Blue Nile - Peace At Last
by Jon Rogers
published: 3 / 4 / 2014

Label:
Select Label
Format: N/A
intro
In our 'Re: View' section, in which our writers look back at albums from the past, Jon Rogers examines the Blue Nile's 1996 third album 'Peace At Last', which has just been re-released in a deluxe version with an extra CD
It was a bittersweet period for Scottish band the Blue Nile after the release of their second album 'Hats' in October 1989. The album itself had been something of a breakthrough album for the trio of Paul Buchanan, Robert Bell and Paul Joseph Moore. Not only had it been a commercial success - reaching #12 in the UK charts - it had picked up acres of critical praise, perhaps most notably by Stuart Maconie's five-star glowing review in 'Q'. The album broke them out of the small clique of 'those in the know' who prized them as a closely guarded secret. Perhaps more importantly it really introduced the USA to the band (and vice versa), where the album had a (minor) impact on the Billboard chart, reaching 108. Radio picked up on songs like 'The Downtown Lights' and tastemakers extolled their virtues as a band to watch. Amongst those that wanted a little more sophistication in their music from the usual pop frothy-foam, the Blue Nile were held in high-regard and Buchanan was widely admired. He even moved over the pond to live in Los Angeles for a number of years and embarked on a relationship with actress Rosanna Arquette in 1991. So far, so good. But it was not all quite as picture-perfect as that. Record label Virgin, keen to capitalise on the success of 'Hats', were pushing for a quick follow-up, and the band were collectively suffering from a bout of what could loosely described as writer's block. What fragments the band had, they were not happy with anyway. With the band not fulfilling their contractual obligations they were dumped by Virgin and took up with Warner Bros. Then there was the question of just where to record the follow-up to 'Hats'. Their previous albums had been recorded at Castlesound near Edinburgh, but the band were determined to find somewhere new and had a little money in their back pocket from the Warners deal. The question was where. And so the search began, including places like Copenhagen, Amsterdam and Venice but nowhere seemed to fit. It does some rather appropriate for a band that has only produced four albums since it was formed in 1981 that it took them almost seven years to bring out a successor to their commercially most successful album, with 'Peace At Last' eventually seeing the light of day in June 1996. The album marked something of a departure for the band as 'Peace At Last' marked a move away from synthesizers (although not entirely) to more focus on the guitars. Perhaps this was due, in part, as the album was recorded in various locations in Paris, Dublin and LA, and it is easier to transport a guitar rather than a stack of electronic equipment. As such the album, although still cohesive, has something of an itinerant feel to it. Although far from disjointed and scrappy, it does not quite fit together as with previous albums. Still, the band's high-quality standards are very much intact, and Buchanan's song-writing ability is as strong as ever. While 'Peace At Last ' may be the one Blue Nile album that gets rather overlooked, it does contain some real gems that stand as some of the band's finest and display their perfectionist song writing craft. The real stand out though is the heartbreaking 'Family Life' - a stripped down, haunting desolate song comprising, largely, just piano and Buchanan's mournful and stark lyrics: "Just separate chairs in separate rooms; Jesus, please, make us happy sometimes." Elsewhere the band introduce a wilder musical palate to their blueprint with touches of gospel and country splashed across the album mixed in with their lovelorn songs and hopes of salvation and redemption. While the album is probably ready for re-assessment the raison d'être for this remastered deluxe version is the addition of a bonus disc. 'Soon', 'War is Love' and 'Holy Love' all get the remix treatment which act to add a bit of substance to some of the album's weaker songs and some flesh to the bones. The real gems though are a demo version of 'A Certain Kind of Angel' and the previously unreleased 'There Was a Girl' - a heartbreaking tale of lost love; as ever, beautifully constructed and executed by the band. It is the sort of song that most groups would kill for in order to write. It is perhaps a mark of The Blue Nile's high standards that a song like 'There Was a Girl' gets discarded. 'Peace At Last' may be flawed in places and perhaps the most neglected of the band's output, but it is still a very worthy addition to anyone's collection.
Track Listing:-
Also In ReView
Andreas Dorau (2022)
Andrew Gold (2023)
Anthony Moore (2022)
Bark Psychosis (2018)
Beatles (2023)
Bert Jansch (2020)
Bert Jansch (2019)
Beth Orton (2014)
Big Eyes Family (2021)
Billy Idol (2018)
Bitter Springs (2021)
Blind Mr Jones (2015)
Blondie (2022)
Bodines (2023)
Boyracer (2023)
Breathless (2016)
Brinsley Schwarz (2017)
Cardiacs (2014)
Chvrches (2014)
David Bowie (2022)
David Gray (2020)
Death and Vanilla (2016)
Donald Fagen (2021)
Doug Dillard Expedition (2024)
Earthworks (2020)
Flamin Groovies (2015)
Flaming Stars (2024)
Gene Clark (2019)
George Harrison (2024)
Giant Sand (2018)
Gomez (2018)
Gong (2015)
Grace Jones (2016)
Grace Jones (2014)
Graham Day and the Forefathers (2019)
Hawks (2021)
Hawkwind (2022)
Hot Pepper (2018)
Ian A. Anderson (2021)
Ian Dury (2021)
Iron Butterfly (2014)
Jesse Garon and The Desperadoes (2025)
John Cooper Clarke (2016)
Joni Mitchell (2021)
Keith Richards (2022)
Lapre (2020)
Lemonheads (2022)
Loft (2025)
Loft (2021)
Madness (2014)
Madonna (2024)
McCarthy (2015)
Mercury Rev (2019)
Miscellaneous (2020)
Miscellaneous (2014)
Monochrome Set (2015)
Mothmen (2015)
Motorpsycho (2015)
New Leaf (2022)
New Musik (2023)
One Thousand Violins (2023)
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (2015)
Orchids (2023)
Party Day (2021)
Pele (2017)
Phil Alvin (2015)
Phil Ochs (2016)
Primitives (2015)
Prolapse (2022)
Roger Mcguinn (2018)
Rubik (2021)
Saloon (2025)
Sorrow (2018)
T. Rex (2023)
Television Personalities (2018)
Terry Allen (2016)
Thin Lizzy (2023)
Townes Van Zandt (2015)
Trashmen (2020)
Ty Segall (2022)
UB40 (2015)
Various (2022)
Various (2022)
VIPS (2020)
Wolfhounds (2015)
Zz Top (2018)
Picture Gallery:-


most viewed articles
current edition
Pennyblackmusic - Writers and Photographers' Albums of the Year 2024Peter Perrett - In Dreams Begin Responsibilities Interview Part One
Man From Delmonte - Interview
Clive Langer - Interview
Pennyblackmusic - Book of the Year Award 2024
Johnnie Johnstone - Interview
Marianne Faithfull - Reflections
Laura Nyro - Profile
Johny Brown - Corpse Flower
Vinyl Stories - Vinyl 2024
previous editions
Heavenly - P.U.N.K. Girl EPMichael Stuart Ware - Pegasus Epitaph: The Story of the Legendary Rock Group Love
Trudie Myerscough-Harris - Interview
Marianne Faithfull - Interview
Dwina Gibb - Interview
Joy Division - The Image That Made Me Weep
Beautiful South - Ten Songs That Made Me Love...
Henry McCullough - Interview
Peter Paul and Mary - Interview with Peter Yarrow
Marianne Faithfull - Interview
most viewed reviews
current edition
Dorie Jackson - Stupid Says RunRingo Starr - Look Up
Beabadoobee - This is How The World Moves
Pixie Lott - Encino
Dusty Springfield - The BBC Sessions
Unthanks - In Winter
Joan Armatrading - How Did This Happen and What Does It Mean?
Oïmiakon - Comptoir Des Vanites
Rosie Lowe - Lover, Other
Emily Burns - Die Happy
Pennyblackmusic Regular Contributors
Adrian Janes
Amanda J. Window
Andrew Twambley
Anthony Dhanendran
Benjamin Howarth
Cila Warncke
Daniel Cressey
Darren Aston
Dastardly
Dave Goodwin
Denzil Watson
Dominic B. Simpson
Eoghan Lyng
Fiona Hutchings
Harry Sherriff
Helen Tipping
Jamie Rowland
John Clarkson
Julie Cruickshank
Kimberly Bright
Lisa Torem
Maarten Schiethart