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Showing posts with label 5-Relativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 5-Relativity. Show all posts

Friday, April 10, 2020

Doctors' Mob - Sophomore Slump

Name: Doctors' Mob
Album: Sophomore Slump
Year: 1987
Style: Punk, Alt-Rock, College Radio, "New Sincerity"
Similar Bands: Live, Redd Kross, REM, Gin Blossoms
"One-Word" Review: Jangly-Punk
Based Out Of: Austin, Texas
Label: Relativity Records
 Cover, Sleeve, Record
Back, Sleeve, Record
Sophomore Slump (1987)
  1. It's Up To you 2:10
  2. Sinking Fast 4:08
  3. Poison 3:30
  4. There's A Way 3:08
  5. Pat Blashill 3:03 /
  6. Let Me Try 2:37
  7. Gracious Brunette 5:08
  8. C2 E 2:45
  9. Wake Up 2:34
  10. I Don't Know 3:22
Album Rating (1-10): 7.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • Tommy (Ramone) Erdelyi - Producer (Ramones)
  • Steve Collier - Writing, Music, Vox, Guitar (Big Boys, Sidehackers, Rite Flyers)
  • Don Lamb - Guitar, Vox, Remixing (Street Punks, Rhyth, Raiders, Captain Crunch, The Psychedelic Mirage, The Reivers)
  • Glenn Benavides - Drums (Buick MacKane, Alejandro Escovedo)
  • Tim Swingle - Bass, Vox (Hand of Glory, F)
  • Mike Stewart - Engineer, Remixing
  • David Fox - Cover Photo
  • Linda Earley - Back Photo
  • John Hamilton - Cover Painting
  • David Bett - Art Direction
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band. Could be jangly just by the name and the year, however one of the band members has a Misfits shirt on, so that could make for more of a punk-like edge, also they look kinda crusty, so that may make for interesting music.

Album Review: Part of the "New Sincerity" musical movement (ragged clothes & melodic songs played heavily), but also embracing the sloppy Drunk Rock moniker (Show up Drunk, Show Up Late, Or Don't Show Up At All), this band was pulled in multiple genre directions from the speed of punk melodies and harmonies of power pop, and jangley guitars, kinda sounding like a raw Gin Blossoms. But at the base of it all, they were musicians making good songs. Theyt didn't do well with "next big thing" pressure and really just want to have fun. This is their second album, and they've said it is mostly left over material that didn't get recorded for the first.

Stand Out Track: C2 E

Links:
Allmusic
Discogs
Austin Chronicle '99
Ear Candy mag

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Durutti Column - Valuable Passage

Name: Durutti Column
Album: Valuable Passage
Year: 1986
Style: Ambient, Post-Punk
Similar Bands: Cocteu Twins, New Order, Joy Division, Soundtracks, Jesus & Mary Chain
"One-Word"Review: Lofty Dreamscape
Based Out Of: Manchester England
Label: Relativity Records, Factory UK, Important Record Distributors
Valuable Passage - Cover, Sleeves, Record
Valuable Passage - Back, Sleeves, Record

Valuable Passage (1986)
11. Prayer 3:21
12. Spent Time 4:09
13. Without Mercy (4-7) 6:44
14. Without Mercy (10-12) 7:04/
15. The Room 5:58
16. Blind Elevator Girl 10:04
17. Tomorrow 4:02
18. LFO Mod 6:21

Album Rating (1-10): 4.5

Members & Other Bands:
Manunagh Fleming - Cor Anglais, Oboe
Chris Nagle - Producer
Vini Reilly - Bass, Piano, Drum Programming, Guitar, Vocals, Producer (Ed Banger & the Nosebleeds, Morrissey, Pauline Murray & the Invisible Girls)
Caroline Lavelle - Cello
Bruce Mitchell - Percussion, Congas, Xylophone, Drum Programming (Alberto Y Lost Trios Paranoias)
Anthony H Wilson - Producer
Michael Johnson - Producer
Mervyn Fletcher - Sax
Richard Henry - Trombone (London Scratch Orchestra, Stan Sulzmann Big Band)
Tim Kellett - Trumpet (Olive, Simply Red)
Blaine Reininger - Violin, Viola (Falling Infinities, Tuxedomoon)
John Metcalfe - Viola (Duke Quartet, Kreisler String Orchestra, London Scratch Orchestra, Millennia Ensemble)
Phil "Snake Davies" - Sax
8vo- Design
Peter Saville - Design
Kevin Cummins - Photographer
Stuart Pickering - Producer

Unknown-ness: I’ve never heard of this band. And let me start with saying that I bought this album with only record 2 inside. The sleeve for the first record is there, but the record was not. So I can only review the second half of this double album. The design looks cold, desolate and synthesized. It reminds me of OMD’s early design: square, black and white.

Album Review: “Prayer” is actually the start to side 3, not the album beginning, but seeing as this is a compilation; the album is not created for cohesive play. But this starts out solemn and dark, and it reminds me of “Warning Sign” by Hail Social. It is frosty, magical, and dreamy. It is slow and meandering, with no specific direction. It feels like it could have been useful in 80’s soap operas, in some sort of sad, reminiscing montage. It ends in an uplifting synth keyboard clarity, as if the dreamer was about to wake up
“Spent Time” has New Order-ish bass line, but the icy synth in the background really dates the production style. There are hushed, whispery monotone vocals barely sung and mixed in the background, a bit like Joy Division. The song is very repetitive, so it feels like a long song.
“Without Mercy (4-7)” begins with a repetitive, two liquidy, echoing guitar hooks overlapping and some strings in the background. It sounds like slowed down Mega Man level music. A trumpet is added later on, further accenting the trickling, liquid feeling the song creates: like ice melting and the water running below the still solid surface. It feels like it could go on forever, but it eventually just fades out.
“Without Mercy (10-12)” starts with a trumpet salute to royalty walking into a thrown room. This too is in somewhat slow motion, but it feels like, to me, that it is telling the story of two young royals courting and dancing together after an evenings’ feast.

“The Room” has electric beam effects echo across the soundscape. And what sounds like a Theremin is played in the background, quite repetitively. More quiet, reserved vocals are added sparingly to the background, creating a delicate and futuristic lullaby. I’m recalling imagery from the Ice Palace in The Never Ending Story.
“Blind Elevator Girl” is a long instrumental song, beginning with another welcoming royalty hook on repeat. It begins to sound like a real pop or prog composition with steady drums, and horns, but once the drums disappear, they take the rock song template with them, and the song reverts back to a meandering thought that could coalesce at any time. This song is actually a little jazz-funky with its combination of bass, guitar and horn.
“Tomorrow” feels like a Ween guitar ballad at the beginning. It is folky, and acoustic sounding, while still in the presence of echo. Unwavering vocals lightly sing over the guitar and plucked string accompaniment. The somber voice is comfortable with dying, by admitting “tomorrow never comes.” And once the horn is added, the music takes on a sad Belle & Sebastian quality.
“LFO Mod” is a little more organic in its piano and shuffling synth background. It changes synth settings about a minute and half in to be more bubbly and liquid, and is accompanied by an acoustic guitar crying out a fluttering Santana melody. Later, a stereotypic sexy sax is layered over the warbling, watery keyboard. It is as if the background template is set, and guest instruments take their turns jamming out overtop, creating a different vibe with each transition. And it ends in a fade out.

Stand Out Track: Tomorrow

Links:

Friday, March 6, 2009

Gene Loves Jezebel - Immigrant

Name: Gene Loves Jezebel
Album: Immigrant
Year: 1985
Style: Gothic New Wave Metal
Similar Bands: Early U2, Suede, Alarm, The Church, Echo & Bunnymen, Placebo
"One Word" Review: meandering-whine-anthem-rock
Based Out Of: London, UK
Label: Relativity, Situation Two, Import Ant Record
Immigrant - Cover & Tape

Immigrant (1985)
  1. Always A Flame 4:29
  2. Shame 3:46
  3. Stephen 4:43
  4. Bruisies 3:38
  5. The Immigrant 3:55 /
  6. Cow 4:47
  7. Worth Waiting For 3:36
  8. The Rhino Plasty 5:05
  9. Deep South Wale 4:00
  10. Coal Porter 4:32
Album Rating (1-10): 4.5

Members & Other Bands:
Jay Aston - Vox, Guitar, Piano (Edith Grove, Immigrants)
Michael Aston - Vox
Ian Hudson - Guitar
Jean-Marc Lederman - Keys
Peter Rizzo - Bass
John Leckie - Producer
Marcus Gilvear - Drums
Chris Bell

Unknown-ness: I think I have actually heard of Gene Loves Jezebel before I bought this tape. They were one of the names I must have come across listening to 80’s new wave bands and I’m sure they were referenced somewhere. I know I did not buy the tape based on the album imagery, it looks drab and strained. It looks, with the color scheme of the pic and the font that it is trying to be gothic. But this is something I usually avoid, but somehow, it was in my tape collection when I went through the tapes I knew I had never really listened to. So here we go, with another album that I will listen to, and never be able to gain these minutes of life back.

Album Review: “Always A Flame” starts with its very tinny sounding guitar work, filled with echoy effects and overlaid with an equally echoy vocal. The song launched into a U2 song musically. The vocals are androgynous, as in I know they are guys, but gender is lost on the gothic, dark vocals. The strummidy guitar and driving drums, overlaid with soaring guitar work that almost cries out in eternal pain. After a fade out, a drum fill begins the next song, “Shame” with the same elements, soaring guitars and synth effects, somewhat shrill vocals and a steady somewhat disjointed rhythm. There is an inexplicable musical breakdown about 2:15 into the song, and it picks up with the same synth effects and very repetitive chorus. “Stephen” is a sprase musical soundscape. Perhaps a little like Wire’s slower stuff. The vocals are a slow droning. And the song meanders along with what sounds like an almost random drum beat and more crying guitars. It really feels like it goes on forever. “Bruises” is not listed on the tape’s cover. It only appears on the song listing on the tape itself. This is supposedly a single from their earlier album, so I don’t know what it is doing here. But it is a good song, the urgency in the vocals is unique, especially in the catchy chorus. But it, like the rest of the songs, does go on for a bit too long. “The Immigrant” rounds out the side with a whining string sound and the anthemic vocals & music mix. This is the type of music I really don’t understand, I don’t really like it, you can’t really dance to it, and it kinda just drones on and on. And it floats out as it ends, like it is carried on a passing wind.

“Cow” starts side two with a bit more punk structure, but it still comes of jangley and anthemic. The drum and bass beat is disjointed, almost Gang of Four-like. But the vocals and production of the guitars mask any kind of similarity that might have existed. Listening to the music is like a background activity…you can easily get caught up doing other things, not pay attention to it, come back to it, and it is in the same place you left it. There is a sort of wall of sound to their style too, that is impenetrable. “Worth Waiting For” has a strong Gang of Four bass-drum beat, and even comes close in style with its lead guitar too. But its chorus reverts back to a lazy melody, detracting from the quality of the song. The disjointed rhythm comes back in the next song “The Rhino Plasty” it is kind of all over the place in the beginning, and it settles for an eerie haunting vocal and watery guitar sound for a section, and reverts to a track that just sounds unfinished. The repetitive line “look at your nose” definitely stands out, and is a positive thing about the song. A relatively cool normal drum beat kicks off “Deep South Wale” and droning whine-tars drill their solo notes into your head one at a 15 second long time. The vocals feel like they are nervous and jittery, almost like the bands Clap Your Hands Say Yeah and Arcade Fire tried to copy. “Coal Porter” finally finishes the album, and I can’t say I’ll remember any of the tracks. The beginning of this track is wispy vocals, sounding like Tim Booth, from James. But unlike James, the song fails to pick up the pace. It maintains a steady sedentary drive. It picks up with jammy guitars and a general meh tempo. This might be a bit Gary Newman too, but I’m just guessing at that, as I don’t know much of his style.

Stand Out Track: Worth Waiting For

Links:
Wikipedia
Allmusic
Website (jay)
Website (michael)
Jay's Site
UK Myspace
Michael Interview
Cd Universe Album Info
Where the music takes you-Review
Musicians Guide Bio