AUTOR

Thursday, November 30, 2023

Laurie Anderson-Mister Heartbreak (1984)

Despite having been part of New York City's most avant-garde art scene since the early 1970s, it took Laurie Anderson many years to release her first solo album, "Big Science" (1982), a work that was remarkably well-received by the public and garnered favorable reviews from the specialized press. Her eclectic style could be categorized as cutting-edge and experimental pop, something that has kept her a cult artist to this day. Some time after that groundbreaking debut, Laurie Anderson began collaborating with prestigious musicians such as Peter Gabriel, Nile Rodgers, Adrian Below, Phoebe Snow, and Bill Laswell, all of whom would eventually contribute to her next release, "Mr. Heartbreak", released two years later. Although much more accessible than its predecessor, Anderson continues to use her music to tell stories in a literal sense, fusing ethnic influences, electronica, and the most unusual experimentation. Strange canvases very close to minimalism "Sharkey's Day", poetic hypnotism "Langue D'Amour", approaches to electronic new wave "Gravity's Angel" or "Excellent Birds" or exotic pieces that navigate between the ethnic and the electronic "Kokoku", make up an album as challenging as it is luminous.