Radcliffe Wrote:
I've liked 'em since I first heard "The Unguarded Moment" sometime in the very early '80s. IMO Starfish is their best album, but I also give a big thumbs up to The Blurred Crusade, Heyday, Remote Luxury, Of Skin And Heart, and Hologram of Baal. If the band has a flaw it's that they prefer mood over melody - but, depending on my own mood, I might also consider that to be their greatest strength.
They're a great live band, too. The guitar interplay between Koppes and Wilson-Piper is something you gotta see to believe. I saw them recently (touring Hologram of Baal), and they hadn't lost a step. If anyone gets a chance to catch 'em, I heartily recommend it.
Great take Radcliffe and they were really good live, I couldn’t agree more. I saw them around five times with the most memorable being the time they opened for Echo and the Bunnymen, a phenomenal double bill. I’m looking over my ticket stubs and this was my summer of 1990: Peter Murphy in May, David Bowie in May, the Church in July, four days later Happy Mondays (changed everything), and with what I thought would be the climax, Depeche Mode at Dodger Stadium in August. Sonic Youth was on it’s
Goo tour so we decided to go because PJ Harvey was also on the bill and it was in late August. Well there was this unknown band opening the show called Nirvana and we were at the Hollywood Palladium in time to see them. As you could imagine they were insane with Kurt spending most of the time going crazy on the floor of the stage. They destroyed their equipment by the end and everyone kind of knew they witness something special. I bought
Nevermind the day it came out. To fast forward to the end of the year and close it out, Cocteau Twins with the one and only time I saw them live.
The Church were a great band and I don’t think you could go wrong with any of their 80’s records;
Of Skins and Hearts, the Blurred Crusade, Séance, Remote Luxury, Heyday (favorite), and
Starfish.
Gold Afternoon Fix came out in 1990 and really didn’t do much for me. Though I bought
Priest = Aura a couple of years later, and was an improvement, I was into different kinds of music by than and had lost interest in the band. I wish I had my record player with me so I could dig out these records and see if they sound dated. I played last years album twice, so it did nothing for me, and no one said to check it out so I lost track of it.
BTW, “Milky Way” was on
Starfish. It was probably Willson-Piper who was going off Dusty as that was more his style.