Standout songs include the title track "Berlin," "Caroline Says II," "Oh Jim," and "Sad Song." It's not Reed's most accessible album (though nowhere near his least) but it is beautiful and harrowing at the same time. The songs alternate between sparse acoustic arrangements punctuated occasionally with strings and horn sections. Reed reworked some older material, both from prior solo efforts as well as his time in The Velvet Underground. Ezrin plays some piano, but it's his kids' heartbreaking cries and screams of "mummy" that are the most provocative sounds on the entire album. The band on this album includes guitar greats Dick Wagner and Steve Hunter, Anysley Dunbar on drums, Jack Bruce on bass and Steve Winwood on Hammond organ. Ezrin, of course, is no stranger to rock operas having worked with Pink Floyd (The Wall), Alice Cooper (Welcome to my Nightmare), and KISS (The Elder). The result is the tragic dark story of Jim and Caroline weaved over 11 songs lasting just under an hour. The album was inspired by producer Bob Ezrin's question about whatever happened to the couple from the song "Berlin" from Reed's first solo album. It tells the story of a dysfunctional couple's struggle with drugs, depression, domestic abuse and ultimately, suicide. This one of Reed's best and most haunting albums. In the growing category of albums I never realized were rock operas, we must add Lou Reed's epic Berlin.
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