toots Wrote:
i still have the tenner, i'm not sure who put it up originally (probably frosting Radcliffe). i could re-up.
Fixed.
Yeah, the best starting point is
Days of Wine and Roses. Many prefer their debut ep
Down There, but it's included in the bonus tracks on the
Wine and Roses reissue so you don't have to waste time tracking it down. Bassist/singer Kendra Smith left after the debut to form Opal with David Roback.
After that,
Medicine Show is almost on par with the debut, but produce Sandy Pearlman gave it the same over-gloss that he handed the Clash on
Give 'Em Enough Rope. It's the last studio album with Karl Precoda in the band, and it's worth picking up just for his magic. Really, the only track that doesn't work is "John Coltrane Stereo Blues", which was mostly just a concert launching pad for Precoda's guitar wig-outs and feels interminable and pointless in the studio setting.
After that, Wynn settled in as a kind of serious
songwriter, guitar duties were handled by Paul Cutler (who produced their debut ep, also was in 45 Grave), and the band started leaning towards the Long Ryders school of Paisley Underground roots rock. The best way to hear that era is on the
Live at Raji's set (although
Ghost Stories from 1988 will pleasantly surprise anyone with a jones for electrified folk/roots).