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Wilfully Obscure
power pop * punk * emo * indie rock * shoegazer
Sunday, November 3, 2024
Five stripes shining in the sunlight.
Saturday, November 2, 2024
The Trend - Crash the Bash (1980-96)
Though somewhat rudimentary, not to mention highly topical, The Trend's mid-tempo forte was competent with surprisingly robust arrangements. The Dead Boys or the Saints this trio were not, but they have moments here that almost parallel the Buzzcocks circa their nascent Spiral Scratch ep, bearing some of the same sardonic heft. Another loose comparison might be the Trends' Belgium contemporaries The Kids, but you're no doubt bound to draw parallels of your own. Love their spot-on rendering of the Mats' "Color Me Impressed," and they also delve into the Damned's Strawberries-era "Dozen Girls."
A thoughtful bio on the band can be read here, and the aforementioned Batman Live... was reissued in limited quantities on the always impressive Japanese Air Mail imprint.
Sunday, October 27, 2024
No one that survived this hurricane would dare deny...
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The Fat Lady Sings - Fear and Favour 7" (1986, Good Vibrations)
Saturday, October 26, 2024
Primary Colors - s/t ep (1983, Urbanoise)
Sunday, October 20, 2024
Then Jerico - Before the Future: 1984-1989 (2024, Cherry Red) - A brief review.
With sizable nods to Simple Minds, as well as lesser concessions to the likes of Duran Duran and U2 (the more preferable eras of all three I might emphasize), The Mark Shaw-fronted Then Jerico usually functioned as a five-piece and wielded a 50/50 sonic wallop of keys and guitars to match their manpower. No, this wasn't quite new wave, rather an advanced outgrowth thereof, buttressed with a manicured fury of dense, robust arrangements, a flair for the dramatic and colored with somewhat opaque socio-political themes. Heck, even the album title alone, First (The Sound of Music), reeked of ambition and sophistication. A volley of singles from the effervescent album in question commenced with 1986's "Muscle Deep" (reissued as a single for a second go-around in '87) , "Let Her Fall," "The Motive," "Prairie Rose," and finally "Blessed Days," the latter for TJ's Japanese market exclusively it appears. Sweeping, anthemic, yet wholly benevolent and above all else, melodically captivating, First... is practically a salvo of greatest hits unto itself. Not quite on the level of say, the Joshua Tree or Songs From the Big Chair, First.. but merely a rung or two down on the same ladder, deftly avoiding any ostentatious or preachy pitfalls. It's an unheralded classic with even it's deepest cuts, specifically "The Laughter Party" and "A Quiet Place (Apathy and Sympathy)" landing as effectively as it's more renown singles.
The version of First... presented on Before the Future, is sensibly enough the original British iteration of the album. When First... saw the light of day in America in 1988 several tracks were remixed, the U.S. variants thereof are included as bonuses here - and there's gobs more on top of that, with all the contemporary extras from the album occupying not one or two CDs, but would you believe three all told? We're treated to TJ's excellent premiere independent 12" "The Big Sweep," circa 1985 and it's follow-up, "Fault." From there on ...Future leaves virtually no stone-unturned, catching every solitary non-LP b-side (including gems like "Searching" and "Electric"), remixes of the more danceable cuts, and a plethora of single edits. It's a bit overkill, and the sequencing/intermingling a bit dodgy (occasionally separating A-sides and B-sides on different disks), but nothing egregious mind you, and this collection is very much assembled with the completist in mind. The fourth CD here, dubbed From the Vaults, houses something I've been craving for an eternity- demos for roughly half of First... Early takes of "Let Her Fall," "The Hitcher," and "The Motive" aren't necessarily raw or rough-hewn, per se, but certainly presented in an interesting embryonic context, and worth my decades-long wait.
Still possessing a healthy quotient of the grandiose sweep that imbued much of First..., TJ's 1989 sophomore effort, The Big Area is by significant degrees more of a commercial venture, demonstrating a tighter and more lucid approach, and notably guitar-centric. Even when the emotional pull isn't as evident as before, Mark Shaw & Co. don't yank the rug out from underneath much of anything, rather Jerico's collective stride pursues a comparatively streamlined tact. And they were still amassing solid material in the shape of "What Does It Take," the pulsing "Helpless," and "Reeling," the latter accented with strings. Six b-sides and such are appendixed to the Big Area CD, including an unlikely reading of Led Zeppelin's "Trampled Underfoot." Considerably uncharacteristic territory for Jerico, but they manage to pull it off.Overall, Before the Future... makes an exhaustive case for rediscovering Then Jerico's often neglected catalog, and its attendant bells and whistles (not to mention ace remastering) ushers all of the band's missing pieces into the digital era in one succinct space. It's available direct from Cherry Red, Amazon. and hopefully a brick and mortar retailer near you.
Can't rest on your laurels now, not when you've got none...
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Saturday, October 19, 2024
FAQ - Pre-Pay (1990, Spikey Music)
Sunday, October 13, 2024
You were my best friend, and I stood there and watched it еnd.
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Thursday, October 10, 2024
St. Johnny - High as a Kite (1993, Caroline)
Sunday, October 6, 2024
I slept through the thundershowers …the day that she pulled out the flowers.
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Wednesday, October 2, 2024
Sunday, September 29, 2024
I had a dream of the sea, but it didn't come for free.
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Saturday, September 28, 2024
House of Pants - Pressed ep (1984, Amorous)
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
Glass Torpedoes - Someone Different 7" (1979, Teen Beat)
A2. Morning, Noon and Night
B. Heart Surgery
Sunday, September 22, 2024
Was a has-been now's an am-is
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Saturday, September 21, 2024
Go Man Go - s/t (1990, Whet Regin)
Sunday, September 15, 2024
I was there to cash in my soul.
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Saturday, September 14, 2024
The Slowest Clock - Smile Futurismo! All I Heard Was Purple (2014, Eye Unseen)
Touted as psych/freakbeat revivalists, Slowest Clock weren't necessarily evocative of anyone from the original '60s vanguard. Not completely removed from that sort of ethos, there is some occasional evidence ("You're So Strange" and "Turning Green") regarding how these guys might have been loosely shoehorned into those environs. The winsome "Eastern Flowers" leaned in the vicinity of R.E.M., but wasn't quite in league with American indie rock either. Elsewhere, there are several songs here that strike me as unfinished, having miraculously surviving past the demo stage. ...Futurismo! is an album of anomalies with seemingly minimal connective tissue, yet still rewarding if you're willing to invest a few concerted listens.
Thursday, September 12, 2024
Green Pyramids 7" (1993, Susstones)
Sunday, September 8, 2024
Saturday, September 7, 2024
Voices - New Bamboo (1983)
Voices are a very bygone Rochester, NY cold case, who apparently didn't give the world much beyond this platter. A privately pressed LP that doesn't necessarily skew to the aesthetics of "indie rock," just one spin of New Bamboo reveals these gents were tempted to tap into a plethora of markets. Synthy new wave forays, "Return to Human," and "Out Tonight" aren't as sophisticated as say, Gary Numan but are satisfying nonetheless, particularly the latter. "Drive-in Show" sports a radio-ready power pop acumen, while the concluding morsel, "Death in a Hand Held Package" is subtly more serious, á la what Genesis were striving for around the same period. Elsewhere on ...Bamboo are a handful of not so new ideas, aimed in a decidedly more AOR direction. Nothing truly embarrassing, mind you, but a comparative curveball. At the end of the day, I'm pretty relieved that I didn't fork out a hundred for the better tracks.
Sunday, September 1, 2024
She met a man so understanding there was nothing he wouldn’t do.
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Saturday, August 31, 2024
Versus - singles 1994-95
Perhaps "Frog" isn't their most effective piece, yet it bears the dynamic, yet tentative lilt of the Baluyut brothers and Fontaine Toup's nascent work, which means it's loaded for bear in the charm department. "Go Tell it on the Mountain" and "Big Head On" exude the consoling mid-fi affectations of virtually everything that made the cut on Dead Leaves, but these numbers (esp "Big Head...") are particularly amped-out, to borderline intense and intimidating proportions. As for the only tune I have yet called out. "N.I.T.A." mines a slightly less strenuous vein, yet bristles with ample tension and texture. Marvy stuff.
Versus' palette would expand and become more lucid and approachable on subsequent records, beginning with Secret Swingers in 1996. And while they've never gone so far off the reservation as to piss me off, I can't help but wish they hadn't shed so much of their comparatively downer and insular vibe that's so meta to these songs.