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Lou Reed, Ecstasy CD cover artwork

Lou Reed, Ecstasy

Audio CD

Disk ID: 1496100

Disk length: 1h 17m 24s (14 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 1999

Label: Unknown

View all albums by Lou Reed...

Tracks & Durations

1. Paranoia Key of E 4:28
2. Mystic Child 5:01
3. Mad 4:29
4. Ecstasy 4:25
5. Modern Dance 4:09
6. Tatters 5:55
7. Future Farmers of America 3:01
8. Turning Time Around 4:21
9. White Prism 4:00
10. Rock Minuet 6:56
11. Baton Rouge 4:54
12. Like a Possum18:03
13. Rouge 1:01
14. Big Sky 6:32

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

Ecstasy is a surprisingly brutal and angry record, even for Lou Reed, who virtually introduced those words into the rock & roll lexicon more than 30 years ago. Like the brilliant New York and Magic and Loss, Ecstasy is a sprawling song cycle dealing with one particular subject, in this case marriage and the ensuing death of love. Ecstasy is the sound of relationships unraveling and love going sour. The songs are about infidelity, mistrust, and dishonesty; more importantly, they're about that moment in time when the flush of romance turns rancid. As Reed puts it in "Modern Dance," "It's all downhill after the first kiss." Through a series of varied sketches, Reed poses a question for which he has no answer: At what point does your lover become your tormentor? On the record's best track, "Baton Rouge," Reed asks, "I wonder where love ends and hate starts to blush?" Looking back on the relationship in "Baton Rouge," Reed dreams about what might have been: the two-and-a-half strapping sons, the fat grandsons, the barbecues, and the family dog--all at the expense of self-identity. The taut, muscular guitar work of Reed and Mike Rathke, complemented by the fluid bass playing of longtime collaborator Fernando Saunders, fuel the anger and helplessness of such songs as "Paranoia in the Key of E" and "Prism," in which Reed likens marriage to indentured servitude. On quieter songs, such as "Tatters" and "Turning Time Around," the band completely shifts gears, using strings and sparser arrangements to create beautiful songs about love's bitter aftermath. The centerpiece of Ecstasy, "Possum Day," is a bleak morass of dissolution and despair played out among the crack whores and sex junkies who have long populated Reed's songs. As Reed and Rathke's guitars churn out an incessant wail, the song's wretched protagonist declares in defiance and disbelief, "Don't know why, baby, I'm still here / I'm the only one left standing / Calm as an angel." Perhaps Reed is also referring to his own staying power and relevance in a world of two-minute pop stars and drug casualties. --Paul Ducey

Other Versions

Albums are mined from the various public resources and can be actually the same but different in the tracks length only. We are keeping all versions now.

Ecstasy

Tracks: 14, Disk length: 1h 17m 24s

Ecstasy

Tracks: 14, Disk length: 1h 17m 26s (+0m 2s)

Ecstasy

Tracks: 13 (-1 tracks), Disk length: 1h 14m 22s (-4m 58s)

Ecstasy

Tracks: 11 (-3 tracks), Disk length: 51m 48s (-26m 24s)

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