Roberto's Rez/Rev-illos Rarities: Another irregular
MRML series powered by the wild generosity of our reader, Roberto*:
Enjoy and don't forget to leave our benefactor a thank-you
comment.
* Another generous reader, Ian Peterson, also sent me this rip with extra info!
Roberto says, "Here's the 1979 repress of the Rezillos (more HERE) first single, slightly remixed "I Can't Stand My Baby". Ian P. adds, "The "Can't Stand My Baby" single is the Sensible 'FAB 1 (Mark 2)' release with the red
cover and green back. The cover still states 'I Wanna Be Your Man' as
the B-side but the single only has "Can't Stand My Baby" and a different, longer version of "(My Baby Does) Good Sculptures" on it. I
don't know how many were actually pressed of this version with the wrong B-side."
If you want more of Roberto's Rez/Rev-illos Rarities - leave us a COMMENT{the very section in which you will find the (My Baby Does) Good Sculptures 7" link}.
Greg MacPherson, who I've talked about here BEFORE, has a new album that I've reviewed for the Big Takeover. Please come read it HERE and feel free to leave a comment behind!
Sure I love doing year-end lists (best non-albums releases HERE, best under-appreciated albums HERE and my want list is HERE) but making one for songs-of-the-year list is sheer folly in light of thousands of songs released over any given twelve moth period. So let us
suspend our disbelief in the comprehensiveness of this blogger's
listening and enjoy some ripping tunes. And ripping it must be, since we here at MMRL crave music that, regardless of genre, > moves>
Unlike my unappreciated albums list, neither acclaim nor sales (or the lack thereof) are a factor here -
and crossover betwixt the two lists is discouraged - this time it's
strictly about the songs!
Here, in no particular order, order are the songs, each of which contains a hyperlink to allow you to hear and/or see the song.
1. Greg MacPherson: "Party at Greg's House" (from Disintegration Blues)
Winnipeg singer/song-writer/community activist/label head MacPherspon (more HERE), has his own way to rock but goes anthemic here to intoxicating effect.
2. The Spazzys: "Divorce" (from Dumb is Forever)
Comeback of the year for these Australian queens of pop-punk (more HERE), after they survived a tortuous legal battle to release their second album, with kick-off/kiss-off single.
3. Ben Jones: "I Wish I Was the Person I'm Pretending To Be" (from Echobox)
Self-loathing never sounded so hummable, as it does on this track from the excellent solo debut from the leader of British power-pop band, The Lovedays.
4. Paul Simon: "Rewrite" (from So Beautiful, So What)
Of course every writer of lists got pulled into Simon's narrative about a damaged Vietnam vet who works at the car wash while endlessly revising his screenplay, because we all sympathized a bit too much, it didn't hurt that the song is just beautiful.
5. The Generators: "You Against You" (from Last of the Pariahs)
These long-running former Schleprock-ers (more HERE), never get the respect they deserves for their Social Distortion-meets-Bad Religions punk sound but they perservere.
6. The Front Bottoms: "Flashlight" [or "Maps"] (from Self-Titled)
To get this New Jersey indie-punk band, sort of a mixture of The Weakerthans and mewithoutYou, it helps if you love songs that put the heart-breaking narratives up high in the mix.
7. Houseboat "Quivering" (from Thorns of Life)
I already regret leaving this off the "Best Albums of the Year" list what with Grath unloading one of his best batch of "pityscapes" with catchy tunes and endlessly clever lyrics on us.
8. Buffalo Tom: "Guilty Girls" (from Skins)
It's funny how I've always admired the commitment and intelligence of nineties alt-rocker Bill Janovitz but never fell in love with one of his songs till this infectious number.
9. Mates of State "Palomino" (from Mountaintops)
Sure, maybe it's just a 21st century kind of pop but if you love soaring hooks and alternating male/female vocals you can find some unguilty pleasure herein.
10. Night Birds: "Bad Biology" (from Fresh Kills)
This ultra-ultra-ultra catchy ripper by NJ surf-core band featuring at least one ex-Erg is originaly from 2009 but finally saw wide release on this 2011 singles collection.
11. Tommy Stinson "All This Way for Nothing" (from One Man Mutiny)
Replacements advocates, like yours truly, are often left grasping at straws when trying to explain how, if the band was such a crucial part of the eighties, why so little great things have come from the band's members in the twenty years since their break-up. Well this Stones-y album from bass player Tommy Stinso ain't gonna settle a thing but at least it gives us a replacement Replacements track in, "All this Way For Nothing".
Somewhere between Bad Religion and The Band (well no one but me would read them that way, exactly) lie this widely-praised beloved Portland indie-folk-rock band, who I've always found pleasant but never so much as on this album packed with finely-written acoustic pop songs!
13. Will Hogue: Goddam California (Hogue discusses the song HERE)
Glad to have a country song make the list, this wouldn't have got any mainstream radio play but that's just because of the cursing and not because Hogue couldn't lay waste to a lot of today's' country elite in song-to-song combat
14. Teenage Bottlerocket: "Mutilate Me" (from Mutilate Me 7")
Wyoming's finest rock n' roll band spit out another trashy but catchy punk tune from their sole release of the year.
15. Wild Flag: "Romance" (from Self-Titled)
This song is catchier and more fleshed-out then any I remember from Sleater-Kinney
16. The Smoking Popes: "Still in a Punk Band" (from This is Only a Test)
An improbable nineties come-back tale by this band who sound a little like a Morrissey-fronted Weezer, which now that I think of it might be a goad career move for all concerned.
17. The Copyrights "Crutches" (from North Sentinel Island)
Y'know some bands get praised for their consistency and other bands, like the Copyrights get damned for it, as if the band making a prog-metal concept album based on Bartleby the Scrivener or having Kenny G play with them on national television would be more worthwhile then another slab of jackhammer pop songs.
While it's no Achtung, Bono, the new 1/2 Man 1/2 Biscuit (whom BBC DJ Andy Kershaw called "the most authentic British folk band since The Clash") album still offers even more proof that Nigel Blackwell is, like Roy Harper or Robyn Hitchcock, one of those Englishmen so particular in their eccentricities, that their appeal becomes (sort of) universal.
19. Canon Bros. "Out of Here" (from Firecracker/Cloudglow)
This track puts this Winnipeg duo's guitarist, Allanah Walker, on lead vocals, where
she excels, and lets her winningly chant “Hey Let’s get out of here, I
hate it here!” until you want to reach through the speakers and help
her escape.
20. The Valkyryans (ft. TV Smith): "Gary Gilmore's Eyes" (from Punk Rocksteady)
These Finns have by no means made a perfect album but this collection of punk covers, Jamaican style, does overcome its novelty appeals by proving just how the malleable the punk rock canon is.
21. Cold Warps: "Stupid Tattoos" (from Self-Titled cassette)
This lo-fi punk-indie band's cassette was a strong contender for non-album release of the year list but Brushback only told me about it last week!
22. Okkervill River: "Wake and Be Fine" (from I Am Very Far)
Yup, they are one-time indie darling (though ones who recorded an album with Roky Erickson) and yup, they have bearded members but this songs is strong and the band perform it with a real jump in their step.
oh...
22.1 I Am Chimp! "Old Men in Coloured Trousers" (from "I Am Chimp EP) The best :21 second song of the year, bar none! Y'know our last two lists generated less COMMENTS than usual...
So, please leave a COMMENT: A) TELL US IF WE GOT YOU TO TRY SOMETHING NEW! B) TELL US WHICH GREAT SONGS WE MISSED!!
AND, OF COURSE, IF YOU LIKE THE MUSIC - SUPPORT THE DAMN BANDS!!!
Die Toten Hosen (more HERE) followed their 1991 punk covers album, Learning English Lesson One, with an all-English album of originals called, Love, Peace & Moneyin 1994. That album (which I bought in the dollar bin at Extreme Noise in Minneapolis in '95), seemed a bit grunge-damaged at the time but now sounds like a fun rock-punk mix with Wagnerian production.
This EP, donated to us by Bristolboy from the fantastic My Life's a Jigsaw (as a response to this gift from our reader, Roberto - don't you just love the cycle of giving!) comes from that album. Both album tracks, "Love Song" and "My Land" are cynical and utterly catchy and well worth your time. It seems lesson two of the band's plan to learn English was to form an alliance with The Boys, whose members Honest John Plain and Matt Dangerfield get writing credits on every song on Love, Peace & Money, including the two aforementioned anthems. One of those Boys, John Plain also get a co-writing credit on the terrace-echoing football song, "Long Way From Liverpool" and (I believe) he and Dangerfield pitch in on a foul-mouthed-but-still-kinda-clever cover of "Guantanamera" that would've sent Pete Seeger into an axe-wielding frenzy! Plus you get the band running through "Whole Wide World" with it's writer, Wreckelss Eric (more HERE) on lead vocals.
So you're all familiar with the give/receive binary and how the former is widely considered to be optimal here during the jolly season.
Therefore in order to give you, dear readers, a chance at betterness, here is a list of out-of-print releases for which MRML is seeking donations of decent quality rips and cover scans for:
If you can help, please feel free to e-mail me at:
musicruinedmylife(at)gmail.com
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Mega City Four: Any demos (1987-1994)
UK pop-punk
The Gas: Emotional Warfare (good rip) + early singles. (1981)
UK new wave
The Cry: Leave Your Bones in the Hallway (1981)
Canadian new wave/power-pop
Ruggedy Annes: Jagged Thoughts (1984)
Canadian indie-punk
V.A. - Not Just Mandella (1987)
UK pop, punk, indie compilation
On the Air: Ready for Action 7"
UK mod-punk w/Simon Townsend (Pete's bro)
Swalk: No Shame (~1983)
Eighties glam-pop w/ Jo Callis
Modernettes: Gone But Not Forgiven LP (1981)
Canadian power-pop
The Payolas: China Boys/Make Some Noise 7" (1979)
Canadian power-pop
Wreckless Eric: Yuletide 45 (1990)
UK/France rock n' roll
Poisoned 12" (1986)
Canadian Eighties new wave band w/ Art Bergmann
Rise: Joy 12" (1990)
Canadian melodic hardcore
Doug and the Slugs: Ten Big Ones LP and any radio broadcasts (1979-1981)
Canadian new wave
The Slugs (-Doug) "Running Around" 7" (1981)
Canadian new wave
Graham Shaw: Good Manners in the 80's (1981)
Canadian new wave
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Speaking of of all that giving, MRML loves fitting musical donations of Mp3's and cover art (as you shall see in just a few hours, meine freunde). So if you think you're in possession of other out-of-print treasures not listed here (nor available at cooler blogs) by all means let me know at the e-mail above!
"The files in this blog are posted for a limited time and are intended for educational, non-commercial use. These files were transcribed from what are believed to be out-of-print sources. If you are aware of any of these items being readily available from commercial sources, or if any of these files infringe upon rights that you hold, please notify us so that we can quickly remove the referenced items immediately." Real music fans buy music - do it!