Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Day 0487 - Wild Gift

X "Wild Gift" (1981)

 
Punk rock, rockabilly, mixed with almost 1950s-esque pop.  That style, with the combination of male and female vocals makes it feel like a slightly more musical take on the B-52s' sound, or something akin to the wild and woolly retro sound of the Cramps.

An enjoyable album that had my wife and I both bobbing our heads along with it.

The album was produced by ex-Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek, who also played on some of the tracks (I guess he'd have to really wouldn't he.  You wouldn't want to miss that opportunity).

Monday, December 30, 2019

Day 0486 - Damaged

Black Flag "Damaged" (1981)


Wow, that is an in-your-face punk album!  According to the book, the first few BF recordings had been in a much less intense 70s punk vein.  This album (the first with raging new singer Henry Rollins) slit that vein and spewed forth angry hardcore punk rock, almost crossing into metal in places.  There's not a lot of melody on show here, but it sorts of feels like too much melody would take away from the intensity of the music.

The band were early proponents of the DIY punk scene.  After their record label decided not to release the album, (claiming it was immoral) the band released it themselves.   The band then jumped in a van with their gear and a roadmap to tour the album off their own bat.

Sunday, December 29, 2019

Day 0485 - My Life in the Bush of Ghosts

David Byrne and Brian Eno "My Life in the Bush of Ghosts" (1981)


Having enjoyed the individual works of Eno and Byrne; I was keen to hear this one.  The album, described by Eno as "psychedelic Africa" was delayed in its release due clearance issues with the various copyrighted materials sampled.  As a result, the Talking Heads'  "Remain in Light" album (also produced by Eno), though recorded later, was released before this collaboration.

Whereas that Talking Heads album was built on a foundation of jam sessions among the various musicians, this is much more a studio construct, formed around samples and based heavily on Holger Czukay's "movies" album.  An interesting album to be sure, but I'd say I really prefer Byrne in more of a traditional song-based vein, whether it's with the Heads, with St Vincent or as a solo artist.

Saturday, December 28, 2019

Day 0484 - Architecture and Morality

Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark "Architecture and Morality" (1981)

 
OMitD are one of those bands where I had heard their name plenty of times but wasn't really familiar with them musically.  Something about them (maybe as simple as liking their album artwork or liking their name) made me really keen to check them out.

The actual result fits in the "it's alright, but I wouldn't rush to listen to it again" category.  An album of synth-pop that the book perhaps overhyped with its various Beatles comparisons: they're from Liverpool and deliver their mix of pop and experimentalism in digestible 3 1/2 minute chunks.

I listened through a couple of times and none of the music particularly stayed with me.  There were parts where I enjoyed a melody here or a synth-line there, but largely it passed me by without too much fanfare. 

Regardless, I would be willing to hear more from this band.

Friday, December 27, 2019

Day 0483 - Non-stop Erotic Cabaret

Soft Cell "Non-stop Erotic Cabaret" (1981)


My favourite part from the blurb about this one in the book is where it said that the band ended up breaking up when, after a bad review, vocalist Marc Almond marched into the office of the critic and set upon him with a bullwhip.   It just screams the kind of twisted sass that you'd associate with a band who made a career out of singing about the seedy sex-market underbelly of the UK.

It's an interesting album  with a very 80s vibe.  The band are a duo with one of them on vocals and the other creating the music, largely just using a drum machine and synthesisers.  There are hints of sleazy jazz moods.  As far as the lyrical sleaze, it feels almost a tad naive in places; like a virgin trying to bluff everyone that he has totally got laid a bunch of times (no matter what that flasher jacket and sleazy porn-star mo might suggest).


The track most people will know from this one is "Tainted Love".





Really looking forward to the next little run of albums.  There are a few artists that I've been meaning to check out and just have never got around to.

Thursday, December 26, 2019

Day 0482 - No Sleep 'til Hammersmith

Motörhead "No Sleep 'til Hammersmith" (1981)


A pretty solid live album.  I've said it before, I'm not the biggest fan of live albums.  This one works though, given that their albums are pretty down and dirty and lacking studio 'sheen' so this is just a raw representation of what they do, with the extra sweat and intensity of it being laid out live, and maybe a little faster.

The Motörhead ethos is clearly spelt out with the liner notes which include the dedication



"Thanks to Smirnoff and Carlsberg without whom lots of this would have been coherent."

Wednesday, December 25, 2019

Day 0481 - Beauty and the Beat

The Go-Gos "Beauty and the Beat" (1981)


Originally started in LA 1978 as a punk rock band (their singer had even been in the Germs for a while). The band claimed that they could barely play their instruments when they started, but that they seemed propelled towards success, with this, their first album spending 6 weeks in the Billboard chart.

By the time this album came out, much of the band's punkiness had been airbrushed with a gloss of a new-wavey take on the old-school girl group pop sound.  It actually works really well, like, catchy songs but with some guts and a bit of rock to them. Not a million miles from something like Letters to Cleo with their cover of "I want you to want me" in "10 things I hate about you". 

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Day 0480 - Penthouse and Pavement

Heaven 17 "Penthouse and Pavement" (1981)


I remember listening to this one ages ago (in fact I quickly searched out a review I wrote in 2015 - all I said was that it was a good little pop album with some funky sounds and lighter synth bits). Didn't really remember the music off the top of my head... though I was listening to it during night-shifts back then so that might factor into it.

It remains a good pop album with some funky sounds and lighter synth parts.  A fun album, even though it's lead single "(we don't need this) fascist groove thing", championed by John Peel was banned by the BBC for implying that Ronald Reagan was a fascist.  Some things never change, the BBC have made some terrible censorship decisions in the past.

The band was formed by ex-members of the original line-up of the Human League (before they went extremely mainstream and had huge success with songs like "don't you want me"). That band had a reshuffle and the members who would form Heaven 17 created the company called the British Electric Foundation (BEF) under which the band was based... that idea of band/album as corporate product is illustrated (quite literally) on the album cover with it's corporate promotional vibe.

Day 0479 - Juju

Siouxsie and the Banshees "Juju" (1981)


Still not really sold on S&tB. I do prefer this one to "The Scream" though as the songs just feel stronger and with a stronger identity.

Much like the previous album, the driving rhythm section lays down some relentless pulsing grooves with the guitar alternately funk-rocking hard, pattering around the edge or droning with Siouxsie's vocal driving everything along. Another one that feels like a touchstone for a lot of indie-rock bands from the 00s.

Sunday, December 22, 2019

Day 0478 - Kollaps

Einsturzende Neubauten "Kollaps" (1981)


Another band I heard a lot about.  I knew too that vocalist/guitarist/keyboardist Blixa Bargeld had gone on to join Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, so that's all the reference I needed.

Their name translates as "collapsing new buildings" and the band, look to live up to this destructive moniker.  They set out to make the most unlistenable album they could, something in the spirit of Faust or Throbbing Gristle.

It is arresting. A mix of scrap metal percussion, power tools, heavily distorted guitar, screams and ambient parts. It's certainly not the most structured or melodic album of all time, but it is interesting and (for me) enjoyable. I can make easy connections between this album and several of the more avant bands of whom I'm a fan.

Saturday, December 21, 2019

Day 0477 - The Pretenders

The Pretenders "The Pretenders" (1980)


Another of the many bands that I had heard of and really wanted to check out.  This list has made for a good motivation to get on with it.

According to what I've read, Chrissie Hynde was working as a writer for NME magazine in the UK and hanging out with Clash and Sex Pistols, even working in Malcolm McLaren and Vivienne Westwood's SEX shop in London. A few of the punkers in the area didn't think much of Hynde and her musical aspirations. It was Lemmy from Motörhead who pushed her to put her money where her mouth was and get the band going.

Some great punky stuff in here mixed with some more pop moments and even a Police-esque new-wave reggae groove to "Private Life". Hynde's voice ties it all nicely together; alternately wailing, snarling or cooing. I recognised the track 'brass in pocket'.

Interestingly Madonna listed Hynde as one of the people who really inspired her to go and make music.

Friday, December 20, 2019

Day 0476 - Arc of Diver

Steve Winwood "Arc of a Diver" (1980)


Steve Winwood had previously tried to release a solo album and had somehow accidentally wound up reforming his band Traffic and releasing the album with them instead. Winwood then got out a self-titled solo album but it sank link a stone commercially. This one fared much better with the record-buying public. I'd certainly heard opener "while you see a chance" on the radio a bit in the past.

Winwood crafted his catchy, somewhat funky tracks, more or less entirely by himself... which was no mean feat taking into account the late 70s/early 80s study technology.

Thursday, December 19, 2019

Day 0475 - More Specials

The Specials "More Specials" (1980)

 
The Specials had helped launch the ska craze in the UK. The label 2-tone records, started by Specials keyboardist and songwriter Jerry Dammers would go on to release music from artists such as Madness, the Beat, and Elvis Costello (only one single for EC though).

The band were exhausted from touring and were hoping to make a few changes for their second album in order to keep things interesting.

The first few tracks stick to the ska/reggae formula, but towards the middle of the album you start to get the kitschy sing-along of "Pearl's Cafe" and hard funking of "Sock it to em JB". The album works with passages of exotica and some noodling around with different keyboard textures. The mix of styles would go on to influence the 90s trip-hop explosion through artists like Portishead, Massive Attack and others.

 

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

Day 0474 - Kilimanjaro

The Teardrop Explodes "Kilimanjaro" (1980)


The book makes several comparisons between Teardrop Explodes and Love... I'd say there are some parallels with Love's "Forever Changes" album as far as the use of orchestral flourishes and building some of the songs from innocent, simple beginnings to lush crescendos.

The album is still of its time though, so has less of an acoustic folky bent like 'Forever Changes' and more of a post-punk (heading towards new-wave) sound. Definitely wouldn't mind another album from this band to show up on the list.

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Day 0473 - UB40 "Signing off" (1980)

UB40 "Signing off" (1980)

 
I was most familiar with UB40 as purveyors of slightly twee reggae covers of Elvis and Neil Diamond songs; but this is actually a strong, moody reggae offering.

The band came from a working class background in Birmingham and funnelled discontent around their grim reality (the high unemployment figures, the rise of Margaret Thatcher's government, and the increasing popularity of the racist party the National Front) into lyrics that ranged from downbeat to scathing.

The music also ranged from lengthy atmospheric reggae jams, to deep rocksteady grooves and all with Ali Campbell's strong, heartfelt vocals.

At 66 minutes long, it was probably a little too much UB40 for my tastes, but then reggae has never been a genre that could hold my attention for too long a time.

Monday, December 16, 2019

Day 0472 - Heartattack and Vine

Tom Waits "Heatattack and Vine" (1980)

 
After 5 or 6 albums leaning on his downtrodden barfly troubadour persona, Waits started changing it up here. There are one or two songs where he still slur-croons clever couplets over a loungey jazz piano, but the guitar starts to play a much bigger role in his compositions, and Waits starts exploring his bluesy yell-mixed-with-Cookie Monster vocal that would come out full force in later albums.

For a guy who used to put out albums every year or so in the 70s; the 80s onwards have been increasingly sparse as far as his musical output goes (with the exception of his dual releases 'blood money' and 'Alice' in 2002).  Maybe that's due to an increase in acting roles and soundtrack music... or maybe he's just been enjoying life outside of the 'business.

Sunday, December 15, 2019

Day 0471 - Sound Affects

The Jam "Sound Affects" (1980)

 
This band seems kind of like the meeting point of the Beatles (to the extent of nicking the 'Taxman' bassline for their song 'Start!') and the indie rock of the 00s.

Like a few albums of the day it has the post-punk mix of stripped down rock with occasionally bouncy and funky bass.  The band also add the odd horn section, double-tracked acoustic guitars (on hit "that's entertainment") and occasional fiddly poly-rhythmic guitars playing over a fairly straight ahead rhythm section.

Saturday, December 14, 2019

Day 0470 - Hypnotised

The Undertones "Hypnotised" (1980)


I wasn't really too fussed on the previous Undertones album on this list; it was kind of fairly nondescript punk with a little extra melody thrown in.

This one is more of the same but with the punk dialled down a little and the pop/melody turned up slightly, and yet it seems so much better (to my ears). Maybe they reached the punk/melody 'bliss point' or were on a bit of a roll songwriting-wise... who knows?

Again it's not one that I'm really planning on revisiting, but it's more enjoyable and a lot of the songs just seem 'familiar'. I kind of feel like they could potentially have been an early influence on Blur (of whom I am a fan), going by the similarities in sound.

Friday, December 13, 2019

Day 0469 - Iron Maiden

Iron Maiden "Iron Maiden" (1980)


I remember seeing the 'classic albums' show for Iron Maiden's "Number of the Beast" album, and they'd talked about the issues they'd had with their former singer Paul Di'Anno and what a step up Bruce Dickinson was.  From that, I'd assumed that the first guy must be absolute rubbish... but no.

Sure, on one or two songs he sounds like a bit more of a punk yowler than a metal howler, but he still manages some decent tremolo in places and some minor wails. I actually really like this album; it's almost as if having a slightly more limited singer over top of the virtuosic and showy music kind of reins it in and stops it getting too grandiose and up it's own arse!

The album does feature an instrumental track and several songs that take their sweet time getting to the vocals, which is maybe just how Maiden roll, or it could be a sign that they were already unhappy with Paul? Either way, as I say, this album works just fine for me. The bass work is incredible, which I guess is not surprising as the bassist started the damned band!

Thursday, December 12, 2019

Day 0468 - Closer

Joy Division "Closer" (1980)


The sonic experimentation of 'unknown pleasures' is set aside in favour of laying the songs bare (other than some well placed reverb). The music remains fairly mechanical and cold but with increasing use of synthesizers, possibly hinting that the New Order direction would have still happened had Curtis survived.

Ian Curtis' lyrics are grim and funereal. He had said to one of his bandmates that he felt the lyrics were essentially writing themselves and that he felt like a weird feeling of claustrophobia and being pulled into a whirlpool and drowning. He was dead before the album was released, which makes the crypt/tomb album cover a rather prescient choice.

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Day 0467 - Remain in Light

Talking Heads "Remain in Light" (1980) - got it


David Byrne was suffering a case of writers block so looked to build up some minimalist jams, often around just one or two chords. The band brought in influences from funk, to afro-beat, to electronica and Byrne helped craft the jams into functional songs.

Following the 'Fear of music' tour, the band had taken time off to pursue other interests. Byrne and 'Remain in light' producer Brian Eno recorded the "My life in the bush of ghosts" album.  Jerry Harrison produced an album for a soul singer.  The married rhythm section of Tina Weymouth and Chris Franz headed to the Caribbean to hang out with famed reggae rhythm section Sly and Robbie. The two mulled over the idea of leaving Talking Heads due to Byrne's controlling nature.

Eno too had questioned coming back as producer after his previous two albums with the Heads... so it wasn't really a happy working environment.   As it was, Eno didn't produce the next album ("Speaking in tongues") and a few year's later the band's inner turmoil became insurmountable and they broke up. It's probably telling that while many acrimoniously split groups have reformed throughout the years, the Heads (aside from a Rock n Roll Hall of Fame appearance) have avoided reuniting.

For all the friction in its making, the album produced some great songs, including one of TH's most known tracks "Once in a lifetime".

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Day 0466 - Group Sex

Circle Jerks "Group Sex" (1980)



14 tracks in 15 minutes... it doesn't get much more punk than that, motherfucker!

Keith Morris had left Blackflag to form his own band which he did, forming Circle Jerks with Red Kross guitarist Greg Hetson.

The songs are raucous party tracks and pretty much set down the blueprint for every party punk band to follow e.g. NOFX.

Monday, December 9, 2019

Day 0465 - British Steel

Judas Priest "British Steel" (1980) - got it

 
So the development of metal continues.  Priest took the musicianship and thunder of Led Zep and Black Sabbath, added the speed and intensity of punk.  The vocals and lyrics though stay larger-than-life with songs like "Metal Gods" or "Grinder".

Because metal hadn't come of age and the 'rulebook' hadn't been set, there seemed to be no feelings of self-consciousness about belting out an uplifting anthem like "United", engaging in some party rock with "Living after midnight", or even dropping a hint of reggae with "the Rage".

I saw Judas Priest 4 years ago at a metal festival in Auckland, and by golly they could still put on a show! Rob Halford may be in his 60s but he was still able to wail and scream with the best of them. He also did this whole thing where he went off stage partway through one song, there was a loud roaring and he came rolling onto the stage on the back of a motorbike... what a showman.

Sunday, December 8, 2019

Day 0464 - Killing Joke

Killing Joke "Killing Joke" (1980)


 The seeds of industrial metal find fertile soil here.... or is it this album that is the seed?  My metaphor is eating itself.

This is a really interesting album with elements of tribal drumming, funk bass, touches of what almost sounds like early electronica (heavily treated vocals, synthesizers), there's a bit of post-punk, there's atmospheric slow building repetitive tracks, there's more straight-ahead metal.

I was familiar with this band initially through a couple of side-routes
1) Metallica covering their track 'the Wait' on the "Garage Inc." album
2) vocalist Jaz Coleman producing the debut full-length from NZ band Shihad (and later their most recent album) which definitely bears hints of this album.

Saturday, December 7, 2019

Day 0463 - Ace of Spades

Motörhead "Ace of Spades" (1980)


Lemmy, having been kicked out of Hawkwind for taking too much speed, went on to start a band that seems like the musical equivalent of that drug.

I quite enjoyed the band's slightly less intense self-titled debut album, but it's hard to deny the power and immediacy of the lightning fast riffage, crazed intensity and throat tearing yells of these tracks. One of the initial building blocks of metal, but also beloved by punks at the time.

Friday, December 6, 2019

Day 0462 - Crocodiles

Echo and the Bunnymen "Crocodiles" (1980)


Echo and the Bunnymen: the 80s-ness continues.

I have their album "Ocean Rain" which had a kind of atmospheric, gothic somnambulism to it and I really liked it... however, I'm glad that they sound different here, because variety is the spice of life.

This is much more a dark and jangly album with a definite post-punk  flavour, though still with hints of what their sound would become.

Thursday, December 5, 2019

Day 0461 - Seventeen Seconds

The Cure "Seventeen Seconds"



The Cure are another band that I was primarily familiar with through a few singles... that I wasn't overly keen on; but this is a pretty fantastic album. Aside from the odd wailing, dramatic vocal this is a pretty low-key affair with jangling but mostly unobtrusive guitar. There are odd spots of keyboards but they're used sparingly and in such a way that they add to the music without drawing attention to themselves. In fact everyone here seems to be just doing good work to serve the songs.

I can definitely hear the influence of this band on artists like early REM, a lot of 00s indie rockers, and even the early demos of the Smashing Pumpkins bear a startling resemblance to this collection of songs.

Wednesday, December 4, 2019

Day 0460 - Underwater Moonlight

The Soft Boys "Underwater Moonlight" (1980)





The Soft Boys were actually recommended to me a few short years back by a friend who was really vibing on them. Pretty sure that this was the album he recommended to me.

Despite the fact that this reeks of late stage punk with encroaching post-punk sounds; this album puts me in mind of the Beatles.  The melodies, the dalliances with psychedelia and just some general overall 'tone' to their sound... so yeah, for me, Beatles = good.

Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Day 0459 - Peter Gabriel III (AKA "Melt")

Peter Gabriel "Peter Gabriel III" (AKA "Melt") (1980)

 
Gabriel was well clear of his Genesis 'Prog' sound, and with his first two relatively quirky and eccentric solo albums also behind him, he seemed content to settle into a groove as a purveyor of interesting and innovative art pop-rock in the vein of Berlin-Bowie and Brian Eno. He even uses Eno-regular Robert Fripp on guitar, along with his Genesis bandmate (and vocal replacement) Phil Collins.

PG experiments with world music (sampling African chants for one song) and new technology, playing around with drum machines, and studio trickery to produce an album that seems a collision of human with machine.

Monday, December 2, 2019

Day 0458 - Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables

Dead Kennedys "Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables" (1980) - got it


Contender for best punk album of all time, in my opinion... shockingly this was my first (second and third) time listening to this album from start to finish.

It combines everything that can be good about punk: there's anger and vitriol, but tempered with a sense of humour.  Blisteringly fast-paced music (but played with tight musicianship) that takes some sideways detours in places. Instead of being macho and body-slamming, or agro in vaguely white supremacist manner like some of their hardcore contemporaries; this music is almost spidery and angular with the bass overruling the guitar in a lot of places.

Jello Biafra's vocals sounds wild, frantic and slightly crazy but when you actually listen to him, you see that he's one of the smarter, more eloquent spokesmen for punk.

I was actually familiar with a lot of the songs, in part because I've heard several of them covered by other bands... always a good sign.

As you can see from the above - I have since picked up a copy of this one.

Sunday, December 1, 2019

Day 0457 - Songs the Lord Taught Us

The Cramps "Songs the Lord Taught Us" (1980)


Another band where I'd heard the name but wasn't really familiar with the music... I assumed punk, based on the name and era. There is some punk here, but the band also digs deep into rockabilly, surf music and even b-movie soundtracks. The b-movie theme extends out to the lyrics with songs such as "I was a teenage werewolf" and "Zombie Dance".

The vocals are pleading, snarling and desperate, the music ranging from bare and unvarnished to drenched in reverb - as the song dictates/requires.

In places this album has a guttural rockabilly that sounds like it would fit nicely into Nick Cave's early oeuvre with the Birthday Party and early Bad Seeds.

Unfortunately the album, though critically acclaimed, was commercial disappointment. When the band went out to tour it, their guitarist Bryan Gregory drove off with a van full of their gear which he sold to help fuel his drug addiction. The band never saw him again until years later.

Saturday, November 30, 2019

Day 0456 - Back in Black

AC/DC "Back in Black" (1980)

 
AC/DC had managed to pull themselves up by their Aussie bootstraps to 'take on the world'. By the time they released "Highway to Hell" they had won over Europe, but hadn't quite cracked the US. Tragedy befell them when their lead singer Bon Scott died after a night of drinking.

The band didn't pause.  They started recording straight away and recruited British vocalist Brian Johnson to take up lead singer duties. The album opens with tolling bells and then slow, ominous guitar, leading you to believe that maybe the band were going to deliver a solemn eulogy to their fallen bandmate... at least you might believe that if you were unfamiliar with the rest of their work. Pretty quickly,  the slow opening gives way to an 'all hands to the pump' rocker, and things doesn't really let up from there.

The band continue with their misogynistic, wild-time lyrics and solid riffing rock. Solid is the word too; apart from Angus Young's flashy lead guitar parts, the music is fairly workmanlike in its simplicity. The rhythm section mainly hold down the most basic groove needed to support the guitar riffs, which in turn provide a bed for Johnson's vocals to bounce around on top of. It is rock economy, and it works really well for the songs.

The album took off in the US. It has since racked up 22x platinum sales, and sits as the sixth highest selling album of all time in the US!

Friday, November 29, 2019

Day 0455 - Searching for the Young Soul Rebels

Dexy's Midnight Runners "Searching for the Young Soul Rebels" (1980)


Touché 80s - the goodness continues!

Kevin Rowland and Kevin 'Al' Archer, late of the punk band 'Killjoy' formed Dexy's Midnight Runners at the tail end of the 1970s. The band's name was a reference to the 60s party drug of choice, Dexedrine.

The album opens with a confusing babble of mixed radio programme signals before these are interrupted by a raucous yell, signalling the start of the music proper. My first impression was that this would be another punky ska album (though that hadn't been my experience with the one or two DMR songs I'd heard), it turned out to be more like 'Northern soul... with guts'. Horns and backing vocals that almost have a slight hint of theatricality to their wildness.

Thursday, November 28, 2019

Day 0454 - Kings of the Wild Frontier

...and hello the 80s. Bracing self for cheesiness, overflow of synthesisers, big hair, but hoping to discover some good music out of it. In particular the early rap music, most of which I'm not that well versed in.


0454

Adam and the Ants "Kings of the Wild Frontier" (1980)


Well the 80s are off to a good start. I'd heard a couple of Adam Ant songs in the past and liked them; one of them "Antmusic" is on this album.

Reading about this one it's quite interesting. A&tA had released a 1979 post-punk album, Adam wanted to distance himself further from punk and its supposed anti-pop aesthetic. The Sex Pistols' architect Malcolm McLaren suggested using African rhythms and so Adam set about assembling some drummers to make this happened... then McLaren stole them away to form the group Bow Wow Wow.

Adam picked up and started again, assembling a new band and drawing in influences from all over the spectrum, military drum beats, hints of African rhythms, blasting guitars, clean plinky funk guitar, sea shanty melodies with almost glam guitar, and skittish Talking Heads-esque vocals. Definitely keen to check out more from this band!

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Day 0453 - Specials

The Specials "Specials" (1979)


The Specials kind of came out fully formed here; from their image (suits and narrow ties, shades and porkpie hats - referencing UK 'mods' and Jamaican 'rude boys'), to their music which was a brash and rocky take on ska, dub and rocksteady... all with a hint of the recent punk movement reflected in it.

A number of the band members sing, but it's the combination of lead singers Neville Staple with his warm round Jamaican accent and Terry Hall with his punkish holler that really help carve out a unique sound amongst the then burgeoning ska scene in the UK. "Too much too young" is a favourite of mine here.




....well goodbye 1970s. You have been an education.

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Day 0452 - The Pleasure Principle

Gary Numan "The Pleasure Principle" (1979)


Numan!   Stop eyeballing that pyramid.

Another synth-pop album that kind of heralded the sound that would come to rule the airwaves in the 80s. Numan's band consisted of drums, synthesisers, bass, and a viola... the last of which adds a touch of the organic to what can occasionally be an overly polished and dehumanised genre.

The cover too speaks of that move from flamboyant or macho scruffy musician in the 70s to a buttoned down, corporate look that a few bands opted for the following decade.

The track M.E (or a part of it) is the basis for the popular Bassment Jaxx song "Where's your head at", aside from that, I was familiar with the song "Cars".

Monday, November 25, 2019

Day 0451 - Machine Gun Etiquette

The Damned "Machine Gun Etiquette" (1979)



Things that make you go "oooh"

Outside of a fairly rote cover of one of these songs by the band the Offspring, I was aware of the Damned by name only, including the names of its band members, who sport such spicy monikers as Rat Scabies and Captain Sensible.

This sounds like a Ramones album and a Kinks album got shoved in blender with glorious results. Snarling punk attitude one moment, eccentric British pop the next.  Most of the time it falls partway in between, in the form of high-velocity melodic punk with a decidedly British flavour and some great little lead breaks.

Fun fact: Lemmy from Motorhead and Joe Strummer and Paul Simonon from the Clash help out with some bass, backing vocals, and hand claps.

Sunday, November 24, 2019

Day 0450 - Off the Wall

Michael Jackson "Off the Wall" (1979)


The beginning of the end of the... beginning, I guess. MJ hadn't had a solo hit in 7 odd years, and while working on the (not particularly successful) film 'The Wiz' Jackson asked Quincy Jones to recommend him a producer. Quincy suggested himself and they began what has to be one of the more commercially successful partnerships in music.

This album combined funk, disco and soul to basically lay out the blueprints for modern RnB (and the blueprint for nearly every Jamiroquai album).  Michael is let loose over these tracks, forming and honing the array of vocal ticks and exclamations that would become one of his many trademarks and would go on to define his vocal style.

Amongst all the upbeat danceable songs, he even has one of the more straightforward heart-string tugging ballads of his career in "She's out of my life".  He's so sincere that by the end of it he sounds like he's more or less in tears... tears of money.

Saturday, November 23, 2019

Day 0449 - Metal Box

Public Image Ltd "Metal Box" (1979)


Where the first PIL album had been all over the place, with some noisy drone pieces, and some remnants of John Lydon's punk stylings; Metal Box is much more cohesive, and more 'its own thing'.

The title and album cover really spell out the feel of the music: cold, bleak, and nihilistic. Blasts of bass-heavy post-punk that preceded many other such grinding, industrial bands. Bringing in influences seemingly as diverse as dub, and krautrock into the mix.

The album finishes with the somewhat out of place melodic, almost classical (but still cold and a little harsh somehow) piece "Radio 4".

Friday, November 22, 2019

Day 0448 - The Wall

Pink Floyd "The Wall" (1979) - got it



A monster! Genius!

While many great prog bands had fallen from favour in the face of punk, or had attempted to change their sound to fit with the evolving musical climate; Pink Floyd pretty much just kept doing Pink Floyd.  Exploring their feeling of alienation from their audience in the spotlight of fame by building a literal wall (a beautiful wall, the bigliest) between them and the audience.

This is one of those rare double albums that actually legitimately works and doesn't just feel like a bunch of songs that could just as easily have been stuck on a couple of single releases.

The album uses repeated musical themes without sounding like it's just running short of ideas. Most of the songs work fine in isolation as well as part of the overall narrative. I can listen to one of my favourite Floyd songs "Goodbye Blue Sky" and not feel like I'm missing out on the story by not having heard the previous 6 tracks.

The album has plenty of variety, with theatrical art rock, pseudo-funk, atmospheric ballads, and yet manages to wrap all of this into a cohesive lyrical and musical narrative whole across two discs/records.

As a teen I used to listen to this album on a regular basis. Doing nothing else but lying back and listening to the whole 26 tracks uninterrupted.

Thursday, November 21, 2019

Day 0447 - Tusk

Fleetwood Mac "Tusk" (1979)


Following on from the gargantuan success of "Rumours", Fleetwood Mac were able to spend a whopping $1 million making this one. Not surprisingly, given the sales of Rumours and the fact that this was a double album, "Tusk" did not fare as well as its predecessor.

It's a pity, because Tusk is far more diverse than Rumours.  Mixing the smooth accessible pop of that album with some even more mellow, laidback tracks, raucous almost honky-tonk rock music, and of course the urgent angular percussive drive of the title track.

The book describes them as drawing on the two Brians (Eno and Wilson) and that doesn't feel too far from the truth, given the harmonic and production boundaries the band play with and push against here.

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

Day 0446 - At Budokan

Cheap Trick "At Budokan" (1979)

 
Cheap Trick had been working away in the US with 3 albums under their belts, but only moderate success. The band had however, scored success fairly early on in Japan so cashed in on that by recording this live album there to the adoring screams of hundreds of fans.

Whether it was those screams, the culmination of lots of hard work, or just sheer dumb luck, this album stayed in the US charts for around a year, selling over 3 millions copies and well and truly launching the band and their particular brand of power pop.   The success was no doubt aided by upbeat pop hit "I want you to want me".

Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Day 0445 - Entertainment

Gang of Four "Entertainment!" (1979)

 
A band from (my one-time home) Leeds named after a group of Chinese Communist Party officials... hinting at the band's left-wing sympathies.

Another one of those bands that mixes the attitude and melodic minimalism of punk with a bit of white-boy funk (though here the funk element seems to have been ramped up considerably). Another of those bands that most likely stylistically inspired some of the early 00 indie rock bands like Bloc Party or Gossip.

Listening to the angular funk sounds here, I wouldn't be surprised if the Gang were listened to by Les Claypool or his band Primus.  They were certainly an influence on the Red Hot Chili Peppers, who drafted the Gang's guitarist Andy Gill to produce their first (self titled) album on the basis of the "Entertainment!" album.

Monday, November 18, 2019

Day 0444 - Rust Never Sleeps

Neil Young "Rust Never Sleeps" (1979)


Neil survived the 70s, was even nominated as "artist of the decade" by the Village Voice. He finished out the 70s with a film and an album both titled "Rust never sleeps" (the title a phrase that Young coined to urge himself to keep pushing in new creative directions to avoid stagnation).

The album itself was recorded live with overdubs added later and audience sound removed as much possible. The songs are half solo acoustic, and half 'rawk', recorded with Young's band Crazy Horse.

With the album being bookended by two stylistically different versions of the song "hey hey my my", it really shows off what Young could do back then.

Sunday, November 17, 2019

Day 0443 - Armed Forces

Elvis Costello "Armed Forces" (1979) - got it


I keep expecting to find that the next Elvis Costello album I listen to will be rubbish. He's one of those artists who has been around so long that you'd assume he'd have a few duds in him, but nope, this is another good'un.

Here Costello's keyboardist Steve Nieve was beginning to exert more control and the result is a very poppy, catchy, keyboard-heavy album. Bubbly pop rock with hints of new-wave and just the lightest ska-flavour. Possibly my favourite from Elvis and his band so far.

I picked up a copy sometime after listening to it for the list.

Saturday, November 16, 2019

Day 0442 - Cut

The Slits "Cut" (1979)


The Cuts were a punk band who had been part of the Sex Pistols' inner circle, but they only managed to get their first album out after the Pistols' breakup.  They had evolved during that time from their punk origins to incorporate reggae and dub elements, and jittery rhythms.

German singer Ari Up sounds somewhere between Nico and Bjork and the ratty production gives the whole thing a unique and interesting sound.

Friday, November 15, 2019

Day 0441 - Broken English

Marianne Faithful "Broken English" (1979)
Okay, this was not what I was expecting.  I'd picked Faithful as a bit more of a folky sort. In fact doing a quick bit of digging I see that she got her start in folk.  I guess this is just like that time that I introduced myself to Leonard Cohen's music via his fairly synth-heavy album "I'm your man".

Faithful had been discovered by the Rolling Stones' manager, released some albums, had a relationship with Mick Jagger, was nearly cheated out songwriting royalties by the Stones, was left homeless, lost custody of her son, and ended up addicted to heroin. Coming out the other side of all that she embraced the punk scene and put together this album that combined the sneering attitude, melodic minimalism and abrasiveness of punk with the slightly cold and mechanical sound of synthesizers.

Her lyrics don't take any prisoners, particularly the closing track "why'd ya do it" rebuking a former lover, featuring lines as charming as:
"Why'd ya do it, she said, why'd you spit on my snatch?
Are we out of love now, is this just a bad patch?"
or
"every time I see your dick I see her cunt in my bed"

Thursday, November 14, 2019

Day 0440 - Quiet Life

Japan "Quiet Life" (1979)



I've never heard of Japan before (well... not the band.  I've heard of a Japan), but apparently their move from glam rock to trendy arthouse was "a revelation" - or so says the book.

This is quite nice, not amazing, but nice.  Reminds me of Duran Duran, but with sparser, dreamier production. Lots of fretless bass backed by synths.

Wednesday, November 13, 2019

Day 0439 - London Calling

The Clash "London Calling" (1979) - got it


From a ho-hum punk album on day 438 to one of the greats.  To be fair, the Clash were barely 'punk' by this stage.  The attitude remained, and some of the more direct, raw 'rock' tracks still reflect that side of their sound, but the band were pulling influences from all corners: rockabilly, northern soul, post-punk, ska, reggae... even hints of new-wave.

 With a run of 19 tracks, I do tend to get a feeling of 'track fatigue' with it.  Most of these tracks are good and I can pick out pretty much any one track and enjoy it, but it just seems as though 65 uninterrupted minutes of Clash is probably slightly too much in one sitting for me.

Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Day 0438 - The Undertones

The Undertones "The Undertones" (1979)


The diversity of the 70s musical landscape comes out again as we jump from a 'disco' album back into the seedy den of punk.

The Undertones are from Northern Ireland which then makes it odd that they didn't dip their wick into angry politics for their lyrics. Instead it's mostly about girls and Saturday nights and other such things young men might want to indulge in.

Not a lot to say about this one, it's a relatively 'clean' garagey punk band/album with a bit of melody thrown in for good measure. Not bad, but nothing I'd rush to listen to again.