When it comes to the '80s, Ultravox must have a seat at the senators' table. During the period with John Foxx on vocals, they delivered stunning works of punk deconstructed on the teachings of Eno-Bowie. Later, with the arrival of Midge Ure, they veered towards a more synthetic and melodic sound. At this point, critics turned their backs on the group with a snobbish and superficial attitude, often grouping them with chart-topping bands and the numerous awful trash that sprouted like mushrooms during that time. It was a time of hedonism, an era marked by superficiality, but also by latent and hidden tensions.
Indeed, no one like Ure's Ultravox managed to transplant into "commercial" sounds that sense of Central European decadence, that poignant romanticism emanating from Billie Curie's string arrangements, perhaps the true soul of the group.
Their arrangements were sometimes too ornate but always of great class and elegance, light-years away from the rest of the "Top Of The Pops" company.

Vienna is the first work after Foxx's departure, released in 1980. It remains perhaps their best, certainly the most representative of their art.
The initial "Astradyne" is an instrumental cousin to the icy visions of Berlin Bowie, between walls of synths and drum rides à la Neu!, which introduces the overwhelming charge of "New European". A piece with a catchy and epic melody, subtly melancholic, with Ure's voice perfectly at ease in these urban twilights, ending with a splendid piano coda, a refined and original farewell.
It is not synth-pop, but rather synth-rock; the energy their songs emit has more affinity with rock than pop. "Private Lines" confirms this theory by diving into a compelling synthetic whirlpool, with an ever-present rhythm, but above all, with meticulous attention to detail, for a sought-after refinement, but never baroque, redundant. The class is felt, and, in this case, it was also sold. This is not necessarily a mortal sin, on the contrary. "Passing Strangers" continues the discourse always on high levels, with interludes always in good taste. With "Sleepwalk" you enter the most "dandy" clubs of the era, but through the front door.
Almost as if to "apologize," Ultravox follows with the most experimental track of the batch, "Mr.X", a hypnotic nocturnal journey through the meanderings of a Europe divided by contradictions, and united by a dream born of a vigilant slumber, gripped by fear and seduced by heavy makeup. The tone remains dark with the furious "Western Promise," an emblematic and perhaps foretelling title...
And here is the song that gives the album its title, "Vienna". This electro-glam, poignant and evocative, is perhaps the manifesto of their new direction. A slow progression embellished by the chimes of a tearful piano accompanying Ure's desperate declamations, never so "expressive." The track picks up speed and is enveloped by the coils of a melancholic viola, ending with a Parisian-style "grandeur" emphasis. A quintessential 80s piece.

Ultimately, when evaluating a work, one should free oneself from prejudices and compartmentalized labels. One should look deep into its value, dissecting its deepest aspects with clarity, which was not done. "Vienna" is a small masterpiece, which may well not appeal to everyone, but it says a lot about the period in which it was conceived. It is a revealing album, that "speaks" of its era, representing, for better or worse, its salient aspects.

Tracklist Lyrics and Videos

01   Astradyne (07:07)

Instrumental

02   New Europeans (04:05)

In a quiet street washed by the rain, the room within the home.
A lonely man sits cheek to cheek, with unique designs in chrome.
The mellow years have long gone by, but now he sits alone.
He has a brand new radio, but never turns it on.

Chorus:

New Europeans.
Young Europeans.
New Europeans.

A photograph of lovers lost, lies pressed in magazines.
Her eyes belong to a thousand girls, she's the wife who's never seen.
Their educated son has left, in search of borrowed dreams.
His television's in his bed, he's frozen to the screen.

(Chorus)

On a crowded beach washed by the sun, he puts his headphones on.
His modern world revolves around the synthesizer's song.
Full of future thoughts and thrills, his senses slip away.
He's a European legacy, a culture for today.

(Chorus)

Young Europeans.

03   Private Lives (04:07)

All the boys are wearing blue tonight.
We'll thrive, we'll dive, how can we lose?
All the strangers walk like you tonight.
So tall, we fall for every move.

We'll laugh and talk,
Don't stop for breath,
In these our private lives.
We dance 'til dawn,
As they beat the drums,
For all our private lives.

Close your eyes and use the melody,
Who cares who stares under the light?
See the shadow tailing me again,
It shows, it glows, and it grabbed so bright.

04   Passing Strangers (03:50)

We were so young, we were too vain.
Dance in the dark, sing in the rain.
Time on our hands, hope in our hearts.

(Chorus)
We were talking, passing strangers.
Moments caught across an empty room.
Wasted whispers, faded secrets.
Quickly passes, time goes, time goes by too soon.

We stood alone, silent and proud.
Moments unknown, lost in a crowd.
Running through memories like thieves in the night.
Clutching emotions, holding too tight.
Hold turns to dust, shattered by light.

(Repeat chorus 3 times and fade)

05   Sleepwalk (03:12)

Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk

Rolling and falling
I'm choking and calling
Name after name after name

Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk

Naked and bleeding
The streetlights stray by me
Hurting my eyes with their glare

Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk

Helplessly breaking
Exchanging my faces
Destined, we had to collide

Sleepwalk!

Taut on the outside
I'm crumpling and crawling
Watching the day drag away

Spiralling deeper
I can't feel my fingers
Grip round my throat as I dream

Dream, dream (echo)

Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk
Sleepwalk

06   Mr. X (06:33)

I found the perfect picture, of a perfect stranger.
It looked as if, it were taken in the forties sometime,
Judging by the style.

He could be a killer or a blind man with a cane,
Perhaps he died in a car crash, years ago.
Right now, it's impossible to tell.

I almost thought I saw him, standing, whistling on a bridge.
I asked him the time, but when he turned around,
I saw it wasn't him at all.

I'm still searching.
I'm still searching.

I saw him in an airport, while he was sitting on a wing.
And I waved to him, but I don't think he noticed me.
I've got a funny feeling I know who he is.

Mr. X (Repeat 14 times and fade)

07   Western Promise (05:18)

Hai!

Oh mystical East, on old postcards,
Your childhood dreams and energies.
Your temples' gardens, old world charm,
An ancient culture, torn and scarred.

This is my Western promise.

Oh mystical East, you've lost your way,
Your rising sun shall rise again.
My Western world gives out her hand,
A victor's help to your fallen land.

This is my Western promise.

Hai!

Mystical East, all taxi-cabs,
All ultra-neon, sign of the times.
Your Buddha Zen and Christian man,
All minions to messiah Pepsi can.

This is my Western promise.

08   Vienna (04:54)

Walked in the cold air
Freezing breath on a window pane
Lying and waiting
A man in the dark in a picture frame
So mystic and soulful
A voice reaching out in a piercing cry
It stays with you until

The feeling has gone only you and I
It means nothing to me
This means nothing to me
Oh, Vienna

The music is weaving
Haunting notes, pizzicato strings
The rhythm is calling
Alone in the night as the daylight brings
A cool empty silence
The warmth of your hand and a cold grey sky
It fades to the distance

The image has gone only you and I
It means nothing to me
This means nothing to me
Oh, Vienna

This means nothing to me
This means nothing to me
Oh, Vienna

09   All Stood Still (04:22)

The lights went out
(the last fuse blew)
The clocks all stopped
(it can't be true)
The program's wrong
(what can we do?)
The printout's blocked
(it relied on you)

The turbine cracked up
The buildings froze up
The system choked up
What can we do?

Please remember to mention me
In tapes you leave behind

We stood still
We all stood still
Still stood still
We're standing still

The screen shut down
(there's no reply)
The lifts all fall
(a siren cries)
And the radar fades
(a pilot sighs)
As the countdowns stall
(the readout lies)

The turbines cracked up
The buildings froze up
The system choked up
What can we do?

Please remember to mention me
In tapes you leave behind

We stood still
We all stood still
Still stood still
We're standing still

The black box failed
(the codes got crossed)
And the jails decayed
(the keys got lost)
Everyone kissed
(we breathe exhaust)
In the new arcade
(of the holocaust)

The turbine cracked up
The buildings froze up
The system choked up
What can we do?

Plese remember to mention me
In tapes you might leave behind

We stood still
We all stood still
Still stood still
We're standing still

We stood still
We all stood still
Still stood still
We're standing still

Loading comments  slowly

Other reviews

By AJM

 The revenge of the synthesizers over the guitars had already laid its groundwork... now with the advent of Ure the transformation is complete, definitive.

 'Vienna,' a grand musical summary of the heart of Europe... a cold and dark portrait of hopes that are lost in a splash of water at the sides of the dark streets.


By Battlegods

 Ultravox symbolizes fear towards technology, globalization, and the precarious state in which modern man finds himself.

 Vienna is born, putting trust in Midge Ure’s concept and stylistic traits, creating an evergreen classic of the genre.


By RRDN

 Probably the best Ultravox album ever, the self-titled track is simply fantastic.

 There is a perfect harmony between instruments typical of classical music and those typical of rock music, and the atmosphere is almost tangible.