Lou Reed - Berlin

Lou Reed: Berlin

Album #182 - October 1973

Episode date - December 21, 2022

The Alternative Top 40
    0:00
    0:00

     Lou Reed has always been a controversial character, but this album rates high in his catalog for controversy. It surely contains one the most miserable stories that he ever concocted. Does that make it brilliant, or unbearable?

    It is also arguably the best-produced album of his entire catalog. Does that help to make it great or are all the bells and whistles gratuitous excess? There are no clear answers, and I often find myself walking on the edge of both schools of thought. I find myself returning to “Berlin” constantly over the years, though, and I have played this album so often that it is permanently committed to memory, so I must think more highly of it than I’m wont to admit. 

    The story of “Berlin” is simple but harrowing; Boy meets girl. Girl drinks and cheats on boy unrepentantly. Boy beats girl. Girl takes excessive drugs. State takes girl’s children away. Girl slits her wrists. Listener then slits wrist, too… The fact that Reed sings all of this in his typically droll deadpan delivery only heightens the emotional impact, although Bob Ezrin’s production is worthy of full-blown opera. As a producer, there are very few who work better than Ezrin at organizing sound into effective clusters. This is the man who made Alice Cooper a household name by making that band sound palatable (if you ever heard the band’s first two albums recorded before signing on with Ezrin, you will get a very clear picture of what I‘m talking about), and his production work is among some of the best in the music industry.

    In the case of Lou Reed, it can be breathtaking to hear full orchestral accompaniment, blaring horn sections, and potent sound effects that are properly placed. The grandeur of the production sits at distinct odds with the pathetic tale it conveys. It’s a combination that by definition should not work but somehow does. “How Do You Think It Feels” conveys the desperate emotional state of the couple, but the horn chart makes the damn thing sound almost celebratory. In a move that would have made any Alice Cooper fan shiver with delight, you actually hear babies crying and screaming “Mommy!” as state services haul them away. Perhaps the most interesting moment comes at album’s end, when a string section plays a repetitive pattern of 16th notes as Reed repetitively intones the words “sad song”, the album’s greatest understatement. He literally sounds emotionally spent but the strings make it sound as if the heavens are opening above him. Apparently, Ezrin recognized the emotional power of this arrangement, and used it a second time when he produced Pink Floyd’s “The Wall”, placing the exact same arrangement under “Comfortably Numb.” Going forward, Reed would write other unique and fascinating theme albums, including “New York” and “Magic and Loss”, but “Berlin” is the monster that keeps calling me back.

    Featured Tracks:

    Berlin

    Lady Day

    Men of Good Fortune

    Caroline Says I

    How Do You Think It Feels

    Oh Jim

    Caroline Says II

    The Kids

    The Bed

    Sad Song

    October 1973 - Billboard Charted #98

     

    Related Shows

    Nick Drake – Bryter Layter

    Nick Drake: Bryter Layter

    Album #132 - November 1970

      0:00
      0:00
      TWELVE DREAMS OF DR. SARDONICUS - SPIRIT

      Spirit: Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus

      Album #131 - November 1970

        0:00
        0:00
        The Velvet Underground: Loaded

        The Velvet Underground: Loaded

        Album #130 - September 1970

          0:00
          0:00
          The Stooges: Fun House

          The Stooges: Fun House

          Album #129 - July 1970

            0:00
            0:00
            U-Roy - Version Galore

            U-Roy: Version Galore

            Album #128 - June 1970

              0:00
              0:00
              Robert Johnson - King of the Delta Blues Singers, Vol. 2

              Robert Johnson: King of the Delta Blues Singers Vol. 2

              Album #127 - June 1970

                0:00
                0:00
                Kris Kristofferson: Me and Bobby McGee

                Kris Kristofferson: Me and Bobby McGee

                Album #126 - June 1970

                  0:00
                  0:00
                  Deep Purple - In Rock

                  Deep Purple: In Rock

                  Album #125 - June 1970

                    0:00
                    0:00
                    Randy Newman - 12 Songs

                    Randy Newman: 12 Songs

                    Album #124 - April 1970

                      0:00
                      0:00
                      Syd Barrett: The Madcap Laughs

                      Syd Barrett: The Madcap Laughs

                      Album #123 - January 1970

                        0:00
                        0:00
                        Fairport Convention - Liege and Lief

                        Fairport Convention: Liege and Lief

                        Album #122 - December 1969

                          0:00
                          0:00
                          David Bowie - Space Oddity

                          David Bowie: Space Oddity

                          Album #121 - November 1969

                            0:00
                            0:00