Chairs Missing
Chairs Missing is the second studio album by the English rock band Wire. It was released on 8September 1978 through Harvest Records. It uses more developed song structures than the minimalist punk rock of the group's first album. The record was met with widespread critical acclaim.
The album peaked at number 48 in the UK Albums Chart. The single "Outdoor Miner" was a minor hit, peaking at number 51 in the UK singles chart.
Music
Although it features some of the minimalist punk rock of the band's debut Pink Flag, Chairs Missing contains more developed song structure, keyboard and synthesizer elements brought in by producer Mike Thorne, and a broader palette of emotional and intellectual subject matter. The title is said to be a British slang term for a mildly disturbed person, as in "that guy has a few chairs missing in his front room".The album was released through Harvest Records on 8 September 1978.
Critical reception
In a 1979 Trouser Press review, Jim Green said, "Wire are disconcerting, laconic yet eloquent in fragmented visions, jarring even at their most accessible. They disdain cliche, pushing out the limits of rock; the easy way is too boring." He continued, "Their stripped-down rhythms take on the quality of being familiar yet somehow alien, just as their bleak lyrics lift the everyday from its context and illuminate its ironies." Green concluded that "ou have to listen for yourself." The Sandwell Evening Mail wrote that "the songs are sparse, sometimes rather frightening, but often superbly constructed."In its retrospective review, Steve Huey of AllMusic wrote: "The arty darkness of Chairs Missing, combined with the often icy-sounding synth/guitar arrangements, helps make the record a crucial landmark in the evolution of punk into post-punk and goth, as well as a testament to Wire's rapid development and inventiveness." BBC Music called the album a "glorious avant-pop coup" and "the most satisfying of the three reissues ." In 2004, Pitchfork listed Chairs Missing as 33rd best album of the 1970s. In 2013, NME listed the album as the 394th greatest album of all time.
Legacy
In 2004 the US record label Words-on-Music released A Houseguest's Wish, a CD tribute album to the band consisting solely of 19 different versions of the Chairs Missing track "Outdoor Miner".In 2016, Paste named the album as the third-best post-punk release of all time. Staff writer Garrett Martin assessed: "It’s hard to imagine 'post-punk' even existing as a genre tag without this record; although a couple of songs recall the minimal, straight-forward punk of Pink Flag, the rest of the album adds synthesizers, guitar effects, a disco beat on 'Another the Letter,' and various other flourishes and experiments that clearly marked this as something new and different at the time. It foreshadowed so much of the punk-derived music that followed that you can draw a straight line from Chairs Missing to a handful of different indie-rock subgenres."
Track listing
Credits adapted from the 2018 Special Edition.All music written by Colin Newman, except where noted. All lyrics written by Graham Lewis, except where noted.
Personnel
Credits adapted from the liner notes of the 2018 Special Edition.; Wire
- Colin Newman – vocals, guitar, backing vocals, arrangement
- Bruce Gilbert – guitar, arrangement, concept
- Graham Lewis – bass, vocals on "Sand in My Joints", backing vocals, arrangement, concept, original sleeve design
- Robert Gotobed – drums, percussion, arrangement
- Kathryn Lukas – flute on "Heartbeat"
- Mike Thorne – production, keyboards, synthesizers, backing vocals on "Being Sucked in Again", arrangement
- Paul Hardiman – engineering
- Ken Thomas – assistant engineering
- Annette Green – photography
- Brian Palmer – art direction
- Tim Chacksfield – project co-ordination
- Phil Smee – packaging
- Chris Blair – cutting engineering
- Andrew Day – design
- Denis Blackham – Remastering
- Nick Glennie-Smith – engineering
- Jon Wozencroft – art direction, layout
- HQ – layout
- Malka Spigel-Newman – photo restoration
- Jon Savage – liner notes
- Graham Duff – liner notes
- Craig Grannell – booklet editor