There’s something quietly defiant about "Susan Sleepwalking" resurfacing forty years later, freshly remastered and unapologetically nocturnal. Not a comeback engineered for algorithms, but a slow reappearance - like a familiar figure you spot at dusk and aren’t sure is real until they pass close enough to breathe. The Arms of Someone New never chased the spotlight in 1985, and the album still doesn’t beg for attention now. It simply waits, confident that the right ears will wander by.
Formed by Steve Jones and Mel Eberle in the college-town half-light of Champaign-Urbana, The Arms of Someone New occupied a peculiar space even back then: adjacent to post-punk, flirting with college rock, but fundamentally invested in mood rather than momentum. "Susan Sleepwalking" was their opening statement, and it sounds like one - tentative, intimate, and stubbornly interior. The songs don’t rush. They drift, circle, hesitate. If this were cinema, it would be all lingering shots and meaningful silences.
The 2025 remaster doesn’t try to modernize the record, and that’s its greatest strength. Instead, it sharpens what was already there: the glassy synths, the soft mechanical pulse of early drum machines, guitars that feel less strummed than exhaled. Tracks like “St. Catherine” and “The Fisherman” retain their fragile gravity, suspended between romantic longing and emotional reserve. Vocals arrive veiled, never quite center stage, as if privacy itself were part of the arrangement.
What becomes clearer with time - and with better resolution - is how deliberate the restraint always was. These songs aren’t unfinished; they’re underlit. “With Louise” and “Susan Slept Here” don’t tell stories so much as suggest the existence of one just outside the frame. The effect is quietly addictive. You lean in, not because the band demands it, but because they refuse to spell things out.
The second disc, packed with demos, alternates, and rarities, acts like a sketchbook left open on a desk. You hear ideas branching, looping back, sometimes collapsing. It’s less about uncovering “lost classics” than about understanding the band’s internal logic - how repetition, minimalism, and atmosphere were not limitations, but chosen tools. Even at their roughest, these pieces carry the same inward pull.
Then there’s "Susan Dreaming", the third disc, which could have easily felt like an unnecessary appendix. Instead, it reframes the album through a new lens. Jones and Eberle reprocess the original material into an ambient-leaning electronic landscape that feels less like revisionism and more like afterimage. The melodies dissolve, rhythms evaporate, and what remains is pure residue - emotional dust, gently rearranged. It’s not nostalgic; it’s reflective, like revisiting a place you once lived in but now only recognize by smell and light.
What’s striking, listening now, is how little "Susan Sleepwalking" has aged - or perhaps how unconcerned it is with time altogether. It doesn’t sound retro so much as sidestepped by history. In an era obsessed with maximalism and confession-as-content, its quiet opacity feels almost radical. This is music that trusts ambiguity, that believes understatement can carry weight, that understands melancholy doesn’t need to announce itself loudly to linger.
"Susan Sleepwalking" remains what it always was: a record for insomniacs, wanderers, and people who prefer the long way home. The remaster doesn’t rewrite its story; it simply lets it speak a little more clearly in the dark. And if you miss its meaning on first listen, don’t worry - it was never meant to be fully awake anyway.