The Buggles
Adventures in Modern Recording


3.0
good

Review

by Divaman USER (166 Reviews)
January 13th, 2019 | 15 replies


Release Date: 1981 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Although it's the lesser of The Buggles' two albums, this LP is still something of a treasure.

A while back, I reviewed the Buggles 1980 debut album The Age of Plastic, which featured their one big single, "Video Killed the Radio Star." Shortly after that LP's release, in as improbable a turn of events as one could imagine, the new wave duo of Trevor Horn and Geoff Downes suspended The Buggles in order to join the progressive rock giants Yes. They took part in the creation of the Drama album, then toured as part of Yes through the rest of 1980. When Yes dissolved (temporarily, as it turned out), Horn and Downes began to record a new Buggles album together. However, a month or so into the recording, Downes left the band in order to form a new supergroup, Asia, with former Yes bandmate Steve Howe. Horn then pulled together a group of studio musicians, and continued to record what turned out to be The Buggles' final effort, Adventures in Modern Recording.

Unsurprisingly, given Adventures' hectic origins, the album is a bit of a mixed bag. It does contain some of Horn's best-ever vocal work. It also features a number of very strong tracks. The highlight would definitely be a leaner electropop version of the song known on the Drama album as "Into the Lens", retitled here as "I Am A Camera". While the Yes version is magnificent, it's also maybe a little overblown. Here, the track is sparser, allowing the words (and the song's theme of trying to capture a moment of reality and hold onto it forever in photographic form) to come through more clearly. Which adaptation of the song is the superior one is really a matter of personal taste. Personally, I'm glad that we have both of them.

The album's title track is also a winner. "Adventures in Modern Recording" is a bit autobiographical, as it has fun with the fact that The Buggles were solely a studio act that never played a live show until they performed some reunion shows several decades later. The track features a canned audience cheering wildly throughout, even as Horn sings of his fictional rock star wannabes "They're not playing/They're not playing/They're just having/Adventures in modern recording." The synth line on this one is quite fetching, and creates a sense of excitement, even as the multiply overdubbed vocals demonstrate that we're obviously not listening to a live track.

"Lenny" is another strong number. I've never quite been able to figure out who it's about, but it seems to be a British political or religious figure. In any event, it's a quirky, but quite dramatic, track, about a leader who is decidedly anti-science. ("When you say that the sun does not move/Did it show you the answer?/When the ships do not fall off the world/Does it mean there's a wall there?"). And "Beatnik", the second of the LP's nine songs, is silly, but kind of fun.

On the other hand, unlike Age of Plastic, there are a few entries here that fall fairly flat. "Vermillion Sands" isn't bad in the main body of the song -- it's quiet and a little foreboding -- but then it shifts into a synthesized simulation of swing-band music that is nothing but annoying. And "On TV" is kind of goofy -- it sounds like a caricature of Joe Jackson's "Sunday Papers".

It should be noted that in 2010, the album was re-released with ten bonus tracks, two of which are of particular interest to Yes fans. They're the original demos of the first and second parts of what was eventually reworked into the title track of Yes's 2011 Fly From Here album.

Adventures in Modern Recording was mostly favorably received by the critics at the time of its original release. The album, however, was a commercial failure, which led Horn into terminating The Buggles, and walking away from his career as a performer to concentrate on his new passion, musical production. Nevertheless, the album can be considered something of a flawed treasure, cherished all the more because it was one of the only two albums this underrated eighties band ever released.



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user ratings (12)
3.5
great

Comments:Add a Comment 
Divaman
January 14th 2019


16120 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Took me awhile to get to my first review of the year, but better late than never.

Get Low
January 14th 2019


14250 Comments


Pos'd

e210013
January 14th 2019


5164 Comments


Nice to see this reviewed here by you Diva. You completed your job with this band. Great. Definitely less good, but still it remains an album with some interest, especially as a testimony of an era. Great job on the review, as always. Pos.

Divaman
January 14th 2019


16120 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Thanks GetLow and e.

TwigTW
January 17th 2019


3934 Comments


The first album is great, but this one is pretty hit or miss. I like Lenny, I Am A Camera, and On TV (but you're right, it is goofy). Maybe it's a good thing that this failed, otherwise he might not have gone on to The Art Of Noise and producing so many hit '80s albums for other bands... By the way, The Flat Earth is a great Reviewer Rec.

Divaman
January 17th 2019


16120 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Thanks Twig.

Get Low
March 29th 2021


14250 Comments


I should probably check this at some point.

Divaman
March 29th 2021


16120 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Definitely.

Sabrutin
August 9th 2021


9698 Comments


Not bad at all, more on the prog electronic side somewhat.

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
December 8th 2021


32033 Comments


A good informative read as always Diva, loving the fact you reviewed both of the Buggles albums, underrated band.

Divaman
December 8th 2021


16120 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Thanks Dewi. And I completely agree about them being underrated.

Get Low
December 8th 2021


14250 Comments


Any idea why this isn't on Spotify?

Divaman
December 8th 2021


16120 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

None whatsoever. I'm surprised that it isn't.

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
December 8th 2021


32033 Comments


Yeah, had to resort to youtube for this one, not cool, buggles.

Get Low
December 8th 2021


14250 Comments


Apparently it was available until 2018. I think most likely Horn had it taken down because he didn't like the album.



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