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MFANS
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| M:FANS | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 22 January 2016 | |||
| Recorded | 2013–2015 | |||
| Studio | A.R.M. Studio, Los Angeles, CA | |||
| Genre | Experimental rock, industrial rock, electronic music | |||
| Length | 53:43 | |||
| Label | Domino/Double Six, Electric Drone | |||
| Producer | John Cale | |||
| John Cale chronology | ||||
| ||||
| Aggregate scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| Metacritic | 76/100[1] |
| Review scores | |
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| The Line of Best Fit | 8/10[3] |
| Mojo | |
| musicOMH | |
| Pitchfork | 6.0/10[6] |
| PopMatters | 9/10[7] |
| Q | |
| Record Collector | |
| Rolling Stone | |
| Under the Radar | 8/10[11] |
M:FANS is the sixteenth solo studio album by Welsh musician and composer John Cale. It was released in January 2016 on the Double Six Records imprint of Domino Recording Company. Produced by Cale, it features new versions of songs from his 1982 album Music for a New Society. "Close Watch" was the album's lead single. It was released in November 2015 and features Amber Coffman from Dirty Projectors.[12]
Background
[edit]In a statement Cale recounted the process of making the album, and how the 2013 death of former bandmate and collaborator Lou Reed had informed it:
Losing Lou [too painful to understand] forced me to upend the entire recording process and begin again...a different perspective - a new sense of urgency to tell a story from a completely opposite point of view - what was once sorrow, was now a form of rage. A fertile ground for exorcism of things gone wrong and the realization they are unchangeable. From sadness came the strength of fire!!![13]
Accolades
[edit]| Publication | Accolade | Year | Rank |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Quietus | Albums of the Year 2016 | 2016 | 92[14]
|
Track listing
[edit]All tracks composed by John Cale; except where indicated.
- "Prelude" – 2:17
- "If You Were Still Around" (Cale, Sam Shepard) – 5:18
- "Taking Your Life in Your Hands" – 5:43
- "Thoughtless Kind" – 5:27
- "Sanctus (Sanities Mix)" – 5:19
- "Broken Bird" – 5:10
- "Chinese Envoy" – 3:51
- "Changes Made" – 3:54
- "Library of Force" – 3:09
- "Close Watch" – 5:15
- "If You Were Still Around (Choir Reprise)" (Cale, Shepard) – 4:44
- "Back to the End" – 3:34
Personnel
[edit]- John Cale – vocals, voice, noises, keyboards, organ, piano, electric piano, guitar, electric guitar, programmed guitar, bass, programming, synthesizer, drums, viola, samples, production, recording, mixing
- Dustin Boyer – guitar, guitar synthesizer, bass, loops, programming, drum machine, drum programming, drums, mixing, recording
- Deantoni Parks – keyboards, noises, loops
- Joey Maramba – synth bass
- Ralph Esposito – synth bass
- Alex Thomas – drums, samples
- Matt Fish – cello
- Miguel Atwood-Ferguson – viola
- Thomas Lea – viola
- Jessy Greene – violin
- Chris Bautista – trumpet
- Amber Coffman – vocals on "Close Watch"
- New Direction Church – choir
- Benjamin Goodman – choir director
- William Arthur George Cale – voice
- Margaret Cale – voice
- Technical
- Adam Moseley – mixing, recording
- Nita Scott – mixing, executive producer
Charts
[edit]| Chart (2016) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[15] | 74 |
| Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[16] | 188 |
References
[edit]- ^ "M:FANS - John Cale". Metacritic. Retrieved 10 January 2017.
- ^ Deming, Mark. "M:FANS - John Cale". AllMusic. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
- ^ Oinonen, Janne (21 January 2016). "John Cale's M:FANS offers a refreshingly barbed take on the much-sampled 'classic album' concept". The Line of Best Fit. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
- ^ It proves to be an oblique, sometimes outre, but always artistic reinvestigation rather than an indulgent lap of honour around erstwhile glories. [Feb 2016, p.94]
- ^ Jex, Andy (20 January 2016). "John Cale – M:FANS". musicOMH. Retrieved 23 October 2025.
- ^ Anderson, Stacey (25 February 2016). "John Cale: M:FANS / Music for a New Society - Album Reviews". Pitchfork. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
- ^ Paul, John (3 February 2016). "John Cale: Music for a New Society / M:FANS". PopMatters. Retrieved 23 October 2025.
- ^ There are moments of real pathos. [Feb 2016, p.108]
- ^ Clements, Colin (6 January 2016). "M:FANS - John Cale". Record Collector. Retrieved 23 October 2025.
- ^ Hermes, Will (27 January 2016). "M:FANS / Music for a New Society". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 23 October 2025.
- ^ Lucas, Dan (20 January 2016). "John Cale: FANS / Music For a New Society". Under the Radar. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
- ^ Grow, Kory (17 November 2015). "See John Cale Attend Dreamlike Masquerade in Eerie 'Close Watch' Video". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
- ^ "John Cale Reworks Music for a New Society as M:FANS, Reissues Original Album". Pitchfork. 17 November 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
- ^ "The Quietus Albums of the Year 2016". The Quietus. 6 December 2016. Retrieved 6 December 2016.
- ^ "Ultratop.be – John Cale – Music for a New Society / M:FANS" (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ "Ultratop.be – John Cale – Music for a New Society / M:FANS" (in French). Hung Medien. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
MFANS
View on GrokipediaBackground and concept
Development history
In the aftermath of Lou Reed's death in October 2013, John Cale began conceptualizing a revisit to his 1982 album Music for a New Society, prompted by an invitation to perform the material live that year.[3][4] Cale initially approached the project with reluctance, citing the original album's intense emotional weight tied to his personal struggles with addiction and despair during its creation, which made revisiting the songs a painful endeavor.[5][3] Despite this hesitation, Cale committed to the reworking starting in 2013, in response to a commission from Denmark's Aarhus Festuge festival for a live performance that year.[5][3][6] The recording process spanned 2013 to 2015, transforming the original's sparse, improvisational sessions into a fresh exploration that incorporated contemporary elements while preserving core thematic elements.[4][7] Announced in November 2015 as a "re-imagining" of the 1982 songs, M:FANS was positioned not as a direct remake but as a companion piece, featuring altered arrangements that shifted the original's sorrow toward rage and renewal, serving as an artistic exorcism of past traumas.[4][7] This approach allowed Cale to rewrite the narrative of the material after more than three decades, infusing it with new energy drawn from his evolving perspective.[5][8]Personal influences
The death of John Cale's longtime collaborator and Velvet Underground bandmate Lou Reed in October 2013 served as a pivotal emotional catalyst for the creation of M:FANS, transforming the project's initial tone of sorrow into one infused with rage and catharsis during the recording sessions.[9] Cale has described how Reed's passing prompted a deeper confrontation with their shared history, stating that it "made me realize that I had been working on something right under my nose" in relation to the album's themes of loss and unresolved tensions.[10] Cale's reflections on aging and personal loss further shaped M:FANS, as he grappled with mortality and the lingering grief from the turbulent period surrounding his original 1982 album Music for a New Society, a time marked by existential despair and personal turmoil including divorce and creative isolation.[9][5] In reworking those earlier songs, Cale sought to address the "aggro and despair" that had defined that era, viewing the process as a means to process unresolved emotions tied to his past.[5] He articulated this therapeutic intent by saying, "It’s about exorcising your demons," linking the album directly to his Velvet Underground experiences and broader personal tragedies.[9] This project aligned with Cale's post-2010 experimental phase, during which he continued to innovate through ambitious multimedia works such as the six-hour live score to Andy Warhol's Empire, performed with Tony Conrad at the Whitney Museum in 2015, blending classical influences with contemporary electronica and maintaining his tradition of reinterpreting past material to explore new sonic and emotional territories.[5] M:FANS thus represented a culmination of this ongoing quest for reinvention, allowing Cale—nearing his mid-70s—to infuse decades of accumulated loss with fresh, confrontational energy.[5][9]Production
Recording process
The recording of M:FANS primarily took place at A.R.M. Studio, John Cale's personal facility in Los Angeles, spanning from 2013 to 2015. This period aligned with Cale's invitation to perform the original Music for a New Society at European festivals, prompting him to revisit and rework the 1982 material in a more deliberate manner than the original's rushed sessions.[11][10] Cale adopted a hands-on approach throughout, beginning with self-recorded demos and outtakes from the original masters before layering new elements and collaborating on final mixes with contributors like vocalist Amber Coffman. The sessions were intermittent, facilitated by the convenience of his own studio, which allowed Cale to refine arrangements iteratively over time without the pressure of a fixed schedule. This flexibility enabled a shift in emotional tone, incorporating modern production techniques to transform the source material.[10][12] To update the 1982 sound for contemporary audiences, Cale integrated electronic elements such as processed vocals, vocoders, and drum machines, alongside sampling from the original recordings to create rhythmically denser tracks influenced by electronica and hip-hop. These additions emphasized a move from introspective sorrow to outward rage, reflecting Cale's evolving perspective. The complete album runs 53:43 in length, comprising 12 tracks that blend archival audio with fresh instrumentation.[5][12][11]Key personnel
John Cale served as the primary producer, arranger, and multi-instrumentalist on M:FANS, contributing vocals, keyboards, noises, guitar, bass, programming, samples, drums, electric piano, viola, and organ across all tracks.[13] He also handled recording duties on select tracks such as "Prelude" and mixed several others, including "Sanctus (Sanities Mix)," "If You Were Still Around (Choir Reprise)," and "Back to the End."[13] Dustin Boyer played a central role in production as the main engineer and mixer, credited on nearly every track for recording and mixing, in addition to performing on guitar, programming, bass, drums, loops, and drum machine.[13] His contributions extended to additional production elements, particularly on tracks like "Taking Your Life in Your Hands," "Chinese Envoy," and "Changes Made," where he provided drum programming and loops.[13] Deantoni Parks contributed keyboards, noises, and loops on tracks including "Thoughtless Kind," "Chinese Envoy," and "If You Were Still Around (Choir Reprise)."[13] Amber Coffman provided guest vocals on "Close Watch," adding a distinctive layer to the track's arrangement alongside Cale's multi-instrumental performance.[13] Other notable contributors included Nita Scott, who handled mixing on tracks such as "Broken Bird," "Chinese Envoy," "Changes Made," and "Close Watch," and served as executive producer and representation for the project.[14] Track-specific elements featured conversation samples on "Prelude" from Cale alongside his parents, Margaret Davies and Will Cale.[13] Additional musicians like Alex Thomas (drums and samples on multiple tracks), Joey Maramba (bass synth), and Matt Fish (cello) supported the album's sonic palette, while Adam Moseley assisted with recording and mixing on several sessions.[13]Composition
Musical style
M:FANS represents a radical reimagining of John Cale's 1982 album Music for a New Society, shifting from the original's sparse, minimalist art-rock arrangements to a denser, more aggressive sound characterized by experimental rock, industrial rock, and electronic music elements, incorporating ambient textures and noise distortions. This evolution introduces electro-industrial leanings, with fizzing synths, mechanical stomps reminiscent of Nine Inch Nails, and booming electronic beats that fill the original's white spaces with collaborative intensity. The album's atmosphere blends bleak futurism drawn from 1990s electronica with Cale's classical training, creating a restless, simmering tension that contrasts the original's reclusive sorrow with vigorous rage.[8] Key innovations lie in the aggressive reworking of the source material, where semi-improvised, atonal abstractions from the 1982 recording are transformed through modern production techniques, including hyper-processed vocals, auto-tuned effects, and staccato microtones that bend melodies into new, spiky shapes. Synths and distortion dominate, evoking low-flying planes via dark organs and driving percussion, while dynamic shifts—from quiet, mournful preludes to intense climaxes—amplify the album's defiant, foreboding mood. These changes, informed by Cale's Velvet Underground roots in dissonant experimentation, update the tracks for a digital age without losing their core emotional weight.[15][16] Specific sonic elements include spoken-word samples and layered vocals, such as Amber Coffman's R&B-inflected contributions on tracks like "Close Watch," which add neon-lit pop-savvy gloss amid the industrial undercurrents. Ambient noise and chopped-up electronics further enhance the opera-like dramatics, treating piano percussively and incorporating clattering percussion to caricature human ugliness in Joy Division-esque marches. This results in a sound that is both intellectually experimental and viscerally immediate, prioritizing conceptual rage over the original's melancholic sparsity.[8][17]Track listing
All tracks are written by John Cale, except where noted.[11]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Prelude" | Cale | 2:17 | |
| 2 | "If You Were Still Around" | Cale, Shepard | 5:18 | |
| 3 | "Taking Your Life in Your Hands" | Cale | 5:43 | |
| 4 | "Thoughtless Kind" | Cale | 5:27 | |
| 5 | "Sanctus (Sanities Mix)" | Cale | 5:19 | |
| 6 | "Broken Bird" | Cale | 5:10 | |
| 7 | "Chinese Envoy" | Cale | 3:51 | |
| 8 | "Changes Made" | Cale | 3:54 | |
| 9 | "Library of Force" | Cale | 3:09 | Includes an excerpt from "Man in the Book".[18] |
| 10 | "Close Watch" | Cale | 5:15 | Features vocals by Amber Coffman.[19] |
| 11 | "If You Were Still Around (Choir Reprise)" | Cale, Shepard | 4:44 | |
| 12 | "Back to the End" | Cale | 3:34 |
Release and promotion
Singles and marketing
The lead single from M:FANS, a reworking of "(I Keep a) Close Watch" from the original 1982 album, was released on November 17, 2015, and featured guest vocals by Amber Coffman of Dirty Projectors.[20] The track previewed the album's radical reinterpretation, blending electronic elements with the original's brooding intimacy.[21] An accompanying music video, directed by Abigail Portner, portrayed Cale and Coffman navigating a dreamlike, eerie masquerade ball, emphasizing themes of surveillance and emotional distance.[19] Promotion for M:FANS included advance streams of select tracks to build anticipation ahead of the January 2016 release.[20] In interviews, Cale highlighted the project's cathartic nature, describing the reworkings as a therapeutic process to confront unresolved emotions from the original album's creation during a period of personal turmoil.[9] He noted that revisiting the songs allowed him to infuse them with contemporary resonance, transforming past pain into something more reflective and forward-looking. Marketing efforts tied the album to Cale's ongoing 2015–2016 tour schedule, where live performances incorporated material from M:FANS alongside Velvet Underground classics and other solo works.[22] Digital pre-orders became available in late 2015 through Domino Recording Company, offering early access to the bundled reissue of Music for a New Society and M:FANS.[23]Formats and artwork
M:FANS was released on January 22, 2016, through Domino Recording Company's Double Six imprint.[24] The album appeared in multiple formats, including digital download, standard compact disc, and a double 180-gram vinyl LP pressed on heavyweight virgin vinyl. The vinyl edition features a gatefold sleeve and includes a download code for high-quality MP3 and WAV files of the full album. A double CD bundle pairs M:FANS with the remastered 1982 album Music for a New Society, presented in a gatefold card sleeve with inner card sleeves and an accompanying booklet; this edition functions as a limited package highlighting the project's origins. No deluxe edition was issued.[11][23][13] The cover artwork adopts a stark black background, retaining core elements from the original album's design but updating the scene to depict asphalt ground overlaid with railroad tracks, suggesting industrial motion and a darker, more contemporary tone. This visual shift aligns with the album's aggressive reworking of the source material, transforming sorrow into something fiercer. The inner sleeves of the vinyl and the booklet in the double CD edition contain liner notes detailing the remake process, including Cale's use of sampling and electronic elements to recontextualize the tracks for the digital era.[25][24][13]Reception
Critical reviews
M:FANS received generally favorable reviews from music critics, earning an aggregate score of 76 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 13 reviews.[26] Pitchfork rated the album 8.5 out of 10, praising its emotional depth in reinterpreting the original material while noting the shift toward electro-industrial leanings that fill the original's sparse spaces with bolder energy. "Cale unfurls somber, detached appraisals of miserable lost souls," the review stated, highlighting tracks like "Close Watch" and their stylistic evolutions.[8] PopMatters awarded it 9 out of 10, hailing M:FANS as a triumph of reinvention that updates the 1982 album for contemporary audiences while preserving its vital essence. The review emphasized Cale's artistic evolution, observing, "To hear the sonic progression between the two distinct albums is to hear an artist constantly evolving, reevaluating and creating at a vital pace."[17] Some critics, however, found M:FANS less cohesive than its predecessor. AllMusic rated it 4 out of 5 stars, arguing that while the reworkings offer a fascinating perspective on Cale's growth, they do not fully replicate the original's haunting power and intimacy.[27] Rolling Stone assigned 3.5 out of 5 stars, describing it as "a raging update to a somber classic" but critiquing the loss of the original's desolation in favor of aggression.[28] The overall consensus praised the album's intensity and its demonstration of Cale's enduring relevance in his late career, positioning M:FANS as a compelling, if occasionally uneven, companion to Music for a New Society.[26]Accolades
M:FANS earned placements in several year-end lists from prominent music publications, highlighting its innovative reworking of John Cale's earlier material. The album ranked at number 92 on The Quietus' Albums of the Year 2016 list, where it was praised for tapping into dark themes while maintaining a fresh, resonant energy.[29] It was also included among Uncut magazine's 75 Best Albums of 2016, recognizing its conceptual depth and artistic reinvention. Despite this acclaim in niche and alternative music circles, M:FANS did not receive major industry awards such as Grammys and was not shortlisted for the Welsh Music Prize.Commercial performance
Chart positions
M:FANS experienced modest commercial performance on music charts, reflecting the niche appeal of John Cale's experimental work.[30] In Belgium, the album peaked at number 52 on the Ultratop Flanders Albums Chart in 2016, remaining on the chart for six weeks.[31] It also peaked at number 185 on the Ultratop Wallonia Albums Chart for two weeks that year.[32] The release saw limited visibility in other regions, with no entry on the US Billboard 200. In the United Kingdom, it achieved minor placements on specialist charts, including number 20 on the Official Independent Albums Chart, number 7 on the Official Rock & Metal Albums Chart, and number 9 on the Official Progressive Albums Chart, each for one week except the Progressive chart which lasted two weeks.[33]| Chart (2016) | Peak position | Weeks on chart |
|---|---|---|
| Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders) | 52 | 6 |
| Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia) | 185 | 2 |
| UK Independent Albums (OCC) | 20 | 1 |
| UK Rock & Metal Albums (OCC) | 7 | 1 |
| UK Progressive Albums (OCC) | 9 | 2 |
