Sorry I haven't been able to give you much this week, but you'll probably find this humdinger a nice asset to the collection. The Maryland Cookies were in fact not from The Old Line state, rather...Sweden. Specializing in wailin' garage rawk-cum-punk, the Cookies approximated later era Lime Spiders (think Cave Comes Alive) fronted by a mouthpiece (Mike Eriksson) with a thing for Stan Ridgway. From the vigorous lead off number, "You Just Fade Away," to the slammin' cowpunk surge of "Too Much Hamburgers," the quartet manages to keep the bulk of Flesh, Trash & Heat at a rolling boil with bite and sneer for miles. These gents were taut as all-get-out. The garage standard, "I Can Only Give You Everything" is given a new coat of cookie batter to sublime effect I might add. Per Discogs, it looks like three more MC albums followed.
01. You Just Fade Away
02. Protection
03. back on the Ground
04. Too Much Hamburgers
05. I Can Only Give You Everything
06. Move on Baby
07. New Kind of Spirit
Thursday, September 29, 2016
Maryland Cookies - Flesh, Trash & Heat (1987, Rainbow Music)
Sunday, September 25, 2016
This is where I walk out the door...
A: Yes! Here are sixteen power poppin' examples.
Saturday, September 24, 2016
Game Theory - Berkeley Square, 10-02-86
Note: I'm making this available only as an MP3 download tonight, but will try to get a FLAC version up tomorrow. Please check back!
01. Carrie Anne
02. Rayon Drive
03. 24
04. Waltz the Halls Always
05. Girl with a Guitar
06. Look Away
07. Where You Going Northern
08. Shark Pretty
09. I've Tried Subtlety
10. Friend of the Family
11. King-Fu Fighting
12. Curse of the Frontierland
MP3 or FLAC pt 1 & pt 2
Thursday, September 22, 2016
Game Theory - The Big Shot Chronicles (1986/2016, Omnivore) - A brief overview.
Beyond my slightly indulgent testimonial, the band's not-so-difficult third album found Game Theory settling not merely on a more assured sound, but a signature one at that. In the process, they ironed out some of the nascent wrinkles that charmingly evidenced themselves on their debut, Blaze of Glory, three years prior - an album which for better or worse wasn't cut under the most professional of circumstances. The Big Shot Chronicles is all about honing a new kind of charm - one forged from the lessons of fifteen years of power pop spoils (from both sides of the Atlantic), not to mention the then fertile Paisley Underground hubbub due south in their native California. Modest dollops purloined from the Beatles and Big Star didn't hurt either. Scott Miller and Co. stitched up all of this inspiration and appeal with a subtly indigenous thread. The Game Theory "recipe," as it were.
And what of the songs composing the record in question? By the time Big Shot... was tracked by Mitch Easter, G/T were finally in full swing, both in terms of songwriting and performance acumen. The aforementioned "Here it is Tomorrow" is a flabbergastingly sharp opener, yet it's bested a little further in via a vivacious and visceral pop/rock trifecta - "I've Tried Subtlety," "Erika's Word," and "Crash Into June" all of which are worthy of college rock canonization. Big Shot's brashness and carefully wielded horsepower wasn't rooted in arrogance so much as four years of practice, touring and toil that this band accumulated since their 1982 genesis. Conversely, Game Theory turn this record on it's head so to speak, in the guise of spare acoustic pieces as well, specifically "Regenisraen," and "Like a Girl Jesus," the latter of which resonated enormously with fans, and was even paid homage to a decade later by indie acts The Killjoys and Sleepyhead. Now, everything that falls in between the cracks of the songs I mentioned aren't necessarily as riveting, but let it be known that Big Shot is phenomenally consistent was perhaps the most definitive record in the band's catalog, spanning the depth and breadth of their capabilities. In fact, it's the ideal starting point for neophytes too, but above all else a sophisticated, cohesive, and artful pop record.
Omnivores reissue and expansion of Big Shot entails a thirteen song addendum, including some of the bonus songs from the original Alias Records 1993 overhaul of the album, live takes of "Friend of the Family" and the Velvets "Sweet Jane," rough mixes and demos, and a primo remake of Todd Rundgren's "Couldn't I Just Tell You." It's available now direct from Omnivore, or Amazon and iTunes if you prefer. The vinyl incarnation is pressed on immaculate looking transparent green wax.
Wednesday, September 21, 2016
Starbilly 7" (1994, Buzz)
While Starbilly have reunited as recently as this year, things have been quiet on the Squirrel Bait front for eons. Peter, if you're reading this, please consider a S/B reunion. Start out with Coachella or Riot Fest next year if you have to, and preferably expand from there, but for chrissakes just throw us a bone. We've been starved for a good thirty years now.
A. Unmistakable Tick
B. Diane
Hear
Tuesday, September 20, 2016
It Figures - 12 (1987, Perspective)
Yes, this album jacket is irrefutably daft - the music enclosed, not so much (thankfully). You're not getting The Joshua Tree here folks, but little did this Portsmouth, NH trio realize some thirty years ago that they were creating a record that was nearly a custom fit for these hallowed pages. Pulling (albeit never plundering) from Minneapolis indie-punk not to mention a trove of their left-of-the-dial contemporaries, It Figures weren't innovators, but they need not be so long as they possessed the tunes. With a few exceptions, 12 is conveniently divied up into a relatively rough-hewn, slightly rambunctious yin (side one), nicely balanced with a more introspective and occasionally melancholy yang via the flip. 12's first half is the more convincing of the two, though I'm hardly one to quibble with the remainder. If you're so inclined, kindly proceed to this page to explore earlier It Figures compositions.
01. Hookline
02. Crash and Burn
03. (It's a) Madhouse
04. Now They're the Slaves
05. Close to Home
06. Erika
07. Sorry Starts With 'S'
08. The Hypnotist
09. Pull the Wool
10. Visions
11. Superman
12. Mechanical Me
Sunday, September 18, 2016
She's playin' my very most favorite Sweet record.
Thursday, September 15, 2016
The Boo Radleys - Learning to Walk (1991)
01. Kaleidoscope
02. How I Feel
03. Aldous
04. Swansong
05. The Finest Kiss
06. Tortoiseshell
07. Bluebird
08. Naomi
09. Alone Again Or
10. Everybird
11. Sometime Soon She Said
12. Foster's Van
13. Song For Up!
14. Boo! Faith
Hear
Sunday, September 11, 2016
Saturday, September 10, 2016
The Flys - Waikiki Beach Refugees (1978, Captain Oi)
The 2001 reissue of Waikiki tacks on eight bonus selections, mostly culled from singles.
01. We Don't Mind the Rave
02. Beverley
03. Looking for New Hearts
04. She's the One
05. Monsoon Sky
06. Fun City
07. Don't Moonlight Me
08. Some Kind of Girl
09. I Don't Know
10. Waikiki Beach Refugees
11. Saturday Sunrise
12. Dark Nights
bonus
13. Love and a Molotov Cocktail
14. Can I Crash Here?
15. Civilisation
16. Fun City (single vers)
17. EC4
18. Beverley (single vers)
19. Name Dropping
20. Fly v. Fly
Reissue news here!
Thursday, September 8, 2016
Trotsky Icepick/Vena Cava - Saints tribute split 7" (1992, Happy Squid)
Trotsky Icepick - I'm Stranded
Vena Cava - This Perfect Day
Hear
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
V/A - Dirt Compilation Vol. 1 (1982, Dirt)
01. The Numbers - Smash Hit
02. The Shakes - On the Blink
03. The Bounce - Jenny's Doin' Fine
04. The Groceries - Hire High School Girls
05. (mystery track - download to reveal!)
06. Modulators - Down at the Dirt
07. The Colors - Growing Up American
08. Transformer - Tonight
09. Shrapnel - Come Back to Me
10. Abstracts - It's Me
11. The Whyos - 1-2-3-4
12. Zap & the Wires - Tramps of Days
Hear
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
The Earthmen - College Heart (2016, Popboomerang) - a brief review
Two cuts deep into this retrospective is one of the band's signature pieces, the title track from the aforementioned Fall and Rise ep. Imagine if you will three densely packed minutes of
dizzying guitar squalls coupled with a pulverizing hook, all tucked inside a frantic delivery system – and you still won’t get half the idea of what I’m extolling until you experience it firsthand. Yes, that good. "The Fall and Rise..." was so effective I'm not sure if the guys were able to top it, though the driving "First Single" and "Figure 8" weren't far off.
The Earthmen subscribed to the '90s alt-rock trend du jour as much as anyone, but you wouldn't find any grunge tread on their collective tires. In fact, they weren't an eccentric bunch in the least, nor were their records particularly challenging. They went the long way around the block and actually hunkered down and wrote songs with no discernible flash or frivolity. For every assertive rocker (e.g. "The Fall and Rise...") there was at least one ballad to counter it, and they weren't afraid to bring in a string section when suitable. Sometimes hushed and introspective ("Tell the Women We're Going"), sometimes polished ("Arms Reach"), and even haunting ("Kathleen"), the Earthmen's slower forays were invariably sincere and bittersweet.
Two years after the well received Love Walked In, the Earthmen bid adieu in front of a hometown Melbourne crowd in December 1999. Some seventeen years later however, the band's epilogue was about to be rewritten. To put the icing on College Heart's cake, the group reconvened to record four new songs for the compilation and are slated for select live dates later this year. The spry, power-pop tinged "Personal History" and "Find Your Own Way" (a la recent Posies) make a strong case for the Earthmen to have a whole 'nother go at it.
You can draw your own conclusions by taking College Heart for a spin (and hopefully a purchase) over at Popboomerang's Bandcamp page. Amazon and CD Baby have you covered as well.
Sunday, September 4, 2016
Takes ten pounds of bullshit for ten ounces of glory.
Friday, September 2, 2016
Woodpecker - No Factory Town ep (1989)
01. No Factory Town
02. Twenty Five Years Old
03. Very Pretty Girl
04. Parade Songs
Hear