Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Vision Thing (album)

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Released
  
13 November 1990

Artist
  
The Sisters of Mercy

Label
  
Elektra Records

Length
  
42:35

Release date
  
13 November 1990

Vision Thing (album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbc

Recorded
  
Puk Recording Studios, Gjerlev, Denmark

Vision Thing (1990)
  
Some Girls Wander by Mistake (1992)

Genres
  
Gothic rock, Rock music, Alternative rock, Hard rock

Producers
  
Andrew Eldritch, Jim Steinman, Chris Tsangarides, Andy Zax (reissue)

Similar
  
The Sisters of Mercy albums, Gothic rock albums

The sisters of mercy hd vision thing album remastered


Vision Thing is the third and, to date, final studio album by British gothic rock band The Sisters of Mercy, released in November 1990 on the band's own label Merciful Release.

Contents

Recording

Soon after the release of the band's previous album, Floodland, Eldritch approached guitarist John Perry to join them on writing a new album. After Perry turned down the offer to become a full-time member, the band began to search for a new guitarist through their record label. Eventually, Eldritch was forwarded a demo tape by young and unknown Andreas Bruhn. Bruhn was called to audition a week after turning in his tape.

As the band—now composed of Eldritch, Bruhn and bassist Patricia Morrison—was about to enter the studio, Morrison was abruptly replaced by the former Sigue Sigue Sputnik member Tony James. As Perry recalls, "When I first heard the Vision Thing material, Patricia was there; when I did the album, she wasn't." While details on Morrison parting ways with the band have never been fully disclosed, she herself was allegedly hired by Eldritch on the day her predecessor, Craig Adams, resigned.

Morrison later confirmed to have worked with Eldritch up until December 1989. She would go on to say her resignation was linked to her monthly salary of £300, and that she had her doubts on the band's musical direction. "I wasn't too thrilled with the direction the record was going in. There were elements I didn't like that could have gone either way, and now that Tony James is in I want nothing to do with it. It seems obvious what's going on – it's scam time..."

While Morrison's recording input on the band's previous album, Floodland, has oft been contested, Perry raised doubts whether either she or James play on Vision Thing. "By the time of the recording, Tony James was in, but I'm not sure either [he or Patricia] actually played any bass on the record – sounds sequenced to me." James has later admitted his parts took some twenty minutes in total to record.

Ultimately, the band spent nine months in the Danish recording facilities, with guitarist Tim Bricheno recruited during the final two weeks. Then-manager Boyd Steemson followed suit at one point to observe the progress. "I remember flying out to the [Puk] studio when they were making Vision Thing, and Tony [James] spoke to me and said: 'Well, I guess it's going to be a five-song album.' And I said, 'No, it will not be a five-song album.' Two days later they had seven-and-a-half songs. It was a very painful process."

According to the official website of the band, the final mixes were not the ones worked on the most. "'Vision Thing' is a stripped-down affair. Half of the finished mixes for the album are shelved in favour of rough mixes from earlier stages of the recording session, 'monitor mixes' which retain the immediate feel of the songs."

Content

The album was designed by songwriter and singer Andrew Eldritch as an attack on the policies of the George H. W. Bush administration (the title comes from an oft-cited quote by Bush).

It appears the majority of tracks on the album are based on the original demos, Eldritch being unhappy with the mixed versions and going back to basics.

Legacy

Described by Andrew Eldritch as "a fine album", it was included by Q magazine in their "Fifty Best Albums of 1990" list. In 1999, Ned Raggett ranked the album at number 69 on his list of "The Top 136 or So Albums of the Nineties".

Track listing

All songs produced by Eldritch except "More", produced by Eldritch and Jim Steinman, and "When You Don't See Me", produced by Chris Tsangarides.

2006 Re-issue

Along with the group's previous two releases, Vision Thing was re-issued in November 2006 with bonus tracks, which, listed as follows:

Personnel

  • Andrew Eldritch – vocals, guitar, keyboards
  • Tim Bricheno – guitar
  • Andreas Bruhn – guitar
  • Tony James – bass guitar
  • Doktor Avalanche (drum machine) – drums
  • Guest musicians
  • John Perry – guitar, slide guitar on "Detonation Boulevard"
  • Maggie Reilly – backing vocals on "Vision Thing", "More", "Detonation Boulevard", "Something Fast", and "Doctor Jeep"
  • Songs

    1Vision Thing4:36
    2Ribbons5:29
    3Detonation Boulevard3:49

    References

    Vision Thing (album) Wikipedia