![]() U.K. Polydor PD-1-6146 Released: April 1978 Chart Peak: #65 Weeks Charted: 15
U.K.'s first record is, unsurprisingly, a treat to the ears on every level. Jobson's synthesizers are the key. Whether he's playing great, roiling, oceanic masses of convoluted melody, he's never facile or petty. His "Alaska" gives a good purview to his skills; an opening fanfare, all synthetic, bursts into the kind of colossal rhythmic assault unheard since synthesizers became guitar surrogates. To keep his electronics from dominating altogether, he sets up a brisk ostinato on the next song, "Time to Kill," holding forth on his second instrument, the electric plexiglass violin.
Though the group was a long time in the making, U.K. was recorded in relative haste. The material is a bit queasy yet -- a few loose ends, an occasional gratuitous dissonance -- but the moving parts are surprisingly well meshed for a debut album. And the petty disappointments don't keep U.K. from dominating the whole of the progressive field in 1978. - Michael Bloom, Rolling Stone, 8/24/78. Bonus Reviews! U.K. is a sort of progressive version of Foreigner; that is, it's a bunch of fairly well-known Big Names out of the Yes/Genesis axis regrouped and ready, if you believe the hype, to play the best music of their careers. That music, unfortunately, turns out mostly to be the usual art-rock clichés: percussive electric-bass ostinatos, ridiculously baroque synthesizer decorations of the most basic blues riffs, and the like. The rest is just bad soundtrack material for a grade-B sci-fi film, despite the presence of Eddie Jobson, who demonstrated a mildly adventurous bent during his tenure with Roxy Music. Hacks making a last dash for the cash, you see, sound pretty much alike no matter what genre they're fooling with. - Steve Simels, Stereo Review, 8/78. John Picarella: "What the guys in U.K. apparently don't understand is that it's not impressive or difficult to rock out in 9/4 -- it's impossible." C+ - Robert Christgau, Christgau's Record Guide, 1981.
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