Product Code: 4863116
Artist: Simple Minds
Origin: Germany
Label: UMC (2023)
Format: LP
Availability: In Stock
Condition:
Cover: M
Record: M
Genre: Electronic , Pop , Pop Rock , Rock N

Néapolis (Lime Green Vinyl) RSD 25th Anniversary.

Brand new sealed RSD 2023 LP, Album, Record Store Day, Reissue, Lime Green vinyl.

Néapolis is the eleventh studio album (of original material) by Scottish rock band Simple Minds, originally  released in March 1998 by record label Chrysalis.

After being released from their contract with Virgin Records, Simple Minds decided to musically reinvent themselves yet again. Having worked since 1991 as a duo with session musicians, Jim Kerr and Charlie Burchill reunited on a rehearsals-only basis with the band's original rhythm section, Derek Forbes and Brian McGee (returning after eleven & fourteen year absences respectively). McGee was not involved in the project beyond the rehearsal stage, but Forbes formally rejoined Simple Minds as bass guitar player in July 1996. To record the album, Simple Minds also reunited with producer Peter Walsh, who'd been responsible for their acclaimed 1982 New Gold Dream (81-82-83-84) album.

The resulting set of songs (written entirely by Kerr and Burchill) was a move away from the band's more recent stadium rock and funk approaches and a return to their early-'80s electronic pop days (inspired by European experimental pop such as Kraftwerk and Hansa-period David Bowie) as well as incorporating contemporary dance music influences. While the reinstated Forbes played all of the bass tracks, drums were handled either by session players Michael Niggs and Jim McDermott or replaced by programmed loops provided by Hamilton Lee of Transglobal Underground. In early 1997, the band brought in their former drummer Mel Gaynor for a studio session, resulting in him playing the drums on one track "War Babies". In a March 1998 interview with Q, Kerr would comment that «Néapolis wasn't created as some kind of spiritual successor [to New Gold Dream], but I suppose that in getting back together with the people we work best with, some kind of thematic similarity was inevitable.»[5]

A1   Song For The Tribes
A2   Glitterball
A3   War Babies
A4   Tears Of A Guy
B1   Superman V Supersoul
B2   Lightning
B3   If I Had Wings
B4   Killing Andy Warhol
B5   Androgyny