1982
Looking backwards and forwards all at once, drawing on influences from across every spectrum, 1982 is an unpredictable record that will reward a dedicated listener dozens of times over. Even by the band’s high standards - which includes a gleeful disregard for boundaries of style and genre, their eye fixed firmly on constant movement forwards - their latest studio album 1982 is multidimensional. Recorded by the core ACR line up of Jez Kerr, Martin Moscrop and Donald Johnson, alongside Tony Quigley, Matthew Steele and Ellen Beth Abdi, it shoots off in every direction, whether via searing Afrobeat, mind-melting jazz breakdowns or moody electronic experiments. And the album title? Although 1982 might conjure memories of the year that saw ACR put out both the acclaimed Sextet and the cult favourite I’d Like To See You Again, it’s more of a playful red herring than an invitation to nostalgia.
Picking up the baton from acolytes like !!! and LCD Soundsystem, Brit-funk originals ACR enter their fifth decade with an energized take on an old sound.
There's some humor to A Certain Ratio starting 1982 with a track titled after Jean-Michel Basquiat and Al Diaz's joint graffiti tag "Samo," an abbreviation of "same old shit."
The Manchester post-punk band mostly plays to their strengths by leaning into the progressive, dance-y side of their sound.
A Certain Ratio have always been willing to fiddle with their sound. That they do so in '1982' doesn't surprise and fits with their rejuvenation in the 2020s.