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

Friday, July 31, 2020

Shooting Star - s/t

Name: Shooting Star
Album: s/t
Year: 1979
Style: Power Pop, Hair Rock
Similar Bands: Journey, Foreigner, REO Speedwagon, Jefferson Starship, Bad English, .38 Special, Kansas, Scorpions, 
"One-Word" Review: Midwestern Hair Power Prog
Based Out Of: Kansas City MO
Label: Virgin, Atlantic, Warner Communications Company
Cover, Record
Back, Record
Shooting Star (1979)
  1. You Got What I Need 3:45 (Single)
  2. Don't Stop Now 4:36
  3. Higher 4:15
  4. Just Friends 3:58
  5. Bring It On 4:45 (Single) /
  6. Tonight 4:38
  7. Rainfall 2:49
  8. Midnight Man 3:35
  9. Stranger 4:47
  10. Last Chance 6:51 (Single)
Album Rating (1-10): 6.5

Members & Other Bands:
  • Gary West (Gary Hodgden)- Writer, Lead Vox, Keys, Guitar, Drums, Percussion (Chesmann Square, The Beckies, Missouri, Madison Avenue)
  • Van McLain(Van Allen McElvain) - Writer, Lead Vox, Lead Guitar (The Shooting Stars featuring the Galaxies, Craig W. Lindesay)
  • Steve Thomas - Drums
  • Ron Verlin - Bass (The Shooting Stars featuring the Galaxies)
  • Bill Guffey - Keys
  • Charles Waltz - Harmony Vox, Violin, Keys (Toledo Waltz, Human Drama, Incubus)
  • Gus Dodgeon - Producer, Tambourine (Elton John, David Bowie)
  • Stuart Epps - Engineer, Short Vox Appearance
  • Stewart Eales - Asst. Engineer
  • Kosh - Design, Art Direction
  • Peter Howe - Photos
  • John Kostick - Mgmt
  • Greg Kimmelman - Mgmt
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band. And nice little play on their name + artwork. They're paparazzi, shooting the stars, thus the band name and bright flash bulb cover. the back band photo catches the flash in a less bright stage, so we see who they are. And they look kinda Talking Heads - new waveish from their general, non-flamboyant outfits. I'm going to guess this will be a solid new wave band

Album Review: They definitely tend to err on the side of Hair Band / Metal side of power pop rather than quirky, jittery new wave end of the spectrum. "You've Got What I Need" borrows a little bit from the chorus melody of  "Philadelphia Freedom," perhaps to using the same Producer Dodgeon. Album Ender "Last Chance" shows their progressive side. Even with those elements, they have the auspicious claim to fame as the first american band to sign with Virgin Records. A second world's first claim, for them was that in 1989, they had the first ever album (a greatest hits CD called Touch Me Tonight) on Billboard's pop album chart that wasn't released on vinyl. Members floated in and out of the band due to illness, touring schedules and disenfranchisement with the music industry, but the band has continued in one way or another to this day, despite McLain's passing in 2018, with plans to play one-off shows here and there sporadically.

Stand Out Track: You've Got What I Need

Links:
Wiki
goldmine 2013

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Other Ones (the) - s/t

Name: The Other Ones
Album: s/t
Year: 1987
Style: Light Rock, Pop
Similar Bands: Sonic the Hedgehog sndtk, Thomas Dolby, Eurogliders, a-ha, Howard Jones, Eurythmics, ABC, Spandau Ballet, Animotion
"One-Word" Review: Overproduced 1-D pop
Based Out Of: Berlin, Germany
Label: Virgin, WEA, Atlantic
Cover, Record
Record, Back
The Other Ones (1987)
  1. Holiday 3:32 (single)
  2. Stay With Me (It's Not Forever) 3:28
  3. We Are What We Are 4:25 (single)
  4. Losing It 2:59
  5. Moments 5:06 (single b-side) /
  6. He's A Man 3:43
  7. All That Love 3:15 (single)
  8. All Day, All Night 5:07
  9. It Makes Me Higher 3:38 (b-side single)
  10. Stranger 3:47 (single)
Album Rating (1-10): 7.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Christopher Neil - Producer
  • Simon Hurrel - Engineer
  • Alf Klimek - Lead Vox (You Pretty Thing, Spliff, Alphaville, Klaus Baumagrt)
  • Johnny Klimek - Bass (You Pretty Thing, Reinhold Heil, 030, Babyloon, Clemek, Effective Force, Holy Language, Pale 3, System 01, Nina Hagen Band, Franka Potente, Tykwer, Matador, Alphaville, Sir Simon Rattle)
  • Uwe Hoffmann - Drums (Ca Lingo, King Kong, La Loora, Rockin' G & the G-Letters, White Russia, Zebra Zebra, Die Arzte, Silly, Nina Schultz, Wire, Wiglaf Droste & Bela B, Terrorgruppe, the Twins)
  • Stephan Gottwald - Keys (Albert & the Heart of Gold, Zebra Zebra, Marian Gold, D Base 5, Spiro, Bobo in White Wooden Houses, Alphaville, 
  • Andreas Schwarz-Ruszczynski - Guitar (Alphaville, Marian Gold, You Pretty Thing, Boy George, Trevor Horn, Klaus Schulze, Pet Shop Boys, Steve Lipson, Julian Mendelsen, Jack White, UKW, Albert & The Heart of Gold, Martin de Vries, Atlantic Popes, Andreas Feidbaumer)
  • Jayney Klimex - Lead Vox (Alphaville, Marian, Bankstatement, Tony Banks, Tangerine Dream, Paul van Dyk, XII Alfonso, Terranova, You Pretty Thing, System 01, Simon Bonney, Johnny Logan, Atlantic Popes, Anita Lane, Xaver Von Treyer)
  • Greg Fulginiti - Mastering
  • Mike Schmidt - Cover
  • Dieter Eikelpoth - Photos
  • Margo Chase - Logo
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band. Their outfits (over-sized jackets with broad shoulders and fluffy mullets) scream mid-80's renaissance/jazz, and i'm getting a Shriekback vibe from the black & white photo. So i imagine this to be some weird overproduced chamber pop music or something.

Album Review: So the album is in fact quite overproduced in an ultra smooth synth way, but the record is very listenable compared to much of this era. It has enough catchy and lively song melodies buried beneath the extraneous guitar solos and synth sounds that don't quite sound like any instrument they are intending to mimic. The band consists of 3 Australian siblings and three German musicians who met after the Aussie family moved to Berlin in search of a European music break. They only have 2 albums and their big hit Holiday reached 29 on the US Billboard hot 100. Internationally, it was 22 in Switzerland, 13 in Austria, 10 in New Zealand and 4 in Germany. Johnny has made a career working in film and tv soundtrack composing, amassing credits for Run Lola Run, Cloud Atlas, Sense8, Deadwood, One Hour Photo, and Land of the Dead.

Stand Out Track: It Makes Me Higher

Links:

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Microdisney - Crooked Mile

Name: Microdisney
Album: Crooked Mile
Year: 1987
Style: Jangle Pop, Light Rock
Similar Bands: XTC, ABC, Loud Family, Aztec Camera
"One-Word" Review: Melodic Overproduced Hookey Pop
Based Out Of: Cork, Ireland
Label: Virgin, Atlantic
Cover, Record
Record, Back
Crooked Mile (1987)
  1. Town to Town 3:19 (single)
  2. Angels 3:41
  3. Our Children 4:33
  4. Mrs. Simpson 3:54
  5. Hey Hey Sam 4:19
  6. Give Me All Your Clothes 4:02 /
  7. Armadillo man 3:04
  8. Bullwhip Road 3:37
  9. And He Descended Into Hell 3:46
  10. Rack 4:29
  11. Big Sleeping House 3:03
  12. People Just Want to Dream 5:17
Album Rating (1-10): 7.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • Cathal Coughland - Writer, Lead Vox, Grapefruit Segment Keyboard, Flexatone (Fatima Mansions, Bubonique, North Sea Scrolls, Martin Stephenson, Dave Couse, Francois Ribac, Eva Schwabe, Ruefrex, Christopher Young, Avalanche, Luke Haines, Eileen Gogan & the Instructions)
  • Sean O'Hagan - Writer, Guitar, Harmonica, Backing Vox (High Llamas, Stereolab, Damian O'Neill & the Monotones, Turn On, Palace Songs, Laila Amezian, Cornelius, Kev Hopper, Young Fresh Fellows, Minus 5, Bonnie Pink, Heavy Blinkers, Alexander Von Mehren, House of Hiss, Jean-Emmanuel Delux & Friends, House of Love, Edith Frost, Laila Amezian, Piero Umiliani, Schneider TM, Saint Etienne, Aluminum Group, Dondre lerche, Kahimi Karie, Kev Hopper, Pluramon, Oddtoot, Super Furry Animals, the Coral more  )
  • Tom Fenner - Drums, Percussion, Backing Vox (High Llamas, Tom Robinson, Fiddlers Dram, Brad is Sex, 
  • Steve Pregnant - Bass
  • James Compton - Keys, Accordian, Backing Vox (Microgroove, Straight Eight, Railway Children, Marshall & the SHooting Stars, Hank Wangford & Lost Cowboys, Paul Ansell's Number Nine, Imelda may, Shakin' Stevens)
  • Lenny Kaye - Producer, Backing Vox (Link Cromwell & the Zoo, Patti Smith Group, Jim Carroll Band, Andy Zwerling, Throwing Muses, Joey Ramone, The Shams, Eugene Chadbourne, more)
  • June Miles-Kingston - Harmony Vox (Mo-Dettes, Pride of the Cross, Fun Boy Three, Everything But the Girl, Big Country, Max Eider, Communards, Woodentops, Jimmy Somerville, David Freeman, 
  • BJ Cole - Pedal & Lap Steel Guitars (Scott Walker, Marc Bolan, Bjork, Luke Vibert, Cochise, Lushlife, Mike batt, Black Eyed Dogs, Hank Wangford Band, New Hovering Dog More)
  • CP Roth - String Arrangement (Blessed Union of Souls, John Giorno Band, Poptarts, Edgar Winter, Rick Derringer, Dead at Birth, Karen Haglof, Regina Richards, Neeva, Nolan Thomas, Suzanne Vega, NKOTB, more)
  • Sabah El - Frugalhorns of Allah
  • Bill Gill - Engineer, Recording, Virtuoso Tambourine (Railway Children)
  • Greg Fulginiti - Mastering
  • Mark Boyne - Jam Studios
  • Matthew Kay - Representation c/o Farrago MGMT
  • Robert Brimson - Sleeve Photos
  • Keith Breeden - Sleeve Design
Unknown-ness: I have heard of Microdisney from being a casual fan of the High Llamas & Sean OHagan, but did not know what they sounded like. I only assumed it was similar to the light indie rock with a bit of a grounded, alt-country feel.

Album Review: At first most of the album is sleepy, with smooth & tinny, "fake" mid to late 80's production, and bits of country peppered through out. That is, except for the superior, fun, soulful "Big Sleeping House"; a song i'd love to hear XTC or the Jam cover. But as i listened to it more, the vocals became more enjoyable in a bit of an Andy Partridge way at the same mid-late 80's era. In 2018, after winning the Irish Music Rights Org / NCH Trtailblazing award, they played their self-declared final two shows ever after a 30 year hiatus.

Stand Out Track: Big Sleeping House

Links:
Wiki

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Fingerprintz - ~Distinguishing Marks *Beat Noir

Name: Fingerprintz
Album: ~Distinguishing Marks *Beat Noir
Year: ~1980, *1981
Style: Punk, Powerpop
Similar Bands: Cheap Trick, Clash, Gang of Four, Buzzcocks, Game Theory, Sex Execs, Blue Chips, Sparks, Talking Heads, Thomas Dolby, Lou Reed, Devo, Duran Duran, Gordon Gano
"One-Word" Review: ~Pure Power-Pop Punk, *Disco-Jazz Post-Punk
Based Out Of: Scotland, UK
Label: ~Virgin, Atlantic, Warner *Stiff, Virgin
 Cover, Credits, Record
 Back, Lyrics, Record
 Cover, Record
Back, Record
~Distinguishing Marks (1980)
  1. Yes Eyes 3:02
  2. Houdini Love 3:09 (Single)
  3. Criminal Mind 4:08
  4. Bullet Proof Heart 4:49 (Single)
  5. Remorse Code 3:34 /
  6. Amnesia 2:44
  7. Ringtone 2:40
  8. Radiation 4:50
  9. Jabs 3:23
  10. Hide And Seek 4:50 (b-side single)
~Beat Noir (1981)
  1. The Beat Escape 5:52 (single)
  2. Shadowed 3:07 (single)
  3. Changing 3:46
  4. Get Civilised 4:35 /
  5. Catwalk 4:08
  6. The Chase 5:15
  7. Touch Sense 4:22
  8. Going Going Gone 3:52
Album Rating (1-10): ~ 9.5
*7.0

Members & Other Bands:
  • *~Jimme O'Neill - Guitar, Lead Vox, Writer, *Producer, Trashicaster Chops, Chimes (Jacqui Brookes, Silencers, Honkytonk Hicks, Celtic Social Club, Intro, Lene Lovich, Scottish World Cup Squad, Alan Simon, Manfred Mann's Earth Band, Anthony More)
  • *~Cha Burnz - Lead Guitar, Vox, Writer, *Underworld Vox, Whirlybird Guitars (Silencers, Adam Ant)
  • *~Kenny Alton - Bass, Vox (Dick Envy, Vermilion)
  • *~Bogdan Wiczling - Drums, Percussion (Jacqui Brookes, Adam Ant, Bill Wyman, Lene Lovich, Bill Nelson)
  • ~Bernie Clarke - Keys (Ten Years Later, Alamo Leal, Alvin Lee, Sapho, Bram Tchaikovsky, Vampire Bats From Lewisham, Phillip Rambow, Aztec Camera, Bill Hurley, Johnny Guitar, Big Heat, David Knopfler, Lizzy Mercier, Edwyn Collins, OST, Go Betweens, Alabama 3)
  • ~Nick Garvey - Producer
  • ~Trevor Hallesy - Engineer
  • ~Terry Medhurst - Engineer
  • ~Nigel Barker - Asst. Engineer
  • ~David Kemp - Asst. Engineer
  • ~John Stalin - Illustrations
  • ~Peter Saville - Sleeve Design
  • *Chris Kimsey - Producer
  • *Chris Porter - Producer 
  • *Steve King - Shadowy Keys (The Colonel, Maddy Prior, Leon Rosselson, Helen Shapiro, Home Service, Linda Thompson)
  • *Sadie the Cat - Cat Vox, Do-be-Doos
  • *Don Snow - Keys Blanc (Squeeze, Anti-Heroin Project, The Catch, The Sinceros, Lee Kosmin, Wendy & the Rocketts, Judie, Tzuke, Nik Kershaw, Chris Eaton, Shelia Walsh, Tina Turner, Holly Johnston, Jimmy Somerville, Heartland, Thomas Anders, Markus Gardeweg, Lene Lovich, Jona Lewie, Nino Buonocore, Tracey Ullman, ABC, Stephen Duffy, Roger Daltrey, Dusty Springfield)
  • *Ron Francois - Bass Noir (Strutters, Lene Lovich, Teardrop Explodes, James Reyne, Wendy Matthews, Sinceros, Absent Friends, Kaylan, Ganggajand, Eurogliders, Nick Plytas, Valerie Lagrange, Julian Cope, Cabo Frio, Aleesha Rome)
  • *Krystof Kafka - Accordion
  • *John Irish Earle - Sax (Gnidrolog, Kilburn & the Highroads, Nine Days' Wonder, The Dance Band, Rumor Brass, Philip Chevron, Ruthless Blues, Graham Parker, Jona Lewie, Rachel Sweet, Johnny Thunders, Thin Lizzy, Wreckless Eric, Carlene Carter, Roy Sundholm, Sandy McLelland, Johnny G, Inmates, Desmond Dekker, Supercharge, Sean Tyla, Joan Jett, Lili Drop, Live Wire, dB's Kirsty MacColl, Dave Edmunds, Shakin' Stevens, Sky High, Mike + Mechanics, Katrina and the Waves, Big Heat, gadgets, Krypton, Dogs, Les Cactus, Fafafa, Paul Carrack, Gary Glitter, Privates)
  • *Dick English Hanson - Trumpet (Ossie Laine, Dance Band, Greatest Show On Earth, Rumor Brass, Taggett, Supercharge, Graham Parker & The Rumour, Jona Lewiw. Rachel Sweet, Wreckless Eric, Inmates, dB's, Dave Edmunds, Sky High, Shakin' Stevens, The Strand, Julien Clerc, Helen Shapiro, katrina & the Waves, Big Heat, Zoom, Dogs, Fixx, Fafafa, Rory Gallagher, Desmond Dekker, Privates, John Gotting, Suzi Quatro, Richie Milton )
  • *Spike Edney - Trombone (Gosport Horns, Queen, SAS Band, Brian May Band, The Cross, Happy Clubsters, The Cross, Roger Chapman, Roger Taylor, Edwin Starr, Linx, Private Lives, Boomtown Rats, Dexys Midnight Runners, Bucks Fizz, Elaine Paige, Haircut 100, Virginia Wolf, Ann Lewis, Duran Duran, Manic Street Preachers, Rhinomen, Les Wampas, Joe Cocker)
  • *Andy Hamilton - Sax (Gosport Horns, George Michael, Duran Duran, David Bowie, Elton John, Radihead, Pet Shop Boys, Albania, Dexys Midnight Runners, Hook Horns, Sandy McLelland & the Backline, Edwin Starr, Linx, Private Lives, Boomtown Rats, Corey Hart, Altered Images, Farmers Boys, Judie Tzuke, Thomas Leer, Wham, Jon Astley, Virginia Wolf, David Knopfler, gary Moore, Tina Turner, Nine Below Zero, Right Said Fred, Marc Almond, Interpreterts, Rhythm Kings, Brian May, Stereophonics)
  • *Dave Phee - Sellotape & Masterplans
  • *Niall Doull-Connolly - Cover Photo
  • *Mike Laye - Back Photo
  • *Kip Krones - Mgmt
Unknown-ness: Never heard of this band, but i saw these two albums side by side in the same discount bin, and from their name, Bryan Ferry-like cover (*sure, Ferry's more familiar "Bete Noir" was 6 years later) and punch out postcard artwork on the 'Marks' it really seems like they have a retro spy/PI theme going, along with the band name. So I imagine dark, back alley crime themes, along with power pop/punk styles (based on the labels).

Album Review: These two albums are very different in composition. Where 'Marks is straight up New Wave power pop-punk, akin to Cheap Trick with a little Game Theory-like vocals + slight variants song to song, Beat Noir is, for the majority, a dancey, Thomas Dolby/Sparks-like Disco New Wave band. That said, (and i love Sparks), there is not really a bad song on 'Marks (Bullet Proof Heart is the closest to a miss), however, I am having hard time picking out a good, stand out song on 'Noir. Singer O'Neill was not their original singer, and early on was writing songs for other big acts like Lene Lovich, Paul Young, Rachel Sweet & Manfred Mann. His wife Sadie sings on 'Noir.

Stand Out Track: ~Yes Eyes
*Going Going Gone

Links:
Spotify
Discogs
rate your music
post-punk monk
Trouser Press
Jimmie Wiki

Friday, March 2, 2018

It's Immaterial - Life's Hard And Then You Die

Artist: It's Immaterial
Album: Life's Hard And Then You Die
Year: 1987
Style: Spoken, Roots Rock, Experimental
Similar Bands: James, The Alarm, Borghesia
One Word Review: Discordant Jazz-Theaterical Dreams
Based Out Of: Liverpool, England
Label: A&M, Virgin Records
 Life's Hard And Then You Die - Cover, Record
 Life's Hard And Then You Die - Back, Record
Life's Hard And Then You Die - Notes

Life's Hard and Then You Die
  1. Driving Away From Home (Jim's Tune) 4:12
  2. Happy Talk 5:29
  3. Rope 3:37
  4. The Better Idea 5:42
  5. Space 3:59 /
  6. The Sweet Life 4:38
  7. Festival Time 3:52
  8. Ed's Funky Diner 3:05
  9. Hang On Sleepy Town 4:02
  10. Lullaby 6:21
Album Rating (1-10): 5.5

Members & Other Bands:
Dave Bascombe - Producer
Felix Kendall - Engineer
John Campbell - vox (Yachts, La Fiancee)
Jarvis Whitehead - instruments (Branda & the Beachballs)
Dave Bates - Producer
Ross Stapleton - A&R
Jerry Harrison - Keys (Talking Heads, Tom Tom Club)
Tarrant Bailey Jr
Roddy Lorimer
Steve Wickham
Brenda Kenny
Henry Preistman (Yachts)
Gillian Miller
Merran Laginestra - Vox
Red Ranch - Art Direction & Design
Charlie Rivel - Clown on Cover
Tansy Spinks - Photographic Treatment Cover
Alastair Thain - Band Photo
Jim Lieber - Harmonica

Unknown-ness: I've never heard of this band, but from the dark album title, nihilistic name, scratchy clown artwork and general font choices, I'd imagine this is a hardcore, thrash band.

Album Review: “Driving Away From Home (Jim's Tune)” is a haunted country landscape tune similar to the Alarm, full of bouncy bass, echoing vocals and harmonica. The vocals are sedately spoken for the verse, and mildly sung for the chorus. The dead- gong jumps out from the background, echoing off in the distance.
“Happy Talk” kicks off with a discordant couple of notes, and quietly, whispers into a rushed, yet muted tempo. It is poetic, like many songs from James albums Laid and Seven, and the vocals are very similar in sound & style to Tim Booth. There is an over all, wind-swept sound to these songs so far. The song is long and meandering, where it can really lose the listener.
“Rope” begins with a skipping synth drum loop, and the Tim Booth style theatrical vocals continue here, supported by piano bursts and a steady bass. The chorus is very dreamy, upbeat and catchy. It slowly transitions into a Celtic jig, thanks to the violin section. A chorus of vocals supports the lead in bold, deep bursts at the end.
“The Better Idea” starts off with a windy background, and slow wood block percussion. It slowly creeks awake, stuttering and going back and forth between singing and beat poetry. It is much more a work on aestetic art than a song
“Space” begins with some mild, repetitive jungle xylophone action, and cold synth. The vocals are like an instruction manual or encyclopedic entry about space. The chorus breaks out into a cold, dark wave song, there is a little Russian Cold wave aspect here.

“The Sweet Life” is another dream-like minimal song, with held, wavering notes, somewhat operatic.  There is a little optimism in the horns at first before they squawk discordantly. The applause at the end give further suggestion of a theatrical
“Festival Time” starts out with a vibe similar to the Ewok celebration at the end of Jedi. Adding in some tribal rhythms, and flutes, but it also has periods of avant guard jazz bursts. And the song fades out with one or two remaining instruments played
“Ed's Funky Diner” has a more straightforward funky melody, a beat-snapping post-apocalyptic dance with horns and a lot of energy, comparatively to the rest of the album.
“Hang On Sleepy Town” has a slow, quiet swaying swagger with acoustic guitar and violin. The vocals glide through, painting a sad, sullen image. The farmhouse instruments slowly grow in urgency.
“Lullaby” begins with twinkling bells, and unexpectedly fast tempo in bass and guitars for a lullaby. The song is actually driving, musically, as the vocals slowly glide overtop. The lyric “It’s a shame” repeats over in the chorus. The piano and bass have an urgent quality to them, although the overall song is not that pressing. The end of the song has actual lullaby lyrics over synth instrumentations that sound like an ominous heart monitor, which paints a sad picture of a prayer for comfort in a hospital room.

Stand Out Track: Rope

Links:
Wiki
Discogs
facebook
pledge music drive (over)
allmusic
SuperDelux Edition
rate your music

Friday, January 29, 2016

Motors - Tenement Steps

Name: Motors
Album: Tenement Steps
Year: 1980
Style: New Wave
Similar Bands: Sparks, Cheap Trick, Split Enz, Gary Numan
"One-Word" Review: Bursting Jazz Hands
Based Out Of: London, UK
Label: Virgin

 Tenement Steps - Cover, Sleeve, Record
 Tenement Steps - Back, Sleeve, Record

Tenement Steps (1980)
  1. Love & Loneliness 4:48
  2. Metropolis 4:43
  3. Here Comes the Hustler 3:32
  4. That's What John Said 5:05 /
  5. Tenement Steps 4:35
  6. Slum People 4:31
  7. Nightmare Zero 3:29
  8. Modern Man 3:20
Album Rating (1-10): 7.5

Members & Other Bands:
Nick Garvey - Vox, Guitar, Bass, Piano (Ducks Deluxe, The Snakes, Buzzcocks, The A's, Sean Tyla, Paul McCartney, Chris Thompson, Wreckless Eric, Bram Tchaikovsky, )
Andy McMaster - Vox, Keys (Ducks Deluxe, Paul McCartney, James Dewar) 
Martin Ace - Bass (Man, Flying Aces, Deke Leonard, Wreckless Eric, Clive John)
Michael Desmarais - Drums (Tyla Gang, John Cale, The Winkies, Brian Eno)
Terry Williams - Drums (Man, Rockpile, Dire Straits, Willie & the Poor Boys, Carlene Carter, Donna Summer, Man, Graham Parker, Kill Switch...Klick, 702, Richard Marx, Tina Turner, Cliff Richard )
Jimmy Iovine - Producer, Remix
Peter Ker - Producer
Shelly Yakus - Engineer, Recording, Mixing, 
Steve Margoshes - Orchestral Arrangement
John Jensen - Additional Engineering
Greg Calbi - Mastering
Pearce Marchback - Sleeve Design
Richard Ogden - Managment

Unknown-ness: I have heard of the Motors before, but they are from an era and part of a niche of bands I don't know enough about to differentiate. Just based on their name, I assume them to be like Mike & The Mechanics, whom I only know a very little bit more about. I do really love the packaging, as anything that diverges from the typical square record cover is a welcome creative change. The packaging, with the angled corners makes it feel like the record is smaller. The optical illusion inducing artistic pattern and upside down use of negativity and symmetry keeps the eye busy and is rewarding. I already like this record, and haven't heard one song yet.

Album Review: The Motors have had quite the pedigree. An early version of the band, called the Snakes, had Robert Gotobed on vocals, who later formed Wire. Before this album was recorded, guitarist Bram Tchaikovsky was also a member, who broke away to record 3 solo records, which I’ve reviewed here before. But by the time this third and final album was recorded, the Motors were down to a two piece, with accomplished studio musicians filling in for the rhythm section.

“Love & Loneliness” was a single, and a minor hit, reaching #58 & #78 in the KU & US respectively. It starts with a rolling drum, a bouncy tempo, and then hits you over the head with soaring and swirling synth keys. The tempo calms down a bit, and establishes a catchy new wave bass line. It is a very bombastic song.
“Metropolis” was released as a single. It has a somewhat dark tone to the synth introduction, and plays in a catchy repetitive loop. I feel like this comes from the same world as Mr. Roboto or maybe Gary Numan. But the chorus is very Sparks-like, with a Broadway theme.
“Here Comes the Hustler” is another very theatrical song, with dark, cold digital tones and a bouncy prog backbone.
“That's What John Said” was released as a single. It has a swaying, sing-song tempo, with a rhythmic, pulsing keyboard driving the tempo.

“Tenement Steps” was also released as a single. This song treads the fine line of a Sparks-style song and a straight up show tune. It plays in parts, or acts, and carries a full range of emotions.
“Slum People” is a revving, coked-up, intense driving track, like something from the mess of a musical, The Apple.
“Nightmare Zero” continues the chemically enhanced stamina theme with a flash-dance rushed tune that sounds like it’s played just a little faster than it should. Like powering through some Cheap Trick
“Modern Man” is a minimal glam-metal-power pop song with simple structure, and a few guitar solos that add a hard edge and coarse atmosphere, but don’t necessarily have to be there.

Stand Out Track: Love & Loneliness

Links:
Wiki
Allmusic
Discogs
post punk monk
Down Underground

Sunday, March 29, 2015

(the) Records - s/t~, Crashes*

Name: The Records
Albums: s/t~, Crashes*
Years: 1979~, 1980
Style: Powerpop, Pub Rock, Glam
Similar Bands: Badfinger, Kinks, Byrds, Cheap Trick, Big Star
"One-Word" Review: Easy Going Harmonic Pop
Based Out Of: England
Label: Virgin, Atlantic Recording Company, Warner Communications
 The Records - Cover & Back
 The Records - Gatefold
 The Records - Lyrics & Record
 The Records - Sleeve & Record
 Crashes - Cover & Record
Crashes - Back & Record
The Records (1979)
  1. All Messed Up & Ready to Go 3:45
  2. Teenarama 4:00
  3. Girls That Don't Exist 3:38
  4. Starry Eyes 4:21
  5. Up All Night 4:33 /
  6. Girl  4:06
  7. Insomnia 3:00
  8. Affection Rejected 3:50
  9. Phone 3:20
  10. Another Star 4:38
Crashes (1980)
  1. Man With a Girl Proof Heart 2:47
  2. Hearts Will Be Broken 3:52
  3. Girl in Golden Disc 3:47
  4. I Don't Remember Your Name 3:38
  5. Hearts on Her Eyes 3:20/
  6. Spent a Week With You Last Night 3:09
  7. Rumour Sets the Woods Alight 3:06
  8. The Worriers  3:29
  9. The Same Mistakes 4:15
  10. Guitars in the Sky 4:08
Album Ratings (1-10): ~8.5
*8.5

Members & Other Bands:
John Wicks - Rhythm Guitar, Vox~* (Kursaal, Flyers, Rachel Sweet, Dave Nachmanoff, Josh Wink)
Huw Gower - Lead Guitar, Vox, Producer~ (The Ratbites from Hell, Rachel Sweet, Dragons, Magic Muscle, Carlene Carter, David Johansen, Graham Parker, Brian Copsey & The Commotion, Rick Springfield, Monks)
Phil Brown - Bass, Vox~* (The Janets, Rachel Sweet)
Will Birch - Drums, Vox, Producer~* (Kursaal Flyers, Rachel Sweet, The Paley Brothers, Richard Anthony)
Ian Gibbons - Keys~
Jude Cole - Guitar, Vox* (Moon Martin & The Ravens, Nugent, Del Shannon, Jewel, Lifehouse, Honeyhoney, Billie Myers, Beth Orton, Rocco Deluca)
Barry Martin - Guitars* (Kursaal Flyers, The Hamsters)
Robert John Lange - Producer~
Tim Friese-Greene - Producer~
Dennis Weinreich - Producer~
Bill Price - Engineer~
Dave Bellotti - Engineer~
Jeremy Green - Tape Op~
Richard Manwaring - Engineer~
Steve Prestage - Tape Op~
Peter Scarbrow - Management~
Neil Terk - Art Direction~
Wayne Maser - Photography~
Andy Cheeseman - Personal Management~
Craig Leon - Production, Engineer*
Gary Langan - Remix*
Mick Glossop - Producer, Engineer*

Unknown-ness:
I've never heard of the records, despite their generic and obvious name. I found these Records records at two different times. I really like the first album's packaging, with the gatefold cover and obvious record store artwork plus Robert Palmer-esq girl shopping and standing in front of ragged concert posters. I assume it will be a gritty pub rock band, and probably power pop mixed in.

Album Review: Power pop best describes The Records, with a touch of Glam. Their biggest hit, Starry Eyes, was from their first album, Shades in Bed, released in the US as a self-titled album, reaching Billboard’s #41. Crashes did not yield any singles, and the record company lost interest in the band. Birch turned to managing bands and started a sightseeing rock bus tour company in the UK. 


~“All Messed Up & Ready to Go” starts with a steady, confident beat. Power guitars and pulsing vocal delivery characterize the song. The verse guitar is like a less-bubblegummy “Last Train to Clarksville.” The start of the instrumental break sounds like the Talking Heads.
“Teenarama” was also a single, and their second best known song. The vocals are calm and collected, yet the music is very jittery. The vocals are harmonized in a very smooth way. The chorus reminds me of Cheap Trick, where it’s just the title showcased in chorus around some catchy, hooky, chugging power pop chords. It’s a solid Fountains of Wayne style song mixed with a little Jellyfish harmony.
“Girls That Don't Exist” starts with a simple Spoon like guitar and drum beat and an anticipational Dismemberment Plan bass line. After the first verse, the song takes more shape as a Tom Petty classic rock song. After the instrumental section, the lead vocals are supported by high pitch bee-gees like backing vocals. The song is an odd mix of a variety of musical styles combined very well.
“Starry Eyes” was a big hit in the US, even more so than the UK. This version was the original version, not the re-recorded one that’s on the UK Shades in Bed. The guitar that leads off the song is a jangely hook. The vocals start, and it has all the tempo of a Cheap Trick song. The song is a perfect looping verse-chorus with a natural transition back to the start. It is not overpowering or slight, but a nice energetic blend of melodic guitars and power pop. The guitar solo hook sounds like what the strikes tried to recreate.
“Up All Night” begins with a rotating psychedelic guitar melody, and the vocals are mixed nicely with a little echoing reverb. This is a side to side swaying, Beach Boys style, atmospheric ballad. Lots of higher pitched harmonized sections come together for the chorus, which retains a lazy yet aware vibe. It is just an easy to listen to, enjoyable sound.
“Girl” starts off with whining guitar for a moment before picking up power chords with the rhythm guitar. The guitar chugs along rhythmically with the pounding keyboard and it breaks out with power pop chords in the chorus. 
“Insomnia” starts off as a running, training montage soundtrack with strong guitars and rushed tempo. The verse slows the tempo down, as if the insomniac is trying to relax and fell asleep. But the tossing and turning gets the better of the story’s main character, and the chorus brings back the frustrated training tempo. 
“Affection Rejected” begins like a smooth ELO song, with a little prog bassline. The tone is sentimental, and very Badfinger-like. Lots of harmonies and little power flourishes along steady, main melody.
“Phone” carries a very funky bassline, which along with the guitar playing chords with lengthy intervals, makes a sinister back alley tone, like Cold as Ice by Foreigner. The lead vocals are shared…the first set are deeper, and by the breakdown, the higher, Sparks like vocals come along. They then interchange for the second verse
“Another Star” is a more ballady combination of vocals and light electric guitar for the intro. Wailing guitars are added behind soon after, and along with the bass and drums, they create a smooth soaring, cloud hopping melody.


*“Man With a Girl Proof Heart” picks right up from the first album, with catchy melody, chugging guitars. In this case, the vocals are more nasally, and a little like the Ramones or Graham Parker. But the root is still in catchy power pop.
“Hearts Will Be Broken” starts with a whiny rhythm guitar loop, and then the vocals take it back a laid back notch, to smooth power pop easily comparable to Big Star or Badfinger. 
“Girl in Golden Disc” takes us into the gritty bar, for a guitar heavy pub rock intro, and the song flows into a power-prog verse. The bridge into the chorus builds well, and the chorus turns out to be the same as the bridge melody, with a fuller sound. The vocals fade out near the end, leaving the drums pushing on alone. Then the vocals rebuild the song with the lead vocals singing the chorus, and the whole song returns for a short final section.    
“I Don't Remember Your Name” floats in with a fade up and a power guitar melody installs the initial hook. It has a very Beatles structure, with short building verses that end in harmonies, and the repeating hook which has a very Beatley sound.
“Hearts on Her Eyes” was the lone single from this record. It starts with a mid-toned, jangly guitar, and a staggered dual layered voice. It follows a simple, intuitive melody that is not incredibly catchy, but it’s very folksy and nonthreatening. 


“Spent a Week With You Last Night” has a swaggery Beatles guitar-like intro, and the vocal melody also ends in harmonies, again, like the Beatles. As the song progresses, it unveils a sort of southern bluesy rock to the tempo and rhythm, capitalizing on the sound at end.
“Rumour Sets the Woods Alight” builds momentum right from the beginning, with the guitar chugging along as the tempo conductor. The vocals flow over the musical base, and they possess a gentle release when they finally get to the chorus. The song has a nice structure, which keeps it interesting. The short instrumental section is followed by a pause, making the listener think the track is over, but it then picks right back up at the bridge. I do particularly like the melody in the chorus of the song.
“The Worriers” has a bold power pop guitar driven base, but the vocals don’t carry the energy that would match with the music. It does not detract from the music, as these songs are all so full of catchy hooks, but it makes the songs non-threatening, perhaps by design: like a muzzle on a menacing looking dog.
“The Same Mistakes” carries along a simple variant on the aggressive guitar work balance with soft, smooth harmonized vocals. The punishing drums behind the chorus pound the hook into the listener’s ears. The drums build coming out of the chorus, leading into a verse that falters just a little. But the bridge finds its way, and leads into a cereal commercial level of vocal delivery and catchiness. The next breakdown is a little psychedelic, with a “turning me round,” spinning, echoing vocal production and are brought back to finish out the song.
“Guitars in the Sky” feels like a mid-album track, not quite an album finisher. The momentum is building in the verse of the song, not letting the listener come down from the power pop on the rest of the album. This is a song that promises more. There is a little metal mentality in the chord changes and driving guitars and drums. Cheap Trick is again brought to mind.

Stand Out Tracks:~Starry Eyes
*Rumour Sets the Woods Alight

Links:
Wiki
Website
John Wicks & The Records site
Allmusic
Discogs
Trouser Press
Will Birch Site

Thursday, January 29, 2015

(the) Members - 1980 - The Choice is Yours~, Uprhythm Downbeat*

Name: The Members
Album: 1980 - The Choice is Yours~ Uprhythm, Downbeat*
Year: 1980~, 1982*
Style: Ska, Punk, Funk*
Similar Bands: English Beat, Clash, Ventures, Bad Manners, Madness, Buzzcocks, Rifles, The Jam, The Alarm*
One Word Review: Anthemic Power-Surf-Punk~, Discount-Danceclub-Funk*
Based Out Of: Camberley, England
Label: Virgin~, Artista*
 1980 - The Choice is Yours - Cover & Record
  1980 - The Choice is Yours - Back & Record
Uprhythm Downbeat - Cover & Record
 Uprhythm Downbeat - Cover & Record
1980 The Choice Is Yours (1980)
  1. The Ayatollah Harmony 2:45
  2. Goodbye to the Job 2:25
  3. Physical Love 3:20
  4. Romance 3:12
  5. Brian Was 3:28
  6. Flying Again 3:27/
  7. Normal People 3:25
  8. Police Car 3:50
  9. Clean Men 3:57
  10. Muzak Machine 2:48
  11. Gang War 5:27
Uprhythm Downbeat (1982)
  1. Working Girl 4:09
  2. The Family 4:11
  3. The Model 5:10
  4. Chairman of the Board 4:05
  5. Boys Like Us 4:11/
  6. Going West 4:10
  7. Radiodub 5:52
  8. Fire (In My Heart) 4:19
  9. You and Me Against the World 4:22
  10. We the People 5:28
Album Rating (1-10): 9.0~
6.0*

Members & Other Bands:
Chris Payne - Bass, Vox~* (JC's Mainmen, Adrian Borland & the Citizens, Newtown Neurotics, Gary Numan, Andy Smythe, Dramatis, Tubeaway Army, Visage )
Adrian Lillywhite - Drums, Percussion~* (Bruce Foxton, King, Kristy MacColl)
John Brand - Engineer~
Dick Cuthell - Flugelhorn~ 9Pogues, Eurythmics, Burning Spear, Specials, Selecter, Fun Boy Three, Steel Pulse, Toots & The Maytals, Jade Warrior)
Nigel Bennett - Guitar, Vox~*Keys* (Vibrators, Hugh Cornwell, Duck Sauce)
J.C. Carroll - Guitar, Vox,~*Keys* (The Wise Monkeys, Frank Tovey, Johnny Thunders, Newtown Neurotics)
Nicky Tesco - Vox~* (Stranglers, Newtown Neurotics, Roger Daltrey)
Buzz Carter - Management~
Robin Eggar - Management~
Chris Gabrinski - Photography~
Joe Jackson - Piano~
Rupert Hine - Producer, Keys~
Albie Donnelly - Sax~ (Supercharge, Graham Parker, City Boy, Boomtown Rats, 
Keith Breeden - Sleeve~
Malcm Garret - Sleeve~
Ian Morais - Tape Operator~
Rico Rodriguez - Trombone~ (Jooles Holland, Burning Spear, Toots & Maytales, Steel Pulse, Delroy Washington, Specials, Bad Manners, The Selecter, Ocean Colour Scene, SFA, Amy Winehouse)
James Lebbad - Design Logo*
Howard Fritzon - Art Direction
Dave Stetson - Cover Photograph*
Monica Dee Lenrow - Photography Inner Sleeve*
Dave Allen - Producer, Programmer*
Martin Rushent - Producer, Programmer*
Simon Lloyd - Saxes, Trumpet, Keyboard Programmer* (Bananarama, Ice House, Thomas Dolby, Lords of the New Church, The Damned, Propaganda, Trevor Jones, Outcasts)
Steve (Rudi) Thompson - Sax (X-Ray Specs, Snips, Lords of the New Church)
Ian Grant - Management*
Rhonda Krauss - Hair & Make-Up
Sue Game - Stylist

Unknown-ness: I’ve never heard of the Members, and from the looks of the two vastly different album covers, they are either clunky new wave or a horror-rockabilly indie band. The first album has cold war politics imagery all over it, and the second album changes up their logo to look like the Cramps and the band looks slightly menacing, standing in some fire escape stairwell. I bought these albums separately, hardly believing it was the same band, once I filed them next to each other, which was further enforced by the fact that the albums are on two different labels.

Album Review: The Members were one of the original bands to combined Reggae and Punk rock, starting back in 1977. The second of the two albums I have here was a lighter, more ska-reggae influenced album, and even released in the US a full year before it was renamed and released in their homeland. Guitarist JC Carroll has scored a couple of films including Don Juan DeMarco and a Joe Strummer documentary. Like the Dead Milkmen after them, they were from the suburbs, and sang in a witty and imaginative manner. As the times changed, their sound altered from one album to the next, from a Buzzcocks and Power-Pop rawness to a more produced sound with much more brass, evoking later period Clash and a little English Beat.


“The Ayatollah Harmony” is an instrumental that illustrated the reggae beat of rhythm guitar with a bit of a neurotic and dark new wave/punk tempo to sound like the Clash. It brings in surf guitar to take the lead like the Ventures.
“Goodbye to the Job” starts with a rolling drum beat, and stop start tempo. The heavy British vocals begin sounding like Bad Manners or like gruffer Madness. The chanting choir of vocals at the chorus gives an impression of a working class.
“Physical Love” starts out reserved, but ready to explode with its building chords. It relaxed for the moment with a cowbell, and Clash like guitars. The harmonized choir of vocals makes up the chorus. There is a lot of general energy in the singer’s voice, as it hiccups over the melody, but the song wavers in a middle ground that is neither a ballad nor a driving jumping song.
“Romance” was a single. It is composed of a general reggae back beat and a bouncy bass line. The vocals are a deep nasally British sound holds down a basic sing-song melody. This track involves some Madness-like spoken sections and steel guitar surf effects. This is a toe-tapping and friendly skanking song.
“Brian Was” fades up from a very quiet place. The vocals are quiet and polite at first as the momentum builds; it feels like a less-controlled Elvis Costello song. Mid song, it turns into a power pop chanting anthem.
“Flying Again” was also a single. It enters with a rolling drum loop, and is supported by power chords, neurotically pulsing along. This could easily be classified as power-pop punk. The bridge to the chorus builds up slightly off key, only to level out with a catchy hook based on the song title.

“Normal People” starts right off with a straightforward, driving, energetic slam dancing punk rock song with a catchy edge akin to the Buzzcocks. The breakdown takes all the momentum out of the song. It quiets the music down to light drums, faint guitars and the bass beat keeping time. But it has a building potential, and once the spoken word vocals find the phrase to repeat on, they blast off.
“Police Car” has a jangly guitar played precisely, and the song becomes a dark alley Clash-like song, with echoing bully vocals for the chorus, reminding me of the Rifles, who copied the Jam.
“Clean Men” brings some horns into the mix, bringing the jammy slow side of Ska & reggae to the forefront. This reminds me of a couple different Madness songs.
“Muzak Machine” throws a familiar posh doorbell melody played by guitars to start off the song, and it is a driving Buzzcocks type song with a little extra powerpop added in. The chorus is not as obvious, the first time around, but by the second one, it jumps out and builds with applied instruments to the end of the song.
“Gang War” is much lighter, with a barroom piano and bass driving the song in the intro. It moves out of the piano pub and into the street with a pleasant blue collar brawler’s anthem. It feels like a romantic memory describing a violent situation perhaps current, or perhaps of the singer’s youth. Squealing brass matches the melody sax, as the song fades out chanting the title over and over again.

“Working Girl” was apparently a huge hit in the US. And it follows up on the dark bass lines and a little reggae rhythm guitar from the first album. The sound is much more produced and feels like more generic 80’s middle America New Wave (Jessie’s Girl) rather than anything with authentic emotion from the first album.  
“The Family” kicks off with an artificial power guitar, and brass, and the song takes on a sweaty pastel Miami Vice nightclub vibe. The basic melody still feels rooted in the Clash.
“The Model” slows things down with a detective reggae tempo. The horns punctuate the verse sections, and the instrumental choruses are just chill. They lose their focus and just meander around for a while, after what feels like 10 minutes (but is only 4) before one last run through with the horns, and a hiccupping skipping sample (think English Beat) and a horns fade out.
“Chairman of the Board” is a nice steady driving song made interesting with the horns. It feels like a cheap imitation of the Clash, but once you are in there at a live show, I’m sure you would forget all else and just embrace the good vibes. It feels like they ran out of ideas, and just let things ramble in this and the song right before.
“Boys Like Us” has a much more funky approach, as it is a slow parliament vibe. The vocals lead is much deeper like INXS or the Soup Dragons, and are more relaxed. For the chorus, they request a call and response from the band. It evokes a little cheese hired-for-a-party feeling that is trying to be funky. And it fades out as if the party ship is returning back to its own planet, which is just one band member’s apartment behind some 7-11.

“Going West” continues the funky vibe to side two. I’d consider this more of Funk-a-delic influenced than reggae for the majority of the song. The horns show little reggae themes in the chorus. And before bringing anything catchy, the song just quietly fades out.
“Radiodub” was a hit single in Australia. With a reverberating bass beat, and echoing effects, the song carries a bit of a Gang of Four, broken time signatures and angular chords, but those elements are embedded in computer synthesized effects. It is mostly an instrumental, with a few echoing shout-vocals. It really feels like a dance remix, which I think it is (dub). As it builds to the end, there are lazer sounds, cross fading and layers of vocals.
“Fire (In My Heart)” is another example of Clash like jangly punk with is bare bones music and mostly a beat keeping it alive. The horns also add to the song, and the chorus of call and response singing makes it quite anthemic, and a little like the Alarm. But like most of the other tracks, the song tends to meander and grow tedious.
“You and Me Against the World” is a slow swaying side to side acoustic ballad. The vocals are extra deep. The sway gently becomes a swagger by the chorus, with a chanting group of vocals. I think it is trying to be soulful in a country-manner. It is thoughtful, but not that interesting of a song.
“We the People” is gritty and power hungry. The vocals are sloppy-nasally, and are thrown over a marching tempo. The chorus is just the title of the track sang by the lead and a chorus of voices at different pitches. The horns are used minimally to accent the melody nicely. Again, they use a very anthemic way to end an album. The tone of the song for the verse reminds me a lot of the Alarm’s The Stand with the way the vocals are near-spoken over the song. It is a steady and repetitive song that goes on for a little too long.

Stand Out Tracks: Musak Machine~
Links:

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Martha & The Muffins - This is the Ice Age

Name: Martha & The Muffins
Album: This is the Ice Age
Year: 1981
Style: Pop, New Wave, New Age
Similar Bands: Lou Reed, Jerry Harrison, Talking Heads, Cocteu Twins, Daves, Blondie
"One-Word" Review: Sci-Fi Fantasy Soundtrack
Based Out Of: Toronto, ON
Label: Polygram, Virgin, Dindisc
This is the Ice Age - Cover & Record
This is the Ice Age - Back & Record
This is the Ice Age (1981)
  1. Swimming 3:52
  2. Women Around the World At Work 3:46
  3. Casualties of Glass 5:09
  4. Boy Without Filters 4:58
  5. Jets Seem Slower in London Skies 2:34/
  6. This is the Ice Age 7:25
  7. One Day in Paris 4:15
  8. You Sold the Cottage 3:55
  9. Three Hundred Years / Chemistry 7:00
Album Rating (1-10): 6.5

Members & Other Bands:
Martha Johnson - Vox, Keys, Percussion
Mark Gane - Guitar, Vox, Keys, Treatments, Percussion, Cover
Tim Gane - Drum Kit, Percussion
Andy Haas - Sax, Trombone
Jocelyne Lanois - Bass, Backing vox, Percussion, Keys
Daniel Lanois - Backing Vox, Percussion, Treatments, Production, Engineer,
Nick Gane - Casiotone, Noise Generator
Sandy Horne - Backing Vox
Gordon Deppe - Backing Vox
Alyx Skriabow - Backing Vox
Andy Condon - Hand Claps, Asst. Engineer
George Axon - Percussion, Asst. Engineer
Corinne Plomish - Backing Vox
Glenn Schellenberg - Piano
David Millar - Live Sound
Gerry Young - Management

Unknown-ness: Never heard of these guys. But I like the minimal artwork and pastel sky colors on the cover and back. Plus, with the name like Martha & The Muffins, I can’t expect it to be too serious. The name actually sounds like they should have come out of Hoboken at this time period.

Album Review: “Swimming” begins with traffic & car sound effects, and then an icy cold key melody begins. The monotone (but harmonic) male vocals remind me of Lou Reed for the little I know of him, and Jerry Harrison, who I’ve reviewed before. It has a bit of an electro-dance beat to it. Female backing vocals take over the lead toward the end, bringing new life to the melody. The guitar sounds a little 8-bit-like, with whatever effects are placed on it.
“Women Around the World At Work” is a more straightforward new wave song. Female vocals take the lead, and they balance the Male, icy cold melodic monotone vocals. I could hear this played at Sex Dwarf. For some reason a sax is added right in the middle of the song, which initially feels odd, and is jarring. It has a repetitive but catchy chorus.
“Casualties of Glass” is delicate and quiet as its name suggests. A bit new agey and ethereal, it feels like a period piece. Like poetry sung to smooth jazz. After 2:45, the music picks up and a catchy 80’s pop/new wave song emerges. At this point it transitions from a cheesy 80’s sci-fi fantasy theme song to a Broadway show tune, with a dance routine done to the repetitive catch phrase “don’t lose hope.”
“Boy Without Filters” begins with a woodwind fade out, and an ambient Asian tundra mood is set. The song projects a sense of environment and discovery. The monotone male vocals guide the song, like poetry, from musical section to section. The music is stripped down with a basic dark, “Goonies-ish” tone. “Jets Seem Slower in London Skies” provokes exactly what the title says. There is a growing bass note held that, knowing the song title, audiocates a slow moving jet across the sky. This instrumental song is an “early morning wake up to the new day” song as I often like to describe. But it stays in that one eye-rubbing-awake moment for the entire song.

“This is the Ice Age” begins side two with a slowly rising combination of tinkling piano sections. Then a bongos drum beat and faster pace bass & guitars brings the song to life and really shakes you awake from the last three songs on the first side. The female vocals reminds me of the Daves, as the song feels very visual, like it is a performance art song. I am reminded of the Tom-Tom club from the little I know of them. It is a long song, enough time to zone out until the repetitive reiterating of the title brings you back and fades out.
“One Day in Paris” creeps up very slowly, and is beaten in capturing the listener’s attentions by Celtic like female vocals. The song is a delicate piano ballad, which again is very good at capturing that waking up moment in audio atmosphere.
“You Sold the Cottage” comes right back with a strong drum beat and a fast dancy bass line. It is a bit angular and synthetic, like Devo. Female vocals sing over the melody, and really carry the new wave jitteryness with them. The only bad thing is when the vocals digress from singing to speaking over the music. Otherwise this would be a great song.
“Three Hundred Years / Chemistry” ends the album with a quiet ambient serious thinking instrumental beginning. It turns into another cheesy instrumental sci-fi fantasy score. Half way through the synth picks up the pace (I’m guessing this is when “Chemistry” come in) and it sounds Asian in its execution. It is a fun and poppy melody, and is overlayed by a buzz-saw like electric guitar which follows the melody too. Female vocals accompany this song, sounding like Blondie. The vocals don’t give up, but the fade out, seeming premature, ends the album smoothly.

Stand Out Track: You Sold the Cottage

Links:Allmusic
Wikipedia
Perfect Sound Forever Interview
Blog Critics
Myspace
Last FM
Facebook
Radio Free Canuckistan
80's Server
National Post
CBC News
Wears the Trousers

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Interview - Big Oceans~, s/t*

Name: Interview
Album(s): Big Oceans~, s/t (Snakes & Lovers)*
Year(s): 1979~, 1980*
Style: New Wave, Smooth Pop, Singer/Songwriter
Similar Bands: Graham Parker, Aztec Camera, A's, Daddy Licks, John Mellencamp, Elvis Costello, Dramarama
"One Word" Review: Nazal-Smooth Pop-Wave
Based Out Of: Bath, England
Label: Virgin, Atlantic, Warner
Big Oceans - Cover & Sleeve
Big Oceans - Back & Sleeve Notes
Big Oceans - Record
s/t - Cover & Record
s/t - Back & Record

Big Oceans (1979)~
  1. You Didn't Have to Lie to Me 3:12
  2. Here Come the Cavalry 4:25
  3. Feet Start Walking 2:30
  4. Love Fallout 3:47
  5. Fire Island 4:40/
  6. Academies to Anger 3:41
  7. Blow Wind from Alesund 3:00
  8. St Jean Wires 4:56
  9. Hart Crane in Mexico 3:45
  10. Shipyards 4:52
S/T (1980)*
  1. Adventures 4:50
  2. Hope It's Me 3:45
  3. Hide & Seek 2:58
  4. Crossing Borders 3:16
  5. It's Over Now 3:18
  6. Union Man 3:30 /
  7. To The People 3:39
  8. A Gift 4:38
  9. The Conqueror 4:10
  10. Style on Seaview 4:12
  11. Until I Hold Her 7:20
Album Rating (1-10): ~ 7.5
*6.5

Members & Other Bands:
Pete Allerhand - Guitar, Keys, Vox
Alan Brain - Guitar, Vox, Sleeve Concept~
Jeff Starrs - Vox
Manny Elias - Drums
Phil Crowther - Bass~
Alfie Agius - Bass, Vox*
Colin Thurston - Producer~ (Duran Duran, Kajagoogoo)
Arnold Frolows - Executive Producer~
Ansell Sadgrove - Design~
Marlis Duncklau - Vox*
Pete Wingfield - Piano, Synth, Hammond, Clavinet*
Mick Glossop - Producer,Engineer*
Roger Stowell - Photography*

Unknown-ness: I had never heard of these guys. I got the two albums at different times, not even knowing or remembering each one. I got the spotted, self titled album first, mostly because of the picture of the band on the cover. The rest of the album looks to be too 80’s – in a bad way, for my taste, but I liked to take a chance on it, also because of the year. But on Big Oceans, the minimal artwork is bright and the font for the band looks pretty cool too.

Album Review: “You Didn't Have to Lie to Me” begins with a pleasant smooth rock intro, akin to Aztec Camera and college radio music, with light rock harmonized vocals. There is a large adult contemporary vibe to this, and the lead vocals are sung in a nasally urgency, similar to Graham Parker, or like a very light Elvis Costello. The songs have a very minimal produced sound that floats by.
“Here Come the Cavalry” had a bold 80’s new wave, but the production is so light and wispy, that its potency is completely lost. The nasally vocals and harmonized background still sound good, but it is like an impression of new wave rock music. There is a heart beat pulse breakdown halfway through the song, and the bass kicks in giving it more of an edge, but the jangely guitar does nothing to bolster that power. This could have been a really great song with a youthful production.
“Feet Start Walking” is a slower, near-ballad sentimental song that beckons the feeling of a doo-wop love-lost song. The vocals have an honest emotion, and the minimal music actually helps accent that in this song in a good way.
“Love Fallout” has a nice bouncy upbeat progression, and the lead guitar does its own things within the boundary of the bass. The melody is catchy and feels like it is going to explode into an ultimately catchy chorus at any second. The chorus instead turns into something like adapted-disco.
“Fire Island” starts with the jangley 80’s guitar and the vocals are hushed, until the song builds up to its full force. It is still near-disco and harmonized vocals here in the chorus. There are some neat ideas with the bass and guitar in the instrumental sections, but it’s the production, being drawn and quartered between new wave, light adult contemporary rock, and popular disco. If they would have embraced the nasally, high-energy vocals, and tuned down the harmonized vocals and disco themes, the album would be a classic. The song ends with an ambulance siren like guitar

“Academies to Anger” has a slightly buzzing guitar in the background and a thin watery bass in the front. The drums carry the danceable beat and the bass soon follows. This song, produced differently, could have been a rival to XTC’s energy and style.
“Blow Wind from Alesund” begins like a Duran Duran song without the thick electronic wall of synth. It quickly turns into a prog song, at least for the chorus, the over all theme of the song is a sneaky, dark groove, like “Watching the Detectives” or another sly theme.
“St Jean Wires” is a slow stumbling theme, pushed along by drums and flopsy bass. This is a day break, sun rising ballad, still full of the adult contemporary production. For a 5 minute song, it is pretty tedious.
“Hart Crane in Mexico” comes back and revisits a Duran Duran like intro, but the song evolves into a Middle America rock anthem. It is a bit smoky and a bit dancy, but the guitars are still too light in production for their own good.
“Shipyards” feels aquatic, with its partially liquid guitar sound. The pace of the song is similar to the ambulance siren tempo of “Accidents Will Happen.” The chorus has different sections cleverly woven together, where, just when you think the final note has been struck, the melody starts over again under a different layer of music. It is one of those songs that could go on forever. The instrumental section presents a large, heavy and repetitive bass hook, sounding like a tanker’s horn. Interwoven is a lighter keyboard sound like a littler ship trying to dock as well. This is perhaps the most complicated and interesting song on the album and it sounds good within its own production.

“Adventures” begins the second album, this the American version, titled and organized differently from the UK release. It follows suit with more light production, identifiable right off the bat. Even the urgentness in the vocals is gone. The nasaliness is there, however, he sounds reserved and calm. The bass is two-note simple, the kick drum gives no thrust and the keyboards are adequate at best. The chorus is ballad-catchy, meaning slow and lofting, but not all that fun. It almost feels like it was written to be performed by the groom at a cheesy wedding in an 80’s movie.
“Hope It's Me” comes back with a more funky 80’s synth fast number. The synth is jittery, even if the wave/arc of the jitteriness is slight. But there is an unnatural smoothness to the song’s structure, where it should bear its teeth more, rather than slink down to a Billy Joel story song. The bridge into the chorus is catchy with a bit of extra energy, but over all it falls flat.
“Hide & Seek” dabs its feet into country with the sound of the bass. But the song sounds like a typical singer songwriter song, with its roots growing back into an Oldies style. Here it’s simple design works in its favor. And I have since reconsidered the country style bass to be much more fitting to the song, after its third visit to the mix. The chorus is very head nodding catchy. There is still a lot of Graham Parker in the sound.
“Crossing Borders” sounds like it is basically the same song as “Hide & Seek,” but slightly rearranged in its outset. But this is lighter and not as fun. And not as catchy either. This song sounds more like a piano songwriter’s specialty, with one guitar hook overlaid repetitively.
“It's Over Now” starts out with a revisiting the same guitar hook from “Crossing Borders.” It is more upbeat of a song, but feels a little tedious and repetitive in a bad way.
“Union Man” is a soft piano ballad, like a lesser version of Elvis Costello’s later sentimental work. It really is like a demo, as the music is so sparse. But I imagine that was the key with the very quiet production.

“To The People” rocks back into shape as much as Interview rocks. This initially strikes me as a straightforward rock song, with slight harmonies, and a steady driving beat, and nothing too memorable or catchy. Well, perhaps the chorus is a bit catchy in a repetitive sing song way, which actually makes for a good chorus.
“A Gift’s” vocals are a bit different than the rest of the album. It is the same, but even more nasally, British and higher pitch. The melody is nice, but it does not need to be shoved down out throats, as it is guided with the in your face keyboard melody. And this is the first time where the singer breaks form and talks through some of the lyrics. And the over all vibe of the song would have to be categorized as anthemic.
“The Conqueror” is a slow bluesy waltzing ballad. Its lyrics easily evoke imagery of the storyline. This is more singer/songwriter folk storytelling at its most elemental form. The emotion of the vocals is quite clear, not buried under the music at all.
“Style on Seaview” feels long winded and like filler to me. There a steady beat broken once in a while by a brief pause and energy build, which is quickly relinquished for the steady tempo. The instrumental section is filled with a medieval/Spanish sounding plucked guitar. And the song reminds me of throwaway Dramarama slow ballads.
“Until I Hold Her” is a long 7:30 epic song that is a bit divergent from the rest of the album at its onset. It possesses an overproduced slyness, but that mood is never altered of overcome. It slinks along into a deeper hazy unsureness, the metaphoric rantings of continued drunkenness and deeper slinking down in the corner booth at a favorite dive bar. It oozes classless and an unavoidable downward spiraling feeling.

Stand Out Tracks: ~Shipyard

Links:
Allmusic