Alphaville - Salvation -deluxe Remaster 2023- -... 〈2027〉
Alphaville once sang about wanting to be "Forever Young." With Salvation , they proved they could age with grace, intelligence, and impeccable synthesizer tone. This remaster ensures that grace will last forever.
In the sprawling discography of German synth-pop pioneers Alphaville, Salvation (1997) has always occupied a peculiar, sacred space. Sandwiched between the bombastic pop of Forever Young (1984) and the lush, orchestral melancholy of Prostitute (1994), Salvation was the sound of Marian Gold and crew looking into the abyss of the new millennium—and finding a strange, electronic peace.
Available now on all major streaming platforms and via CD from Warner Music / Alphaville Archive. Have you listened to the 2023 remaster of "Salvation"? Does it beat the original? Let us know in the comments below. Alphaville - Salvation -Deluxe Remaster 2023- -...
The 2023 Deluxe Edition shines a light on this thematic richness. Unlike their earlier work, which dealt with nuclear fear ("Forever Young") or cosmic isolation ("Big in Japan"), Salvation asks: What happens after the fall?
Now, 26 years later, the album has been resurrected. is not merely a reissue; it is a complete sonic overhaul and historical document that demands attention from both nostalgic fans and newcomers curious about the golden age of intelligent Euro-synth. The Sound: From "Safe" to "Sublime" The original 1997 mix of Salvation was a product of its time: clean, digital, and occasionally thin by modern standards. The 2023 remaster changes the game entirely. Alphaville once sang about wanting to be "Forever Young
The low-end has been given a significant lift. Tracks like “Wishful Thinking” and “The Impossible Dream” now possess a weight and warmth that was previously buried beneath 90s-era mixing conservatism. Marian Gold’s ethereal voice—always the band’s secret weapon—sits perfectly in the center of the soundstage, no longer fighting with compressed synthesizers.
For the uninitiated, this is the best entry point into Alphaville’s "middle period"—less dated than The Breathtaking Blue , more focused than Prostitute . For the long-time fan, hearing these songs stripped of 90s sonic grime is akin to cleaning a dusty stained-glass window. The light finally shines through. Sandwiched between the bombastic pop of Forever Young
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