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

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Tapes (the) - Party

Name: The Tapes
Album: Party
Year: 1980
Style: Post Punk, Punk, New Wave
Similar Bands: Talking Heads, Husker Du, XTC, Residents, The Jam, Wire, Television
"One-Word" Review: Disjointed Space-filled Angular Wave
Based Out Of: Amsterdam, Netherlands
Label: Passport Records, Jem Records, WEA

Cover, Sleeve, Record
Back, Lyrics, Record

Party (1980)

  1. (I Fall) Head First 3:00
  2. The Mating Season 3:48
  3. Blue Thighs 2:55
  4. Point Eighty Eight 3:38
  5. Into Action 4:14 /
  6. To Assemble 4:05
  7. LG/DG 2:18
  8. Lonesome Max 2:45
  9. Party 3:20
  10. In The Crocodile's Mouth 2:16
  11. Inside Out 5:03 

Album Rating (1-10): 8.5

Members & Other Bands:

  • Rolf Hermsen - Vox, Guitar, Cover Design (Mathilde Santing)
  • Fred Hermsen - Mgmt, Writer
  • Peter Meuris - Drums (Frits, Zonder Naam, Slagwerkgroep, Mathilde Santing, The Nits, Astrid Seriese, Julya Lo'ko, Trockener Kecks)
  • Igor Roovers - Bass (Dynastie Van Oer)
  • Michiel Brandes - Guitars (Mathilde Santing)
  • Don Willard - Producer
  • Angele Grevelink - Photos
  • Peter O. Kapteijn - cover photo inspiration

Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band. From the cover art (and back art, which is basically a cover for side two) of white outfits and ties, it would seem to project new wave. They look rather clean cut, so my guess is more to the synth side of new wave than dirty, hard, or blue collar new wave. 

Album Review: It's a tad funky, with some discordant, flat hooks similar to the Residents, and vocals similar to the Jam. They can be categorized right there in the middle of the new wave / post punk bridge. Lg Dg is quite frantic and a little spooky with the guitar sound meshed with the vocals.
Known as the Dutch Talking Heads for their first two records, this band from Amsterdam recorded 3 records, and took cues from the scene of XTC, Wire, and the aforementioned Talking Heads. This is the only of their records remastered & put to CD with bonus live tracks

Stand Out Track: Lg Dg, Into Action

Links:
Discogs
Allmusic
4 live tracks on Bandcamp
The Velvet Vox - in Dutch
No Longer Forgotten Music
Fredheadset - live recording
Rate your Music
Written in Music

Monday, June 22, 2020

Pezband - s/t

Name: Pezband
Album: s/t
Year: 1977
Style: Power Pop
Similar Bands: Squeeze, Cheap Trick, Badfinger, The Records, Fountains of Wayne, Shoes, Beatles, Raspberries
"One-Word" Review: Sleek hook filled catchy pop
Based Out Of: Oak Park, IL
Label: Passport Records, ABC records, 
Cover, Record
Record, Back
Pezband (1977)
  1. Baby It's Cold Outside 2:49
  2. Tracer 2:51
  3. Princess Mary 2:25
  4. Runaway 3:45
  5. Gas Grill 2:33
  6. When I'm Down 2:02
  7. It's Only a Girl 1:56 /
  8. Please Be Somewhere Tonight 3:04
  9. Let's Dance! 2:34
  10. It Was Alright 2:30
  11. Hold On 2:58
  12. Close your Eyes 5:33
Album Rating (1-10): 9.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Mick Rain - Drums, Percussion, Vox
  • Mike Gorman - Bass, Vox (Black & Blonde, Off Broadway, EIEIO, The Kraze, Second Sufis, Boy George, Matt Bennett )
  • Tommy Gauvenda - Guitars (Tamo Show, Claire, Siren, 
  • Mimi Betinis - Lead Vox, Guitar, Piano (Black & Blonde, Off Broadway, Studebaker John & the Hawks, )
  • Stephan Galfas - Producer, Engineer
  • Peter Sobel - Production Coordinator
  • Jim Bonnefond - Asst. Engineer
  • Joe Intile III - Asst. Engineer
  • Charles Conrad - Asst. Engineer
  • Cliff Hodson - Asst. Engineer
  • George Marino - Mastering
  • Clarence Clemmons - Sax (E-Street Band, Artists United Agaist Apartheid, Red Bank Rockers, Bruce Springsteen, Jersey Arts for Mankind, Ringo Starr & All Starr Band, Steve Smith & the Nakeds, Temple of Soul, Browns All-Star Band, Louisiana Gator Boys, more)
  • John Payne - Sax (Louis Levin, Van Morrison, Milkwood, Bonnie Raitt, The Siegel Schwall Band, Andy Pratt, Fanny, Niki Aukema, Water Into Wine Band, Travis Shook & the Club Wow, Johnny Shines, David Bromberg, Tom Mitchell, Don Ebbett, Martha Velez, Rosalie Sorrels, Peter C Johnson, Tom Church, Noel Paul Stookey, Martin Gross Wendt, Robert Ellis Orrall, Bill Quateman, Halleluja the Hills, Canned Boogers)
  • Randy Brecker - Trumpet  (Andy LaVerne, Art Blakey, Black Light Orch, Blood Sweat & Tears, Bob Mintzer, Child is Father to the Men, Chroma, CTI All Stars, Dalia Faitelson, Das Pferd, Dizzy Gillespie, Don Groinick, Duke Pearson, Farberius, GRP All Stars, Hal Galper, Harlem River Drive, Jaco Pastorius, Kerry Strayer, Loren Schoenberg, Man Doki Soulmates, Marc Copland, Mike Mainieri, Milky Way, Mingus Big Band, Mingus Dynasty, NY All Stars, Pond Life, Renolds Jazz Orch, Roif Kuhn, Ron McClure, Brecker BrosDavid Liebman, Domenic Troiano, Eleventh House, Fisher Fidelity Standard Rock Band, George Gruntz, Horace Silver,  Jack Wilkins, Jamie Baum, Jazz Composers Orch, White Elephant, Woody Witt so much more)
  • Alan Rubin - Trumpet (Black Light Orch, Newport Youth Band, Blues Brothers Band, Mike Gibbs, RCO All-Stars, SNL Band, The Tick Horns, Blood Sweat & Tears, Fat City, Duke Ellington, more)
  • Larry Fast - Synth  (Synergy, Fire INC., Tony Levin Band, Deodato, Sylvia, Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band, Stephen Dees, Martha Velez, Nektar, Intergalactic Touring Band, Peter Gabriel, Stormin' Norman & Suzy, Odyssey, American Standard Band, Tommy James, Hall & Oats, Kate Bush, Boz Scaggs, Meatloaf, Foreigner, Air Supply, John Denver, Bonnie TylerJoan Armatrading, Barbara Streisand, Rick Springfield, Serge Gainsbourg  more)
  • Jay Warneke - Road Crew
  • Jeff Roeschlein - Road Crew
  • John Gillespie - Art Direction
  • William Sosin - Photography
  • Guido Scarato - Design
  • Omega Graphics - Design
  • Michael J Lembo - Mgmt
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but from the logo in broadway lights, i'm guessing they are a little show-tuney or at least theatrical..or perhaps glam rock, even if their band image just looks like a straight forward 70's AOR or power pop band. Upon closer look, the band photo on the cover looks "photoshopped: "the member on the far right is not as Vaseline blurred as the rest of the band...and his image is upside down on the back, which might be on purpose, too...perhaps he was hired after the production was completed, and is pasted over an ex-member.

Album Review: The album is straight up guitar & harmony powerpop- and with a start in 1971, Pezband was one of the first ever bands to be marketed as powerpop. The vocals sound somewhere between the Beatles and Squeeze (esp Let's Dance!): two great bookends. The songs are well structured, simple, catchy and infectious. Its very difficult to pick a stand out track as they all have similarly impressive hooks. They truly were one of the amazingly productive and astonishing bands that should have been much bigger than they were, most likely victims to the time: disco and punk, and being on a struggling soon-to-be bankrupt independent record label that was hemorrhaging $$$ and had no financial system in place to promote the band. At the same time, other bands like Cheap Trick were filling the holes where they would have also fit. And with a killer live act underrepresented on  record, audiences didn't have the awareness needed to make the band a household name. All three of their albums have recently been released on CD (Air Mail Recordings / Not Lame), remastered and remixed their third, Cover to Cover last year (2019). And fun fact, Pezband has no actual meaning aside from the candy: singer Betinis just liked the way the letters looked together artistically.

Stand Out Track: Gas Grill, Please Be Somewhere Tonight

Links:
Wiki

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Good Rats - From Rats to Riches

Name: Good Rats
Album: From Rats to Riches
Year:1978
Style: Glam, Metal, Powerpop, Prog
Similar Bands: Journey, Def Leppard, Queen, Cheap Trick, Kiss, Alex Harvey Band, Black Sabbath, Rush
"One-Word" Review: Theatrical Metal
Based Out Of: Long Island, NYC
Label: Passport, JEM
Cover, Credits, Record
Back, Lyrics, Record
From Rats to Riches (1978)
  1. Taking It To Detroit 3:36
  2. Just Found me A Lady 2:50
  3. Mr. Mechanic 3:39
  4. Dear Sir 3:12
  5. Let Me 4:45 /
  6. Victory In Space 3:06
  7. Coo Coo Coo Blues 4:37
  8. Don't hate the Pnes Who Bring You Rock n' Roll 3:18
  9. Could be Tonight 2:54
  10. Local Zero 5:08
Album Rating (1-10): 7.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • Micky Marchello - Guitar, Vox, Guitar Arrangements
  • Joe Franco - Drums (Twisted Sister, Chiliwack, Fiona, Widowmaker, Vinnie Moore, Blues Saraceno, Leslie West, Jack Bruce, Mariah Carey, Celine Dion, Taylor Dayne, Diana Ross, Hall & Oates, Desperado, The Ladder, Ellen Shipley, Barry Manilow, Natalie Cole, Annie Haslam, Donnie Osmond, Natasha's Brother, Baton Rouge, Henry Lee Summer,Kathy Troccoli, Sheena Easton, Jennifer Holiday, Francesca Beghe, Doro, Mojo Bros. Hammerhead, Magellan, Vanm Helsing's Curse, Mecano, Eddie Ojeda, Steve Walsh, James LaBrie, Leslie West)
  • Peppi Marchello - Lead Vox, Writer (U-Men, Popzarocca, Marchello, Dum, Intergalactic Touring Band)
  • John "the cat" Gatto - Guitar, Keys
  • Lenny Kotke - Bass, Vox
  • Flo & Eddie (Mark Volman & Howard Kaylan) - Producer, Ba Ba Ba's (Phlorescent Leech & Eddie, The Turtles, Frank Zappa)
  • John Hansen - Engineer, Mixing
  • Clay Hutchinson - Second Engineer
  • Stephen Galfas - Project Coordinator, Co-Producer, Engineer
  • David Sonenberg - Business Director
  • Alan MacMillan - String Arrangement & Conduction (Hollywood Vampires, Lou Reed, Alice Cooper, Babys, UFO, Del Erickson, Staccatos, Poco, Guess Who, Barnaby Bye, Kiss, Dave Mason, American Flyer, Mike Finnigan) 
  • Tom Juliano - Sax (Gentle Giants, Kip Carmen)
  • Brian Cuomo - Piano (Fireballet, Sylvia, First Class, Brook Benton, Jack McDuff, Intergalactic Touring Band, Martha Velez, Brother to Brother, Eon, First Class, Bill Perkins, Strawbs)
  • Joe Hosey - Art Direction, Layout & Design
  • Murray Brenman - Art Direction, Layout & Design
  • Bob Friedman - Photos
  • Bob Sherbow - Photos
  • Tom Macchi - Album Title
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band. But they have some solid facial hair going on the cover, and they really look like a bunch of musicians, rather than models posing as a band. Between the cover & smokey back, they seem like this might be a slightly experimental, possibly punk or prog-centered band with a sense of humor.

Album Review: This album spans a gamut of Def Leppard Metal, Queen Glam Pop, catchy Cheap Trick Power-Punk and even some orchestral sections. hard to truly put this band in one genre- in a good way- as the songs still sound cohesive. Some times they go heavy with prog, sometimes harmonized hairband rock, sometime theatrical ballad or showtunes...even throwing in some Beach Boys harmonies. Their 1974 Tasty was their biggest release. And they played with huge superstars at some of the biggest venues- mostly on the East coast, however.

Stand Out Track: Victory in Space

Links:
spotify album
Wiki
website
Billboard Peppi Obit
Discogs
Facebook
Culture Sonar
long island HOF
classic rock history
best classic bands
greatest east coast bands
allmusic
rate your music

Thursday, April 16, 2020

Private Lines - Trouble in School

Name: Private Lines
Album: Trouble In School
Year:1980
Style: Power Pop, Prog
Similar Bands: Journey, Supertramp, Kansas, Buggles
"One-Word" Review: Small Arena Power Rock
Based Out Of: New Jersey
Label: Passport Records, Jem
 Cover & Record
Record & Back
Trouble In School (1980)
  1. Bat an Eye 4:09
  2. I Need to Know Tonight 3:27
  3. Why Am I Always Waiting 4:05
  4. How Long 4:23
  5. Since I Found Your Love 4:55 / 
  6. Young & Sexy 3:43
  7. Trouble In School 3:09
  8. Why Can't I Be More Like You 5:34
  9. Think Of Me 5:57
Album Rating (1-10): 7.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • Pete Sobel - Producer, Bass, Backing Vox, Engineer, Mixing (Intergalactic Touring Band, Martha Velez, Synergy, Strawbs)
  • Ryche Chlander - Writer & Arranger, Guitars, Vox, Mixing (Renaissance, Nektar, Fireballet, Intergalactic Touring Band, Dunn Pearson Jr, Milira, Circuline)
  • Dave Street - Writer & Arranger (The Undead)
  • Bill Pankow - Keys, Guitar, Moog, Claviner
  • Spike Biglin - Bass (Fireballet)
  • Johnny Hawk McLaughlin - Drums, Backing Vox
  • Steve Barth - Vox (Intergalactic Touring Band, Nektar)
  • Claire Lawrence - Sax (Collectors, Chilliwack, Hometown Band, Classics, Valdy, Bim, Minglewood band, Shari Ulrich, Silverlode, Connie Kaldor, Idle Eyes, Cam Molloy)
  • Dave Slagter - Synth, Engineer, Mixing (Payola$, Doug & the Slugs, Morgan Cryer)
  • Bob Rock - Asst. Engineer
  • Pat Glover - Asst. Engineer
  • John Vrtacic - Master of Maintenance
  • Jack Skinner - Mastering
  • Murray Brenman - Art Direction
  • Len Kaitman - Photograhy
  • Wayne Herndon - Hair
  • Isabel Collazo - Make-Up
  • Iris Faith Sekoff - Stylist
  • Rebecca Brenson - Zoli Model
  • Jennifer Carr - Zoli Model
  • Sue Jackson - Zoli Model
  • Dik Fraser- Mgmt
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but based on the cover and back, they definitely think of themselves as ladies men, but I see them as a small town band playing to hometown class reunions and high school football games. I still guess it will be pub rock or power pop.

Album Review: Even though they are a Jersey band, the middle America vibe is strong with this one, as the songs are set for arena rock if the arena is a local VFW or friend's wedding. They do explore some extra curricular instruments like synth sounds and smooth harmonies, but at their root, they are a power-pop band sounding like Journey or Kansas.

Stand Out Track: Trouble In School

Links:
Discogs
Allmusic
La Bible de la Westcoast Music
Glory Daze Music
AOR Night Drive

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Human Sexual Response = Fig. 14

Name: Human Sexual Response
Album Fig. 14
Year: 1980
Style: New Wave, Jangle Pop
Similar Bands: Devo, Blotto, Television, Tom Verlaine, Squeeze
One Word Review: Urgent, Menacing Jangles
Based Out Of: Boston 
Label: Passport Records, EAT Records, Jem Records
 Fig. 14 - Cover, Liner Notes, Record
 Fig. 14 - Back, Liner Notes, Record
Fig 14. Credits Close-up
Fig. 14 (1980)
  1. Guardian Angel 3:48
  2. Dick & Jane 4:13
  3. Jackie Onassis 3:48
  4. Cool Jerk 2:35
  5. Dolls 4:57/
  6. What Does Sex Mean to Me? 4:47
  7. Marone Moan 3:42
  8. Unba Unba 2:53
  9. Anne Frank Story 6:24
Album Rating (1-10): 7.5

Members & Other Bands:
Larry Bangor - Vox (The Zulus, Wild Kingdom, Screaming Mimis, Gospel Birds, Sugar, Kazoondheit, Honey Bea & the Mellow Muffins)
Casey Cameron - Vox (Kazoondheit, Honey Bea & the Mellow Muffins) 
Windle Davis - Vox (Kazoondheit, Honey Bea & the Mellow Muffins)
Dini Lamon - Vox, Tambourine (Kazoondheit, Honey Bea & the Mellow Muffins, Musty Chiffon)
Rich Gilbert - Guitars (The Zulus, Wild Kingdom, Screaming Mimis, Gospel Birds, Concussion Ensemble, Tanya Donelly, Frank Black, Uncle Tupelo, Steve Wynn. Throwing Muses, Lemonheads, Steve Westfield, The Family Cat, Crown Electric Company, Condo Pygmies, Country Bumpkins, CLOWN, The United States, The Coronet Premiers, Blackstone Valley Sinners, Eileen Rose & The Holy Wreck, Thad Cockerell)
Chris Maclachlan - Bass (The Zulus, Wild Kingdom, Screaming Mimis, Gospel Birds)
Malcolm Travis - Drums (The Zulus, Wild Kingdom, Screaming Mimis, Gospel Birds, Sugar, Concussion Ensemble)
John Doelp - Producer
Don Roze - Executive Producer
Eddie Ciletti - Recording
J.D. - Recording
Ben Wisch - Mixing Engineer
Hipgnosis - Cover
Paul Maxon - Cover
Richard Manning - Photo Coloring
Colin Chambers - Line Drawing
BC Kagan - Back Cover Photo

Unknown-ness: I had never heard of this band…looks like it may be calculated, yet fun. Retro, random artwork of children juxtaposed against the band name and album title, seems to illustrate a contradictory, yet clever, say hipsterry theme. I imagine new wave since it is from 1980, but to what degree, and how much nervousness, is yet to be found.

Album Review: So the guitarist, Rich Gilbert, has gone on to play with some of the most popular and big artists from the Boston area, namely Tanya Donelly and Frank Black. He has also worked on many a Bob Mould-Sugar album. They are still playing one-off reunion shows, even up to this year, 2017. But they never received much nationwide success, despite being played on KROQ in LA.
 “Guardian Angel” kicks in with a drum beat, and enters jangley pop territory. The vocals are jittery, and nervous, much like Tom Verlaine, with backing harmonized vocals for key phrases in the verse. There is some good energy to the song, but it is pretty non-threatening, and like a sloppier early-mid era Talking Heads
“Dick & Jane” is a little darker, with a fuzzy feedback guitar punctuating the verse, which is delivered in a cold and broken in structure. Verse two takes the guitar up a couple of octaves, but still is screeching with feedback. The chorus is just a chant of the chorus. The song is a little tedious, as it does not expand over the segmented and stumbling tempo, perhaps chanting a little like Devo.
“Jackie Onassis” was their “big hit.” It starts off with a cymbal, and sleepily and jangley begins, as if part of a dream. It charges ahead with a confident stomp with some prog-guitar flourishes, mixing in dreamy oh-yeahs in time. The song ends with call and response oh yeahs between the singer and backing chorus.
“Cool Jerk” begins with a bouncy and Squeeze-like bass line…the song jitters along anxiously, and would be a fun song to dance to during a live set. It is repetitive, but in a fun, catchy and building way. There are breaks in the song, that still pound forward with a pulsing drum beat. The song is just a Isley Brother’s “Shout” or Checker’s “Twist,” requesting to do the popular dance along with the band as a soundtrack.
“Dolls” also feels like an early Chris Difford/Squeeze song, with some wonky sound effects, and methodical, Devo-ish singing. The song refers to dolls coming to life. It builds and grows, but stays along a very narrow path of musical diversity. The song feels like it wears out its welcome, looping alarm-like vocals that build in intensity, but doesn’t really evolve or capitalize.

“What Does Sex Mean to Me?” starts with a basic rhythm setting the tempo…this is filled with some classic lines like “Virgins Die Horny” and “I put my fingers to my tongue / I taste vagina” Really the song juxtaposes how other societies view sex versus how we/the singer view sex, with some quite political/moral topics amongst the reactionary lyrics. The song, with its anxious, jittery vocals, and repetitive chorus fits cleanly on the album, but it feels like, aside from the instrumental, complex music is traded in for a clear, intelligible platform.
“Marone Moan” starts out quietly, with a less neurotic vocal. It feels a little renaissance like, lofty world and roots music at first. Then it gets a little progressive as the vocals harmonize into a wind-swept cadence. The urgency grows with the pulsing guitar and ethereal “AAhhhhhh” and then it just…ends.
“Unba Unba” begins with a dark guitar line, and a steady drum beat, which creates a bit of a menacing back ally atmosphere. Unba is the stuttering start in the chorus for the work unbelievable. Before the final urgent verse, the vocals swirl into a whirlpool of syllables and notes. And the song, also repeating like an alarm, winds itself up to a sudden stop.
“Anne Frank Story” is their sad, slow ballad. It too, has a bit of a mysterious menacing tone, but the sullen mood is felt as the calm vocals sadly croon and shutter about the Anne Frank Museum. The drums are bombastic and striking. After 2 minutes, the song changes direction a bit, picking up a driving progressive pace to reset the scene, back to the sad reflective verse. It has a bit of a similar feel to the Hooter’s “All You Zombies” which came out 5 years later. The lyric that is repeated the most is perhaps “Time Warp At The Anne Frank Museum.” And the song seems to build and exit just as quietly as it began.

Stand Out Track: Cool Jerk

Links:
Discogs
Allmusic
Wiki
Rate Your Music
Down Underground
Clash City
Static & Distance

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

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Invisible Men - s/t

Name: Invisible Men
Album: s/t
Year: 1983
Style: Power Pop
Similar Bands: Tears For Fears, Paul Simon, XTC, Jerry Harrison, Thomas Dolby, Sparks, Big Country
"One Word" Review: 80's-let's-try-this-button-on-the-keyboard-pop
Based Out Of: West London
Label: Jem Records, Passport Records

Invisible Men - Cover & Sleeve

Invisible Men - Back & Sleeve
Invisible Men - Record

Invisible Men (1983)
  1. Sally 4:09
  2. Golden Bodies 3:01
  3. Going For Broke 3:53
  4. Exocet 3:10
  5. Love In A Hot Air Balloon 3:34
  6. Traces 4:35 /
  7. I Want Your Heart 3:53
  8. Falling For Love 3:31
  9. Guru 4:30
  10. The Women Were Watching 4:31
  11. My Time Has Come 4:33
Album Rating (1-10): 6.5

Members & Other Bands:Anthony Phillips - Bass, Guitar, Vocals, Organ, Producer, Jupiter 8, Polymoog, Arp 2600, Loupy Choir (Genesis)
Martin Drover - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Malcolm Griffiths - Trombone
Joji Hirota - Cymbals, Marimba, Tambourine, Tympani , Shaker, Wood Block, Jawbone, Bell Tree, Cabasa
Morris Pert - Tambourine, Kalimba, Shaker, Jawbone (Isotope)
Vic Stench - Bass
Bimbo Acock - Saxes, Brass Arrangement
Richard Scott - Piano, Guitar, Loupy Choir, Chorus, Noise, Producer, Vocoder, Drum Machine, Tubular Bells, Roland TR-808, Binoculars, Windows
Trevor Vallis - Producer
Stephen Marsh - Photography
Paul Robinson - Drums
Martin Robertson - Sax
Uti Koofreh - Bvox
Jeff Dunne - Drums
Henry & The Cakettes - Party
R. Bernascone - Sarrusaphone
Jonathan Snowdon - Piccolo
The Vicar - Church Organ
The Professor - Title & Harmony Class

Unknown-ness: I’ve never heard of these guys. Actually, I saw the sticker on the cover, and because I’m not a big Genesis fan, I am not familiar with the name Anthony Phillips. So I bought this album, probably because it fit into an artistic genre of albums I was buying: pastel colors, and minimal design. Just the fact that it had the sticker gave it some potential, that this was the new project from a famous somebody. So it has to be at least respectable, right? The date on the record was 1983, so even if it is getting a little old for the height of the power pop style (which is what I’m expecting), it might still be good.

Album Review:
So there are lots and lots of instruments and musicians on this album, so there should be a thick rich palette of textures and sounds. I’d only assume that being in Genesis before this would add to the talent pool of musical friends Philips has acquired. I’ve read that the ideas are there, but the production and execution of the songs is not that great. So here it is.
“Sally” is a smooth synth keyboard, followed up by terrible 80’s jazz sax. Oh god, a twinkling chimey keyboard and the awful parts of the synth 80’s style have all clocked in. Once the song breaks free from the verse, the chorus is not too bad. But there is a lot of making up ground for the inspirational-yet-superficial verse. This reminds me of terrible Tears for Fears songs.
“Golden Bodies” more synth samples, which start out with promise are quickly dashed with overpowering synth brass. But the vocal melody of the song is very interesting and catchy, reminding me of latter XTC. Even if the music is like bad Paul Simon meets TV Dramedy Theme songs. The song has a natural islander flow to it, something like Talking Heads. If only the 80’s stylized synth was toned down, the song could have been a fabulous song. This will probably be the strongest song on the album.
“Going For Broke” has a metal/prog intro, which transfers to a jittery, driving Flashdance-style song. The atmospheric whining guitar takes away from the song, where the direction of the majority of the song is straight ahead, and fun, the guitar grabs your attention and pulls you away toward the opposite direction. It is like the force of an ambient prog song trying to bury its way into this catchy rock/pop song. They don’t blend, rather they tear it apart.
“Exocet” begins with a simple drum machine loop. The vocals remind me of Tears for Fears again. But the synth effects, which are trying to sound like sterile marching war, thus the reference in the song’s name to the missile that struck a British warship in the Falklands War (wikipedia). The song picks up a little, but it feels like it is about to fall apart at any second. The song loops with increased effects to the point of siren like warning. And it cuts off into the polite and delightful next song.
“Love In A Hot Air Balloon” has a slightly warbly guitar sound paired with a upbeat drum section and a triumphant trumpet. The vocals are upbeat and happy, pretty much like what you’d literally expect with the song’s title. I think the song refers not as much love IN, but love FOR a hot air balloon ride. The chorus features short burst of rhythmic vocals that build up to a high climactic finish of the song title.
“Traces” is a quiet ballad that feels a bit like Thomas Dolby in its simplicity and dreamy landscape. There is a popular 80’s song that this reminds me, but I can’t for the life of me think about who it is or what the lyrics are. The deepness, and the liquid nasally-ness of the vocals are the only characteristics that make me think of this missing song. Anyway, I could really see young middle schoolers slow dancing to this song in the mid 80’s

“I Want Your Heart” is a smoothly produced upbeat pop song, with high pitched signing, similar to Sparks, and a bouncy keyboard synth beat, featuring swirling synth sections all over in the back and foregrounds. It is a good song, but it is just a little one-dimensional, never really losing track of its sugary bubble gum purity.
“Falling For Love” fades up with a quiet synth tambourine and totally 80’s keyboard production. The vocal melody trembles up and down, barely attached to the musical accompaniment. The instrumental section brings back the synth sax effect, which sounds like a blister on the song’s surface rather than something blended for the betterment of the song.
“Guru” is an off-timed song, with a staggered section orchestral beginning. Then the sax introduces the verse. This is a proud waltz of a song. It has many new-agey elements, and the same thick, but nasally voice still similar to Tears for Fears, with less energy. The song ends in a swirling fade-out of the chanting chorus.
“The Women Were Watching” begins with a drum and cymbal into, and is soon added to with a thick New Order sounding bass, with a flute and other clashing effects. The chorus comes on bold, like Big Country, and for an instant, it becomes very fun. By far, the most energy exerted is all bonded up in this song. I could totally see Roland from Tears for Fears singing this song.
“My Time Has Come” is a slow, breezy ballad, ending the album on a soothing sleepy note. But the chorus is comparatively bombastic: bold and marching. The melody is proud and all-knowing. And as it loops around, it could go on forever in its catchy building or momentum. Instead of changing it up, and improving with the melody, the song just fades out, just as it begins to get repetitively catchy.

Stand Out Track: Golden Bodies

Links:
Wikipedia
Wikipedia - Anthony Phillips
Phillips Official
Prog Archives
Rate Your Music
Camino Records
Allmusic

Monday, February 11, 2008

Brand X - Unorthodox Behaviour, Moroccan Roll, Masques, Product, Do They Hurt?

Name: Brand X
Albums: Unorthodox Behaviour~, Moroccan Roll^, Masques*, Product`, Do They Hurt?{
Years: 1976~, 1977^, 1978*,1979`, 1980{
Style: Prog Fusion Jazz
Similar Bands: Genesis`, Chromeolodeon
"One-Word" Review: Space-Jazz-Videogame-Soundtrack
Based Out Of: England
Label: Passport, ABC Records~^, Artista*, Columbia Pictures*, Jem`{
Unorthodox Behavior~ - Cover & Insert Unorthodox Behavior~ - Back & Insert Moroccan Roll ^- Cover Moroccan Roll ^- BackMasques *- Cover Masques *- BackProduct `- Cover Product `- Back Do They Hurt {- Cover Do They Hurt {- Back

Unorthodox Behaviour (1976)~
  1. Nuclear Burn (6:25) (sample)
  2. Euthansia Waltz (5:37) (sample)
  3. Born Ugly (8:10)/ (sample)
  4. Smack of Euphoric Hysteria (4:25) (sample)
  5. Unorthodox Behaviour (8:13) (sample)
  6. Running On Three (4:35) (sample)
  7. Touch Wood (3:03) (sample)
Moroccan Roll (1977)^
  1. Sun in the Night (4:23) (sample)
  2. Why Should I Lend You Mine (11:19) (sample)
  3. ...Maybe I'll Lend You Mine After All (2:09) (sample)
  4. Hate Zone (4:41) (sample)
  5. Collapsar (1:34) (sample) /
  6. Disco Suicide (7:55) (sample)
  7. Orbits (1:35) (sample)
  8. Malaga Virgen (8:27) (sample)
  9. Macrocosm (7:23) (sample)
Masques (1978)*
  1. The Poke (5:06) (sample)
  2. Masques (3:17) (sample)
  3. Black Moon (4:48) (sample)
  4. Deadly Nightshade (10:54) (sample)/
  5. Earth Dance (6:10) (sample)
  6. Access To Data (8:04) (sample)
  7. The Ghost of Mayfield Lodge (10:08) (sample)
Product (1979)`
  1. Don't Make Waves (5:28) (sample)
  2. Dance of the Illegal Aliens (6:52) (sample)
  3. Soho (3:47) (sample)
  4. ...And So To F... (6:34) (sample)/
  5. Algon (6:07) (sample)
  6. Rhesus Perplexus (4:06) (sample)
  7. Wal to Wal (3:09) (sample)
  8. Not Good Enough - See Me! (7:27) (sample)
  9. April (2:40) (sample)
Do They Hurt? (1980) {
  1. Noddy Goes to Sweden (4:30) (sample)
  2. Voidarama (4:21) (sample)
  3. Act Of Will (4:43) (sample)
  4. Fragile! (5:26) (sample)/
  5. Cambodia (4:31) (sample)
  6. Triumphant Limp (7:34) (sample)
  7. D.M.Z. (8:39) (sample)
Album rating (1-10):
Unorthodox Behaviour 5.0
Moroccan Roll 5.0
Masques 5.0
Product 5.0
Do They Hurt? 4.5

Band Members & Other Bands:John Goodsall - Guitars~^*`{, Vocals` (Tunnels, Nova)
Percy Jones - Bass~^*` (Tunnels)
Robin Lumley - Keys~^`{ Producer*
Phil Collins - Percussion~^`{Mixed~, Vocals` (Genesis)
Morris Pert - Percussion Etc^*`{
Peter Robinson - Keyboards*`{ (Quartermass)
Chuck Burgi - Drums* (Blue Oyster Cult, Rainbow)
Mike Clarke - Drums`
John Giblin - Bass`{, Photos`
Jack Lancaster - Sax~
Dennis Mackay - Engineer~,Produced~^, Mixed~
Geoff Leach - Tape Op~
Julian Tayler - Tape Op~
Steve Taylor - Tape Op~
Neil Ross - Tape Ops^
Geoff Leach - Tape Ops^
Steve Short - Tape Ops^
John Brand - Tape Ops^
Chris Ysangarides - Tape Ops^
Tex Reed - Equipment & Stimulants~^
Hipgnosis - Sleeve Design~`{Photos`{
Richard Manning - Colouring{
Colin Elgie - Graphics`
Paul Cantry - Photos`
Trident Studios 1975~, 1976-77^, 1978*
Perdurabo Stephen Tayler - Engineered^*
Ray Staff - Mastered^`
Colin Green - Asst Engineer* Recording Engineer`{, Produced`
Neil Kernon - Recording Engineer`{, Producer`{
Richard Austin - Engineered{
Reno Ruocco - Asst Engineer*
Mike Donegani - Asst Engineer*
Jack Skinner - Mastered*
Pete Donovan - Equipment*
Steve Jones - Equipment*
Dave Powell - Equipment*
Hit & Run Music - Management* (Brian Murray-Smith){
Chris Kutschera- Front Photo*
Hag - Back Cover*
AD Design - Layout*
Tony Smith - Management{

Unknown-ness: I had never heard of Brand X. The first of the albums I picked up was "Do They Hurt?" It reminded me of any other pseudo-metal band of the 80's. Later that same visit, I found "Unortho," "Morrocan Roll" & "Masques." So I picked them all up. Looking at the backs, I saw Phil Collins' name, so I realized it was not going to be metal. After examining the song lengths, other album artwork, and band images, I deduced that these would be prog albums. I did not know that they would be all instrumental albums, prog-jazz fusion though. It was not until later that I got "Product," which looks like a really fun album, with all its Rube Goldbergian pipes and random objects.

Album Reviews: If three Bram albums was tough enough to review at one time, this is ever more daunting. For this time I have five albums, and I am not very fond of, nor familiar with this genre of music. I am honestly not experienced in listening to instrumental jams. I've read reviews of these albums, and cannot identify the same characteristics that those reviewers find, and I do not know the correct terminology to describe it anyway. Furthermore, I do not know the historical time line as to what happened in music influentially or what the musicians were up to when these albums were made. So these reviews might seem bare-bones or uninformed; and that is because they are.

~Unorthodox behaviour starts with "Nuclear Burn," as bass & drums fueled Jazz, touched off by soft keyboards. There is a very catchy guitar hook that sets the changes in musical timing. Around 4 min in, the bass and guitar pick up the pace and there is a quick, funky musical burst before the guitar hook brings us back to the familiar tempo. Overall, the album is very liquid jazzy and funky. It is somewhat mystical at times, but there is not as guitar heavy prog as on the later albums. There is one kind of instrumental music that I like and can compare to this music, which is 8-Bit video game cover bands. It is through them, that I have developed any kind of liking to instrumental prog. "Running of the Three" sounds very much like it could have been the background music to a number of classic NES games. With soaring guitars, and quick paced bass & cymbals, this song has all the motivation and energy that keeps a player pacing themselves through out a video game level. The album ends with the quiet, yet ominous "Touch Wood."
^ True to it's conceptual origins, "Moroccan Roll" begins with "Sun In The Night;" a Middle Eastern, Arabic sounding keyboard, which is soon supplemented by chanting in the same melody. This sounds like something that Mr Bungle would have come up with on their last album, or something from one of the Bungle off-shoot bands. More Moroccan based instruments are added, possibly a sitar, or something manufactured to sound like a sitar. Then it is back to the jazzy tempo as from the first album. The humorously titled "Why Would I Lend You Mine" is a long song in 2 parts. After the jazz beginning, the second part is a quiet, dreamy piece with raindrop guitars and echoy insect sounds. Around 8:30, the instruments build to crashing prog, then quietly dissipate back to the quiet, meandering dream-scape. The bass line cements the two sections together. Seemingly continuous in the dream state, the retort to the comedic question: "Maybe I will Lend You Mine After All" is a much shorter, but still as dazed as the preceding track. Changing moods Hate Zone begins with a rollicking drum solo, and is followed up with all sorts of prog elements; the bass line, variety of keyboard sounds, and more soaring guitar. There is a proud, strutting quality to this song. The short "Collapsar" is a spacey, magical journey. It feels like a sample of a song that could go much longer and deeper. This sparse theme is briefly revisited in "Orbits". "Disco Suicide" is a 70's lounge-jazz track, with fast bass play and sudden drum fills. But it is spaced out in equal parts with slower, mystical prog sections. Toward the end, the aspects combined: the strength of the jazz, and the tempo of the mystical side; to produce an anthemic, powerful instrumental ending. The end of "Macrocosm" is of crowd chatter, followed by the dropping and exploding of a bomb, perhaps a way to wipe the slate clean, or a statement about war. This did not have a cohesive Middle Eastern feel as the album title and imagery imply.

* "The Poke" begins Masques with a quick and slightly dark musical attack up and down the scale. There is a slow head nodding musical chorus break. "Black Moon" has a catchy bit, even if it's catchiness feels like a TV show theme to an early 80's dramady. "Deadly Nightshade" begins with twinkling bells, and falls right into dreamy, stretched out prog-lite. And after 2 minutes, the driving tempo that I associate with video game music comes on squealy and strong. That lasts for a great portion of the song, and the music fades out to a dark slowly wobbling atmospheric drone around seven minutes. The song then picks up the slower prog elements from the beginning of the song, as it finishes in fade. "Earth Dances" starts out as positive, yet alien investigation music. It then picks up as a jungle dance number, and changes into a Sonic The Hedgehog musical parody (or due to dates, the parody would be the other way around). It is a fun song, adding and combining a variety of elements to make a chaotic percussion dance number. The only stand out aspect of "Access to Data" is that it ends with a very fast & whiny guitar solo. The last 2.5 minutes of "The Ghost..." are virtually silent, as if the tape was left rolling as they closed up shop for the record (although I know that everything on these albums is meticulously planned).

`The first song from Product is a straightforward radio hit, complete with simple, distinct sections and vocals. It could be a Genesis song, with a multi-layered Phil Collins on vocals. The build to the chorus is driving and very catchy. "Dance" has mismatched fast, groovy bass + drums and slower classical piano overlaid. Yet it is the bass that drives the song. Chapter 2 of the song begins about 2.5 into the song. The music slows to a stop, and the tempo changes to a darker, devilish atmosphere. But chapter 3 comes back with a positive outlook and crooning guitar with 2 minutes to go. The second of pop tracks, Soho is a homage to So-Ho in NYC. It has metal guitars, swirling keyboards and a catchy march-beat of vocals. It gives all the imagery of walking down the street, observing everything around you, and maintining pace with foot traffic. "...And So To F..." is a very repetitive driving song, with the same bass and xylophone sounding instrumentation in the background. Everything follows the path and build of the melody, from the guitar chord crunches to the stuttering obscure vocals in the background. Algon is a futuristic, and it starts out with an incredible amount of energy, which reminds me again of "Sonic The Hedgehog" music. It slows down quite early to a soothing atmospheric sound and calming bass. It wakes up again 2.5 into the song to return to the frantic jittery style. It switches back and forth from calm to rushed music another time, and stalls into a prolonged slow section. But it gains pace, and ends as if Sonic won the level. "Rhesus" feels like Caribbean lounge mixed with salsa. It is care free, and the guitar structure is so much like vocals, you can almost understand what it says. "Wal to Wal" is another head nodding song, but this song feels like a slow, simple tribute to new wave. It is a showcase for the bass. "Not Good Enough" feels like 'secret agent on the move' action music. It is sinister and secretive, but has all the 'limited time' energy of setting up or diffusing a bomb. Yes, it feels like A-Team music. There is a slow transitional period that ends around five minutes with a launch back into some sort of chase scenario set around waterfront streets in Miami Vice. A car drives off and the scene is over with the bad guys getting away. The final track feels like a warm, spring rain, with birds twittering in the background and the water a pleasant happening rather than a nuisance. The music gives out, and the album ends with a bird chirping fade.

{I took a break before I listened to "Do They Hurt." So now I am coming back to this album after not listening to Brand X for two days. Apparently, these are all songs recorded during Product, but were reserved for a year to make this album. "Noddy" starts off with a quick burst of bass prog energy, then slinks along with minimal, repetitive instrumentation. There are some backwards vocals underlying the bass and synthesizer driven song. The song fades out without going anywhere. "Voidarama" follows up the sparse nature of the last song, with a layout that lacks anything distinct or memorable. Synthesized vocals make "Act Of Will" stand out, sounding like a slow version the Moog Cookbook's cover of "More Than A Feeling." This song falls in the category of slow hard (southern) rock. Fragile is more sparse music, where the attention falls on the silence between the musical bits rather than vice versa. There is a neat cartoonish, rapid xylophone played in the background for a couple brief moments. The song slowly builds, to some seemingly Jazz improv sequences, but really never materializes into cohesive song. "Cambodia" follows right in line with as a slow, cigarette lighter ballad. Like a lazy soundtrack score, "Triumphant Limp" is just background fodder. The end starts to build, but it peters out before it can really take off. The final song contains the most energy, and pace, as it possesses a quick drum beat & bass play throughout. This album feels like a bunch of half-baked ideas that were not flushed out, or were just given passage by a band that wanted to get the album done. There seems to be less experimentation with synthesized sound effects. I cannot specify a stand out track, because none of them do. I think one from each of the other four albums is plenty though.

Stand Out Tracks:~Nuclear Burn
^Sun In The Night
*Earth Dances
`Soho

Links:Brand X Allmusic
Brand X Wikipedia
Brand X Myspace
Brand X official
Brand X Discography
Brand X Timeline
Brand X Album Prog Archives
Brand X Album Prog Reviews

Brand X Album Reviews
Brand X Footage on Youtube