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Movement: Collector's Edition/Remastered & Expanded

Movement: Collector's Edition/Remastered & Expanded

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Artist: New Order
Label: Rhino
Category: Music

List Price: £17.99
Buy New: £10.97
You Save: £7.02 (39%)



New (18) Used (3) from £9.99

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 929

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

UPC: 825646936946
EAN: 0825646936946
ASIN: B001EMPUGM

Release Date: September 29, 2008
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new and unplayed, perfect condition, instant delivery! Product guaranteed.

Tracks:

  Disc 1
  • Dreams Never End
  • Truth
  • Senses
  • Chosen Time
  • I.C.B
  • The Him
  • Doubts Even Here
  • Denial

  Disc 2
  • Ceremony
  • Temptation
  • In A Lonely Place
  • Everything's Gone Green
  • Procession
  • Mesh
  • Hurt
  • Cries And Whispers
  • Ceremony (Alt. Version)
  • Temptation (12\x{201d} Mix)

Similar Items:

  • Power Corruption and Lies: Collector's Edition/Remastered & Expanded
  • Brotherhood: Collector's Edition/Remastered & Expanded
  • Low-Life: Collector's Edition/Remastered & Expanded
  • Technique: Collector's Edition/Remastered & Expanded
  • Joy Division [2008]

Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A great reissue   October 31, 2008
D.H. (Seattle, WA USA)
This 2 disc set collects the first album and all of the singles at that time. The bonus disc includes: Ceremony, Temptation 7"mix, In a Lonely Place, Everyting's Gone Green, Procession, Cries and Whispers, Hurt and Mesh, Ceremony (Alt Version), Temptation 12" Mix. Neither of the versions on disc two is the Substance version of Temptation like another review says.

The album was the beginning for NO and definitely different than later albums. But the beginnings are all there, from the bass hooks, to the driving drums. Sumner's vocals are more like Ian Curtis's on this than on future albums.

Rhino did a nice job with this package. Sonically, disc 1 (the album) is excellent. Disc 2's sonics are ok, but could have been better.



5 out of 5 stars Total New Order Fan   October 7, 2008
M. Pullan (Edinburgh, Scotland)
1 out of 3 found this review helpful

I grew up listening to New Order. Throughout my angst teenage years of pubescent dreams I continually got told "turn it down !!" by my parents as from my bedroom I played (far too loud) the likes of Denial, Procession , Confused beats , Mr Disco etc etc. I'm 40 now and still get told "turn it down" by my wife and kids . Some things never change and I can honestly say New Order (as sad as it sounds) were/are part of my life. As a young lad I was lucky enough to go and experience the mecca that once was the Hacienda. Imagine going to a Nite Club owned by the band that you idolized ? Amazing experience amazing place. Unfortunately I also got thrown out of possibly their last gig in the UK, in Glasgow. Mistaken identity ! It was my brother throwing paper off the balcony. Anyway if you are a New Order fan you'll have aready bought all these latest editions and if you're not , Just buy and you'll not regret it, no Regret whatsoever..(just the Price of Love)



1 out of 5 stars Tattered legacy   October 7, 2008
N. Smith
6 out of 13 found this review helpful

Trust New Order eh? Such an amazing back catalogue of ingenuity, joy, feeling, and innovation. And with these reissues, the chance to draw a line under their amazing career after their acrimonious split last year.

And what do we get? A lazy, clumsy, set of reissues that offer neither satisfactory remastered versions or a bonus disc of rarities nicely captured in one place. Even the sleeve notes are cheap and don't tell the whole story. The bonus discs contain tracks recorded straight from vinyl - can you believe that?

Compare with the Pet Shop Boys or Depeche Mode reissues, and weep!



1 out of 5 stars We Should Review This 'Movement' Re-issue Not The Original Issue!   October 5, 2008
Mr. G. Hassan (Glasgow, Scotland)
2 out of 6 found this review helpful

I would like to state clearly and umambiguously that I adore, treasure and hold dear to my heart the music of New Order and Joy Division.

However, where I part company completely with some of the reviewers is on two crucial and I think central points. First, because you love an artist's work does not mean you are craven and submissive to a record company re-issue programme. This seems to me to fly in the logic of what was punk, new wave and post-new wave in the 1980s. I love the Factory Records period of New Order 1981-89, but I detest what London Records have done to their back catalogue subsequently. I am not too keen on what New Order subsequently became musically either post-1990, post-Factory, but that's another argument.

Second, I note with New Order's and previously Joy Division's re-issues that quite a few people give critical reviews, blasting the bonus discs and then giving five out of five. Such reviews point in other comments that if you love the original album and detest the bonus - you cannot give it a low rating - as you should just ignore the bonus disc.

This is entirely wrong. When one is reviewing an album like this or any of the other NO reissues - one is not just reviewing the 'Movement' album in question. This would seem to me missing the point. What one should be reviewing is the release in question: 'Movement' plus the bonus disc.

In this case, Movement was never a classic NO release, always the sound of a band leaving the powerful shadow and legend of Joy Division, and feeling and sounding very insecure and fragile. This is thus a fascinating period, which does not always make for pleasant listening.

The bonus disc here is like all the NO so-called bonus releases; collecting the singles between Movement and NO's second release Power, Corruption and Lies, which show the band finding its voice, power and evolving in an amazing and surprising direction. However, eight of the ten tracks are easily available on a variety of the numerous New Order compilations from Substance to the numerous London comps.

An interesting footnote is that London Records mucked-up the re-issue programme in more ways than the bonus disc. Four out of the five releases came out as planned, but Movement was delayed until a week later.



2 out of 5 stars 1982 7" original version of Temptation   October 3, 2008
Anthony King
0 out of 16 found this review helpful

Does anyone know where I can get the 1982 7" original version of Temptation on CD or Download?

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