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Showing posts with label 2spacepop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2spacepop. Show all posts

Friday, April 10, 2020

Raybeats - Roping Wild Bears

Name: Raybeats
Album: Roping Wild Bears
Year: 1981
Style: Instrumental Surf
Similar Bands:Man or Astroman?, Ventures, B-52s, Los Straitjackets
"One-Word" Review: Space Surfing Spy Soundtrack
Based Out Of: NYC
Label: Don't Fall Off the Mountain
Cover & Record
Record & Back
Roping Wild Bears (1981)
  1. Searching 3:34
  2. Rise and Fall of Flingel Bunt 2:54  (Shadows cover)/ 
  3. Tight Turn 4:00
  4. Tone Zone 3:37
Album Rating (1-10): 8.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • Pat Irwin - Sax, Acetone, Guitar (8-Eyed Spy, Command V, B-52s, Foolish Virgins, PI Power Trio, Love Tractor, Lydia Lunch, The dB's, Rage to Live, Lucky Pierre )
  • Jody Harris - Guitar (James Chance & the Contortions, Loose Screws, Band of George, The Golden Palominos, Syd Straw, Matthew Sweet, ImpLOG, James White & The Blacks, Lester Bangs, Colin Bryce, John Zorn, Victoria Williams, Richard Hell, Freedy Johnston)
  • Danny Amis - Bass, Guitar (Los Straitjackets, Overtones, Thee Phantom 5ive)
  • Don Christensen - Drums (James Chance & the Contortions, Philip Glass, Cadillacs, New Action Army, Loose Screws, Band of George, impLOG, James White & the Blacks, Angel Dean & the Zephyrs, Change of Heart, Waitresses, Bush Tetras, Laurie Spiegel)
  • Dan Dryden - Engineer
  • Trace Rosel - Cover Credit
  • Lisa Rosel - Cover Credit
  • Joe Stevens - Back Cover Photo
  • Bob Singerman - Mgmt
  • Ruth Polsky - Special Thanks
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band. But based on the album name and cover art, I get the impression that they are wacky, perhaps embarrassingly so. So I imagine this will be some sort of silly nerdy new wave band, like Pet Clams or the Rave Ups.

Album Review: This is an ep of 4 instrumental tracks, that feature elements of blues and soul, surf, and spy themes. Allmusic is quoted as calling them "the soundtrack for a James Bond movie directed by David Lynch" and that is spot on. Pat Irwin went on to scoring TV and Film, including his big break with the quality work he did on cartoon Rocko's Modern life.

Stand Out Track: Tone Zone

Links:
Wiki
Discogs
Bar-None
Allmusic
Tone Zone  Tribute page
rate your music
Bedford & Bowery
Please Kill Me - Pat Irwin

Monday, February 8, 2016

FM - City of Fear

Name: FM
Album: City of Fear
Year: 1980
Style: Space Rock, Prog
Similar Bands: City Boy, Rush, Yes, Styx, Journey
One Word Review: Watered Down Power Prog.
Based Out Of: Toronto, Canada
Label: Passport
 City of Fear - Cover & Back, Record
City of Fear - Gatefold, Record
City of Fear (1980)
  1. Krakow 4:37
  2. Power 3:28
  3. Truth or Consequences 4:13
  4. Lost and Found 4:25
  5. City of Fear 5:07 /
  6. Surface to Air 5:18
  7. Up to You 4:21
  8. Silence 3:22
  9. Riding the Thunder 4:06
  10. Nobody at All 4:09
Album Rating (1-10): 6.5

Members & Other Bands:
Larry Fast - Producer (David Pritchard, Synergy, Peter Gabriel, Fire Inc, Tony Levin Band)
Ben Mink - Violin, Mandolin, Vox (Murray McLaughlin, KD Lang, Heart, Raffi, American Flyer discogs page)
Cameron Hawkins - Lead Vox, Synth, Bass, Piano (David Pritchard, Ken Ramm, Nash the Slash, Kick Axe, Marty Simon, Ed Bernard)
Martin Deller - Drums, Electric and Acoustic Percussion (David Pritchard, Ben Mink, The Travellers, Ken Ramm, M+M, Nash the Slash)
Murray Brenman - Artwork, Design
Charles Conrad - Engineer
Jim Frank - Engineer, Pre-Production
Mark Wright - Engineer, Recording, Pre-Production
Cliff Hodsdon - Asst Engineer
Scott Rea - Asst Engineer
Bob Ludwig - Mastering
Ian Murray - Pre-Production Asst, Crew
Eric Staller - Photo Cover
Paul Till - Inner Photo
Bob Rock - Stand Ups Photo
Pamela Silverstein - Spoken Word
Rob Onedera - Synthy Maintenance
Ed Stone - Pre-Production
Ian Dunbar - Pre-Production, Crew
Kitty Cross - Crew
Fred Bunting - Crew
Bob Rodgers - Crew
Andy Murray - Crew
Phil Morrow - Crew
Peter McMullen - Crew

Unknown-ness: I’ve never heard of FM. But they look like any long haired hard rock band from the late 70’s early 80’s, like City Boy, or Heaven. I don’t expect it to be anything out of the ordinary, perhaps metal lite with prog rock tendencies.

Album Review:  FM was a space or Sci-Fi Prog Rock band based in Canada. Starting in 1976, they had a revolving door of band members and set ups, starting off as a two-piece lacking any guitars. The front man (Hawkins) sang, played keys and some bass, while Nash was in the back, a mysterious shrouded figure playing electrified string instruments, a drum machine and occasional backing vocals. Four albums followed the departure of Nash as well as the addition of a live drummer. This album is the final of those four, acclaimed as catchier than being prog-heavy, and featuring shorter song lengths: both are seen as pros or cons depending on who you talk to.
“Krakow” begins with a simple driving bass line, reminding me a little of the intro/verse of Steppenwolf’s Born to Be Wild. The vocals begin solo, with a chorus echoing in tow. They are similar to that of a hundred other new wave bands, kind of nasally, and computer-cold. After a brief fake-out soundless section, the instruments come back. The song is of simple construction, verse and instrumental in trading off sections.
“Power” explodes with Prog synth notes, and transitions into power pop guitar chords, which sets the tone for a marching tempo. It builds nicely leading up to the chorus, which is a bit of a chaotic reshuffling and sped up drumming. The sections come together nicely for the grand finale.
“Truth or Consequences” starts with a pounding bass line, and soaring strings. The song then shifts gears into a mid tempo pub rock song, with parallel synth & bass lines in the chorus. It has a nice energy build and release in the chorus, even if it is not incredibly catchy.
“Lost and Found” begins with a trash can drum beat. Very synth effects and mid-later period Oingo Boingo-style (thinking Two Twisted Trees) vocals are sung over the snickering synth. The song is strained, pining and kind of dark wave / cold war / industrial once the synth strings and heavy drums kick in.
“City of Fear” on the other hand is much more upbeat and happy tones, with a prog like opening that blends with heavy guitars. Very Rush-like. The verse is very modern, and catchy, and the bridge / verse 2.0,  before the drab chorus, is heightened an octave higher even more catchy. The instrumental breakdown is all lead guitar (even though there is no guitar).

“Surface to Air” is a simple, repetitive keyboard loop, with similar tone to Journey’s Separate Ways intro. The synth line establishes itself and soars along. Calm, non-threatening vocals start, and begin the mid-tempo verse, punctuated by prog flourishes. The chorus is energetic, and catchy. The instrumental breakdown is a duel between the prog power strings and synth melody soaring across the soundscape like a video game.
“Up to You” single chords strung together in with a sinister string effect. This song reminds me of Thomas Dolby a little. It builds nicely in the bridge between verse into the chorus, but does not quite deliver a single catchy release. The second time through ends up at the instrumental, which is powered by the soaring strings solo. That gives out, and the remaining Phil Collins drum loops brings us back. The song is just missing one big thing to make it a great song.
“Silence” begins as another cold, echoing, rhythm based song. It moves forward staggering and segmented. The song is pretty forgettable, with no memorable hook. It feels like it just fills a space, where the melody is tough to pin down, and the vocals are not loud either. I guess Silence is a good title for this mellow, meandering song.
“Riding the Thunder” for a couple of chords, it sounds like it is going to be the Black Crows Hard to Handle. But the power chords never converge into a super catchy, rattling hook. They just hover there, and repeat themselves, bearing the brunt of the tempo. There is a lot of angry energy in the vocals, but they seem diffused by the minimal instrumentation. The instrumental section kicks into overdrive, and the song blasts forward. Just when it seems to return to the slowed up section, it powers on with more synth and distortion effects over the strings, and even the vocals later on in the “instrumental.”
“Nobody at All” begins with spoken work, and a delicate piano. The vocals take the song back to a more elegant era, revitalized through the hair band power ballad. This school dance ender doesn’t fit in too much with the rest of the album, unless you go with the stereotypical record of the day that needed to include a slow song. There are some proggy-crystal elements to the synth at times, but it is mostly a piano ballad with a semi-hard edge at times. 

Stand Out Track: Surface to Air

Links:
Wiki
Amazon
Allmusic
Discogs
Prog Rock Archives
Underrated Albums
Official Site

Monday, January 26, 2009

Flash and the Pan - Lights in the Night

Name: Flash and The Pan
Album: Lights in the Night
Year: 1980
Style: Prog, New Wave, Musical
Similar Bands: Dire Straits, ZZ Top, Styx, Brand X, Thomas Dolby, Genesis
"One Word" Review: Spaceopera-synth-prog
Based Out Of: Australia
Label: Epic, CBS
Lights in the Night - Cover & Liner Notes
Lights in the Night - Back & Liner Notes
Lights in the Night - Record



Lights in the Night (1980)

  1. Media Man 5:55
  2. Headhunter 5:50
  3. Restless 3:34
  4. Welcome to the Universe 8:40/
  5. Make Your Own Cross 5:27
  6. Lights in the Night 4:30
  7. Captains Beware 4:30
  8. Atlantis Calling 6:00
Album Rating (1-10): 6.5

Members & Other Bands:
Harry Vanda - producer, guitar, vocals (Easybeats, Vanda & Young)
George Young - producer, synthesizer, lead vocals (Easybeats, Vanda & Young)
Les Karski - Bass
Ray Arnott - Drums
Jack Skinner - Mastering
Colin Freeman - Mixing Engineer
Warren Morgan - Piano
Gene Grief - Cover Concept & Design
Janet Perr - Cover Concept & Design

Unknownness: I’ve never heard of this band. Dated 1980, and minimal artwork featuring slash marks on the cover & back led me to think of it as something relating to metal or something heavy. The cartoon sticker looks amateurish and is confusing juxtaposed with the black & slashes. I really have no idea what the music will sound like. I did read about them being the next progressive step from the Easybeats, who I do like a lot. So from that, hopefully they’ll have some good pop sense, perhaps updated to new wave production.


Album Review: “Media Man” starts things off, and is the first single. It starts with a huge prog blast of organ synth and mysterious guitars. It then catches a new wave, lesser prog groove. It reminds me of the Dire Straits or the Tubes: not quite singing in the verse, and a catchy chorus that feels like ZZ top to me. The instrumental break takes us back to prog for a short time before the chorus picks back up. Apparently, the song was shortened for a single version, cutting over 2 minutes out of the song. The song kinda stalls as it ends with the repetitive chorus being chanted between various spoken words and phrases all relating to “Media Man.” “Headhunter” follows up, starting as a slow ballady prog-synth song. The vocals again are spoken, sounding like they are being transmitted from a spaceship orbiting the earth. It evokes a very grand and dawning sensation, like something spawned clashing of Kubrick films (clockwork & 2010). It barely follows conventional song structure. “Restless” starts up with a slightly evil prog-synth style. It is a driving song, featuring the same spoken isolated & detached vocals. But it is a dancey, near-disco song, with the soaring slightly eastern European synth and the dance-drum beat. “Welcome to the Universe” ends the side with a long (again shortened for the single) nearly nine minute epic prog journey. It eases awake for 2 minutes with sound effects, somewhat carnivalish, and creepy. Then the pure prog/show-tune melody picks up. The spoken vocals still dominate the song, with a smooth vocal choir for the catchy Rocky Horror / Tommy /Queen type chorus. The pace quickens and it becomes a very fun song. The single version might just be the best song if it were on the album. The melody is slowed down and sped up using it in a variety of ways, making the epic song carry with it a full range of emotions. It slows down as it finishes, like an overly dramatic Shakespearian actor reciting a long eulogy as he dies, knowingly.

“Make Your Own Cross” starts with a synth bass line/hook, and the same spoken vocals and some hints of disco. The chorus features the only sung lyrics, which is also the title. There is a message in the lyrics of standing up for your own battles. For the short musical breakdown and the ending, there are chanting vocals, creating a religious atmosphere. The song fades out with a held organ note creating more dread. The song bleeds into the next song “Lights in the Night” which shows no signs of diversity. Slow minimal music background to the rhythmic spoken vocals. This song parallels headhunter with its simple production, atmosphere setting and placement on the album. “Captains Beware” zooms in with electric charges and then a dancey new wave beat (kinda of like Hail Social a little) The spoken vocals are trying to be more melodic but they sound like they are trying too much. The chorus is very bold and theatrical. It totally sounds like a musical. I don’t completely buy the combination of vocal styles…they sound to distinctly different to mesh cohesively. “Atlantis Calling” starts with a children’s music box sounding introduction, with the storyteller vocals uttering the story. It then picks up with piano and synth. It is somewhat devious and dark, with the string production, but it also walks the fine line around disco. The grandness of the music reminds me of Thomas Dolby too. Throughout the album, the vocals give off the feeling of an all-knowing story teller guiding us though the prog space dream. The song has many parts and sections that are all in their own right very catch. But when put together for each song, individually, they sound like mini rock operas.


Stand Out Track:

Links:
Allmusic

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Agent Sparks - Red Rover

Name: Agent Sparks
Album: Red Rover
Year: 2006
Style: 90's Alternative dream-pop
Similar Bands: Belly, Semisonic, Eels, Pixies, Radio-Muse
"One Word" Review: Shoegazing-Rock
Based Out Of: Calabasas (LA), Cali
Label: Immortal Records
Red Rover - Cover, CD & Inside Tray
Red Rover - Back, Liner Notes
Red Rover - Liner Notes
Red Rover - Liner Notes

Red Rover (2006)
  1. Waving By 3:01
  2. Polly Anne 2:54
  3. Face the Day 4:01
  4. Make Up Friend 3:14
  5. Maybe Tomorrow 2:59
  6. Funny Foolish 2:37
  7. Mr. Insecurity 3:21
  8. Camouflage 3:19
  9. Peeping Tommy 4:00
  10. Beautiful True 4:00
  11. Razorhand 4:55
Album Rating (1-10):
7.0

Members & Other Bands:
Benjamine Einziger - Lead Vox, Guitars (Audiovent)
Stephanie Eitel - Lead Vox, Keys
Paul Fried - Bass, Vox (Audiovent)
George Purviance - Drums
Michael Einziger - producer (Incubus)
Karl Egsieker- Mix & Engineer
Rick Will - Engineer
Sam Farrar - Production
Noah Passovoy - Engineer
Paul Figueroa - Asst Engineer
Jun Murakawa - Asst Engineer
Nancy Stevens - Management
Ted Whitacre - Guitar/Bass tech
Brantley Guitierrez - Photography
Mark Steez - Cover Art
Sons of Nero - Layout & Design

Unknown-ness: This was another part of the CD mail package. I've never heard of these guys. The chaotic artwork, and messy over all appearance, makes me assume the music is going to be all over the place fuzzed out "alternative" type music, garage rock or stripped down punk. The live band images are all over the place too, from indie rockabilly to jam band hippy grunge.

Album Review: “Waving By” is the first introduction to Agent Sparks, and it starts out heavy and thick, like 90’s alternative’s Screaming Trees. The dual male & female vocals are streamlined and overlap in harmony. It has a lovely flowing mood, almost shoe-gazing pop, but there is more concrete melody behind the droning guitars and atmosphere. “Polly Anne” is an attack of single note bass played over and over, dreamy guitar is over-layed, and the vocals add a new level of direction for the melody. It is like driving fast through a daze. The chorus of repeating “Polly Anne” is a gear shift up in speed and aggression. The breakdown section showcases female vocals, energized and excited. The song ends quietly, and makes me think of the Eels. “Face the Day” is a driving drum beat behind atmospheric whooshing. The guitars begin along side the vocals, making a typical dream-pop song. “Make Up Friend” feels like a song from the Belly catalogue, with a male singer in the background. It is jangley, and still dreamy in production. It gets aggressive in the chorus, rocking out like the harder alternative music ala Nirvana. ”Maybe Tomorrow” is an alt-country acoustic campfire song. His vocals are similar to that of Semisonic or The Eels. It gains energy as it goes along, but it just becomes a more elaborate campfire sing-a-long. “Funny Foolish” begins with dreamy (have I said this word enough?) female vocals over a drudgingly sleepy beat. As with the rest of the songs, more energy is picked up by the chorus, this time with fuzzed out, chugging guitars. “Mr. Insecurity” follows with a more upbeat, 90’s alternative rocking tune. The vocals remind me of the little that I know the Pixies & Pavement, but I think that much of this music is reminiscent of both of their styles. And this song especially reminds me of Enon. “Camouflage” is an eerie slow stomp through fuzz and somewhat evil melodies. There are some Radiohead/muse style vocals in the breakdown toward the end, and it ends with harmonizing their voices. “Peeping Tommy” begins with sultry, sexy Jennifer Charles (or Hope Sandoval if you like) type vocals. It is a slow, Luna style slow space pop song. “Beautiful True” is in the spirit again of Radio-Muse (as well as the Eels) in pace, tempo and especially male vocals. There is a Mazzy Star style honky-tonk country slide guitar used for a sweaty, dusty mystifying effect. “Razorhand” continues in the slow ambient, drudging spirit achieved on the second half of the album (where the first half was 90’s alternative). A bouncy bass and fuzz guitars dot the blurry soundscape.

Stand Out Track:
Polly-Anne

Links:
Agent Sparks Allmusic
Agent Sparks Myspace
Agent Sparks Wikipedia
Agent Sparks Website
Agent Sparks Purevolume
Agent Sparks Podcast soundcrank
Agent Spark interview on Decoy
Agent Sparks Subinev