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

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Undertones (the) - Listening In Radio Sessions 1978-1982

Name: The Undertones
Album: Listening In Radio Sessions 1978-1982
Year: 2004
Style: Punk
Similar Bands: Clash, The Jam, Buzzcocks, The Adverts, Monkees
"One-Word" Review: Standard Punks Who Became Musicians
Based Out Of: Derry, Northern Ireland
Label: Sanctuary Records Group, BBC Music, BMG 
Cover, Sleeve Back
Liner Notes, CD Back
Liner Photo, CD, CD Tray
Liner Notes
Liner Notes
Liner Notes, Song Details

Listening In Radio Sessions 1978-1982 (2004)
  1. Get Over You 2:54
  2. Top 20 1:59
  3. She Can Only Say No 0:36
  4. Male Model 1:52
  5. Listening In 2:15
  6. Family Entertainment 2:35
  7. Billy's Third 1:51
  8. Here Comes The Summer 2:01
  9. Nine Times Out of Ten 2:34
  10. The Way Girls Talk 2:42
  11. Whiz Kids 2:38
  12. Top 20 2:02
  13. Girls That Don't Talk 2:22
  14. Tear Proof 2:17
  15. What's With Terry 3:17
  16. Rock n Roll 3:07
  17. The Positive Touch 1:55
  18. You're Welcome 2:11
  19. When Saturday Comes 2:47
  20. Like That 2:57
  21. Bye Bye Baby Blue 3:23
  22. Beautiful Friend 3:05
  23. (Just Like) Romeo and Juliet 2:03
  24. Untouchable 3:16
  25. The Love Parade 4:11
  26. Luxury 2:35
  27. The Sin of Pride 3:45
Album Rating (1-10): 9.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Michael Bradley - Bass, Vox (The Wesleys, Bernard Lenoir, Ash)
  • Damian O'Neill - Guitar, Vox (The Wesleys, That Petrol Emotion, The Monotones, Everlasting Yeahm Wavewalkers, A Quiet Revolution, Tommy Tate & the Torpedoes, X-Valdez, Bernard Leonoir, Qu4tre, Ash, Rare, Mimi, Aujord'hui Madame, Die Toten Hosen, 5 Billion in Diamonds, Eileen Gogan & the Instructions, Baby Shakes)
  • John O'Neill - Guitar, Vox (That Petrol Emotion, Rare, Bernard Lenoir, Wasp Factory, Blink)
  • Feargal Sharkey - Vox (The Assembly, Peace Together, Kiki Dee, Bernard Lenoir)
  • Bill Doherty - Drums (Bernard Lenoir, Baby Shakes)
  • Vincent O'Neill  -Backing Vox
  • Steve Hammonds - Release Coordination
  • Joe Smith - Release Coordination
  • Hugh Gilmour - Artwork & Design
  • Larry Doherty - Photos
  • LFI - Photos
  • Jill Furmanovsky - Photos
  • Andy Ferguson - Mgmt (Cracks 90 Ltd.)
  • Dave Richings - Recording
  • Mick Houghton - Liner Notes
  • Bob Sargeant - Producer, Engineer
  • Dale Griffin - Producer, Engineer
  • Dave Dade - Producer, Engineer
  • Mike Engles - Producer, Engineer
  • Stephen Nelson - Producer, Engineer
Unknown-ness: This album is one of the more recognizable bands i'm "reviewing"...i probably could take it off the list, but i did not know who they were when i bought this album used back in the mid 00s, a couple years before I started this blog. Figured they were a Clash/Jam style band from the clothes and years this compilation represented. And yeah, spot on.

Album Review: This is a nice compilation that travels the evolution of the Undertones, one of the biggest bands from Northern Ireland's, sound. Starting with their first John Peel session in 1978, where Peel had to foot the 70 pound studio bill for the broke band, through to their final (7th) session in 1982, which apparently the band barely remembers doing. It shows the band's growth from a three chord angsty punk band, the standard first origins step for any punk band. The wavering and harmonized vocals took the Beatles sound, sped it up, and overlaid aggressive guitars over the generally catchy hooks and backing beat. Again, I'm not discovering anything new here, it is a stereotypic start for the genre. Over the sessions, the songs got longer, and more intricate and added in more themes of 60's Psychedelia, Motown and Gary Glitter.

Although this is an Undertones compilation, it lacks their most popular track, Teenage Kicks, missing because, as the band states, they recorded it as well as they could have hoped, and felt no need to replicate it (even if Top 20 is on here twice). They broke up after their fourth album in 1983, but reunited in 1999 for Derry reunion gigs, minus Sharkey, who decided against rejoining. They are still an active band (as of 2021) and i would have seen them last year for the first time, it it weren't for that meddling covid.

Stand Out Track: 78 Peel Session (Get Over You / Top 20 / She Can Only Say No / Male Model)

Links:
Wiki

Monday, April 5, 2021

Phoids (The) - Marianne Doesn't Know Yet

Name: The Phoids
Album: Marianne Doesn't Know Yet
Year: 1997
Style: Pub Rock, Power Pop
Similar Bands: Smithereens, Track Star, Let's Active, Jayhawks, Uncle Tupelo, Replacements, The Forty Fives
"One-Word" Review: Urban Cowboy Rock Variants.
Based Out Of: NYC, NY
Label: Ng Records, BMG, 
Cover & Back photo
Liner Notes, CD, CD Tray Back

Marianne Doesn't Know Yet (1997)
  1. The Great American Farmer 3:01
  2. Baby Menthol 2:47
  3. I'll Smash Anyone 3:39
  4. M 3:25
  5. You Know 3:58
  6. Godel 4:48
  7. Cop Out 4:13
  8. Walk Away 2:37 (single)
  9. Can't Go Back 4:04
  10. Merkle's Boner 2:46
  11. No Good 2:56
  12. Driveway 3:40
  13. Johnny's On Time 1:45
  14. I Never liked you Much 6:12
Album Rating (1-10): 8.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Greg Bass - Bass, Vox (Erica Wylie, Jason Spiewak)
  • Matt Chaiaravalle - Guitar, Vox (Forty Fives, Jill Cunniff, Ernie Halter)
  • Jac Calabro - Vox, Guitar
  • Michael Chambers - Drums, Percussion (Cantinero), 
  • Tammy Lynn - Backing Vox (Battershell, Lenny McDaniel, Sevendust, Total Praise)
  • Andy Kingston - Piano, Organ (Alex Dolan)
  • Roger Lian - Mastering
  • Jeff Gattens - Recording, Mixing
  • Tom Doxanas - Art Direction (DOC Designs)
  • John H Moore - Cover Photo
  • Mick Rock - Liner Photos
Unknown-ness: Never heard of them, but from the photos, they look like they were on the tail end of alt-grunge, just as the tide was turning to a clean cut, smooth rock persona. I'm going to guess they are of their era, and will be similar to New Radicals or Fastball.

Album Review: The Phoids reignite the 80'sAmericana pub rock sound of the 80's with straight forward rock songs that try to keep one toe in a working class country pool. Sometimes they play gruff, driving tracks like the juvenile "Merkle's Boner" that steals a cue out of the Nirvana playbook at the end, as does "I'll Smash Anyone." "Cop Out" is a solid pop song with some shoegazing guitar, and a quick shuffling beat. Overall, this is a immensely palatable album of songs with slight variances on rock extending to the outer tiers of niche genres.

With a total of 3 albums that increased in quality along they way, the NYC based band gained minimal recognition as an opener and CMJ festival performer. But even with an accomplished producer on their 3rd record, they ended up disappearing from the spot light altogether.

Stand Out Track: Cop Out, Merkle's Boner

Links:
Wiki

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Dropping Daylight - Take a Photograph ep

Name: Dropping Daylight
Album: Take a Photograph
Year: 2005
Style: Rock, Emo, Nu-Metal, Chamber Pop
Similar Bands: Bush, Fuel, Fretblanket, Ben Folds, Fastball, Blue October
"One-Word" Review: Lite Gothic Nu-Metal
Based Out Of: Minneapolis, MN
Label: Octone Records, Sony BMG Music
Cover
Liner Notes, Back, CD
Take a Photograph (2005)
  1. Take a Photograph 3:20
  2. Save Yourself 2:41
  3. Lucy 3:16
  4. Till You Feel Something 3:07
Album Rating (1-10): 6.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • Sebastian Davin - Vox, Keys, Engineering (Associated Mess Sui/e Generis, Breaking Benjamin, Paramore, Kidnap Kings, Attention, Hawthorne Heights, )
  • Seth Davin - Guitar (Sui/e Generis, Kidnap Kings, Lucky Boys Confusion, American Scarecrows)
  • Rob Burke - Bass (Associated Mess Sui/e Generis, Kidnap Kings)
  • Jake Englund - Drums (Associated Mess, Sui/e Generis, Lucky Boys Confusion)
  • Ian Allison - Engineering
  • John Fields - Mixing
  • Steven Miller - Mixing
  • Bill Silva - Mgmt
  • Brian Manning - Booking
  • Jeff Biederman - Legal
  • 7S - Art Direction
  • Rhea Pappas - Band Photo
  • Andrew Suggs - Video
Unknown-ness: Never heard of the band. Artwork & packaging reminds me of Postal Service or any complex emo-indie band. The EP comes with an extra "Surveillance Video for "Waiting Through the Afternoon," so i'll see if 2021 technology is compatible with 2005 media.

Album Review: They really want to be hard, but it is pretty non-threatening, frequently incorporating piano in, making a sort of chamber goth rock sound. The shout call & response is strong with this album, and emotional whoa's punctuate the record throughout. The songs can be catchy at times, but its produced in a manner not to my liking. Lucy almost sounds like a Ben Folds or Keane song.

The core of the band met in High School, and went through a couple band name changes before and after Dropping Daylight. Davin and Englund even went to Berklee College of Music.

Friday, June 26, 2020

Pop Will Eat Itself - This is the Day...This is the Hour...This is THIS!

Name: Pop Will Eat Itself 
Album: This is the Day...This is the Hour...This is THIS!
Year: 1989
Style: Electronic, Techno, Industrial, Rap
Similar Bands: Sigue Sigue Sputnik, EMF, B.A.D., M/A/R/R/S, Einsturzende Neubauten
"One-Word" Review: Eastern European Industrial Rap
Based Out Of: Stourbridge, England
Label: RCA, BMG
Cover & Record

This is the Day...This is the Hour...This is THIS! (1989)
  1. PWEI is a Four Letter Word - 1:12
  2. Preaching to the Perverted 4:25
  3. Wise Up Sucker 3:16 (single)
  4. Sixteen Different Flavours of Hell 1:23
  5. Inject Me 3:51
  6. Can U Dig It? 4:31 (single)
  7. The Fuses Have Been Lit 4:02 /
  8. Poison to the Mind 0:57
  9. Def Con One 3:59 (single, US #30 Mod Rock)
  10. Radio P.W.E.I 3:37
  11. Shortwave Transmission on "Up To The Minuteman Nine" 1:01
  12. Satellite Ecstatica 3:33
  13. Not Now James, We're Busy 3:08
  14. Wake Up Time To Die 6:41
Album Rating (1-10): 5.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Flood (Mark Ellis) - Producer, Mixing
  • Dave Pine - Engineer & Re-Mix Engineer
  • Karl Broadie - Asst. Engineer
  • Robin Goodfellow - Engineer
  • Mr. X & Mr. Y - Producer
  • Mark Dodson - Additional Production
  • D. Steele - Producer
  • A. Cox - Producer
  • Robert Gordon - Producer
  • Cenzo Townshend - Engineer
  • Frank Booth - Guitar (Situation B)
  • Kerry The Buzzard Hammond - Guitar (Yeah God!)
  • Twig the Wonder Kid - Backing Vox
  • Mastermix - Turntables (Hardnoise, Beatmasters, Cookie Crew)
  • DJ Winston (Hazel) - Turntables (Forgemasters, Supafix, The Step, Winston & Ross)
  • Vestan Pance - Words & Music Pseudonym for PWEI
  • This Is The Designerstar Republica - Sleeve Design, Artwork
  • Phil Wolstenholme - Computer Images
  • Kevin Cumings - Live Photos
  • Craig Jennings - Worldwide Rep
  • Paul Boswell -UK Agent
  • Ian Copeland - US Agent
  • Graham Crabb - Vox Keys (Golden Claw, Wild & Wondering, Je Suis Crabbi, Primitive Race, Vile Evils, Fuzz Townshend)
  • Adam Mole - Keys, Programming  (Wild & Wondering, From Eden, Kut Loaf, Vile Evils)
  • Richard March - Keys Programming (Wild & Wondering, Bentley Rhythm Ace, Charlatans UK, Wonder Stuff)
  • Clint Mansell - Vox, Guitar (Wild & Wondering, From Eden, Buddah Boys Choir, Cerebral Fix, NIN, Lavish, Vile Evils)
Unknown-ness: I have heard of them, but i know not what they are like...from the artwork ( i do like how the initials PWEI make up the 5 "monsters" attacking the biohazard clock in the middle), and mention of BPMS on the back, i imagine some sort of future-techno EDM band, but for some reason, i think they may sound like Nitzer Ebb or Low Pop Suicide or Stabbing Westward...maybe part of the industrial KMFDM / Front 242 genre, which is not a reach from the formerly listed bands. 

Album Review: This one required some research, as the style of music had an origin in the UK and is called Grebo Rock, a subculture and genre, adopted from a slang term for long hair bikers and/or rock music fans in the late 80's. When grunge and brit pop took hold in the early - mid 90's PWEI was shuffled over to the Industrial sub-genre, but they were a posterband for the Grebo niche. Their big trivia bit is that they were the first Western independent band invited to play the Soviet Union in 1988. The songs on this album are similar to the back of the album: a collage of bits and pieces strung together with samples, turntables and beats that bear a strong association with cold, mechanical industrial sounds. Sometimes the vocals have melody, sometimes, they are like an Eastern European cold wave rap. Def Con One uses samples of "Funky Town" and "The Twilight Zone" among a string of other musical borrows. They are still around, as a 2020 tour was planned in NZ, alas, everything was postponed Mar/April to Oct, so maybe?

Stand Out Track: Def Con One

Links:
Wiki

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

(the) Men They Couldn't Hang - Night of A Thousand Candles~, Silvertown*

Name: The Men They Couldn't Hang
Album(s): Night of A Thousand Candles~, Silvertown*
Year(s): 1985~, 1989*
Style: Celtic Folk, Roots Rock
Similar Bands: Black 47, Pogues, Levellers, James, Bluebells, Midnight Oil
"One-Word" Review: Celtic Hoe-Down On A Prog-Train
Based Out Of: London/Southampton England
Label: Demon~, Imp Records~, Jive*, Silvertone*, RCA*, BMG*
 Night of A Thousand Candles - Cover & Record
Night of A Thousand Candles - Back & Record
Silvertown - Cover & Record
Silvertown - Back & Record

Night of A Thousand Candles (1985)
  1. The Day After 2:41
  2. Jack Dandy 2:24
  3. A Night To Remember 3:14
  4. Johnny Come Home 2:26
  5. Green Fields of France 6:29 /
  6. Iron Masters 4:11
  7. Hush Little Baby 4:22
  8. Walkin' Talkin 2:25
  9. Kingdom Come 3:09
  10. Scarlet Ribbons 5:55
Silvertown (1989)
  1. Rosettes 3:34
  2. A Place in the Sun 3:07
  3. Homefires 4:02
  4. Diamonds, Gold & Fur 2:39
  5. Company Town 5:42 /
  6. Lobotomy Gets "Em Home 3:22
  7. Blackfriars Bridge 4:06
  8. Rain, Steam & Speed 3:56
  9. Down all the Days 2:41
  10. Hellfire & Damnation 2:42
  11. El Vaquero 2:38
Album Rating (1-10): ~6.0
*6.5

Members & Other Bands:
Tom Keane - Bagpipes~ (Pogues, Clannad, Clancy Bros, Nomad)
Shanne Hasler (Bradley) - Bass, Flute~ (The Launderettes, The Nipple Erectors, Wreckless Eric, The Chicken Family)
Chimp Carver - Design, Artwork~
Jon Odgers - Percussion, Drums~* (Catch 22, Swill & The Swaggerband)
Nick Robbins - Engineer, Mixing~
Graham Sharpe - Guitar~
Paul Simmonds - Guitar, Bouzouki, Keys~Mandolin* (Catch 22, Liberty Cage, Naomi Bedford, Swill & The Swaggerband, Lob)
Tony Poole - Management, Producer~
Tim Young - Mastering~
Harold Burgen - Production~
David Howell - Photography~
Phillip Chevron - Producer~
Lindsey Lowe - Trumpet~*
Stefan Cush - Vox, Guitar~*(The Feral Family)
Philip Odgers "Swill" - Vox, Guitar, Tin Whistle, Melodica~* (Catch 22 Liberty Cage, Swill & The Swaggerband, Crash Alley)
Tom O'Grady - band name
Mick Glossop - Producer, Engineer*
Nick Muir - Piano, Accordion, (Fire Next Time, Bedrock)*
Ricky McGuire - Bass (UK Subs, Swill & The Swaggerband, Fits)*
Bobby Valentino - Fiddle (Fabulous Poodles, Mike Oldfeld, Any Trouble, Nick Lowe, They Style Council, Billy Bragg)
Phil Smee - Sleeve Design*
Keith Morris - Photography*
Kris Heuer - Crest Design*

Unknown-ness: I had never heard of these guys before buying these two albums, independently of one another. I liked the cold, industrial artwork on the first album I bought (which was their first album), and before listening to it, I found the other album, picking it up because of the name recognition. Both albums make the band seem to be a real blue collar, working man’s band, and I imagine the contents to be something close to Big Country.

Album Review: The band really broke out onto the music scene in 85 in a big way with their first album, and a strong supportive backing from John Peel. They have basically been active ever since, with a few lineup changes, and a few breaks, but they have recently put out a new album based on fan supported pledges. They will co headline festivals in the UK, as they are still a somewhat well-known act.

“The Day After” starts with a pulsing, driving drum beat, and grows into a folky hoe-down, complete with banjo. It reminds me a little of James. In the chorus, there is a chanting group of vocals supporting the lead.
“Jack Dandy” begins with more jangely guitars, and grows into a driving Celtic drinking sing-a-long.  The bouncy bass line really drives the song home in the end.
“A Night To Remember” was a single from the album. And it begins with a more country-ish tone in melody and vocal inflection. The acoustic guitar carries the rural, mountainside atmospheric song. This song too, becomes quite jangely towad the end.
“Johnny Come Home” is a bouncy three acoustic chord stomping ballad, employing punk rock start and stop time signatures (I Fought The Law).
“Green Fields of France” is a cover of an Eric Bogle song, and is a slow, side-to-side  traditional (drinking?) sounding Celtic song that reflects on a World War 1 victim. The vocals become doubled as the song gains emotional steam. It cycles back for a second verse with a bit more frustration behind the vocals.

“Iron Masters” was a single from the album, which had to be edited for radio play in the UK because it referenced Margaret Thatcher in poor taste at the song’s end with “Oh that Iron Bastard, She still gets her way.” It begins quietly, with just the guitar and story sung vocals. The marching drums come into the song, and the bold, proud Irish sounding chorus takes over. The tempo grows to a sprint, and the song finds a second life rather quickly as an aggressive barn dance. There is a bit of a breakdown with trumpets before it regains its pace and drive.
“Hush Little Baby” begins with the acoustic guitar quietly being played for the first minute. Then a drum crashes down and a melodica accompanied oompa/gypsy beat picks up with an altered, yet familiar Hush Little Baby melody. The song is a bleak and dark interpretation of the nursery rhyme.
“Walkin' Talkin” starts off with a rollicking vocal melody that can only be categorized as a bit of Irish Rockabilly. The song just charges on forward non-stop through the entire hoe-down of a song.
“Kingdom Come” features the same deep chorus of vocals, but this time, they are filtered through an echo, cave-like effect. From there, the song takes on a traditional, driving Celtic sing-song melody.
“Scarlet Ribbons” begins with a flute, and is followed up with a mandolin, and the song progresses like a renaissance era minstrel story-ballad. But the vocal style is that of a nationally proud battle crier. This falls into the emotional remembrance genre of song.

“Rosettes” begins with twinkling sounds from a mandolin, then blasts off in some sort of dark Celtic Punk, that actually sounds a little like Midnight Oil. The vocals are a little angrier.
“A Place in the Sun” was a single. The vocals are a little calmer and clearer. But there is still a very strong Celtic musical backbone to the song. The song does not sound all that particularly catchy or stand out-ish. It feels like an original track from a band headlining a small town Irish festival.
“Homefires” steps back from the angry, energetic vocals and is a memorial/roots song. The marching tempo picks up after a little bit, breathing more life and multiple vocals into the song, but it is has become a traditional sounding drinking sing-a-long.
“Diamonds, Gold & Fur” starts with a fast drum beat, and a piano that takes a page out of Squeeze’s playbook, but this is a bouncy honky-tonk produced pub rock song. The song employs a harmonica for the short instrumental break. The song sounds like a combination of the best parts of the Blasters, and a little like John Wesley Harding (Wesley Stace).
“Company Town” steps back into the Celtic roots culture with a slow ballad as it beginning.  It sings of corporate rule over blue collar life in a small, company owned town. The mood of the song is both longing, nostalgia and hatred in the same breath. The pace of the song slowly picks up from the beginning, but it never becomes too crazy nor stays quiet. This is a solid, respectful song, and is explanatory of where the band excels best: capturing life and sentiment from the oppressed working class

“Lobotomy Gets "Em Home” starts with a bass hook as the cement of the melody. If the song was produced differently, it would be a straight forward punk song with its rollercoastering bass line. But with the style of the era that the band was involved in, this song is just a rollicking, driving folk song. Even the vocals are angry and energetic.
“Blackfriars Bridge” is another slower, historical Celtic roots song. This one feels much more airy and it starts out as new age. Like all the similar songs before it, the band is never just ok with leaving a song as a quiet ballad. They always bring up a rock element, and kick in extra energy and emotion. And this song in particular builds up in vocal and instrumental stress to the very end.
“Rain, Steam & Speed” was a single from the album that keeps its roots in Celtic melody, but with a slightly funky bass line. The verse is a little quiet, but the formulaic chorus holds the harmonizing hooks. The song, like many hints on this album are very prog oriented, although there can be a fine line between Celtic style music and prog rock.
“Down all the Days” begins with a jangely guitar, then like a chugging train, the song takes off, fueled by the drum beat. These songs are simple tempos to carry out fun barn dances or hoe-downs as banditing passengers recalling better times on a cargo train.
“Hellfire & Damnation” is a Kinks-like swampy, staggering southern tinged brass-jug band’s alcohol dream. It features stand out horns akin to Dixie-land jazz. And the vocals are again similar to Glenn Tilbrook of Squeeze. As if it were played in a nearly empty barroom, a trickle of applause stumbles in at the end.
“El Vaquero” ends the record with a wispy, rainy moonlit graveyard anthem for a minute and half. Then the music transports the listener to a 1800’s vaudevillian bar for a few paces, until it reaches the back room for a brief moment, where a sinister Dracula character lays. The listener is then returned to the graveyard, to plod along through to the end of this very visual instrumental.

Stand Out Tracks: ~The Day After
*Diamonds, Gold & Fur

Links:
Website
Wiki
Discogs
New Album's Pledge site
Allmusic
Myspace
John Peel

Friday, January 6, 2012

Crazyhead - Some Kind Of Fever

Name: Crazyhead
Album: Some Kind of Fever
Year: 1990
Style: Garage, Grebo (Great Britain midlands, pre-Grunge)
Similar Bands: Pop Will Eat Itself, The Wonder Stuff, Dramarama, Posies, Mission UK, Game Theory, Birdland.
"One-Word" Review: Thick-Sludgy-Jangle-Pop
Based Out Of: Leicester, England
Label: Black, FM Revolver, BMG,
Some Kind of Fever - Cover & Record
Some Kind of Fever - Back & Record

Some Kind Of Fever (1990)
  1. Big Sister 3:05
  2. Above Those Things 2:44
  3. Everything's Alright 3:17
  4. Magic Eye 4:53
  5. I Can Do Anything 3:00/Movie Theme 3:59
  6. Talk About You 3:29
  7. Rome 2:18
  8. Train 3:02
  9. Some Kinda Fever 4:15
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:Kev Reverb (Kevin Bayliss) – Guitar, keyboards, sitar (Zodiac Mindwarp,
Anderson (Ian R. Anderson) – Vocals
Vom (Robert Morris) – Drums (Zodiac Mindwarp, Diesel Park West)
Fast Dick (Richard Bell) – Guitar
Porkbeast (Dr. Alex Peach) – Bass (Stressbitch)
Christina X (Christine Wigmore) – Bass (Timeless Banditz)
Pat Collier - Producer
Steve Nunn - Engineer
Jessica Corcoran - Engineer
Nick Muir - Hammond Organ (The Men They Couldn't Hang)
Nick Raybould - Artwork

Unknown-ness: I’ve never heard of this band. But from the attitude and band picture on the front, I imagine this to sound a lot like Ugly Kid Joe. Maybe it’s just because the lead singer looks like Whitfield Crane to me. I like the totally 90’s hippie/grunge font of the band name, and the colored face collage on the back gives off a trippy, psychedelic vibe. I picked this up in a two-for-a-pound Oxfam charity shop in Reading, UK.

Album Review: “Big Sister” starts off with the grand appearance of pop-grunge. There are harmonized vocals singing out a fun brit-pop hook. There is a thickness to the song, which leads me to think of garage band music too. This is like Birdland-like rough Brit-Pop.
“Above Those Things” starts with generic thick jangley electric guitars, which all pauses to introduce the vocal melody. This song is more complex, and comes off like Game Theory or Let’s Active: layered harmonies and dense music. But it has a nice clean rock star finish.
“Everything's Alright” continues the thick music with complicated instrumentation and obviously British vocals. Actually there are a couple of times where this reminded me of Dramarama and/or Soul Asylum’s pre-fame songs.
“Magic Eye” is a slinky, pub-like, meandering song. It’s more of a drunken stumble than a psychedelic trip, as the title might otherwise suggest. In the end it spirals out of repetitive control, and even comes back for one more loop after a complete fade-out.
“I Can Do Anything” is filled with wah-wah guitars before the driving garage rock song kicks into auto pilot. This is a coked up, leg kicking, rock n’ roll with lots of yeah yeah yeahs.

“Movie Theme” starts out sounding like a simple Cheap Trick song, but that is only for the first chords. Then it slips into easy gear and brings back the sludginess of complex instrumentation. There is an underlying hook somewhere imbedded in the music that peaks its catchy head out once in a while, otherwise, it is all rocking jangle and fuzz. Then, at about 2:20 the song changes gears a bit and for just a few seconds, is bouncy and catchy…like a movie intermission. For the last minute of the song, there is dialogue mixed into the background, acting as just another level in the instrumentals
“Talk About You” is a little more recognizable as pop music, but still reliant on the jangley guitar. But the harmony in the chorus, which is just the title on repeat, is very catchy and upbeat. It actually kind of sounds like Fountains of Wayne’s “Bright Future in Sales.”
“Rome” starts right out with a catchy verse and is driven by the lead guitar. This would be a good song, except the slide guitar does not complement the song in the chorus. The song is a fast pace driving brit-pop song, but the slide guitar takes it in a different direction.
“Train” drives right out of the starting with a motivating guitar and drums. Then the lead guitar comes in for a lick (which used later, reminds me of Last Train to Clarksville” a little), and stops for the lead vocals to start. This sounds a lot more like British Jangle-Pop stuff from the 80’s than Alternative-Grunge.
“Some Kinda Fever” features a fade up to start the song. And the vocals begin, making the song sound like a snotty British angst song sung over a generic brit-pop melody that’s inflated with fuzzy guitars.

Stand-Out Track: Big Sister

Links:

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Lincoln - Mettle

Name: Lincoln
Album: Mettle
Year: 2002
Style: Quiet Folk, Country, Americana
Similar Bands: Bonnie Prince Billy, Neil Halstead, quiet Belle & Sebastian songs, Lewis & Clarke, later Gorky's Zygotic Mynci, Mazzy Star
"One-Word" Review: Hauntingly Minimal Winter Soundscapes
Based Out Of: London, England
Label: Narwhal Records, 3MV/Pinnacle, BMG
Mettle - Cover, Back, CD
Mettle - Liner Notes 1-2, CD Back
Mettle - Liner Notes 3-4, CD tray
Mettle - Liner Notes 5-6
Mettle - Liner Notes 7-8
Mettle - Liner Notes 9-10

Mettle (2002)
  1. My Reasons Are My Own 5:51
  2. Great Wall of China 5:11
  3. Interlude #3 0:56
  4. Crooked Smile 3:12
  5. Interlude #5 0:51
  6. Blood on the Streets 6:03
  7. Ghost Cat 4:41
  8. Interlude #8 0:45
  9. Mettle 5:47
  10. Interlude #10 1:35
  11. Never See London Again 5:57
  12. Common Ground 3:24
  13. How the Hell 4:33
  14. Interlude #14 1:40
Album Rating (1-10): 5.5

Members & Other bands:
Alex Gordon - Vocal, Guitar, Trumpet, Leys
Crum Hall - Drum, Percussion, Melodica, Violin, Vocal
David Hannam - Guitar, Clarinet, Harmonium, Banjo, Conductor (Culprit One)
Matt Dowse - Trombone, Fender Rhodes, Wine Glasses (Calexico, King Prawn)
Jum Freidlander - Bass, Trumpet, Wine Glasses, Art, Design, Photography
Tracy Van Daal - Vocal, Wine Glasses (Richard X)
Oliver Kraus - String Arrangement, Cello
Sophie Sirota - Viola
Howard Gott - Violin
Ali Friend - Upright Bass
Tom Hodges - Saw
Brian O'Shaughnessy - Overdub & Production
Sean Reed - Producer

Unknown-ness: I've never heard this Lincoln before. The problem is that I like the US band Lincoln, so I picked up this band with the same name, except they're from the UK. I remember listening to a little of it and putting it aside since it was not the band that I liked, but I cannot remember what this band sounded like. With all the instruments, and liner note of it being recorded in an open room, I'm guessing it is some kind of orchestral genre. Maybe I'll like this for different reasons? We shall see.

Album Review: “My Reasons Are My Own” begins with a sad, solemn piano. The vocals quietly start in, reminding me of Bonnie Prince Billy or Neil Halstead. They quiver and shake in their wispiness, and guide the slow melody, like snow falling outside a cabin window. A solidarity trumpet is added, and the song has moved to a quiet Belle & Sebastian song. The musical intermission brings a little peaceful country slide guitar to the front before returning for one last stanza. The song finishes out as quietly as it began, fading to the back.
“Great Wall of China” builds musically and orchestrally in the beginning, again like a frigid and frosty forest scene. The vocals are again, a faint whisper gently flowing with the melody. In the chorus, there is a female backing vocal, adding richness and emphasis to the lead. Musically, it reminds me of the quiet aspects from bands like Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci, Shout Out Louds, and Noah & The Whale.
“Interlude #3” is composed of a slowly building sunrise feeling.
“Crooked Smile” is more country than before, reminding me of later Gorky’s minus the accent. The vocals are shared guy/girl bringing that richness to the music. The horn section gives off a drunken lazy atmosphere. This song is sunnier and more down home, classic folk-country style. Perhaps Americana is the correct term.
“Interlude #5” starts with a sad bugle horn, and is added to with very minor supportive instrumentation for its short song
“Blood on the Streets” slowly sings along with female only vocals at first. The male accompaniment joins in and signals the song to start with another sunrise, awakening section. The song fakes moments where the pace might pick up, but it settles back into something consistent, and driving in its own swaying tempo. The songs feel longer than they are because they do drag, which is by design. The female vocals remind me a little of Neko Case.
“Ghost Cat” is an instrumental that continues the haunting, echoing, atmosphere, with only a trumpet to break through the sorrowful fog.

“Interlude #8” is a whirling echoing musical wind chime instrumental.“Mettle” slows down to a near halt with echoing slide guitar and piano chords played at a very methodically slow pace. This is very sparse and atmospheric. Near the end, the backing female vocals are added, sounding like it was sung in the round.
“Interlude #10” is another cold morning daybreak theme.
“Never See London Again” is a sad, minimal yet soulful female sung less-than-ballad. After about 2 minutes, more Mazzy Star elements are added, and the song becomes a slow country ballad.
“Common Ground” travels on the more folksy side of the genre map. It is still heavy on the slide guitar and there is a jangley guitar played sparingly in the background accompanied by some other string instruments, Cello I’d assume. The construction of these songs is not really structured with verse and chorus, they are much more free flowing.
“How the Hell” starts with sad horns and a melancholy forlorn feeling. There is a wind sound effect in the background, which is really a saw being played I believe. The female vocals, tinted with a sexy yearning, take over a little over halfway through, and the song really comes alive with a horn section, and an unprecedented strength in its composition.
“Interlude #14” ends the album with more singing saw and vocal syllables that start as nearly unintelligible, but grow in strength as the single musical idea, a reprise of How the Hell of sorts, is carried through.

Stand Out Track: My Reasons Are My Own

Links:

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Hoodoo Gurus - Magnum Cum Louder

Name: Hoodoo Gurus
Album: Magnum Cum Louder
Year: 1989
Style: Alternative / College Radio
Similar Bands: REM, Midnight Oil, Gin Blossoms, Replacements, INXS
"One-Word" Review: Gen-reclectic-college-favorites
Based Out Of: Sydney, Australia
Label: RCA, BMG, Artista/Ariola Limited
Magnum Cum Louder - Cover, Back & Tape
Magnum Cum Louder - Liner Notes, Tape

Magnum Cum Louder (1989)
  1. Come Anytime 3:20
  2. Another World 3:16
  3. Axegrinder 3:27
  4. Shadow Me 3:41
  5. Glamourpuss 2:36
  6. Hallucination 5:05/
  7. All The Way 3:11
  8. Baby Can Dance (Pts 2-4) 3:17
  9. I Don't Know Anything 4:07
  10. Where's That Hit? 3:56
  11. Death in the Afternoon 4:08
Album Rating (1-10): 6.5

Members & Other Bands:
Dave Faulkner - Guitar, Hamond Organ, Vox (the Victims, Antenna, Persian Rugs)
Rick Grossman - Bass, Vox (Matt Finish, DiVinyls, Ghostwriters, The Kelly Gang, Persian Rugs)
Mark Kingsmill - Drums, Grunts (The Hitmen, New Christs, Screaming Tribesmen, Hellcats, Super K, Persian Rugs)
Brad Shepherd - Guitar, Harmonica, Vox, Idea for cover (Fun Things, The Hitmen, Super K, Ghostwriters,Beasts of Bourbon, Roddy Ray'Da and the Surfin' Caesars , Replacements, Shutterspeed, The Monarchs, Persian Rugs )
Alan Thorne - Engineer
Dave Thoener - Mix
David Mackie - Asst Engineer
Dary "Pig" Sulich - Asst. Engineer
Tim Leitner - Asst. Engineer
Barbara Mills - Asst. Engineer
George Marino - Mastering
Sluggo McMartin - Behind the Plate on "Where's That Hit"
Stephanie Faulkner - Backing Vox
Richard Allen - Cover Art
Adrienne Overall - Photograpy & Montage
Michael McMartin - Management

Unknown-ness: I had heard the name Hoodoo Gurus somewhere before, but I cannot say under what circumstances. On the basis of name recognition alone, at some point I bought this tape. I don’t know when, or if I ever listened to it, but there it sat on my tape shelf for a long time. I think I had thought of them as a quirky alternative/college radio rock band. I don’t know if they have silly lyrics or not but I came to the conclusion of regarding them as a band that doesn’t take themselves too seriously somehow. The name, picture and font all blend together to seem like an African witch doctor, but finding out they were from Australia, an outback medicine man might be a better basis.

Album Review: “Come Anytime” begins with acoustic guitar, reminding me of “Jane Says” and then electric guitar is quickly added. The vocals begin and my first thought was REM, which quickly transmorphs into Midnight Oil. So I think that is a good combo to describe the vocals, and music as well. The chorus features a catchy melody sung in a few up and down variations. It is a good delivery from the anticipating in the verse. The organ adds a great thickness and depth to the song.
“Another World” also begins with the acoustic guitar and this feels even more like Midnight oil, with a shaky vocal performance. The music is a meandering college radio rock song, predecessor to the Gin Blossoms. There is no real build and release like most pop songs have, this is just a repetitive camp fire singalong with the same unchanging melody, eventually broken down to la la la-ing along at the end.
“Axegrinder” Echoing drums that almost sound like from a drum machine begin this one, and the lyrics are sung fast over the music, similar to INXS. It feels like it is trying to be a metal song, but just can’t get there, wrapped up in too much light production. The chord progression is pretty identical to “Smells Like Teen Spirit.” And the song ends with the chorus repeated and a looping electric guitar like a siren.
“Shadow Me” is an honest ballad, reminding me of the sincerity in much of James catalogue. I am reminded of their song “Runaground.” Although popular at the time, the echoing, jangley guitar really dates the song, and makes me lose interest pretty fast.
“Glamourpuss” picks up the pace with a rough, coked-up grainy rock-a-billy punk like repetitive guitar hook. It drives on somewhat fast with a few hiccups in the vocals, which builds character. But the song never rests for the full 2:36.
“Hallucination” is a somewhat boring head swaying song with a choir of vocals used as a break chanting ahhh at the end of every measure. The chorus is a bit faster and fun, but over all, it is a drab song. The musical break is predominately electric guitar and harmonica. The vocals sound like they get further and further away ending up by an echoing shell by the end.

“All The Way” is a catchy pop rock song. I’m not fond of the vocals, like a less deep Brian Ritchie. But the chorus that the song began with repeats a few times: the catchy “hey-hey-heys.” The short interlude is all lead guitar, and the chorus comes back for a final round.
“Baby Can Dance (Pts 2-4)” begins with quiet whispering, overlaid vocals. The drums kick in and the combating vocals synch up like it is a Flight Of The Conchords song. The song transitions to an anthemic head nodding section after the instrumental section. The song is powerful with the dual vocals. It ends with a few final guitar strums.
“I Don’t Know Anything” blasts off fast and furious with an interesting, catchy bass line and driving drums. The song changes up a couple of times, throwing varieties of the melody over the drum, bass, & rhythm guitar steady canvas.
“Where's That Hit?” begins with the organ playing ballpark baseball songlettes. Then the dusty driving country tinged song trucks along. There is a short breakdown where the baseball organ plays the “Charge!” theme. And the song dives back into the path of traffic with harmonica guiding. The song ends with some more vartiations on the “Charge” theme even altered with a harmonica.
“Death in the Afternoon” is a middle album track places at the end to keep momentum going. But it’s the last song, so it doesn’t have anything to work toward. The chorus is a catchy, multi-voiced chanting hook, which utters the title of the song. The guitars parallel its melody instrumentally. The vocals have lots of energy to them. Police sirens and screeching tires play out as the song winds down with the music overstaying its welcome.

Stand Out Track: Come Anytime

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

Links:

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Flowerhead - ...ka BLOOM!~, The People's Fuzz*

Band: Flowerhead
Album: ...ka BLOOM!~, The Peoples Fuzz*
Year: 1992~, 1995*
Style: Alternative
Similar Bands: Ugly Kid Joe, Animal Bag, Pearl Jam, Smashing Pumpkins
"One-Word" Review: Classic-psych-jam-rock-alternativly-reborn
Based Out Of: Austin, Texas
Label: Zoo Entertainment, BMG
...ka BLOOM! - Cover, CD
...ka BLOOM! - Inside, Back
...ka BLOOM! - Liner Notes
The People's Fuzz - Cover Fold Out
The People's Fuzz - Liner Notes, CD & Back

...ka BLOOM! (1992)~
  1. Acid Reign 5:07
  2. All Along The Way 2:50
  3. Thunderjeep 5:51
  4. Snagglepuss 5:44
  5. Everything Is Beautiful 3:30
  6. Oh Shane 7:22
  7. What?! 3:46
  8. Coffee 6:40
  9. Sunflower 5:18
The People's Fuzz (1995)*
  1. Words To You 4:46
  2. No Meaning 3:33
  3. Arise 3:51
  4. Circles 4:54
  5. Captain Cosmo's Carousel 4:40
  6. Happy 5:56
  7. Overdrive 3:25
  8. Cows 4:22
  9. Hold Me Up 4:03
  10. Sky High 3:41
  11. Trip Around the World 3:16
Album Rating (1-10): ~ - 6.0
* - 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
Eric Faust - Vox, Bass, Goofballs, Asst Mixing~*
Pete Levine - Drums, High Vox, Jonesin~
Eric Schmitz - Guitar, Vox, Grungecake~* (Cedar Park)
Buz Zoller - Guitar, Wah-Wha, Good-Cheer~*
Brian Anderson - Engineered~
Steve Marker - Engineered~
Jim Wilson - Asst Engineer~
Lou Giordano - Mixed~
Tommy "Toad" Bender - Asst. Mix~
Jack Skinner - Mastering~
Pauli Ryan - Addl Percussion~
Leslie Aldredge - Managment~
William Berrol Esq - Legal~
Scott Byron - A&R~*
Merlyn Rosenberg - Photography~
Robbie Adams - Producer, Mix, Recording*
Mick "Rockguy" Stearn - Asst Mixing*
Jim Wilson - Mix*
Steve "Stinky" Starnes - Asst Mix*
"Shoeless" Joe Barnes - Asst Mix*
Dave Collins - Mastering*
Kyle Thomas - Drums, Vox* (Course of Empire, Rev. Horton Heat)
Danny Levin - Fiddle* (Asleep at the Wheel)
K. Lee Hammond - Art Direction*
Mitch Greenblatt - Cover Sculpture*
Jeff Bender - Photography*
Scott Robinson - Management*
Scott Clayton - Booking*

Unknown-ness: I’ve had both of their albums on my shelf for a good many years, but I don’t recall how the songs go. From the looks of the first albums artwork, the song lengths, and last but not least, the name, I would bet that the music is going to be hippy psyche jam band songs. Something like Blind Melon perhaps. But the second album looks a bit more professionally done, but it looks like they’ve stepped away from the psych look, and are leaning toward a grungy low brow, hill-billy audience. The songs are shorter, so perhaps this will be a refine step in their growth. Or perhaps not. Either way, this is the prime time that alternative music thrived, so I can only look back at this as some sort of time capsule, one which I’ll never know why I bought (their second album it would seem that I got from BMG music club, I was a member of them & Columbia house)

Album Review: ~The CD opens up with “Acid Reign” featuring psychedelic bass, and launches into grungy fuzz along with trippy double layered vocals. This is updated 60’s psych-rock to the alternative age. Loud soaring guitar solos dot the soundscape. It feels like one complete headbanging mix, devoid of any verse/chorus structure, where the guitar solos take the place of the chorus. “All Along The Way” bursts out with heavy metal-like guitars, and even a metal-like scream. Then the guitars transform into a catchy melody, and the vocals are kinda spoken in the same way that Ugly Kid Joe used. “Thunderjeep” is a sleepy, stoner rock song, trying to recapture Led Zeppelin as filtered through Seattle Rock. A bit like early Pearl Jam, but everything was moving in that direction then. After about 2 minutes, the song picks up into an emotional rant. It is less nasally but similar to Billy Corgan. But the music is much more classic rock. Chugging guitars start off “Snagglepuss” a catchy whiny guitar is applied next, and reserved melodic vocals slightly distorted begin. This song represents power hard rock, slightly progressive even. It has a good groove to it, and feels like a well constructed and solid song. “Everything Is Beautiful” carried the strong melodically sung themes of the last song, with a slightly more driving and faster pace. The lead guitar sounds like they are directly from mega man. This is very much like a video game song with words. Thinking about it like that gives it an increased appreciation of the song. It is not too bad of a song in general, but the quickness and organization of the song are appealing.

“Oh Shane” is a long jammy jam song, right from the beginning, I can hear how the guitars and drumming will work together to drag this song out, which it will, cause it is over 7 min long. This is the kinda song that urges the listener to udder, just kill me now, or give me drugs. The vocals are very sedated, and the syllables are drawn out. Even the drums feel like they are falling asleep as they are played. And just when you think it is gonna end, there guitar plays in a jam-loop, and there are still 2 minutes left. “What?!” brings the album back to a power-metal-pop genre. The vocals sound terrible in the song, somewhat off key, as they are an odd sounding shout-singing style. “Coffee” enters with bass and some low level feedback. Then the slow monotonous jammy-classic rock style begins the nearly 7 minute song. The vocals are not as sedated as the other jammy songs, but you can tell it is in for the long haul, conserving energy and not exerting itself above or below a standard range. There is a spacey, vocals only section before the metal guitars pick back up, around 4 min in. The song just never gets that interesting…the parts all come together to the end, and the pace seems to pick up, but it flounders as the vocals are added. It winds down and ends with distortion. “Sunflower” has a funky bass and repetitive guitar strum. The track says it is over 19 min long, but perhaps that is the popular concept of the time of a “hidden” track. There is a chorus used in the background for small sections, and the vocals feel like they possess drive and purpose here. The tempo is slow and steady and hand claps are added as the song feels like it is winding down. The lyrics include “praise the lord,” what do we have here, then? It ends at 4:40, so what is there between now and the hidden track, when does it start, and is it actually music…around 5:20 some noise and distortion comes on followed by grumblings and slide guitar sounds. You have to turn the volume all the way up to hear it, though. The guitar turns into whining guitar, drums play haphazardly, and wind effects are layered over top of the track. It sounds like a bad Fantomas track. This is a waste of time…don’t listen through the end of “Sunflower.”

*Their second album starts with “Words To You.” It feels like another fuzzed out trippy song, continuing in the same vein of the first album’s style. I think I remember this song from whenever I must have got it. It is kind of catchy, for the slacker-rock that Alternative music was…a bit Billy Corgan, but not as creative. But it definitely shows improvement from the first record. “No Meaning” fades in with the typical grungy guitar sound, nasally vocals and a sing-song chorus. He really sounds more like Corgan here. The sea shanty keyboards begin the song “Arise.” It is a drinking song for the early morning. There are odd whispering underlayed vocals. It has a sleepy head nodding prog feel. The prog feel continues on “Circles,” and the vocals have deep liquid reverb. The song transforms into something that feels like country bar room rock. And I can only imagine “Captain Cosmo's Carousel” to be some Nemo-Genesis type music. It begins prog enough, but it continues as a slower groove, feeling like everything that was bad about radio-alternative music of the 90’s (like “Counting Blue Cars” and “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.”) It is not even that carnivally, and ends with like 25 seconds of pointless noise. “Happy” has swirling effects on the guitars, sounding like Buckingham green or many SFA songs. The bold, but nasally vocals enter and are harmonized in certain areas, and the slow groove progresses. It picks up a little bit and launches into more upbeat and alternative style. And like these guys usually do, just as it seems to be ending, it continues for another minute or so.

“Overdrive” has a fuzzy bass intro and is somewhat driving, but I’d dare say it is overdriving. It sounds a bit like Soul Asylum. It has a very basic structure of verse and chorus, but it is just not very interesting. “Cows” is a funky country bounce song. The vocals are gruff and nasally, and are really trying to be more country than they can be. Although the band is from Austin. From the chorus’s standpoint, this is the kind of song a friend’s band used to play, and luckily I never had to see them. Without much pause, “Hold Me Up” starts with an electric guitar hook, and dark vocals. It is tedious and has no redeeming value. “Sky High” is a power pop song with a catchy hook in the chorus. The bridge is pretty bad, but not enough to ruin the song. “Trip Around the World” ends the album, and although the song length on the back of the record says 3:16, the length says 29:44 on the player. But the beginning part of the real song is pretty upbeat (almost motowny) and the chorus sounds like a verse from the Scooby Doo song: “And Scooby Doo if you come through you're gonna have yourself a scooby snack! That's a fact.” It does end at 3:15, then clanky and jingly sound effects fill a few seconds, and the record falls silent for a few seconds before more insect/car-alarm like effects begin quietly around 4 min & last until 11 min. More effects appear scattered throughout the rest of the filler time. This time I skipped ahead, not listening to it completely. Again, it would have been a waste of time.

Stand Out Track: ~ Everthing is Beautiful

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