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Showing posts with label 1Y. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1Y. Show all posts

Monday, April 15, 2024

Yah Mos Def (The) - Plays Ugly for Suckers EP

Name: Yah Mos Def (The) 
Album: Plays Ugly for Suckers EP
Year: 2005
Style: Rap-Rock
Similar Bands: Armalite, Low Budgets, Beastie Boys, Suburban Hoodz, Zebrahead
"One-Word" Review:
Based Out Of: Philadelphia
Label: N/A

Cover, Back, CD Back, CD
Lyrics
Plays Ugly for Suckers EP (2005)
  1. New Direction 2:52
  2. Global Liberation Army 2:02
  3. I'm Gonna Be Under Your Bed 2:38
  4. Jive Like Jehu 2:29
  5. Scoty Biebin Owes Me Money 3:36
Album Rating (1-10): 6.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • Distro (Rick Mitchell) - Vox,  (The Clocks, S Prcess, Capital Action)
  • xB.Aewsomex (Brian Poerner) - Vox (Hour of the Star, Track Star Records
  • Joey Sweeney - Photo
  • Mr Mike Robinson (King God) - Production
  • Pink Skull - Production
  • Krash - Recording, Mastering (Krash Is King Shit)
Unknown-ness: I had seen the band's name around the Philly scene for Khyber (picture was from there) or North Star Bar shows back in the early-mid 00's but never saw them. So picked this up at AKA records for a dollar to see what I was missing, but never even put this in to listen to. So not sure, but i imagine it will be some interesting high intensity synth collages, jokey stuff, and maybe an indie take on hip-hop, as the name hints.

Album Review: The Philly duo loves their classic punk and in this outfit, lays rap vocals, many Philly-centric, over the well worn tracks. Then persuaded to change their name from the rapper with the same name, YMD began with one album in 2008. This EP precedes it. The duo reunited in 2014, too. And recently, Brian Poerner became the CEO of North American's Diadaro market (Feb'24).

Included in the local lyrics added are Mike Schmidt, Killtime, Bryn Mawr, (Joey) Sweeney and all the neighborhoods as well as some dated lyrics about The Wire and borrowed lines from Ween and Bikini Kill. The dual lyricists do call back to the Beastie Boys with their different intensities, pitches and rhyme styles. And as advertised, the rapid fire lyrics overtop guitar loops work as well as any synth sample.

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Yellow Magic Orchestra - s/t

Name: Yellow Magic Orchestra
Album: s/t
Year: 1979
Style: Chip Music, Electronic Pop, Techno
Similar Bands: Hot Butter, Chromolodeon, The Advantage, Ghostwriters, Bruce Haack, Cornelius, Kraftwerk
"One-Word" Review: Atari Disco
Based Out Of: Tokyo Japan
Label: Horizon, A&M, ALFA Records
 Cover, Record
Back, Record
Yellow Magic Orchestra (1979)

  1. Computer Game "Theme from the Circus" 6:38
  2. Firecracker 0:02
  3. Simoon 6:28
  4. Cosmic Surfin' 4:27
  5. Computer Game "Theme From Invader" 1:00 /
  6. Yellow Magic (Tong Poo) 6:20
  7. La Femme Chinoise 6:05
  8. Bridge Over Troubled Music 1:00
  9. Mad Pierrot 4:22

Album Rating (1-10): 8.0

Members & Other Bands:

  • Harry Hosono - Producer
  • Kunihiko Murai - Executive Producer
  • Tommy Li Puma - Supervisor
  • Ryuichu Sakamoto - Keys, Electronics, Percussion, Orchestration, Happy End, others)
  • Yukihiro Takahashi - Drums, Percussion, Electronics, Vox (Sadistic Mika Band, others)
  • Haruomi Hosono - Bass, Electronics, Keys, Arrangements (Happy End, Yosui Inoue, Osamu Kitajima many  more)
  • Hideki Matstake - Micro Computer Programmer (Isao Tomita, Akhihabara Electric Circus, Beat Musik, NML: No More Landmine, Oriental mechanic Band, Purple Project)
  • Shunichi Hashimoto - Vox (Izumi Kobayashi)
  • Masayoshi Takanaka - Electric Guitar (Bacco, Brush!?, Flied Egg, Sadistic Mika Band, Sadistics)
  • Tomoko Nunoi - Sexy Vox
  • Nori Yoshizawa - Engineer
  • Atsushi Saito - Engineer
  • Al Schmidt - Mixing
  • Mike Reese - Mastering
  • Shunsuke Miyazumi - Recording Coordinator
  • Roland Young - Art Direction
  • Amy Nagasawa - Design
  • Chuck Beeson - Design
  • Lou Beach - Cover Art
  • Masayoshi Sukita - Back Cover

Unknown-ness: At the time of buying this record, i had not heard of them. The image looks like it is going to be Asian computer sci-fi: with the wires pouring out of the sunglasses-laden Geisha's head. From a PC standpoint, the name seems to be a little racist, amplified by the yellow highlighted suits on the back of the record. But what do I know?

Album Review: So YMO is one of the first bands to include the electronic noised from what sound like Atari games into modern music, which leans disco for the time. Today, it's referred to chip music: folks that include 8 bit sound into their compositions. Their pioneering expands beyond that into J-Pop, Electro-Pop, SynthWave and techno. Their name is apparently satire of Japan's obsession with Black magic in the late 70's. The idea was to fuse oriental exotica with modern electronics. A section of Simoon sounds a lot like Ween's Mexican instrumental Fiesta.

Stand Out Track: Computer Game "Theme from the Circus", Firecracker

Links:
Wiki
Spotify
Discogs
Allmusic
Website
Vice
Facebook
Moog Music
Fact Mag

Thursday, March 12, 2020

Yachts - S.O.S.

Name: Yachts
Album; S.O.S.
Year: 1979
Style: New Wave
Similar Bands: Devo, Majik, 3-D, Romantics, XTC, Squeeze, the A's
One-Word Review: Spinning-Top-Bouncy-Anxious-Pop
Based Out Of: Liverpool, UK
Label: Polydor
 Cover & Record
Back & Record
S.O.S. (1979)
  1. Yachting Type 2:49
  2. Semaphore Love 2:40
  3. Love You, Love You 3:07
  4. Tantamount to Bribery 2:16
  5. Mantovani's Hits 3:05
  6. Box 202 3:28 /
  7. Look Back in Love 2:20
  8. Then and Now 3:50
  9. I Can't Stay Long 3:52
  10. In a Second 3:19
  11. Heads Will Turn 3:15
  12. Suffice To Say (live) 4:17
Album Rating (1-10): 10

Members & Other Bands:
  • Martin Watson - Gutair, Vox (Albert Dock, Alber & The Cod Warriors, Chuddy Nuddies)
  • Henry Priestman - Keys, Vox (Albert Dock, Alber & The Cod Warriors, Bette Bright & The Illuminations, Its Immaterial, Wah!, The Christians, Chuddy Nuddies)
  • Martin Dempsey - Bass, Vox (Albert Dock, Alber & The Cod Warriors, Pink Military, Chuddy Nuddies, Mel-O-Tones)
  • Bob Bell - Drums, Vox (Albert Dock, Alber & The Cod Warriors, Chuddy Nuddies)
  • Richard Gottehrer - Producer
  • Lawrence Diana - Mixing
  • Nick Walker - Asst Mixing
  • Richard Boote - Fire Extinguisher
  • Malcome (Able Images) - Sleeve
  • Clive Langer - Producer (look back in love)
  • Tom Sheehan - Front Cover
  • Bob Gruen - Pics
Unknow-ness: Never heard of them. Like the collage of images and thematic Yachting artwork. Looks like there is a lot of fun, goofy energy in this band, so i am hoping that translates to neurotic new wave.

Album Review: And the music does not disappoint. It's albums like this that keep me buying dollar records to see what lost gems there are out there. The anxious, jittery keyboards remind me of the A's and Elvis Costello's exciting stuff at times, and the harmonizing and fast tempo would have made them a fun band live I imagine. Interesting to see Clive Langer as a producer on a track, which fits their style, along side acts like Dexy's Midnight Runners and Madness. Apparently an early incarnation of this band opened for Sex Pistols in '76 or so, and their first gig as Yachts was supporting Elvis Costello. This SOS album is the US release, and was self titled in the UK.

Stand Out Track: Heads Will Turn [*]

Links:
Discogs

Friday, January 2, 2015

Paul Young & Street Band - London Dilemma

Name: Paul Young & Street Band
Album: London Dilemma
Year: 1985 (1979-1978)
Style: Pub Rock, Power Pop, some Disco
Similar Bands: Elvis Costello, Squeeze, Walter Egan, Dave Edmunds, Dire Straits, Steve Forbert, (disco) Bee Gees, Supertramp, Airwaves
"One-Word" Review: Power Pub Disco
Based Out Of: Luton, UK
Label: Complete Records, PolyGram, Logo
 London Dilemma - Cover & Back
London Dilemma - Inner Gate Fold
London Dilemma (1985)
  1. Mirror Star 4:35
  2. It's No Problem 5:12
  3. Picture Book 4:35
  4. Starry Eyed 3:31
  5. Dilemma 7:07 /
  6. One Good Reason 5:09
  7. Here Comes that Man 5:45
  8. Call Me Soon 5:24
  9. Slaughterhouse Five 7:11
  10. Hold On 3:34 /
  11. You're All I Need 3:58
  12. Happy Families 4:00
  13. Truth Without Lies 3:25
  14. Things Are Never Quite What They Seem 3:36
  15. It Takes a Thief 3:42
  16. Toast 4:30 /
  17. One More Step 3:19
  18. Any Decisions 3:52
  19. Mystery 4:35
  20. His Finest Hour 3:53
  21. Love Sign 4:28
  22. Loud Music 2:52
Album Rating (1-10): London (1978) 8.5
Dilemma (1979) 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
Paul Young - Vox, Harmonica, Percussion, Keys (Q-Tips, Kat Kool & the Kool Cats, Los Pacaminos)
Chaz Jankel - Guitar, Keys, Producer (Ian Druy & The Blockheads, Byzantium, Jonathan Kelly's Outside, Kilburn & The High Roads, Pure Gold, The Secret Police)
Jools Holland - Guitar, Keys (Squeeze, Eddie & The Hot Rods,The Count Bishops, Roger Waters, Fine Young Cannibals )
Trevor Rabin - Guitar, Keys (Dsco Rock Machine, Freedom's Children, Hot R.S., Rabbitt, The Tee Cee's, Yes)
Ken Kim - Art Direction, Album Graphics
Mick Pearl - Bass, Vox (Q-Tips)
Jon Tiven - Compiler, Liner Notes
Chaulkie - Drums, Percussion, Glockenspeil (Mr. Big)
John Rollo - Engineer
Roger Kelly - Lead Guitar, Percussion, Vox, Producer (Starry Eyed and Laughing)
Randy Kling - Mastering
John Gifford - Producer, Guitar (Q-Tips)

Unknown-ness: So I have never heard of Paul Youn & The Street Band. The pink toned photo of Paul on the cover would seem to note some energy in the songs, and the band picture also on the front and in the gate fold, looks like they might be some sort of New Wave band. I am also drawn to the idea that this will be some sort of singer songwriter Bruce Springsteen style band, but that is just because this band follows the same Bruce & E-Street Band formula.

Album Review: So Paul had two major genre periods in his career, with his second, lighter pop side gathering more popularity, with the height being his song “Every time I Go Away” (at least here in the states). This is part of the New Wave Pop/Rock genre similar to Squeeze. This double LP is a compilation of all the Streetband material recorded. The title “Paul Young & the” was added for name recognition in the wake of Young’s popularity as a solo artist. The band was made up of people from Squeeze, Ian Dury & The Blockheads and Yes.

“Mirror Star” begins with power pop guitars and a chugging bass line. The vocals are like a more reigned in Rod Stewart. The chorus has a backing harmonic choir. There is a steady energy to the song, even with the soaring guitar filled instrumental, it never tires nor gets out of line. The song pleas for the listeners to pump up the volume when he comes on the radio. The song does go on for a little too long to be a pop single, as it changes up the melody toward the end with a pounding ending that fades out.
“It's No Problem” fades in and out, sounding like Who Are You. The vocals are punctuated by power guitar chords and drum beats. The song combines the elements, but never really gathers full momentum. The end finally grows to some intensity, as the song drives into the instrumental, which lets up on the gas a bit. After cycling through the lighter sections, the song finishes with the power section.
“Picture Book” is bouncy with nervous energy, and the lead guitar is single held power pop notes. The chorus has a very fun playful, jittery melody, which contrasts with the smoothly sung verse. Two minutes in, and this would be a complete song. It continues to soldier on, with a guitar heavy instrumental bridge, bringing us back to another verse. It is a fun rollercoaster of a melody to follow along with.
“Starry Eyed’s” pounding drums and power chords at the outset converge together after a pause to form an anthemic and dreamy pop song, with little elements of Queen/Bee Gees harmonies thrown in. There are still power squeals of guitars throughout the song, but this could have been recorded for Young in his lighter second half career. The song finishes out as if the record is skipping, repeating the title over and over.
“Dilemma” begins with a keyboard, and it immediately feels like Jools Holland’s influence. It is cartoony, and repetitive. After a minute, the watery rhythm guitar meats with an angular bass line, and the bouncy pop song truly begins. The 3 minute mark features a dreamy breakdown with dueling acoustic guitar plucked notes and chords. The soaring guitar solo comes in to replace the singular notes, and the tempo stops abruptly to revert back to the head banging single chord play like an alarm. The song comes full circle, and decides to end with an extended instrumental of the dreamy songscape, punctuated with the computerized keyboards at the end.

“One Good Reason” begins with a disco beat and bass line. And the Bee Gees influence is felt strongly here between the drum beat and the harmonized, layered vocals. It is repetitive and dancey, and not even the echoing electric guitar cant zip up the jump suit’s revealing chest hair line.  Like most of the songs, this one goes on for at least a minute too long too, losing attention with the guitar solo.
“Here Comes that Man” continues the disco vibe with stings setting the vibe in the background and wah-wah guitars. A marching, building drum lead bridge leads us to a flat disco chorus. I forgot I was listening to the song for a bit there, as a long, drawn out guitar solo comes in to again try to out play the disco back beat, and it succeeds for part of the time, until the bass, keys, and drums change tempo in the background. Eventually the production team gives up and just fade the song out
“Call Me Soon” is not quite disco, but it is a light, dreamy, mystical lullaby. The chorus of “It’s Not Tonight” is smooth and harmonized, but is not all that interesting. An angelic chorus ends the song with church bells and scattered guitar playing, which carries on for quite a while until it stops abruptly.
“Slaughterhouse Five” begins quietly with vocals and piano. It reminds me of a Ben Folds Ballad. Power guitar chords kick in, and the song takes on a new age/prog feel with the vocal melody maintained. Suddenly momentum shifts to the bass and rhythm guitar, and it becomes a bouncy piano driven . Like a Brand X, the style shifts to acid jazz fusion with the bass and drums pounding in different directions, and the lead electric guitar trying to guide the way. The funky interplay ends, and a driving power rock section takes over. This is a very theatrical song, with its changing themes, intensities and genres.  And with an eventual fade out, it ends. This is where the Dilemma album ends too.
“Hold On” feels like a little like No Matter What with the first couple of notes. Then a synthesized whoa-whoa guitar counts out the rolling melody. There is a nice La La La supporting chorus for a couple of sections, and a bunch of catchy bits strung together. This is a non-album single

“You're All I Need” begins their first album, 1978’s London. The song fades up with some arcade effects and a nice Bee Gees esq harmonized verse chugs along, asserting its Bee-Gees-i-ness with the held note chorus. The power pop guitar is not as bold as the second album, but it is crisper and simpler, which translates to being more effective. But the main catchy part of the song is the Squeeze “Another Nail In My Hear” like bass line.
“Happy Families” has a jangly guitar loop over a steady bass and driving drums. The vocals are polite and smooth. The vocals (which are for the first time, very British sounding) to instrument call and response interactions create a playful chorus.
“Truth Without Lies” feels like a sitcom theme song in the beginning with the slow changing guitar chords. The song gains momentum, and follows a power pop chord pattern. The vocals gain emotion as they progress, reminding me a little of The Who.
“Things Are Never Quite What They Seem” transitioned pretty smoothly from the prior song, and takes a laid back, breezy, jazzy tone. It has a delicate bouncy tone, and skates along a smooth jazz musak blended with Van Morrison “Moondance” tightrope.
“It Takes a Thief” drives in right away with power chords and rhythm guitar. The vocals are excited in a short time we are smacked in the face with the release of the chorus, reminding me a little of song structure from Bram Tchaikovsky. The song is not bad, but it lacks an authentic energy and needs a little more focus. By the time it gains the needed energy, it feeds it into the lead guitar, and the vocals are buried underneath.
“Toast” was a b-side to Hold On, which received more airplay by DJ’s and ended up being a jokey hit. It starts with a wood block skatting drum beat with vocals spoken overtop. A jangly guitar is added next, followed by a bass line, and the words still speak about making toast. The vocals become a rap, reminding me a little of Difford’s style. The rapping words are spoken matter of factly, right into your ear, as if the singer is sitting right next to you. And all on topic of things related to toast. It builds to a nice place and is light, airy and delight. It is a little Monty Pythonishin its absurdity and amount of time allotted to one silly topic. Even the presentation, has a little jazzy skatting vocally. The song could have very well ended at the 2:45 mark, but it continues on for another minute forty-five of more toast related storytelling, including spreading sound effects and atomic housewife humming. The utterances of “Toast!” and the energetic bass line keep this song going, and keep it from wearing out its welcome. And it ends with the cops arriving for the toast is eaten  

“One More Step” starts out as a fun bouncy powerpop rock song. I am taken slightly out of character, like a Mellencamp Middle American tune. But by the time the chorus rolls around, the vibe changes direction back to Squeeze. From the second chorus, the song builds very nicely into the instrumental breakdown, which transition into a wonderful new rapid section that slips right back into the catchy chorus hook.
“Any Decisions” carries the Squeeze like vibe along strong with this song. It starts fun and bouncy, which settles into a dragging bit that is useful to build momentum. The tone shifts slightly to the bridge, that features and lots of effects twinkle which leads right into a total Squeeze chorus.
“Mystery” starts with a bit of dialogue, then a ringing guitar and a scream. The familiar mysterious bass and drum beat from film is added for effect, and the backwards Squeeze harmonized melodies are used, and the build of the bridge is good, but they lose sight of the song, adding too much camp with a slow suspenseful breakdown. It is very theatrical/musical, adding more vocal samples over the eerily breakdown, and it reminds me a little of Split Enz. It breaks out to come back to the verse for one final run through the now familiar melody. And it ends with more dialogue
“His Finest Hour” continues with the cinematic feel of a song, with a building, melody and a slew of extraneous flourishes and musical ideas injected. Granted it comes off as a well-crafted song, and they don’t strip away from the song, but they make the track very dense. The melody in the breakdown is interesting because it is not predictable in its melodic sense. There was a lot more creativity in the band for this album that their second, and even more than what is on the first half of this record.
“Love Sign” cuts back to the smoky nighttime jazz city street of a loungy smooth jazz track. Quite a change of direction, because at the chorus, there are elements of rhythm guitar Disco and a dancefloor bass beat. The keyboard sound that adds to the smooth jazz element is quite dated.
“Loud Music” ends this compilation album, as their first record. With the first pounding notes and guitar riffs, I’m reminded of XTC. But the vocals and production from there are not as catchy or simple. The chorus, however, is extremely catchy, in a surprising rolling two part melody. As the momentum builds, the song explodes, noted with a literal explosion to end the record. 

Stand Out Track: Dilemma: Picture Book
London: Any Decision, One More Step, Loud Music

Links:
Website
Wiki
Allmusic
Discogs
LONDON - Full Album
DILEMMA - Full Album

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Yanks - Made in the States

Name: Yanks
Album: Made in the States
Year: 1984
Style:Rock
Similar Bands:Alarm, Bluebells, Hooters
"One-Word" Review:Made-for-Arena-PowJang-Pop
Based Out Of: San Francisco, CA
Label: DTI Records
Made in the States - Cover & Record
Made in the States - Back & Record
Made in the States - Mail In Postcard - Back
 Made in the States - Mail In Postcard - Front
Made in the States(1984)
  1. Tell Me No Lies 3:29
  2. Reason to Try 3:26
  3. We Call Each Other Mine 3:11 /
  4. Run 3:13
  5. Searchin' 3:50
  6. Made in the States 4:18
Album Rating (1-10): 5.5

Members & Other Bands:
Paul Zahn - Drums (SVT, Flamin' Groovies)
Steve Aliment - Bass, Vox
Jack Johnson - Guitars, Vox (Das Block, Flamin' Groovies, Roky Erickson)
Owen Masterson - Vox, Guitar
Orb Company - Management
Karl Derfler - Producer, Engineer
Craig Luckin - Assistant
Derek Tracy - Executive Producer
Bernadette Tevlin - Design
Rex Rystedt - Photo(front)
Phil Gray - Back Photo

Unknown-ness: I’ve never heard of this band, but it looks like a bunch of gritty rock and rollers. Maybe with a power pop lean. Now, the date is a little newer, 1984 so it might not be as raw as the late 70’s early 80’s could be, but with only 6 songs, it is worth the try. I like the generalness of the artwork, and the fact that you could send in a post card to get a 20x26 poster of the band is a pretty cool promotion.

Album Review: One of Yanks’ founders, Jack Casady played in both Jefferson Airplane and Hot Tuna, and had left another San Fran Power Pop group, SVT to form the Yanks with Zahl. He ended up leaving the group before they recorded this album.

“Tell Me No Lies” fades up with jangley guitar, which quickly turns to a heavy power guitar march, reminding me of the Alarm. Its breathy and rhaspy, more spoken word than sung. The angular metal guitars creek and scream as if played out on a barren, windswept landscape.
“Reason to Try” starts with strummed jangley guitars and a 3-note synth hook. The vocals have more melody in them, and are definitely sung more than the opening track, but the song comes off as missing energy and is stagnate. There is even a harmonized call and response vocal section in the chorus which is interesting, but does not save the song.
“We Call Each Other Mine” has a bluesy power riff at the outset, and is countrified in a pub-rock sense. The short chorus that takes the song’s name sake in repeat is the catchiest part of the record, but it still feels like a generic mid-80’s college radio jangle-pop song.

“Run” continues the momentum from the first side with another driving song with a dialed down, fabricated energy. This sounds like an alternate take on “We Call Each Other Mine.” The lyrics are spoken in cadence over the sparse verse. There is a little more energy in the chorus, but it feels forced, tired, and fake.
“Searchin'” starts out bland, and enfolds itself in a skipping jangley melody jog. The chorus is sung a bit “in the round” as the multiple voices wrap over themselves singing “searching for the one.” It is a fairly unjremarkable song, with a steady pulse marching drum rhythm, systematic breakdowns and meh solos. It just feels like they rehearsed these songs to death, and the music that resulted was mechanically perfected by the 96th take.
“Made in the States” is trying to be a middle America blue collar workers unite power anthem. There is a lot of space in the song. This is a half-hearted version of The A’s “Woman’s Got the Power.” The song never really leaves intro status, and feels like it should be building to something more than a lead in. 

Stand Out Track: We Call Each Other Mine

Links:

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

(the) Young Fresh Fellows - Totally Lost~ Electric Bird Digest*

Name: (the) Young Fresh Fellows
Album: Totally Lost~, Electric Bird Digest*
Year: 1988~, 1991*
Style: College Radio Rock
Similar Bands: Melodic Sonic Youth, Screaming Trees, Replacements, Meat Puppets, Guided By Voices, Camper Van Beethoven~, Ramones*, Dead Milkmen* Pansy Division*, They Might Be Giants* Apples In Stereo*
"One-Word" Review: Smart-Allecky-Nerd-Snob-music.
Based Out Of: Seattle, WA
Label: Frontier Records~*, BMG*
Totally Lost - Cover & Back & Tape
Totally Lost - Liner Notes & Tape
Electric Bird Digest - Cover & Back
Electric Bird Digest - Liner Notes & CD

Totally Lost (1988)
  1. Everything's Gonna Turn Out Great 3:59
  2. Failure 2:50
  3. The Universal Trendsetter 2:17
  4. Don't Look at My Face, You Might See What I Mean 2:15
  5. I'd Say That You Were Upset 1:59
  6. No Help At All 4:19 /
  7. No One Really Knows 2:57
  8. Little Softy 3:22
  9. Take My Brain Away 2:49
  10. Celebration 3:05
  11. Picky Piggy 2:09
  12. Totally Lost 4:14
Electric Bird Digest (1991)
  1. The Telephone Tree 2:29
  2. Sittin On A Pitchfork 2:34
  3. Looking Around 2:57
  4. Hillbilly Drummer Girl 3:02
  5. Whirlpool 3:48
  6. Once In A While 3:35
  7. The Teen Thing 0:42
  8. Thirsty 2:30
  9. Fear Bitterness and Hatred 2:41
  10. Hard To Mention 2:59
  11. Tomorrow's Gone (And So Are You) 2:24
  12. Evening 3:37
  13. There's A Love 4:39
  14. Swiftly But Gently 3:32
Album Rating (1-10): ~8.0 *9.0
Members & Other Bands:
Chuck Carrol - Guitar~
Kurt Bloch - Guitar, Vox* (Fastbacks, Sgt. Major)
Scott McCaughey - Guitar, Piano, Organ, Vox *~ (Minus 5, REM, Baseball Project, KMRIA, Lowe Beats)
Jim Sangster - Bass, Guitar, Drums*~ (Sgt. Major, Lowe Beats, Trip Wires)
Tad Hutchinson - Drums, Vox*~, Back Cover Painting~(Chris & Tad)
Butch Vig - Producer, Engineer*
Mr. Colson - Engineer*
Marty Perez - Photography*
Doug Erb - Art Direction*
Bruce "Cecil" Louden - Piano*
Tina Nielsen - Idiotic Outfitting*
Jeff from Spooner - Farfisa Use*
Kim Fastback - Duff's Bass*
Conrad Uno - Producer~
David B. Greenberger - Cover Painting~
Rosanne Olson - Back Cover Photo~
Wendy Sherman - Design~
John Golden - Mastering~

Unknown-ness: Being a fan of They Might Be Giant, I heard of these guys in the lyric “She doesn’t have to have her Young Fresh Fellows tapes back, now” from the song “Twisting.” And that was enough for me to be curious. So I picked up the tape some time ago, and the CD later used, but I don’t really remember listening to them, so I don’t actually know what they sound like. Although from the cover of EBD, they look Weird Al silly. And this supports my image of them, just from being mentioned in the TMBG song. Some of their song titles also support this silliness too. I’m guessing they are a fun rock band, similar to the Dead Milkmen, TMBG, and perhaps even a little Ween. But what do I know?

Album Review:
Not knowing the singer was part of the Young Fresh Fellows, I’ve seen him and the Minus 5 open for Robyn Hitchcock some years ago. I remember that I liked them enough to keep an eye out for an album of theirs used.

~“Everything's Gonna Turn Out Great” is a dark, murky rock and roll song. Juxtaposed against the optimistic title, the song pulls in two directions of musical heaviness and lyrical lightness. The singing reminds me a bit of Sonic Youth while the music reminds me of Screaming Trees. The background singing of “Everything” reminds me of Flansburg of TMBG. Eventually it loses the darkness and just rocks out for a long repetition of the chorus. But it ends with one final dark section
“Failure” is much more poppy and typical pop-rock. Which again juxtaposes two themes, just in the opposite way: happy music, and depressed lyrics. The vocals are sung more than the first song, and are a little smoother too.
“The Universal Trendsetter” rocks from the get go, with fast paced, driving music and energetic lyrics, a bit of wackiness like John Schmersal from Enon.
“Don't Look at My Face, You Might See What I Mean” is a folky-rock song, maybe even a bit country, too. Similar to Camper Van Beethoven & Cracker
“I'd Say That You Were Upset” features horns and bops pretty quickly along with fast singing and a bouncy groove.
“No Help At All” begins orchestrally, and it turns into a slow paced slumping strut, reminding me of the Meat Puppets. The harmonized chorus is a catchy little hook. There are some lead guitar flares and the horns add to the chorus, but the basic tempo never grows or adjusts.

“No One Really Knows” is sung like an acoustic Dead Milkmen punk song. The entire rolling melody is catchy and it differentiates with slight changes in pitch to keep it interesting. It does tend to become a bit repetitive toward the end of the song, but it is a good hook. It feels like Hoboken music, or perfect for college radio.
“Little Softy” begins hard, and the vocals are uttered poetically, but without melody over the chugging bass and drums, with lead guitar fills added here and there. I can see a comparison to Guided by Voices here.
“Take My Brain Away” is quietly sung like a campfire folk-ballad with steady drums and slide guitar.
“Celebration” is a fun, nasally, bouncy pop song, similar to “No One Really Knows.” There are lots of little hooks in the vocals that remind me of oldies rock and roll singles. The verses build well, and the delivery is a short couple of notes. The word celebration is run into the ground at the end, with different inflections in the notes, which makes it interesting, but still repetitive.
“Picky Piggy” begins with a renaissance harpsichord sound, but then it picks up the pace and rocks out, sounding a bit like the Lemonheads, or a lighter Husker Du. The bass line would fit right in on a Violent Femmes record. It is a very fun and pleasant song.
“Totally Lost” had a bit of the 70’s Kinks, southern jug band sound to it with its stomp drums, umpa bouncy bass and twangy guitar. The song winds down like a watch losing its spring tension.


*“The Telephone Tree” is a loud, noisy rock song with crashing cymbals and a catchy chorus. It is straightforward in its construction, with a lead guitar instrumental break. And it ends with a second set of instrumental work with a simple line quietly buried underneath.
“Sittin On A Pitchfork” sounds just like Pansy Division in vocal style and musical production. It is short, very catchy pop/rock. The instrumentation is turned down in trade for loud, clear vocals. But the music is what the vocals parallel and carry this song along very well
“Looking Around” follows up “Pitchfork” well with a simple pop rock vocal melody. It picks up and becomes pop-punk. It is very driving and has a great momentum. It also has some great synth effects in the background. But where “Pitchfork” is simple and repetitive, this song is more detailed and complex. The verse builds extremely well into the chorus delivery.
“Hillbilly Drummer Girl” is simple, vocal melody driven song that is part ballad, at least in comparison to the other songs here. Some of the vocal eccentricities remind me of the Ramones, as well as They Might Be Giants.
“Whirlpool” this song is more meandering, like their previous album’s material. It kinda floats by without shape or structure. The chorus is vague and does not really stand out, except for the fact that after it, the melody returns to the verse. His vocals here are a little reminiscent of Apples In Stereo.
“Once In A While” starts with fuzzy guitars and picks up the melody with calm smooth vocals, again similar to Apples in Stereo. It ends with an odd, chaotic drum fill, completed with a last loud strum.
“The Teen Thing” is a parody of any oldie from 1950. It reminds me of That Thing You Do, but a little less catchy, and much less produced.

On “Thirsty” I’m immediately reminded of Apples in Stereo again. The song structure is identical and the vocal melody is the same. There is even a backwards, psychedelic section that changes things up a bit from the norm.
“Fear Bitterness and Hatred” has a loud, rocking Dinosaur Jr. esq beginning. From there, it is not as quirky as Dino Jr. It is not as catchy as the rest of the album, as the melody does not flow into catchiness as you can hear on the other melodies. This is a more alternative, guitar based song.
“Hard To Mention” starts off right away with a Buzzcocks style electric guitar hook. And from there the guitar chugs along behind quiet, calm loving pop lyrics. The guitar returns for the instrumental bridge. It ends with 20 seconds to spare, where there is a weird song bit, almost as if they recorded it over a different song, and just left the ending there.
“Tomorrow's Gone (And So Are You)” begins very metal-ish, but then the vocals soften it up with their light, nasally polite cadence. The song is fast paced, but the vocals provide the perfect balance to the loud music. The vocals remind me of the previously reviews Fabulous Fondas as well. The chours is a good bit of call and response vocals from a shouting choir behind the lead vocals.
“Evening” is a concert opening song, with a dark, marching beat and metal lead guitar stunts. This would be more character on Totally Lost, rather than here, but it just shows that they still have that part to their music repertoire. On some of the verse sections, he changes it up and sings smoothly, but the majority it is the spoken/sung genre of singing. It ends with heavy guitar chugging suddenly.
“There's A Love” has a whiny electric wha-wha guitar introduction. But the song simplifies itself and transforms into a new wave ballad with monotone vocals and the whiny guitar chugging along too. Toward the end of the song, the lead guitar overtakes the wha-wha rhythm guitar and goes off on a shredding spree.
“Swiftly But Gently” is a nice middle level song, part shoe-gazing pop, part rock with monotone smooth repetitive vocals with a simple melody that is like a children’s nursery rhyme.

Stand Out Tracks: ~Picky Piggy
*Looking Around

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