Saturday, December 9, 2023

V/A - Here Comes That Girl - U.S. Power Pop Vol. 1 [1978-1987] & Knock Me Down - U.S. Power Pop Vol 2 [1977-1986] (2007, Sold-It)

So the story goes, and unnamed record dealer in Europe was sitting on a stash of scarce, private-press power pop singles from a bevy of Yankee unknowns, and prior to unloading his trove onto the marketplace he had the foresight and capitalistic savvy to digitize and compile several of them on two cd-r compilations that were seemingly as difficult to come by as the original 45s. So much so that I don't have physical copies of said cds myself.

I suppose that if MP3s will suffice for me, they will for a few hundred of you as well.  Between these two collections there are 30+ bands, the majority of which I don't believe have been compiled or at the very least profiled anywhere. Despite this quantity I have less to unpack here (save for a pair of  lofty tracklists) than you might think given time constraints on my end and the lack of biographical details available on the artists themselves.  In a nutshell, back in the early/mid '80s when I was getting my head around the likes of Genesis and Hall & Oates, it seems that in every city, burg and borough there was at least one or two under the radar outfits toiling away in obscurity playing for a crowd of 50 or so warm bodies at a local dive, and occasionally were proud enough of their craft to warrant recording and releasing a 7" single on their own label, or better, yet a local imprint that was willing to bankroll the few hundred dollars it would require to bring such an endeavor to fruition.  Scores of such unknown quantities have cropped up on digital DIY collections like the Teen Line and Powerpearls series, but the entrants involving the two albums I'm featuring today, Here Comes That Girl and Knock Me Down seem to be of an especially more arcane variety.  

While a good 99% of musical connoisseurs were tethered to top-40 radio and MTV at the time, lower-profile contestants with monikers like Peer Group, The Windows, The Crickle, and P-15s operated in a parallel universe of sorts, honing a more homespun variation of the pop polemic, conveyed via a far more meager delivery system. Yet in the grand scheme of things these bands occasionally yielded results more heartfelt, sincere and satisfying than their comparative major label counterparts. There was no internet (at least as we know it) or social media outlets to propagate any of these 42 songs when they  originally saw the light of day between '77 and '87.  Those in "the know" by and large lucked out by virtue or attending local venues, tuning into college radio, or more likely had the good fortune of being informed by good old fashioned word-of-mouth. Sure, The Finders and Atlantics never became "stars" per se, they at least had their profiles enhanced a few decades after the fact once the internet eventually dredged up their names in forums and blogs (um, maybe like this one?). In short, better late than never. 

If it's the more aggro or punky side of the power-pop spectrum you're angling for, you might want to stick to your KBD comps, as what you'll encounter on both of these compendiums populate the more melodic end of the three-minute gamut. Surprisingly, Wilfully Obscure has only overlapped in two or three instances with the contenders here, limited  to the likes of the Fan Club, The Choice, and Finders. That means there are three-dozen or so new rabbit holes to plunder, so have at it.

V/A - Here Comes That Girl - U.S. Powerpop 1978-87
01. Atlantics - Television Girl
02. Britins - She Knows
03. Brunettes - You and Me
04. Choice - Strange
05. Crickle - Henry the VII
06. Effections - Cheerleader Crush
07. Fan Club - Just Another Kiss
08. Finders Which Way
09. Hitman - Give Yourself to Me
10. Bill Kern - You're Not Coming Home
11. Masterbeats - Silver Lining
12. Glenn Miller & Impossibles - Walk Right Over You
13. Nems - Solider of Love
14. News - She's So Square
15. P-15's You're Not That Girl
16. Peer Group - No Attraction
17. Pets - Break Em All Down
18. Point - No Desire
19. Rom's - Where Were You
20. Sliders - Here Comes That Girl
21. Windows - Don't Hang Up


V/A - Knock Me Down - U.S. Powerpop 2 1977-86
01. Abstracts - It's Me (1981)
02. The Cheeters - You Aint Breakin' Nobodys Heart (1985)
03. The Effections - Candy (1984)
04. The Finders - It's So Insane (1981)
05. The Gooses - Just a Tailor (1977)
06. Randy Gun - I Apologize (1980)
07. Bill Kern - Don't Listen to Them (1979)
08. The Krayolas - Cry Cry, Laugh Laugh (1980)
09. Mor's - The Girl Next Door (1979)
10. The Nems - A Girl Like You (1979)
11. The Noogs - Everybody Loves You (1980)
12. The Outlets - Knock Me Down (1980)
13. Peer Group - Change of Plans (1981)
14. The Rudies - Sherry Goodbye (1980)
15. The Shake Shakes - You Can Run (1979)
16. Squirrels From Hell - Adverse Reaction (1982)
17. Stan Skora - You Like It (1981)
18. Transistors - R-Love (is Approaching Critical Mass) (1980)
19. Tommy Trash - Why Not (1983)
20. The Windows - My Dear (1982)
21. The Young Idea - Cool Side of Town (1985)

9 comments:

Beyes said...

Thank you, David!

billy said...

just awesome, thanks!

Josef Kloiber said...

Great ! Thank you

Josef Kloiber said...

These 2 comp.are ultra rare. Thanks again.

tom said...

Certainly some obscure groups here - The Atlantics & The Outlets were both on the DIY Boston comp and had LPs (ABC, Restless). Randy Gun was an original member of the Necessaries.

Phil O. said...

Oh wow, I think myself as a serious fan of this genre and era, and I've never heard of most of these bands. I can't wait to hear this. Thanks!!

Kouzie said...

Thank you!

Jim H. said...

Thanks much! I still have a mess of these 45s somewhere, but better to find them gathered here! Cheers for the holidays and the new year!!!!

Nick said...

Hi,

I have 5 of this CDs:
- the two listed on this post (Sold-It 001 & 002)
- PUT ME ON THE RADIO (Sold-It 006, 2008)
- POP SONGS (Sold-It 007, 2009)
- STAND UP AND SHOUT (Sold-It 009, 2010)

If the references are real, it means that (at least) 4 more of this CDs exist ...

Thanks alot for the bog and Happy New Year!
Nick.