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New Order
Like battleships or hurricanes, New Order albums traditionally have classical, stately, one-word titles. So 2001’s slack Get Ready seemed like an admission that they were still warming up after that decade apart. Borne aloft on critical goodwill, in retrospect the record sounds tentative and rudderless, with special guests in place of strong ideas.

But then the original New Order didn’t hit their stride straight away. Returning with guitarist Phil Cunningham in place of the retired Gillian, on lead single "Krafty" they sound relaxed and reinvigorated, self-composed rather than chasing trends. With its breezy, kiddy-Kraftwerk electraglide, the song lent some substance to the rumours that Waiting… was to be a return to the pinnacle of Technique – the band’s most prescient rewiring of rock dynamics with dance technology.

Ironically, the songs most blatantly aimed at the dancefloor may be the weakest. Stuart Price (aka Jacques Lu Cont, whose remixes make no secret of his fandom) is one of four producers – Stephen Street, John Leckie and the band themselves - and his two contributions "Jetstream", featuring Scissor Sister Ana Matronic, and "Guilt…" are bizarrely lifeless exercises.

In fact, Waiting… makes more sense as an emotional, rather than a sonic, sequel to Technique. Although the earlier record was a magnificent, flawless piece of machinery, its charm lay also in the fact that it was kind of a holiday romance, a pilled-up, Ibizan Grease.

You might listen to Waiting… as an update on that chemical romance, 15 rocky years into the relationship. The most affecting songs here are about second chances, reaffirming commitments and the terrible seduction of straying. Sumner has rarely sung better and "Dracula’s Castle" and "Turn" feel like older, wiser revisions of "Run" or "Fine Time". The title track, meanwhile, is a superb example of the surging, bittersweet grace of classic New Order, at once Apollonian and mordantly English.

With one or two exceptions - the daft Egyptian Ragga of "I Told You So", and the sub-Stooges closer "Working Overtime" - it’s a remarkably coherent, consistent record. This may seem like faint praise for a band who once veered so flukily between the divine and asinine. But if nothing here is quite touched by the hand of God, then maybe it’s all the more engagingly human.

By Stephen Trousse
User reviewsSubmit your reviewAverage user rating4 stars1 stars
Kelvin Owers
West Yorkshire
 
Not afraid to be pop

I can't disagree more with the main review. Krafty bored me senseless, with it's lightweight take on past New Order glories. The two tracks slated, Jetstream and Guilt, however are shiny pop gems. Either could be a huge single, maybe alienating old grouchy New Order fans along the way but easily finding favour with those born long after Joy Division had been written into history. Hurrah for the old men chasing new sounds, there are plenty of young men trying to make classic New Order albums without the band themselves having to look back too much themselves. Overall this album is poppier even then Republic, and that's going to result in jaded music media reviews. Hopefully plenty of more simple folk, like myself, will just hum the tunes to themselves and smile.

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