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Lou Reed > Albums & Lyrics

Lou Reed Photo


Berlin Album
  1. Berlin (in album Berlin)
  2. Lady Day
  3. Men Of Good Fortune
  4. Caroline Says I
  5. How Do You Think It Feels
  6. Oh Jim
  7. Caroline Says II
  8. The Kids
  9. The Bed
  10. Sad Song
Coney Island Baby Album
  1. Crazy Feeling
  2. Kicks
  3. A Gift
  4. Ooohhh Baby
  5. Coney Island Baby
Ecstasy Album
  1. Paranoia Key Of E
  2. Mystic Child
  3. Mad
  4. Ecstasy
  5. Modern Dance
  6. Tatters
  7. Future Farmers Of America
  8. Turning Time Around
  9. White Prism
  10. Rock Minuet
  11. Baton Rouge
  12. Like A Possum
  13. Rouge
  14. Big Sky
Growing Up In Public Album
  1. How Do You Speak To An Angel
  2. My Old Man
  3. Keep Away
  4. Growing Up In Public
  5. Standing On Ceremony
  6. So Alone
  7. Love Is Here To Stay
  8. The Power Of Positive Drinking
  9. Smiles
  10. Think It Over
  11. Teach The Gifted Children
Legendary Hearts Album
  1. Legendary Hearts
  2. Make Up Mind
  3. Martial Law
  4. The Last Shot
  5. Turn Out The Light
  6. Pow Wow
  7. Betrayed
  8. Bottoming Out
  9. Home Of The Brave
  10. Rooftop Garden
Lou Reed Album
  1. Going Down
  2. Walk And Talk It
  3. Lisa Says
  4. Berlin
  5. I Love You
  6. Wild Child
  7. Love Makes You Feel
  8. Ride Into The Sun
  9. Ocean
Lou Reed Live Album
  1. Oh Jim
  2. Sad Song
  3. Satellite Of Love
  4. Vicious
  5. Walk On The Wild Side
Magic And Loss Album
  1. Dorita - The Spirit
  2. Power And Glory - The Situation
  3. Magician - Internally
  4. Sword Of Damocles - Externally
  5. Goodby Mass - In A Chapel Bodily Termination
  6. Cremation - Ashes To Ashes
  7. No Chance - Regret
  8. Warrior King - Revenge
  9. Gassed And Stoked - Loss
  10. Power And Glory Part II - Magic Transformation
  11. Magic And Loss - The Summation
Mistrial Album
  1. Mistrial
  2. No Money Down
  3. Outside
  4. Video Violence
  5. Spit It Out
  6. The Original Wrapper
  7. I Remember You
  8. Tell It To Your Heart
New Sensations Album
  1. I Love You, Suzanne
  2. Endlessly Jealous
  3. My Red Joystick
  4. Turn To Me
  5. New Sensations
  6. What Becomes A Legend Most
  7. Fly Into The Sun
  8. My Friend George
  9. High In The City
  10. The Great Defender (Down At The Arcade)
New York Album
  1. Romeo Had Juliette
  2. Halloween Parade
  3. Dirty Blvd.
  4. Endless Cycle
  5. There Is No Time
  6. Last Great American Whale
  7. Beginning Of A Great Adventure
  8. Busload Of Faith
  9. Sick Of You
  10. Hold On
  11. Good Evening Mr.Waldheim
  12. Xmas In February
  13. Strawman
  14. Dime Store Mystery
Rock And Roll Heart Album
  1. I believe In Love
  2. Banging On My Drum
  3. Follow The Leader
  4. You Wear It So Well
  5. Ladies Pay
  6. Rock And Roll Heart
  7. Chooser And The Chosen
  8. Senselessly Cruel
  9. Claim To Fame
  10. Vicious Circle
  11. A Sheltered Life
  12. Temporary Thing
Set The Twilight Reeling Album
  1. Egg Cream
  2. NYC Man
  3. Finish Line
  4. Trade In
  5. Hang On To Your Emotions
  6. Sex With Your Parents (Motherfucker) Part II
  7. HookyWooky
  8. The Proposition
  9. Adventurer
  10. Riptide
  11. Set The Twilight Reeling
Songs For Drella Album
  1. Smalltown
  2. Open House
  3. Style It Takes
  4. Work
  5. Starlight
  6. Faces And Names
  7. Images
  8. Slip Away (A Warning)
  9. I Believe
  10. Nobody But You
  11. A Dream
  12. Forever Changed
Street Hassle Album
  1. Gimmie Some Good Times
  2. Dirt
  3. Street Hassle
  4. I Wanna Be Black
  5. Real Good Time Together
  6. Shooting Star
  7. Leave Me Alone
  8. Wait
The Bells Album
  1. Stupid Man
  2. Disco Mystic
  3. I Want To Boogie With You
  4. With You
  5. Looking For Love
  6. City Lights
  7. All Through The Night
  8. Families
  9. The Bells
The Blue Mask Album
  1. My House
  2. Women
  3. Underneath The Bottle
  4. The Gun
  5. The Blue Mask
  6. Average Guy
  7. The Heroine
  8. Waves Of Fear
  9. The Day John Kennedy Died
  10. Heavenly Arms
Transformer Album
  1. Vicious
  2. Perfect Day
  3. Walk On The Wild Side
  4. Make Up
  5. Satellite Of Love
  6. Wagon Wheel
  7. New York Telephone Conversation
  8. Goodnight Ladies
IN his childhood, Lou Reed longed to play rock and roll — a common dream, perhaps, but Reed was different. By his teens, he had learned to play guitar, had made his first record, had alienated his suburban parents, and had been subjected to electro-shock therapy. During these years, Reed's parents insisted that he take typing lessons so that he would develop a saleable skill, but that didn't seem to cure him of his rock and roll aspirations.

As much as he could, Reed tried to live the straight and narrow: he went to college at Syracuse University in New York; he joined the R.O.T.C. (he was kicked out for threatening to shoot an officer); after graduating, he took a post with Pickwick Records as a staff songwriter, and tried to pen Top 10 hits. But he never seemed to fit with the program — even as a songwriter. He realized that cookie-cutter hit writing was not his rock-and-roll dream, and in 1965, he and another staff writer, John Cale, formed a band called the Warlocks. As quickly as they added members, they changed band names: in the space of one year, they became "The Primitives," "The Falling Spikes," and, finally, "The Velvet Underground" — a name lifted from a pornographic novel.

Reed and Cale (along with Sterling Morrison and Maureen Tucker) worked for a while as the house band at Café Bizarre in Greenwich Village, but were fired one night for playing "Black Angel's Death Song" immediately after being told not to. On the night of their dismissal, they acquired a new fan — a rather well-known artist named Andy Warhol — and suddenly they were off on a new adventure. Warhol felt the Velvet Underground would work well in a multimedia show he had envisioned, called "The Exploding Plastic Inevitable." He added a German chanteuse named Nico to provide vocals and histrionics, and the show toured the U.S. and Canada to wildly mixed reviews. Objections were made not only to the avant-garde theatricality — and the sheer decibel level — of the show, but also to the subject matter of Reed's songs, which were diametrically opposed to the "Summer of Love" sentiments sweeping the nation.

The Velvet Underground released four albums in four years before Reed left, in 1970, and the group was roundly ignored by the music-buying public and by most critics. At the time, Reed was writing unflinchingly about the seedy Manhattan street he knew and lived in — a place of decay inhabited by artists, junkies, homosexuals, and sadomasochists. Sometimes, he wrapped all of these into one, as in "Sister Ray," a song about a transvestite heroin dealer. These tales of deviancy were told over a dissonant sonic backdrop — a combination that stretched the tolerance of most contemporary listeners. Still, the band's influence on later musicians was indelible.

It seems that just about everyone who bought an original Velvet's album wound up either starting their own group or becoming a rock critic. As final testimonial to their significance today, all Velvet Underground albums are still in print, and in 1995, a five-CD retrospective, Peel Slowly and See, was released to good sales and critical acclaim.

After Reed left the band and went underground himself, he worked with his father's accounting firm on Long Island. A year later, in 1971, RCA signed him to a solo contract and sent him to London to record Lou Reed, which was released in 1972. While in England, Reed met David Bowie, a self-proclaimed Reed fan; Bowie produced Reed's next album, Transformer (1972), which included Reed's most popular song ever, "Walk on the Wild Side." For the rest of the decade, Reed consistently put out inconsistent work. A certain core audience connected with Reed's visions of beauty in ugliness (Berlin, 1973) or noise in music (Metal Machine Music, 1975), but the public at large was left more turned off than on. In 1978, Reed released The Bells, which critics compared to such classics as Van Morrison's Astral Weeks and the Rolling Stones' Exile on Main Street.

By the mid '80s, Reed had laid down the Velvet's mantle and was writing brighter, more up-tempo songs (on 1984's New Sensations and 1986's Mistrial). Even while writing about death and other somber topics, on 1992's Magic and Loss, he avoided complete and abject depression. In 1993, Reed joined the other members of the Velvet Underground in a final, reunion tour of Europe. (Sterling Morrison died in 1995.)

Maybe Reed is a romantic at heart; after all, he once got married on Valentine's Day, and he speaks glowingly of his current love, Laurie Anderson. A new album, with the hopeful title, Set the Twilight Reeling, seems to be the work of a man who has finally made his peace with life.



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