Substance by New Order

Substance

New Order

1987

Substance is a Electronic album by New Order, originally released in 1987. On Gatefold: 174 pressings tracked, owned by 38 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Electronic
  • Synth-Pop / New Wave
  • lush
  • wistful
  • nocturnal

About

By 1987, the members of New Order were at the height of their powers. They’d released four albums of revered electronic-flavored rock that found them carrying the post-punk torch of their first band, Joy Division, while adopting dance and New Wave into their sound. And they’d let loose a series of club-centric singles inspired by New York’s thriving early-1980s post-disco, proto-house, early electro and Latin freestyle scenes—all of which helped push New Order further into the electronic dance music milieu. New Order dominated both college-rock radio and dance-music playlists. Unfortunately for fans, New Order’s music wasn’t always easy to track down. Club singles from the early 1980s—including the mammoth hit “Blue Monday”—were available only as 12-inch singles. The 1985 dance-floor classic “The Perfect Kiss” could be found on the album <i>Low-Life</i>, but only in truncated form. And 1986’s beloved “Bizarre Love Triangle” was released in a variety of versions. It was tough to collect all of the group’s smashes in one place. A solution arrived in the form of 1987’s <i>Substance</i>, a two-disc compilation that contained a treasure trove of music. Yet the band members weren’t content with simply slapping a bunch of old recordings together. <i>Substance</i> opens with a new version of “Ceremony,” a track written by the four members of Joy Division while singer Ian Curtis was still alive, and recorded in March 1981 by the three surviving musicians as the first New Order single; the <i>Substance</i> version is a re-recording featuring member Gillian Gilbert adding guitars. Other early hits, like “Temptation” and “Confusion,” appear here in new, <i>Substance</i>-specific versions. Those updates give the album a sonic consistency. It also explains why many fans consider <i>Substance</i> to be their favorite New Order “album”—and why it became the only one to achieve platinum status.

via Apple Music

The Clerk's got thoughts on this one. Mosh members get the full take →

Every pressing, with live pricesUnlock the pressing explorer + marketplace prices with Mosh Pit.

Tracklist

Side A

  1. A1Ceremony
  2. A2Everything's Gone Green
  3. A3Temptation

Side B

  1. B1Blue Monday
  2. B2Confusion
  3. B3Thieves Like Us

Side C

  1. C1The Perfect Kiss
  2. C2Subculture
  3. C3Shellshock

Side D

  1. D1State Of The Nation
  2. D2Bizarre Love Triangle
  3. D3True Faith

Credits

Production & Engineering

Songwriting

38 collectors on Gatefold own this · 174 pressings tracked on Gatefold