The Fixx - Phantoms [MCA Records MCA-5507] (August 1984)

Released: August 1984
Country: US
Label: MCA Records
Catalog: MCA-5507
Genre: Rock, Pop

Item# SR-MCMCA5507
Ratings: C=VG+; LP=VG+

T R A C K L I S T:
01 Lose Face
02 Less Cities, More Moving People
03 Sunshine In The Shade
04 Woman On A Train
05 Wish
06 Lost In Battle Overseas
07 Question
08 In Suspense
09 Facing The Wind
10 Are We Ourselves?
11 I Will
12 Phantom Living




Phantoms
The Fixx


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Album Review

Stephen Thomas Erlewine [allmusic.com]

The Fixx had a banner year in 1983, as their second album, Reach the Beach, broke down doors and gave the band a huge hit with ''One Thing Leads to Another.'' Phantoms wasn't as good, not just because Reach the Beach had that hit but also because it was simply a really good mainstream new wave record. Phantoms was a little more serious, a little more lugubrious, a little directionless, but it still is a pretty good record, all the same. The reason why? The Fixx were a good band. They had an original sound, thanks to the echoing synths, clean-processed guitars, cavernous drums, and Cy Curnin's soaring voice, which soared over the precise arrangements to make it sound human. The wondrous thing about this combination is that it sounded alan_parsonsealing even when the material wasn't the equal of the sound, which is often the case on Phantoms. That's not to say it's a disaster, because it hardly is -- the band sounds good, and the record is a shining example of post-new wave production. But, it does play a bit as singles and filler, with the Top 20 hit ''Are We Ourselves'' shining brightly among the record's 12 songs, but ''Lose Face,'' the reggae-tinged ''Sunshine in the Shade,'' and ''Woman on a Train'' all were fine Fixx songs, standing proudly among the perfectly acceptable, but rather undistinguished, cuts that formed the rest of the album, including a preponderance of long, moody synth ballads. Even if it was an uneven record, its ratio of hits to filler was no greater than most pop albums. However, Phantoms had the misfortune of arriving in one of the greatest years for pop music, a year where every kind of style was in full bloom. So, Phantoms fell by the wayside, but, in retrospect, it was an admirable successor to an album that defined a band's career.