"DREAM ATTACK" NEW ORDER (1989)

For October, the Mental Jukebox is dialing it way back to the eighties and going deep. Deep cuts have always been an important element of music listening to me because they’re often the songs that resonate with me most. Deep cuts are usually the ones that the true fans appreciate most. I like my singles and hits, but I love my deep cuts.

Technique will always be my favorite New Order album. The way those songs sounded one after another made it truly difficult for me to hear the individual tracks in isolation. The troubles with the band have been well-documented in Peter Hook’s memoir Substance. But it’s the chaos and the backdrop of Ibiza that led to one of the band’s greatest recordings. Album aside, if I had to pick a standout, “Dream Attack” is it.

One of the greatest closing tracks of the eighties, “Dream Attack” ended strong with a mid-tempo symphony of driving synth bass, iconic real bass lines by Hooky, piano-sounding synth and a medley of synth and guitar flourishes. Hooky has mentioned that some of Barney’s best vocals are when he’s stretching his range. While I tend to agree with that overall assessment, I think the lower key on “Dream Attack” really served the song well in terms of the vocals. Nothing in this world can touch it.

“Nothing in this world Can touch the music that I heard.”