Moving Windows

Moving Windows is the second and final studio album by American synth-pop trio Our Daughter's Wedding (ODW), released in 1982 by EMI Records. The album was recorded at Intergalactic Studio, except for "Moving Windows" which was recorded at Electric Lady Studios, both studios were located in New York.

Moving Windows
Studio album by
Released1982
StudioIntergalactic Studio and Electric Lady Studios, both New York
Genre
LabelEMI
Producer
  • David Spradley
  • Frank Simon
  • ODW
Our Daughter's Wedding (ODW) chronology
Digital Cowboy
(1981)
Moving Windows
(1982)
Singles from Moving Windows
  1. "Auto Music"
    Released: 1982
  2. "Elevate Her"
    Released: 1982

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

In a retrospective review for AllMusic, critic Stephen Schnee wrote of the album, "Relying exclusively on synths, Silve and bandmates Layne Rico and Scott Simon create an intriguing aural landscape. There is not a synthetic beat out of place here, and it is a most enjoyable release. Too bad we didn't get to hear more of them."[1]

Track listing

All songs written by ODW, except ODW and David Spradley

Side one

  1. "Auto Music" 3:01
  2. "She Was Someone" 3:03
  3. "Elevate Her" 3:29
  4. "Track Me Down" 3:15
  5. "Daddy's Slave" 3:59
  6. "Longitude 60°" 3:19

Side two

  1. "Love Machine" 3:44* (*time printed on album, actual time 4:33)
  2. "Always Be True" 2:44
  3. "Moving Windows" 3:55
  4. "Paris" 3:14
  5. "Buildings" 4:20

Personnel

Credits are adapted from the Moving Windows liner notes.[2]

  • Layne Rico — synthesizer
  • Keith Silva — vocals; keyboards
  • Scott Simon — bass synthesizer; saxophone
  • David Spradley and ODW — production
    • Frank Simon and ODW — production on "She Was Someone"
  • Claire Taylor — album design
  • Anders Nordström — photography

Special thanks

Bob Currie, Aurthur Ring, Nona Hendryx, J.K., Fred Zarr, Ted Currier, M.O.T.C., Lo Chin

gollark: Would people not stop buying them when everyone who uses them ceases to exist?
gollark: With 50% probability sort of maybe ish.
gollark: From the point of view of the company selling the drive, it isn't.
gollark: Surely the original universe might find the nonexistence of anyone travelling with it problematic.
gollark: I'd assume they still use it for shipping tangle channels, at least.

References

  1. Schnee, Stephen. "Moving Windows – Our Daughter's Wedding". AllMusic. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  2. Moving Windows (CD booklet). Our Daughter's Wedding. EMI Records. 1982.CS1 maint: others (link)
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