaim.
The album peaked at number 48 in the UK Albums Chart. The single "Outdoor Miner" was a minor hit, peaking at number 51 in the UK singles chart.
I went back and forth between this and
Pink Flag as my high Wire selection. This album was a little more refined but even more experimental. Some songs eschew typical verse-chorus-verse structures like the one I might select, although I'd like to get Barry's agreement on a track if he feels strongly about one. If I had my druthers then I'd go with one of the three that end Side One and begin Side Two: "Heartbeat," the closing track from Side One without that traditional structure mentioned before but still a potential pop song; "Misery," with its more post-rock crescendo feel; or "Outdoor Miner," a beautiful track which would be the popular track today. But when somebody else rates the album so highly then one would like his or her input.
@Barry2, what say you?
As another critical aside, this album is more than the sum of its parts. The transition, for instance, from the moodier and more pleasing nature of those three songs to "I Am The Fly," the lead single that many people found off-putting and jarring, makes much more sense in the album context than the song "I Am The Fly" does as lead single from this wonderful album. Many people have the wrong idea about this album's aspirations towards beauty because of its sequencing to its lead single. They find it abrasive and too challenging. But that is completely not the case with this one. I'd say a listen to this one deserves to be a background listen at first and then can graduate to a foreground listen once one is aware of its sublime ethereality. Just wonderful in spots that make it all worth it, IMO.
There doesn't seem to be a bad choice or a great one either, as you said "more than the sum of the parts". If it's an introduction to Wire I'd go Mercy, Too Late, or Men 2nd. An intro to Chairs than Outdoor Miner, Fly, or maybe Another the Letter.
Thanks, man.
I think that's an excellent way to look at it. It's a really insightful thought process, and I'm not blowing smoke here. I just listened again to those songs (except "Mercy") and thought about it a bit. I think due to this being the album countdown that "Outdoor Miner" is probably the best intro to both band and album, but that might be my prejudice. I always thought "I Am The Fly" is sui generis and I think now that "Another The Letter" is more suited for
154, which is the third album of what many consider Wire's origin trilogy.
If one asked me, I would say that if you wanted to introduce somebody to Wire to get that person into the band then "Mannequin" off of Pink Flag is the song that I would pick.
Wire · Pink Flag (2006 Remastered Version) · Song · 1977
open.spotify.com
But if "Outdoor Miner" sounds okay I'd go with that. God, "Too Late," is really appropriate also. You can probably tell by my emphasis of the four that I like the
Pink Flag/Chairs Missing era of the band more than I do the
Chairs Missing transition to the
154 era, which I really need to give another chance and listen. I like their later stuff, so I'm not sure why
154 didn't hit at first.
On a Wire note (for anyone interested), I recently got their
Not About To Die studio demos LP, which has some really good songs, including "Love Ain't Polite," "Stepping Off Too Quick (Not About To Die)," and "Options R," which is a more famous demo of theirs. I want to (sic) that "quick" in the title, but they're Brits and probably know more about proper grammar than I do. Heh. Poetic license, too, and probably most importantly!
TL;DR Go with "Outdoor Miner" if there's no objection.