Townsend appear to have got all the UK orders to arrive on the same day, as my copy was also waiting for me when I got home last night. I’m looking forward to hearing it, though it’ll have to wait a few days, but all the posts here enthusiastically discussing its merits have certainly got me fired up, and hopefully I’ll be out walking around the town when I experience it.
Have to agree that the booklet is lovely and the text is a very interesting read, from John's personal descriptions, and his inspirational connections:
“Victorian psychic experiments that eventually arrived at electricity…”One thing for me though, the story behind the work just does not conjure up that city image on the CD front. John’s musical vision of the ghosts and the past existences that live all around us in cities makes me think more of his Garden photographs, or his cover illustrations for novels, with the dissolving figures from the past, and the fragments of ancient and modern detritus all floating together to the surface. Its this kind of atmosphere rather than that interesting, but wholly futuristic looking city on the cover that I think of when reading about the background to the My Lost City music,
but perhaps I’ll change my mind after listening to it!
Originally posted by Alex S:
For me, the music doesn't match the imagery, which is a first for a John Foxx album.
or maybe not!
Originally posted by Alex S:
...And Trellick Tower is utterly horrid!
I often used to go past it. a great landmark and a classic 60’s building, built by the council and designed by the great Emo Goldfinger, google wikipedia and see what you’d have to pay to live there now, (oh and can John call one of his next instrumentals ‘Anniesland Court’, a similar looking 60’s building I know quite well from my home town!

)
Originally posted by Alex S:
There is a lot of emotion in the music, and it's all a lot darker than Cathedral Oceans, some of it sounding quite funerary and saddening. Maybe that's the mood of these poor little pieces of song, having been locked away in John's musical vaults for all these years!
interesting review Alex S.