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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 1979
PostPosted: Wed Nov 30, 2011 12:08 am 
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Go Platinum
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I think I only have two things not already covered.

Possibly their best:
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The Police - Reggatta de Blanc

Not her best:
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Patti Smith Group - Wave

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 1979
PostPosted: Wed Nov 30, 2011 2:32 pm 
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British Press Hype
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Last edited by Head Gardener on Fri Dec 02, 2011 10:07 am, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 1979
PostPosted: Wed Nov 30, 2011 2:37 pm 
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Indie Debut
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Bill Nelson & The Red Noise only release - 'Sound on Sound' is a record ahead of its time and one not for everyone. It sounded unlike anything else released that year. With its angular rhythms, layered synthetics and Dave Mattacks' wacky drum patterns. If you're able, check out the track 'Revolt Into Style'.

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New wave power pop, with questionable lyrics and a shitload of hooks.

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Always second fiddle to The Jam, but a genuine nod toward the 60's mod revival & motown groove.


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Ever evolving sound that's a pre-cursor to Avalon.

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Great power pop record. See Raspberries, Beatles, Vocal Harmony related artists.


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I mention this only because it includes Girl Of My Dreams.


I also endorse -

XTC
GParker
Petty
Undertones
JJackson
Elvis C
Clash
Buzzcocks
NLowe
YMO
Incredible Shrinking & Dawn of The Dickies

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 1979
PostPosted: Thu Dec 01, 2011 11:59 pm 
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Could definitely add a "+1" to a lot of the stuff mentioned on the bottom half of the last page. Magazine, Neil Young, several others.

Still, several of my favorites have not yet been mentioned.

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The Raincoats - s/t
I probably like The Raincoats more than The Slits even though I don't like this album quite as much as Cut. Great band, though, and I love this.

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Swell Maps - A Trip to Marineville
MIDGET SUBMARINES


This Heat - s/t
I wonder if I've mentioned This Heat as many times as I've mentioned Can? Probably not, but I'm sure it's pretty close.


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 1979
PostPosted: Tue Mar 05, 2013 11:49 pm 
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Damn, so much good stuff. I just finished compiling an 80s mega mix and found a bunch of tracks and was like "1979? Dang, so close!"

Really digging this tune from Split Enz, off their Frenzy album.


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 1979
PostPosted: Wed Mar 06, 2013 3:37 pm 
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frostingspoon
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Somehow missed this thread. Lots of great stuff already accounted for, but a few omissions worth checking out:



Bruce Wooley & the Camera Club English Garden
A band that marks the starting point of Thomas Dolby and the Buggles, also includes the original version of "Video Killed the Radio Star." Dolby and Trevor Horn went on to careers that eclipsed Wooley, but none of them ever came up with an album as all-around enjoyable as this one. Sounds like the non-existent Bowie album that bridges Diamond Dogs with Low far more logically than the actual Bowie albums between those points.



Squeeze Cool for Cats
The start of Difford/Tilbrook's short three album run as declared heirs to the Lennon/McCartney pop songwriter throne.



Phil Rambow Shooting Gallery
Ex-leader of the Winkies, an ill-fated pub/glam band that started with so much buzz Brian Eno chose them to be his backing band for his first solo tour (which ended before it began with a collapsed lung), Rambow released two solo albums before disappearing (although he popped up occasionally as a songwriter, penning "There's a Guy Works Down the Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis" for Kristy McColl). This was the first, and it's an interesting meld of Van Morrison and the Costello/Parker/Jackson/Lowe strand of the era's new wave, slightly ruined by the dated production. His follow-up (Jungle Law) was considerably better, but this one is definitely worth a listen.




Jules and the Polar Bears Fenetiks
Not quite as striking as Got No Breeding, but more pop oriented and with at least two tracks ("One Good Reason" and "Faded Red") that may have exceeded anything on that debut. After this there was a 3rd album that never got an official release, and then Jules Shear started his solo career.



Jo Jo Zep & the Falcons Screaming Targets
After years on the Aussie pub circuit, Jo Jo Zep seemed poised for major success with this album. They incorporated strains of reggae and Rolling Stones worship into a My Aim Is True songwriting sensibility (Costello even chose their "So Young" as one of his b-sides at the time). One of those albums where every song might be your favorite at any given time, the band stuck together for one more shot before singer Jo Camilleri pulled the world's worst Rod Stewart imitation and went solo with a thud.



The Buzzards Jellied Eels to Record Deals
Yet another great forgotten late '70s Brit punk band. Originally known as the Leyton Buzzards, Jellied Eels compiled the entirety of the lads' two-year discography for a terrific overview of a criminally neglected career. Smart enough to pen songtitles like the anti-Floyd indignation of "No Dry Ice Or Flying Pigs", but also dumb enough to believe their opinions mattered. Completely endearing on all levels.


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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 1979
PostPosted: Wed Mar 06, 2013 6:33 pm 
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Yeah I'm currently being wowed by that very same Squeeze record.

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 1979
PostPosted: Wed Mar 13, 2013 11:30 am 
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Also, I think "Dream Police" is my favorite Cheap Trick song, off the 1979 album of the same name.

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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 1979
PostPosted: Wed Mar 13, 2013 12:24 pm 
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bort Wrote:
Also, I think "Dream Police" is my favorite Cheap Trick song, off the 1979 album of the same name.



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 Post subject: Re: You Should Hear This: 1979
PostPosted: Wed May 29, 2013 9:43 am 
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Here's my mix so far:

01. The Records - Starry Eyes
02. Joe Jackson - Got The Time
03. Kristy MacCall - They Don't Know
04. Talking Heads - Paper
05. Split Endz - I See Red
06. The Beat - Walking Out On Love
07. XTC - Life Begins At The Hop
08. The Undertones - She's A Runaround
09. Nick Lowe - Without Love

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New and old mixes: http://8tracks.com/neutralmarkhotel
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