"She's Leaving" Released: 17 June 1982 (Benelux only)[6][7]
Architecture & Morality is the third studio album by English electronic band Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD), released on 6 November 1981 by Dindisc.[8] Inspired by religious music, the group sought to broaden their musical palette by utilising elaborate choral samples, the Mellotron, and other new instruments to create a more naturalistic, emotive sound. The artwork was designed by longtime OMD collaborator Peter Saville, along with associate Brett Wickens, while its title was derived from the book Morality and Architecture by David Watkin.
Architecture & Morality reached number three on the UK Albums Chart, and was a top-10 entry across Europe. The record met with lukewarm reviews, but garnered acclaim from critics and other artists in the following years. It has been recognised as a seminal album of its era and the synth-pop genre, appearing in rankings of the best records of 1981 and the wider decade. Architecture & Morality has also featured in various "all-time" lists, including the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.
The record became a commercial success, selling over four million copies and spawning three international hit singles – "Souvenir", "Joan of Arc" and "Maid of Orleans" – which together sold eight million copies. OMD have staged multiple tours based around the album.
Background
During the initial sessions for Architecture & Morality, OMD were looking for a new musical direction. Frontman Andy McCluskey, a longtime atheist, told how the band "found a lot of influence in the emotional power of religious music".[9][10] McCluskey informed Melody Maker at the time, "I haven't gone and 'got God'... It's just trying to understand why people need religion and believe in it."[2] The group spent two months recording at The Manor Studio, Shipton-on-Cherwell, with additional recording completed at the band's own Gramophone Suite in Liverpool. Mixing took place at Mayfair Studios, London.[2] Instrumentalist Martin Cooper left and re-joined the group during the making of the album, missing the bulk of the sessions. During his absence he formed Godot with former OMD session musician David Hughes.[2]
A catalyst in the development of OMD's new sound was Hughes' use of the band's studio to manipulate choral samples he had recorded; the album is noted for making liberal use of those samples,[10] as well as of the Mellotron, a mechanical tape-replay keyboard.[11] The group introduced other new instruments, including prominent guitars on opening track "The New Stone Age", whose sound was intended to startle the OMD audience.[10] All of these measures combined to produce a more naturalistic, emotive sound than on previous OMD releases.[12]
According to the album's credits, its title was suggested to the band by Martha Ladly (formerly of Martha and the Muffins), who had read the 1977 book Morality and Architecture by David Watkin.[1] Ladly, who was also a designer, was at the time the girlfriend of Peter Saville, the album's sleeve designer.[10] McCluskey felt the title Architecture & Morality represented the interplay between the human and mechanical aspects of OMD: "We had the 'architecture', which was the technology, the drum machines, the rigid playing, the attempt to break out of the box by playing specifically crafted sounds, and the 'morality', the organic, the human, the emotional touch, which we brought naturally."[10]
"Souvenir" was the first track to be written for the album. "Sealand" was named after the Royal Air Force's Sealand base on the Wirral;[10] it is also a nod to the Neu! song "Seeland".[13] The sample-heavy title track was compiled in the studio over a three-day period. "The Beginning and the End" was an older composition that the band had previously attempted to record but had shelved due to being unsatisfied with the results.[10] The songs avoided the verse-chorus-verse format, utilising lengthy instrumental passages and substituting choruses with synthesizer lines. Lyrics were largely inspired by historical figures and events, including Joan of Arc, after whom two songs were named.[10] The tenth-through-sixteenth tracks of the remastered edition are bonus tracks and were B-sides from the album's three singles – except for "Gravity Never Failed", which was an out-take from the Architecture & Morality sessions (its original title, "Georgia", was transferred to another song on the record).[1][10] This track was envisaged as a single, but was not released until it featured as the B-side of "Dreaming" (1988).[10] "Of All the Things We've Made", and a completed version of "The Romance of the Telescope (Unfinished)", would appear on OMD's next album, Dazzle Ships (1983).[14]
The cover artwork was produced by Peter Saville and associate Brett Wickens. Inspirations included "art movements like The Circle, and... mid-century iconic furniture like [Le] Corbusier and [Alvar] Aalto".[10][15]
Singles
Architecture & Morality yielded three singles, all of which reached the top five of the UK Singles Chart: "Souvenir" (number three), "Joan of Arc" (number five), and "Maid of Orleans (The Waltz Joan of Arc)" (number four), a retitled "Joan of Arc (Maid of Orleans)". Two singles were also successful in a variety of territories, with "Souvenir" and "Maid of Orleans" each charting at number one in various European countries; the latter became Germany's biggest-selling single of 1982.[16] "Joan of Arc" was only released in the UK.[11] The three singles sold eight million copies combined.[17][18]
Dindisc proposed "She's Leaving" as a fourth single, but the group refused, believing this would over-exploit the album; the label did proceed with a small-scale release in the Benelux region. OMD later regretted their decision, attributing it to being young and pretentious.[6][10]Classic Pop described "She's Leaving" as "the great OMD single that never was".[19]
Architecture & Morality met with a lukewarm critical response.[30] Lynden Barber of Melody Maker wrote: "I don't believe the Orchs even care about this record... the style is the same, the content profoundly different, the onslaught of emptiness, frivolity disguised by furrowed brows, a new brand of meaninglessness."[31]Boston Phoenix journalist M. Howell said the record "gives off the dry stench of self-importance" and would have been more aptly titled "Mortician & Morality".[32] David Fricke of Rolling Stone observed an "awkward mix of dreamy romanticism and spatial, Pink Floyd-ian abstractions", concluding that "too much sincerity and not enough spunk... make for attractive but dull fare."[33]Record Mirror's Daniela Soave cautioned that the album "requires more effort on the listener's part", adding, "Although I had misgivings initially, Architecture & Morality is no disappointment."[27]
Other critics were unapologetically favourable. Dave McCullough of Sounds gave a five-star review in which he referred to Architecture & Morality as OMD's "best album yet" and a "classic in the making",[29] while the Belfast Telegraph's Jim Cusack called it an "excellent album" by a band with "higher interests and concepts in music than most others of their genre."[34] Ian Cranna of Smash Hits noted "varied and imaginative arrangements" that enhance the group's "wonderful melodies and intelligent lyrics", summarising the record as OMD's "most impressive achievement to date".[28]Architecture & Morality was included in Billboard's "Recommended LPs".[35]
"We didn't think it got the respect it deserved", said McCluskey in 1983. "We put a lot into it and we really loved it... anything which undermines our own unstable balance creates a problem for us."[36] Sean O'Neal of The A.V. Club told how OMD responded to lacklustre reviews of the album by "pursu[ing] a darker, more defiantly experimental direction on its 1983 follow-up, Dazzle Ships—only to have the critics belatedly declare [Architecture & Morality] a masterpiece."[30] In particular, a 1984 Melody Maker article, in which Helen Fitzgerald labelled the record "the first true masterpiece of the Eighties", offset the unflattering contemporary review printed in the magazine.[37]
In the All Music Guide to Rock (2002), Ned Raggett wrote: "Combining everything from design and presentation to even the title into an overall artistic effort, this album showed that OMD was arguably the first Liverpool band since the later Beatles to make such a sweeping, all-bases-covered achievement."[20] Mark Lindores of Classic Pop asserted that "Merging the machinations of German electronica with warm Merseyside melodies and otherworldly choral samples... OMD struck the perfect balance between experimentalism and commercial appeal."[10] In Record Collector, John Doran observed an "astonishing record" whose content ranges from atmospheric love songs to the "propulsive and [Gary] Numanesque 'The New Stone Age'" and the sample-heavy "Georgia"; Doran also had praise for Saville's "austere and iconic" cover art.[26] Author Lori Majewski said, "Architecture and Morality is so original, so special, so sublime, that if there were no other new wave bands to speak of, the entire genre could still hang its hat solely on that record."[38]
Legacy
Architecture & Morality has appeared in several lists of 1981's best albums, being ranked no. 1 by The Morning News.[a]Tylko Rock writer Tomasz Beksiński placed it fourth in his 10 most important albums of the New Romantic era.[47]Architecture & Morality has been listed as one of the great records of the 1980s by outlets such as Uncut,[48]Mojo[49] and the St. Petersburg Times,[50] and was voted 13th in Classic Pop's "Top 100 Albums of the 1980s" reader poll.[51] It has featured in various "all-time" lists,[52] including critic Mark Fisher's "Top 100 British Albums",[53]Phantom FM's "Top 500 Albums of All Time",[54] and the book, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[55]The Quietus also named the record one of their favourites.[56] In genre-specific lists, Paste ranked Architecture & Morality the fifth-greatest synth-pop album,[57] while Classic Pop labelled it the eighth-best electropop record;[19]Ultimate Classic Rock declared it the 35th-greatest new wave album and "a crucial connecting point in synth-pop's MTV-era transformation from wrist-slashing industrial-town dirges to sleek, love-struck modern pop music."[58]
The subject of multiple "classic album" analyses,[10][74][75]Architecture & Morality is recognised as a seminal record of both the synth-pop genre, and the 1980s.[10][76][77]Fact labelled it "a key influence on the 80s synth-wave [sic] explosion",[78] while Rolling Stone listed the record among "The 20 Key Synth-Pop Albums", further describing it as "one of the most influential albums of the decade".[79]Architecture & Morality has been the focus of three tours: as well as touring in support of the album upon its release,[80] OMD included all of its songs in the main set of their 2007 comeback tour[81] (which spawned the 2008 live album and DVD, OMD Live: Architecture & Morality & More), and also staged a 40th anniversary tour in 2021.[82] The record has sold more than four million copies worldwide.[b]
^ abMale, Andrew (July 2019). "Days of Future Passed". Mojo. No. 308. pp. 38–43. With eight million singles and four million albums sold, Architecture & Morality...
^Fulton, Rick (4 May 2007). "Singles and albums". Daily Record. One of the UK's most influential electro groups and one of the genre's best albums. It may have been released originally in 1981 but still sounds as fresh today.
^"Records". LA Weekly. Vol. 4, no. 4. 25–31 December 1981. p. 16.
^Eddy, Todd (May 2003). "The Synthesists (supplement)". Q. No. 202. ISSN0955-4955. OMD's 1981 masterwork [...] perfectly balanced the avant garde with top-flight songwriting, pooling those [Kraftwerk and Brian Eno] influences together for an unforgettable set that few in the genre have come close to matching.
^"Instagram video by Anohni". Instagram. 3 January 2023. 1 minutes in. Archived from the original on 4 January 2023. Retrieved 4 January 2023. ...Architecture & Morality [and] Dazzle Ships. Those records, they really changed me when I was a kid. I'd never heard anything quite like it.
^Kember, Peter (June 2020). "My Life in Music: Sonic Boom". Uncut. No. 277. p. 118.
^Houghton, Richard (2019). OMD: Pretending to See the Future (expanded paperback ed.). This Day in Music Books. pp. 414–415. ISBN978-1-9161156-2-0. Amazing music.