*** Welcome to piglix ***

Camera Obscura (album)

Camera Obscura
Obscura.jpg
Studio album by Nico
Released 1985
Recorded March–April 1985
Studio The Strongroom, Shoreditch, London
Length 44:30
Label Beggars Banquet
Producer John Cale
Nico studio album chronology
The Drama of Exile
(1981)The Drama of Exile1981
Camera Obscura
(1985)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 2.5/5 stars
Trouser Press favorable

Camera Obscura is the sixth and final solo studio album by German singer Nico, featuring the backing band the Faction. It was recorded in March–April 1985 and released later that year by Beggars Banquet Records. It was produced by John Cale, marking their first studio collaboration since The End... in 1974. It was Nico's final studio album before her death three years later.

Nico's vocal style is somewhat different from her prior records, with some songs bearing similarities to Dead Can Dance's Lisa Gerrard. The jazz standard "My Funny Valentine", by contrast, has a more standard legato vocal style, despite her very deep contralto. Many of the tracks offer a refined version of the new wave gothic rock of her previous album Drama of Exile. The album is dedicated to her then-manager, Alan Wise.

Sonically, the album follows on from Drama of Exile in that Nico's core songs are given full band arrangements. Whereas Drama of Exile carried a strong North African influence and exotic, new wave-inspired instrumentation, Camera Obscura makes use of synthesizers.

The album's oldest composition, "König", was originally recorded for Desertshore and re-recorded some fifteen years later for Camera Obscura. A version was included in the Philippe Garrel film La Cicatrice Intérieure (1972). John Cale reportedly wanted to produce the song with a more percussive, synth-based arrangement in keeping with the rest of the material, but Nico insisted it should be kept as a solo harmonium piece.

Another early song re-imagined for the recording sessions was "Tananore", which Nico had performed at a Cale concert in Marseille on April 12, 1975, and kept in her set ever since. Nico had incorporated "My Funny Valentine" into her set since February 1982, and previously at her earliest live performances (at the Blue Angel nightclub in New York City). "My Heart Is Empty" and "Fearfully in Danger", meanwhile, had been set mainstays since her Library Theatre appearance in Manchester on June 16, 1983.


...
Wikipedia

...