Ink
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47 new or used available from $1.40
Average customer review:Track Listing
- All Is Fair
- How Much Is Enough
- No One Has To Cry
- Crucified
- Falling In Love
- Shut It Out
- Still Around
- All The Best Things
- Yesterday, Today
- One Jungle
- Climb The Hill
- Make No Plans
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #61389 in Music
- Released on: 1998-08-25
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: Original recording reissued
Customer Reviews
My favorite album ever!
This is my all-time favorite album. I'm not sure what my 2nd or 3rd or 4th favorite albums would be but it's pretty clear by now after 17 years of listening to it that I'm probably never going to love another album more.
Caution: don't expect to feel the same way I do about it right away but know that if like me your favorite bands are the Beatles, Stones, Who, Kinks etc you'll hear the greatness of this too!
Absolutely PHENOMENAL, classy, quality songwriting!
It SHOCKS me to see some '2 star reviews' regarding The Fixx's 'Ink'! This is truly one of The Fixx's BETTER releases, with clockwork songwriting craft that rivals the best alternative rock ever produced. The songs are tight, hooky, layered, exciting, and very well written. Most of the songs on 'Ink' are excellent, and sound contemporary and modern even now in 2008. This signature release is as good as anything The Fixx has done. When music is this good, time doesn't matter!
Low Point for a Great Band
The Fixx is a very underrated and misunderstood band. They are often considered a new wave synth band, and while ample synths flesh out and compliment the sound on their albums, what really makes them shine is their great instrumental work on bass and guitar and the vocals of Cy Curnin. Guitarist Jaime West-Oram in particular is incredible, playing a diverse array of understated but beautiful and complex rhythm guitar parts that are really what distinguish the Fixx sound. All of that said, this is definitely the low point for the Fixx, primarily because the songwriting is so inferior to that of previous and subsequent releases. The band's other albums are marked by strong melody that may be instantly accessible or uncovered more slowly through repeated listens, but this album simply doesn't have any standout songs. It barely has any second rate tunes. Production is an issue too. Gone is the dark tension, the paranoid edginess, the quirky & groovy (listen to the bass work on their other releases) atmosphere, replaced by a rather bland mainstream pop feel that doesn't work for a band with as much talent and distinct craftsmanship as the Fixx. I love this band and strongly recommend early works like Reach the Beach and Phantoms. They are 80s albums that stand out for great musicianship, creative production, and strong songs. Those albums still sound really fresh and rich and I find them as mesmerizing now as when they were released. Even later albums like Elemental are strong, showing the band able to recover from this mid-career phase well. Check those albums out and leave this one to die-hard fans and completists only.




