Customer Reviews
More Hit than Miss - By: Huge, 20 Aug 2008 
I suppose everybody has a band that they consider to be "theirs" & Bauhaus were most definitely "mine"! After seeing Bauhaus on Top of the Pops performing She's In Parties I bought the cassette of Burning From the Inside & everything changed for me & my taste in music. Sod's Law, the band split up a couple of months after I got what was then their last studio album. After bumping in to a seasoned Bauhaus gig veteran on holiday at this time I soon realised my knowledge was woefully limited to the one album & decided to try out their back catalogue. There isn't a single poor Bauhaus album & each one sounds different from the ones before. If Go Away White is your only experience of what Bauhaus are capable of I would recommend dipping in to their other albums.
As they split in 1983 I never managed to see them in their prime & pomp but when they reformed in the late 1990's I saw them at the Brixton Academy & was moved to tears. Here they were almost 20 years after their former heyday & the performance was stunning. A few years later & another attempt at reforming saw the band playing smalller venues but still as vibrant as ever. At this time Bauhaus recorded Go Away White & if I have any criticism it is that the production quality sounds at times rather like a demo session, certainly not up to the standard of their 80's offerings.
This minor glitch aside I'd have to rate Go Away White up there with the better Bauhaus albums. The lads are alll on form, Pete Murphy's vocals are as stirring as ever, David J's bass lines are immense (you can hear his influence on Jane's Addiction) Kevin Haskins takes a more straightforward approach to the rhythms & Daniel Ash lets his riffs wash over the tracks, never too much & never too little.
Bauhaus, I thank you. "Oh to be the cream!"
Not what I was expecting - a pleasant surprise - By: F. Pearson, 27 Jun 2008 
I wasn't quite sure what to expect from this. Whilst I enjoyed the Bauhaus tracks that I heard on my teens (the eighties), I don't think I ever sat down & listened to a whole Bauhaus album. The parameters of my listening experience were - like, I suspect, many of my peers - the darkly camp 'Bela Lugosi's Dead' & the respectful cover of Bowie's 'Ziggy Stardust'.
'Go Away White' came as some surprise then, although I wouldn't say it is unrecognisable as the same band: Pete Murphy's vocals alone stamp their identity on this release. Starting with the surprisingly funky 'Too Much 21st Century', the album then veers back onto more expected territory, although constructively references later period Bowie (Heathen-era on 'Saved') as well as new wave stalwarts Wire (on 'Mirror Remains').
I'm not sure there's a huge incentive to buy this if you aren't (weren't) a Bauhaus fan but I was delighted to find an enjoyable album with a strong sense of identity & Pete Murphy takes himself satisfyingly seriously.
Bauhaus- Go Away White LP Review (7.5/10) - By: www.experimusic.com, 15 Jun 2008 
As excited as I was for the Bauhaus reunion tour over the last couple of years, I don't think I could say the same for a new Bauhaus studio album. Perhaps the band's dedicated following of absinthe drinking, Dracula worshiping goth misfits were pretty blown away by the prospects, but anyone who doesn't proclaim Edgar Allen Poe as their favorite author probably shares the same opinion as I do; that goth-rock is mostly dead.
There are times on Go Away White when it seems like even Bauhaus, the godfathers of Goth, thinks this. Admittedly, the jagged post punk anti-chords, tense atmospherics & oddballl bouncy bass abound in tracks like "Undone" & "Endless Summer of The Damned" fits in satisfyingly with their 80's work. But on tracks like "Too Much 21'st Century" & "International Bullet Proof Talent", Bauhaus retreat to more straight-forward, pop-ladden, Glam-Rock influences, matching T. Rex style guitar chugging with vocals that eerily resemble latter-day Bowie or Nick Cave.
Now there's no denying that the hooks on these tracks are inescapable. But similar tracks like "Adrenalin" & "Black Stone Heart" don't fare even half as memorably, & one gets the feeling that it would've been smarter to do away with this tired rock-posturing completely, in order to craft a more focused & effective blast of nostalgia. Especiallly when the more traditionallly goth tracks of Go Away White are done so well. The latter track in particular, has the trouble of having to follow the wonderful slow-burn that is "Mirror Remains", which moves from it's initial groove into a blend of snake rattles, hand claps, free jazz piano fiddling & ear piercing noise.
So maybe Goth-Rock still has a fighting chance in this decade, but that doesn't change the fact that even one of it's founding fathers won't put complete confidence into it's power. Closing songs, "Zikir" & "The Dog's A Vapour" are atmospheric, spooky winks to the goth sub-culture, both of which actuallly succeed at using moans, groans & reverb to be genuinely unsettling and...well...scary. But unlike Dinosaur Jr, with their excellent reunion album last year, Bauhaus just can't seem to put full faith into the style that's so obviously their greatest strength. Go Away White is a good album. But it could've been great. And as a final chapter in the Bauhaus legacy, it's a little too compromised to be anything other than a bit of a disappointment. (Aron Fischer)
For fans of: Nick Cave, David Bowie, Joy Division, T. Rex, Public Image Ltd, The Cure
Surprisingly good. - By: J. Charlesworth, 15 May 2008 
A new Bauhaus album that actuallly sounds like Bauhaus was the last thing I expected when I signed up to receive this, but I was more than pleasantly surprised. Go Away White is a Bauhaus album, not merely a pale shadow of one, as so many bands produce after much less time (the Smashing Pumpkins being onesuch). It's just as dark & weirdly endearing as previous albums and, while I haven't yet listened to it as much as I have old classic tracks like She's in Parties, Dark Entries or Sanity Assassin, etc, tracks like Adrenalin & Undone definitely have definitely grown on me.
Don't go away.... - By: Lee Middlehurst, 02 May 2008 
Oh this album is SO good.....it's such a shame that Bauhaus have split up & won't be around to promote it.....oh, to hear these songs played live.... chanting "International Bullet Proof Talent"...
This is not an album to be forgotten. Yes, every previous Bauhaus LP had high points but this is a much much better studio album to finish Bauhaus's existance on than "Burning From the Inside".
There is nothing to suggest that the 25 year gap between that album & "Go Away White" have made any negative impact on these new songs' compositions.
This is every bit as good an album as Bauhaus's early recordings. And just as powerful.