Simple Minds – Néapolis

Genere:

Electronic, Rock, Pop

Stile:

Pop Rock, Synth-pop

Anno:

Elenco tracce

Song For The Tribes5:37
Glitterball4:55
War Babies5:03
Tears Of A Guy4:48
Superman V Supersoul4:47
Lightning5:35
If I Had Wings4:43
Killing Andy Warhol5:16
Androgyny5:07

Crediti (7)

Note

Néapolis is the eleventh studio album (of original material) by Scottish rock band Simple Minds, released March 16, 1998.

Versioni

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    46versioni
    Immagine, Nella tua collezione, lista dei desideri o inventario
    Dettagli della versioneQualità dei dati
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-16, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Enhanced, Limited Edition
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 0 0UK1998UK — 1998
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Promo
    Chrysalis – CDCHRDJ 001UK1998UK — 1998
    Modificato di recente
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 2 4, Chrysalis – 493 7122Europe1998Europe — 1998
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Promo
    Chrysalis – CDCHRDJS 001UK1998UK — 1998
    Modificato di recente
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-09, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album
    Chrysalis – TOCP-50463, Chrysalis – 7243 541267 27Japan1998Japan — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 2 4, Chrysalis – 493 7122UK1998UK — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 4 8Poland1998Poland — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 4 8Europe1998Europe — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Promo
    EMI Music Canada – DPRO 1689Canada1998Canada — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 2 4, Chrysalis – 493 7122Italy1998Italy — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Album, Promo
    Chrysalis – noneUK1998UK — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Misprint
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 2 4, Chrysalis – 493 7122Netherlands1998Netherlands — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Album
    Gala Records (5) – 7243 4 93712 4 8, Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 4 8Russia1998Russia — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Unofficial Release
    Chrysalis (2) – 7243 4 93712 2 4Bulgaria1998Bulgaria — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 2 4, Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 2 4, EMI Music Canada – 7243 4 93712 2 4Canada1998Canada — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Promo, Photographs; CD, Promo; VHS, Promo
    Chrysalis – CDCHRDJS 001, Chrysalis – CDIN 111UK1998UK — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 493712-4Malaysia1998Malaysia — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album
    Chrysalis – 372 493712 2, Chrysalis – 493 7122Brazil1998Brazil — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Unofficial Release
    Professional Records (3) – nonePoland1998Poland — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Album, Promo
    Chrysalis – noneUK1998UK — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Unofficial Release
    Chrysalis (2) – 7243 4 93712 2 4, Chrysalis (2) – 493 7122Bulgaria1998Bulgaria — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Unofficial Release
    Not On Label (Simple Minds) – nonePoland1998Poland — 1998
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 2 4Mexico1998Mexico — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 4 8United Arab Emirates1998United Arab Emirates — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 2 4, Chrysalis – 493 7122Australasia1998Australasia — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Album
    Chrysalis – EC 16 7Indonesia1998Indonesia — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Album, Unofficial Release
    Chrysalis (2) – 7243 4 93712 4 8, Chrysalis (2) – 493 7124Russia1998Russia — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Enhanced, Limited Edition
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 0 0Taiwan1998Taiwan — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-09, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Promo
    Chrysalis – TOCP-50463, Chrysalis – 7243 541267 27Japan1998Japan — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 4 8Estonia1998Estonia — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CassetteNéapolis
    Cassette, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 4 8Europe1998Europe — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Unofficial Release
    Chrysalis (2) – 7243 4 93712 2 4, Chrysalis (2) – 493 7122Bulgaria1998Bulgaria — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Neapolis, 1998, CDNeapolis
    CD, Album, Unofficial Release
    Chrysalis (2) – none19981998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Club Edition
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 2 4, EMI Music Canada – 7243 4 93712 2 4Canada1998Canada — 1998
    Modificato di recente
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Promo; CD, Promo; VHS, Promo, NTSC
    Chrysalis – CDCHRDJS 001, Chrysalis – CDIN 111North America (inc Mexico)1998North America (inc Mexico) — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Neapolis, 1998, CDNeapolis
    CD, Album, Unofficial Release
    Chrysalis (2) – none19981998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 1998-03-00, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album
    Chrysalis – 7243 4 93712 2 4Malaysia1998Malaysia — 1998
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 2002, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Remastered, Reissue, Gatefold sleeve
    EMI – SIMCDX12, EMI – 7243 5 41268 2 6, EMI – 7243 541268 26Europe2002Europe — 2002
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 2002-11-04, CDrNéapolis
    CDr, Album, Promo, Remastered
    Virgin Records Ltd. – SMCDX12UK2002UK — 2002
    Nuovo inserimento
    Copertina di Néapolis, 2003, CDNéapolis
    CD, Album, Remastered, Reissue
    EMI – SIMCD12, EMI – 7243 541267 27Europe2003Europe — 2003
    Nuovo inserimento

    Consigli

    • Simple Minds - Good News From The Next World
      Good News From The Next World
      1995 Europe
      CD —
      Album
      Negozio
    • R.E.M. - Reveal
      Reveal
      2001 Europe
      CD —
      Album, Stereo
      Negozio
    • R.E.M. - Up
      Up
      1998 Europe
      CD —
      Album
      Negozio
    • New Order - Get Ready
      Get Ready
      2001 Europe
      CD —
      Album
      Negozio
    • Simple Minds - Black & White 050505
      Black & White 050505
      2005 Europe
      CD —
      Album, Enhanced
      Negozio
    • U2 - Zooropa
      Zooropa
      1993 Europe
      CD —
      Album
      Negozio
    • U2 - Pop
      Pop
      1997 Europe
      CD —
      Album, Stereo
      Negozio
    • U2 - All That You Can't Leave Behind
      All That You Can't Leave Behind
      2000 Europe
      CD —
      Album
      Negozio
    • Coldplay - Mylo Xyloto
      Mylo Xyloto
      2011 Europe
      CD —
      Album
      Negozio
    • Madonna - Ray Of Light
      Ray Of Light
      1998 Europe
      CD —
      Album
      Negozio

    Recensioni

    • Avatar di magius
      magius
      Excuse me but then you should simply verify and discuss the validity of the information on this page instead of blaming the seller, Discogs, and PayPal. I never blamed Discogs for this issue. I just pointed out the vulnerability of this marketplace, which relies on a consumer-generated database that we can improve, and I also asked you to cooperate (but you ignored it).

      We have two other copies with barcodes, matrix/runout codes, and mold SID codes that exactly match with the ones on this release page. However, the remixes on these discs are shorter (5:02 and 6:00), yet the booklet states a longer playing time (7:57 and 7:25). I suppose that the information on this page is based on the latter and disregards the actual playing time of the tracks.

      I would like to ask the editors of this page about their reference and this discrepancy. If a "correct" disc with the longer remixes does really exist, we will have to create a new release for this "incorrect" version. Otherwise, this must be a factory error. In that case, the tracklist on this page should be corrected according to database guideline 12.6.5:

      > 12.6.5. When the printed durations do not match the actual durations and the difference is more than ±5 seconds, enter the actual durations and list the printed durations in the Release Notes. When the difference is less than ±5 seconds, enter the printed durations.
      • Avatar di Jbird
        Jbird
        The copy I received did not have the long versions as listed. Instead they were: Don't You Forget About Me (Jam & Spoon Remix) 5:02 and Waterfront (Union Jack Remix) 6:00.

        I reported this to the seller who took no responsibility, never apologized, blamed Discogs, then chided me for contacting PayPal. After contacting PayPal and waiting a few weeks for a response while an “investigation” took place, the seller agreed to a refund if I returned the item to him in Japan, never agreeing to pay the expensive postage. Discogs was not helpful to and does nothing to protect its buyers. It has not corrected this listing and will probably not, resulting in more unhappy buyers. Marketplace buyers beware.
        • Avatar di theseer2
          theseer2
          Green vinyl, "Made In Germany", is flawless in looks and sound. Does the album justice, better than my clamshell tin. This is how it should have been presented way back then, but then again I think most of us abandoned vinyl.
          • Avatar di Crasher242
            Crasher242
            Looks like those wishing for a vinyl release will get it - it has been announced as part of Record Store Day 2023
            • Avatar di YoungClive
              YoungClive
              Modificato 4 anni fa
              It's a crime this isn't on vinyl, but given that it was their sole album on Chrysalis, which soon shuttered, presumably it's lost in Rights Hell, where it would cost far more in legal fees to rescue and release than it could ever hope to make, considering its less-than-stellar reputation. That's a shame because A) it's actually a great record, and B) clearly it was ahead of its time, as it is virtually a direct musical precursor to their return to form with Big Music, some 15 (!) years later.

              Despite being a band based around a guitarist and a singer, Simple Minds albums are won or lost depending on who's behind the keyboards, and this time around, they had someone willing to embellish the band's songs with then-current trance flourishes, and song after song, it simply works. Nonetheless, relegated to a dying record label unable to even get the album released by its own US arm, this album was doomed to fail. Too bad, because give it a close listen and you'll hear a band willingly changing with the times, invested in evolving its sound -- and the group largely succeeds.

              The fact this album tanked is what I suspect broke the camel's back; Simple Minds didn't really wholeheartedly commit to an album creatively for at least a decade after this, and today, it is still far more focused on product than new music (two live albums and an acoustic hits album between new records anyone?). That's the troubled legacy of Neapolis -- it made them gunshy to go out on an artistic limb, and yet its failure was the fault of Chrysalis and not the (often stellar) music of this album.
              • Avatar di kikoz
                kikoz
                This is the only meaningful album of Simple Minds that has never been released on Vinyl.
                • Avatar di postpunkmonk
                  As I recall, it was difficult getting my hands on this CD. For a start, it was the first Simple Minds album since 1981 not to get a commensurate US release. There were also two editions of the album. The conventional jewel box edition, and a deluxe enhanced CD in a embossed metal box which of course I had to have! The DLX ED also had a second session featuring the video for the single “Glitterball” and band interviews at the amazing [then] new Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao as designed by Frank Gehry in biomorphic titanium sheeting. The deluxe CD echoed the museum’s surface most capably. This may have been the first CD that I used the internet to purchase from. I might have swapped something on an online music forum for it. In any case, it eventually found its was to my Record Cell.

                  The album got off to a very bad footing with “Song For The Tribes,” a chaotic, messy song that sounded like nothing else in the Simple Minds canon in terms of sonics. In terms of composition, it echoed the loose meandering of the title track to “Street Fighting years,” hardly my favorite by this group. It reflected an extreme volte-face for the band coming after the solid, but conventional compositions on their previous album. It was obviously constructed using the then new sample/loop technologies available in the early digital audio workstations of the time.

                  Layers of acoustic guitars, drum loops, virtual synth licks, were layered in a messy, formless fashion here. Jim Kerr added layers of backing vocals and his lead lines decidedly avoided verse/chorus/verse structure. At least it sure sounded like they avoided it. Certain melodic progressions were dropped in and out of the song in a fashion that might not actually be random, but sure sounded that way. Finally, for maximum confusion, the cut featured a string section! Ten points for invention but the end result indeed sounded like “ten records playing at once,” which is how Kerr typified the song years later in hindsight. I was concerned after hearing this first cut.

                  Next came the single, “Glitterball.” This track was grounded in a more conventional musicality, though it employed the same elements as did “Song For The Tribes.” The percussive loops were a far cry from anything we’d heard from this band for years. If the notion of the “Sparkle In The Rain” rhythm section joined with the producer of “New Gold Dream [81, 82, 83, 84]” had led to expectations, they were certainly dashed by what came issuing from the speakers. The CD singles for the A-side were conspicuously lacking in any remixes of the track, but this was compensated by the filling of both CDs with post-modern remixes of the era for their back catalogue.
                  “Glitterball” proffered a low-key coolness with Kerr singing in a casual tone as the chunky rhythm loops were shot through with injections of distorted  guitars. The hazy psychedelia of the lyrics and Kerr’s phased backing vocals completed the picture of an empty clubland attempt at human connection through the dancefloor, expedited by drugs that would eventually leave you as cold as your partner would.

                  “Glitterball, radiate round the hall.
                  Lifts me up, then leaves me to fall.
                  Glitterball, radiate round the hall.
                  As the great unloved go dancing all the way.” – Glitterball

                  The “Great Leap Forward” postulated on the previous album had obviously occurred! I cannot emphasize how radically different this album was from the previous five albums that immediately preceded it. Charlie Burchill had by the mid-90s evolved into something of a rock guitar hero. After gradually abandoning his textural, contrapuntal style, he dipped his toe into classic rock styles and tones on “Real Life” before settling on the crisp, fiery rock as evidenced on “Good News From The Next World.” Here, he was employing lots of acoustics and if there were electric guitars in the mix, they were buried under a lot of effects. The sample/loop methodology was given the front position in the mix.

                  This made the music reflective of machine qualities at its foundation. In that respect, it harkened back to the motorik Krautrock foundations of the band only as evidenced in the new technology of the time. It represented a new synthesis of sound that, in  retrospect, was clearly of its time. Around the same time, Duran Duran recorded their “Medazzaland” album and it also was heavily colored by sample/loop technology. In both cases, the end result was almost psychedelic for the bands in ways that they had never previously touched upon before. Here, the string section added a baroque touch that only strengthened the ties to psychedelia even moreso.

                  The level of innovation on “Glitterball” didn’t do it any favors on the almighty UK charts. Usually pre-release singles from an upcoming album spiked much higher in the UK top ten, but after 17 years, perhaps the magic was beginning to fade since “Glitterball” only crept up to the number 18 position where the follow up singles normally peaked. The next single fared much worse!

                  War Babies” had an intriguing genesis. The track was based on the Tim Simenon remix of an earlier single, “Hypnotised [Malfunction Mix],” but this would not be the first time that this gambit would be employed by the band. The group obviously liked the grinding, industrial rhythm bed Simenon constructed because a close relative of it became the basis for “War Babies.” The heavy, synth bass rhythms received a contrasting counterpoint with the rich string arrangements that accompanied the lilting ballad. The end result was something of a modern Simple Minds classic, featuring new sounds married to a sturdy melody that could have been from any time in the last decade, but it too fell on deaf ears. The second, final, and most commercial single to be taken from “Néapolis” failed to make the UK top 40; peaking at a lowly number 43. That was the lowest chart showing by the band on a single since 1981’s “Sweat in Bullet” charted at number 52.

                  What would have been the third single, “Tears Of A Guy” was a dazzling melánge of hip-hop beats, grinding Hammond organ samples and a touch of distorted guitar that was miles away from the conservative sounds that guitarist Charlie Burchill had been favoring prior to this album. Kerr kept out his stadium box as well and his vocals, which had been agreeable since “Street Fighting Years” to my ears, were now set loose in a new and inventive sonic playground. It made all the difference in the world. To me, at least.

                  While the last track touched on the fringes of hip-hop, “Superman V Supersoul” strode deeper outside out of the band’s comfort zones into uncharted territory. This song featured a lilting, almost folkie melody with hip hop samples and faux scratching. Again, a major coloring of this album was the squelchy, virtual Hammond organ sounds; reeking of 1971, dropped into an utterly fin de siècle vibe where it ended up sounding like neighbors to a band like Urban Dance Squad. I never would have imagined Simple Minds sounding so far off their well-trod path, but having heard it, it worked for me.

                  The psychedelic, blissed out vibe of these songs got a needed injection of energy with the propulsive, galloping “Lightning.” The rhythm bed had a breathless, chaotic quality that harkened back to “I Travel” while the song was laced with what sounded like blues harmonica samples used rhythmically to accent the train-like rhythms that never let up for a second. Kerr’s lyrics were as intriguingly opaque and fragmentary as they had not been since “Sons + Fascination.” Best of all, the tune sported an honest-to-goodness Derek Forbes bass line one could ride to kingdom come and back! This was an exciting band once again.

                  “Riot time right noise.
                  Violent times speak.
                  Bottled up – like a fake damnation.
                  Lightning speed.
                  Crackdown backdoors.
                  Meltdown shoes.
                  Bare back riders – a rank outsider.
                  An automatic cruise.” – Lightning

                  After such a storming track, the volte-face of pacing that was “If I Had Wings” was something of a let down. While the overall relaxed vibe of the album contrasted with the repetitive, motorik rhythms much of it sported, on this track the band gave into the listless vibe inherent in the music and without that crucial divergence and contrast, the end result tumbled off its pedestal and crossed the line into torpid. Much better was the Valerie Solanis inspired “Killing Andy Warhol.” Undoubtedly, Kerr had seen “I Shot Andy Warhol” in 1996 and it got the wheels turning. The song is a great complement to the film with an intro constructed from mandolin or bouzouki loops being yet another left field excursion into virgin territory.

                  With all of the new ground covered on the album, there was a single concession to tradition to be found here. The album ended with a trance-derived instrumental called “Androgyny,” that played out like the sequel to “Theme For Great Cities” as the band dove deep into the Neu!/La Düsseldorf Krautrock playbook for one last, definitive time. It differed from the “Sons/Sister” sound by having Derek Forbes on rubbery bass synth instead of a guitar, but it slots in well to that space in any case.

                  Listening to this album repeatedly over the last few weeks has been a real pleasure, and my initial embrace of this album was more than confirmed. True, the return of Derek Forbes was largely a non-event here. The writing credits conspicuously state Kerr/Burchill. There was certainly a dearth of world straddling Forbes bass lines to be found here. He seemed to be just another pickup bassist at this stage. Long gone were the days of Forbes and the drummer laying vibrant foundation for MacNeil and Burchill to interject their strategic melodic DNA, but that ship had sailed.

                  What it did offer was a band who had been around the block several times rising to new technology and new challenges without being cowed or afraid to take chances. Not all of them worked, but I’ll take the rough with the smooth at that stage of the band’s career. It was so much more gratifying than the stadium era to these relieved ears. But that’s just my opinion. Whole swaths of the former Simple Minds audience were less than convinced and the album died the death commercially; ending the band’s long ride at the top of the charts that had begun 17 years earlier.

                  Between Britpop, grunge, and prefabricated pop unexpectedly making a comeback in the charts, it seemed as if Simple Minds had made a return to synthetic art rock at the worst possible time in the market. That was a large pity, since it caused a crisis of confidence in the band which was undeniably crippling, as they made a 180° turn into a completely different direction that no one could have predicted.

                  Edizione principale

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                  Statistiche

                  • Valutazione media:3.81 / 5
                  • Valutazioni:318

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