Get Ready - New Order

Get Ready

New Order

  • Genre: Rock
  • Release Date: 2001-08-27
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 10
  • Album Price: 9.99
  • ℗ 2001 Warner Records Inc., manufactured and marketed by Rhino Entertainment Company, a
Listen on Apple Music

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Crystal New Order 6:51
2
60 Miles an Hour New Order 4:34
3
Turn My Way New Order 5:05
4
Vicious Streak New Order 5:40
5
Primitive Notion New Order 5:43
6
Slow Jam New Order 4:53
7
Rock the Shack New Order 4:12
8
Someone Like You New Order 5:42
9
Close Range New Order 4:13
10
Run Wild New Order 3:57

Reviews

  • Get Ready

    5
    By 4:44AM
    Personally, this is the greatest New Order album out of their whole discography. This album would come first on my list, then Technique, Brotherhood and I'm not going to keep naming their other albums. From start to finish this album is pure greatness. I am an advit listener of New Order and I'd recommened purchasing a physical or digital copy of this album. Enjoy
  • The Evolution of New Order

    5
    By Thoronir
    While officially the 90's was a state of limbo for New Order, it was also a time of expansion and creativity for the disbanded quartet. Hooky was involved in acts like "Revenge" and "Monaco". Gilbert and Morris were "The Other Two". But perhaps the most influential was when Bernard Sumner teamed up with Johnny Marr to form "Electronic", whose 1999 album "Twisted Tenderness" is the main influence for the album you are viewing now. This album is an amazing reinvention that combines modern alternative rock with some of New Order's familiar elements to create one of the best records of the early 2000's. Why such a spectacular and ferocious album is so overlooked is beyond me. Every track is intricately unique, from the heart-pounding "Crystal", to the techno throbbing of "Someone Like You", and the slow electronic groove of "Vicious Streak", to the lighthearted acoustic closer "Run Wild". I can almost guarantee you that you will enjoy every second of this epic collection of sonic masterworks from start to finish.
  • Surprisingly very good

    5
    By Heavy RockEarl
    This album is a hidden gem, one of the best albums of the early 2000's , never thought I could like an album from this band.
  • I love it!

    5
    By mrtew
    I loved their classic stuff in the 80's but they got too soft and poppy. This is fantastic! It's jamming yet hard edged! It totally rocks out! Very impressed!
  • A more rockin New Order and it

    5
    By superjeff
    Whether making New Wave electronic music or sizzling Rock, New Order has an amazing sound that is unique to only themselves. This album is more rockin effort than past albums and it paid off. The slow but beautiful "Run Wild" is one of my all time favorite songs. "Crystal" is simply incredible and is one of New Orders best songs ever. "Slow Jam" and "60 Miles an Hour" has Bernard's excellent guitar playing with Hook's trade-sound base lines. There's still a couple of songs that have the Electronic-dance side of NO (like "Someone like You") but the others are the jewels of the album. I'm writing this years after I bought the album, and it still hits my IPOD often. One of New Orders best.
  • Their best...

    5
    By KTF!
    In my opinion this is NO's best album to date. I'm commenting on it now because I lost my CD that I bought back in 2001 and had to repurchase the album. I can easily come back to this album, give it another listen, and not get tired of it! If only we had more bands like this in the states...
  • Come-from-behind victory

    5
    By milesstandish
    This has got to be one of the great comeback albums ever produced. Years after New Order appeared to have drifted past their prime, they came out with this electrifying recording of fantastic pop songs that may have been the best record of 2001. It's pure New Order but effortlessly incorporates the sound of the early 00's, and some surprising overtones of old British post-punk guitar classics (listen to "60 Miles an Hour" for the echoes of The Clash's "Train in Vain"). The band creates a wall of sound almost unlike any other, particularly on the centerpiece track "Primitive Notion", where classic New Order bass lines duel with roaring guitars, chattering drums and a massive synthesizer to send the listener hurtling through space head-first. The whole production is capped off with clever lyrics ("the sea was getting rough / it made me feel sick / but I like that kind of stuff / it beats arithmetic") that will keep you happily singing along for years. Good stuff.
  • Run Wild

    4
    By sirenscall
    What's next for New Order? After 20 years they continue to break new boundaries while still providing the classic bass sound and synth we so enjoy. There are a lot of good songs on here, but the best is Run Wild.

Videos from this artist

Comments