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Tender Pervert

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Download links and information about Tender Pervert by Momus. This album was released in 1988 and it belongs to Electronica, Folktronica, Japanoise, Rock, Alternative Rock, Indie Rock, New Wave, World Music, Pop, Pop Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 50:41 minutes.

Artist: Momus
Release date: 1988
Genre: Electronica, Folktronica, Japanoise, Rock, Alternative Rock, Indie Rock, New Wave, World Music, Pop, Pop Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 11
Duration: 50:41
Buy on Songswave €1.43
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Angels Are Voyeurs 2:47
2. Love On Ice 3:55
3. I Was A Maoist Intellectual 4:35
4. The Homosexual 4:45
5. Bishonen 7:42
6. Right Hand Heart 3:40
7. A Complete History Of Sexual Jealousy (Parts 17-24) 5:40
8. Ice King 4:56
9. In The Sanatorium 5:08
10. The Charm Of Innocence 6:36
11. The Angels Are Voyeurs (Reprise) 0:57

Details

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Tender Pervert is the first great Momus album, thanks to a newfound affinity for synth-pop and songcraft, not to mention his sudden discovery of irony. It's hard to say which is more important to the overall effect. The lush, electro-acoustic arrangements provide a platform for Momus' increasing production acumen, and the rambling song-poems of albums past are either condensed into melodic, verse-chorus structures, or held together by focused storytelling (as with the Yukio Mishima-influenced epic "Bishonen"). What's more, the wry humor hinted at on The Poison Boyfriend blossoms into a signature worldview here, complete with a nasty, cold-blooded edge in which Momus takes obvious pleasure. Paradoxically, when he's writing with a bit of ironic distance, Momus seems freed up to discuss more personal matters, perhaps because he's not trying so excruciatingly hard to present himself as thoughtful. A few stories are appropriated, but regardless of the source, they all seem to have more emotional resonance for their author; as such, it's the first time he's really found the humanity of his subjects, instead of simply using them to illustrate ideas. Overseen by a god who gets his kicks watching humanity inflict pain on itself, the characters on Tender Pervert live confusing, duplicitous lives, putting up a front to deal with the world's expectations while carefully hiding their true selves and goals. Yet no matter how dark their desires might get, they're quite often sympathetic, imbued with charm and elegance by Momus' faux-New Romantic backing tracks. And that's to say nothing of the singer's own lyrical wit, which flourishes on "I Was a Maoist Intellectual," "The Homosexual," and "A Complete History of Sexual Jealousy, Parts 17-24" in particular. All in all, Tender Pervert is easily one of Momus' most impressive albums, striking just the right balance between his earlier and later work.