As promised, I will now describe all aspects of MAINFRAME's "Noise of Art" recording. Sound: A bit of a problem here, as I have no turntable. More on this later. Sight: Minimalistic. The front cover ("Into Trouble") mocks the cover of Art of Noise's "Into Battle," which, incidentally, is a loose copy of a Dave Brubreck 5 album cover. In place of the battle scene, a one-color graphic of a common circuit-board card. The writing: "INTO TROUBLE with the NOISE OF ART" and then the track listings: The Noise of Art, Sex, War, Religion, Noise From China, Noise of Peter, Last Chords. The back cover has more text, and a blow-up of a penny (English). The catalog number is YYY001. The text: WHY? WHY? WHY? pretentious (-shus) a (Of person, book speech, record, etc.) making claim to great merit or importance; ostentatious; hence [more dictionary babble] The Noise of Art vividly illustrates the strong under currents of emotion created by the juxtaposition of sex:war:religion within one pseudosurrealistic sample. Thought of incidte dancing mainly due to the influence of the digital crwth in the mix. Noise from China samplifies Arthur's concern with all things porcelain and shows that the band's devotion to Baxter's Soup is not in vain. Noise of Peter gives a glorious sense of rhythmic urge to the strong Powell movement, subtly commenting on the new ace age due to commence in '85. Last Chords is the first of a new series of Cassata and Fudge studies by Ying Yang Yumm from the Real World. Bringing the classamplic uninote bowing of Noxas to the digital keyboard for the first time highlights a brilliant future for the series. FACTS: Into Trouble With The Noise of Art was produced and recorded by "MAINFRAME" entirely on location in a bedroom using an old 4-track. The instrument played by the Band is the Greengate DS:3 Digital Sound Sampling Sequencer, without which none of this would have been possible. This record was made in the REAL World. We look, we listen, we think you will understand. The Penny has dropped [next to the penny] Into Trouble With The Noise of Art is dedicated to Mrs. Ethel Smith of Croydon.