bipolar graphics

Arriving in 1979 with the originality of a quiet post-punk album, "Unknown Pleasures", echoes the magnitude of a dark and powerfully concentrated masterpiece. Reflecting a science-fiction interpretation of Manchester through the echoes of the family atmosphere of the post dilapidated industrial sites, the debut album by Joy Division immediately universal, transforming Critical Acclaim Manchester band in a super group that could perform amazingly.
The gloomy outlook, the Mindscape soundscape punk and rebel late 70s gets a whole new way which is its mirror image in the sound and innovative Joy Division style. With their debut album, Joy Division managed to Manchester International, almost cosmic. Though echoes of the civility of an inner landscape, mainly of the late '70s in England, the album still sounds contemporary.
The introduction of strict minimum graphics, ambient sounds and shrill punk guitar riffs, anchored by the deep voice of Curtis pity, "Unknown Pleasures" album is basically a solitary despair. Each theme is echoed a haunting atmosphere that myth becomes reality as Curtis brings to life the emotion of punk. Feelings of hopelessness, sadness and self-hatred to create an emotional atmosphere which greatly influences the listener, without apologizing for his depression.
Throughout the album there is a building that almost the intensity of threatens the listener with the manic crescendo of Curtis singing with his voice hoarse baritone. The whole album is a stone of passion, liveliness, and despair cathartic while songs are disappearing behind moving light clatters and military activity anchored by drum tempo, under painful and guitar riffs environment.
Using the simplicity of punk to reinvigorate their sound, deep breaths add Joy Division and broken glass to launch the music in one dimension Curtis to bring out your mind in the real world. Being mentally tortured and very bipolar, Curtis wrote the lyrics of "Unknown Pleasures" being in a post-industrial nightmare. Talking about the secrecy of the cynical perception or hatred, he sings "I did everything, everything I wanted, I let them use for their own purposes," echoing a profound and dramatic cry for help.
Moving from the dark groovy rhythms, melodic "Unknown Pleasures", repeat aloud the punk of its time. Primitivo even premeditated, yet emotionally distant, sad but exciting, "Unknown Pleasures" is a masterpiece the dramatic paradox. The disturbing call for the release of "New Dawn Fades", anxious to death "She's Lost Control" or romance in hell of "Shadowplay" are all spectacular, all emotional, all perfect "Unknown Pleasures", one of the best albums in history.
BIPOLAR