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

Thursday, April 9, 2020

Neighborhoods (the) - Reptile Men

Name: The Neighborhoods
Album: Reptile Men
Year: 1987
Style: Power Pop, Janglepop, Metal
Similar Bands: Cheap Trick, The Db's, Dramarama, Material Issue, Moistboys
"One-Word" Review: Collegiate Metal
Based Out Of: Boston, Mass
Label: Roadrunner, Important, Emergo
 Cover & Back + Record
Gatefold & Record
Reptile Men (1987)
  1. Pure & Easy 3:45
  2. Modern Cowboy 4:13
  3. Reptile Men 3:50
  4. Tommy 4:04
  5. Dangerous 3:35 /
  6. The Man 2:30
  7. Peeping Tom 1:49
  8. Out Of Reach 3:34
  9. Wailing Wall 2:53
  10. Cliches 4:25
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
Phil Greene - Producer, Engineer
Ralph Petrarca - Asst Engineer
Davis Minehan - Guitar, Vox (Paul Westerberg, Stardarts, Modifiers, Freeze, Lucky 57, John Surrette, Dirty Truckers, AM Stereo, Kickovers, Little Big Wheel, Cassavettes, Street Dogs, Buffalo Tom, Gang Green, Firecat, Tree)
Michael Quaglia - Drums, Vox (Lord Manuel)
Lee Harrington - Bass, Vox (Future Dads, Outlets, Barrens)
Bill Robinson - Asst Engineer
Vic Steffens - Pre-Production
Chuck Miller - Hoods Crew
Ralph Quaglia - Sound Engineer
Tyler Sweet - Sound Engineer
Nancy Harrington - Concept, Design, Artwork
B.C. Kagan - Photos
Lee - Reptiles

Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band. But they sure seem wacky and alternative. I bet this is mainly jangly college rock with a tinge of punk attitude...but just s little.

Album Review: Apparently they were 10 years old by the time this record came out. In 1979, they won a battle of the bands over Mission of Burma. Their momentum was stopped when they broke up from 80-81, and never regained as big of a following. They even had a song on Guitar Hero 2, and are still active today (2020). The record starts out with power pop, quietly heads toward jangley college radio rock, and dives into some heavier hooks and speedy metal guitars.

Stand Out Track: Pure & Easy

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Friday, January 16, 2015

Wormhole - Chopper

Name: Wormhole (The Wormholes as of 1996)
Album: Chopper (10in EP)
Year: 1995
Style: Alternative
Similar Bands: Nirvana, Dinosaur Jr., Track Star, Pixies, Pavement, My Bloody Valentine
One Word Review: Slacker-Drone-Rock
Based Out Of: Ringsend, Dublin
Label: Roadtrip, Roadrunner
 Chopper - Cover & Record
Chopper - Back & Record
Chopper (1995)
  1. Leave the Blanket In 3:31
  2. 44 Bulldog 3:35
  3. Soul Searching in the Library 2:41
  4. Little Miss 3:34
  5. New 6:48
Album Rating (1-10): 7.5

Members & Other Bands:
Anto Carroll - Bass, Keys (European Sensoria Band, Memory Cells)
Dave Carroll - Drums, Vox (European Sensoria Band, Phil Alvin, Amygdala)
Graham Blackmore - Guitar
Eamonn Crudden - Recording?, Artwork, Photos
Marc Carolan - Production
Edel - Artwork, Photos
Zak -Artwork, Photos

Unknown-ness: I’ve never heard of the band, but just from the band name logo, I imagine this to be some sort of heavy hardcore bridging on metal. It looks dirty and sloppy by design, so I at least imagine some grungy sludge. Also, the label is a division of Roadrunner, and although not all their bands are metal-core bands, they do tend to run in that direction. Either way, this is a short EP, and should not be too much of a challenge to get through.

Album Review: So there was not much on Wormhole, but then I discovered that they changed their name to The Wormholes, and a bit more information opened up. They even got back together last month (DEC 2014) to close down one of their locally historic pubs in Dublin, and they have been an active band since.

“Leave the Blanket In” begins with a rubberband bass riff, and gently fades up with ambient fuzz, only to rock out at about 45 seconds. Sludgy alternative guitars lay the groundwork for a droning, brooding rock song with not so much chord changes, as tonal pitch changes. The whining, crunching guitars note changes sound very minor below all the dense fog.
“44 Bulldog” has a great sounding guitar, like Track Star, with a bit of echo, but sounding metallic and crisp. The chord loop is short and catchy. The vocals drone over the guitar, but are barely intelligible, and are exhausted in their delivery. At the chorus, extra fuzzy guitars add to the density. This is a very good slacker pop song. Toward the end of the song, the lead guitar takes some liberties and flourishes, unwinding a bit, but it does not detract from the song

“Soul Searching in the Library” is a bass driven, instrumental quiet pop song as it begins, with a similar musical setting as XTC’s Battery Brides. Metal screeching guitar is present in the background, and it reminds me of the Pixies as well.
“Little Miss’s” percussive tempo is laid down with a tambourine/cymbal cadence, which abruptly stops to allow for distortion of noise and vocals, like a poorly transmitted hand held radio signal. Then the Pavement like vocals kick in with the chugging rhythm guitar. The distortion revisits for a break and brings  the music to a stop. This precession repeats, and the Pavement-esq
“New” starts out like a band warming up for practice, with some miscellaneous sounds and a very garage band style guitar check, which is the opposite of the band’s recorded style. Then the droning guitars kick in and the pained, slacker vocals set in. The lead guitar hook is quite loud, piercing and walks a fine line of annoying. The song progresses itself into a wall of screeching sound and never comes back to the melody. It wavers in and out of audible tension, and then the rhythm guitar comes back with the melody, a bit of vocal and then it crashes into a huge wall of sound, My Bloody Valentine style. The stumbling, hand dragging melody repeats, like some of the fuzzier, noisier Imperial Teen songs, and then it just decides to end.

Stand Out Track: 44 Bullfrog

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Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Waxing Poetics - Hermitage

Band: Waxing Poetics
Album: Hermitage
Year: 1986
Style: College Radio, Jangle-Pop
Similar Bands: REM, Game Theory, World Party, Let's Active
"One Word" Review: Jangle-Jam
Based Out Of: Norfolk VA
Label: Roadrunner, Emergo, Important Record Distributions

 Hermitage - Cover & Record
Hermitage - Back & Record & Autographs
Hermitage (1986)

  1. Beauty & the Beatitudes 2:49
  2. If You Knew Sushi 2:43
  3. Living Chairs (going through the walls) 3:40
  4. Fridays Child 4:31
  5. Return 3:15
  6. Distinction/ 3:40
  7. Walking on Thin Legs 2:59
  8. Mrs. Dance's Skeleton 4:01
  9. This Parade 4:14
  10. Hermitage 4:23
  11. A Year By Air 2:35
Album Rating (1-10): 6.0

Members & Other Bands:
David Middleton - Vox, Guitar, Production (The Probe, Smile, Splotch, Floyds of Flatbush)
Sean Hennessy - Bass, Vox, Production
Paul Tiers - Guitar, Vox, Harmonica, Production (The Probe, Mike Cross, The Master Plan, Splotch, Wharton Tiers Ensemble)
Bil Shearin - Drums Percussion, Production (Rumblefish, Left Wing Fascists, The Glory Hounds, Brian Grilli)
Mitch Easter - Engineer, Production (Sneakers, Let's Active, REM, Kimberley Rew, Windbreakers, Susanne Vega, Game Theory, Someloves, Myra Holder, Chris Stamey, Loud Family, Helium, Velvet Crush, )
Mike Mills - Production. Piano (REM, The Baseball Project, Warren Zevon, Indigo Girls, The Troggs)
Ted Jansen - Mastering 
Carol Taylor - Art Direction, Cover Concept, Painting, Backing Vox, Manager
Michael Cope - Front & Back Photography

Unknown-ness: I’ve never heard of this band before. I got this record a number of years ago, for reasons I don’t think I even knew then. But based on the name and album cover, it looks like hyper-intelligent indie crap that is too clever for its own good. From the cover and names, it looks tedious, and probably is incredibly boring mid 80’s college radio fodder.



Album Review: Waxing Poetic was a mid-80’s Athens pop dream. Featuring production from both Mike Mills of REM and Mitch Easter of everything else, one would have to imagine that the band knew the exact direction they were going. They are still friends and will play reunion shows to this day, so even though they only had 3 albums, they never really quit. Oddly enough, this album was put out by Roadrunner/Emergo, which mainly focuses on metal acts like Life of Agony, Slipknot, Dream Theater, and The Devil Wears Prada.


“Beauty & the Beatitudes” starts with a “What I Like About You” bass line, and soaring guitar. The vocals fall somewhere in the middle with controlled energy, but with an adventurous melody.  Quick changes to the melody keep you guessing in a good way.
“If You Knew Sushi” was produced as an MTV video back in 1987, and is much more of what I expected: a jangly song, starting out with acoustic guitar. The song is quirky, but still manages to be quite reserved in an under-produced, flat, singer songwriter way.  
“Living Chairs (going through the walls)” is a bit of Alt Country, with a jangly pop melody and harmonica. This is the tedious sort of song I expected, where, at the root, are good pop melodies, but they are covered over by extraneous elements of meandering guitar and muted percussion; not to mention the harmonica, which is treated like a soloing electric guitar instrument.
“Fridays Child” is a darker groove, with the bass heavy and out in front. The vocals are subdued and deeper. If this had heavier guitars, it could have been produced to fit into Nirvana’s catalogue, sounding a little like “Serve the Servants” in the chorus.
“Return” literally returns the listener to the sunnier side, sounding like a Blues Traveler track here. As the folksy rock song continues, the electric guitar becomes a bigger part, and it continues to build right up to a final rest at the end
“Distinction” starts with a pounding drum intro, leading right into the true feel of the song: a funky jam-band bass line. A little Spin Doctors here.

“Walking on Thin Legs” is a straightforward power pop song with bold chord changes and a smooth delivered vocal performance. The melody gently rolls along gaining steam for the crunching chorus. The instrumental break after the first two sections is a bit too jangly, taking away from the song’s power characteristics. All that said, the song is not that powerful of a song; it’s just a nice repeating melody, reminding me of the Posies for some reason.
“Mrs. Dance's Skeleton” enters with a slow, stumbling drum beat, and guitars are added just as sparsely. The vocals are weary and hushed, and this feels like a slow dance shuffle and sway.  
“This Parade” starts with a watery, jangly guitar sound, and picks up to Squeeze-like pop pace, just not nearly as interesting. Even when it gets to the chorus, the vocals are mixed below the guitars and bass, and are thus, not clear, bold, or punchy. The verse-chorus repeats on a rather short loop. The instrumental is mostly the bass line looping, and therefore, does not add much to the song. This part of the song falls into a jam-band style of time killing.
“Hermitage” is the title track, and one of the first songs the band recorded to be released. It starts out with a continuously bass and drum driving tempo and breathless lyrical approach. The verse seems to go on forever without release into a proper chorus. The “Tables are turnin’” section that constitutes the chorus is just an extension of the same melody with extra emphasis on the randomish jangly guitar brought up from the background.
“A Year By Air” slows the album down to a southern acoustic guitar and a mid tempo waltzing drive. The song feels close and localized, like it is trying to spark a sing a long.


Stand Out Track: Beauty & the Beatitudes

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