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Showing posts from February, 2010

Forgotten Songs of the '90s: Blur

Forgotten Songs of the ‘90s: Blur Everyone knows Blur as one of the biggest British bands of the ‘90s but at the start of the decade, they were just another band trying to break their way through. After a relatively successful first album, 1991’s Leisure , they settled in to make their second album. One of the songs that was intended to be on the album ended up being one of their best songs: “Popscene.” The sessions for the second album were harsh as the band were trying to figure out how to expand on their sound. On Leisure , they were poppy but had a bit of an edge, with this new record they were trying to build on that edge. The intro of “Popscene,” one immediately realizes they’ve started off on the right track with a swirling guitar trance courtesy of Graham Coxon that leads into one of the coolest bass riffs of the decade by Alex James that kicks the song off with a bang. Then when Dave Rowntree comes in hitting harder than he’d ever done to that point, the band builds louder an

Forgotten Songs of the '80s: The Damned

Forgotten Songs of the ‘80s: The Damned By the time 1986 rolled around, The Damned were already punk forefathers but by this time, they were also able to make the jump to a major label, MCA. After 1985’s Phantasmagoria flopped, the band tried again and released Anything . While the record was a massive critical disappointment and in some ways, a step backwards for the band, it did give them one of the most notable songs of their career, a brilliant cover of Love’s classic “Alone Again Or.” By kicking off with the song’s signature Spanish acoustic guitar riff, the band built on the song by making it a bit stronger and louder. Singer Dave Vanian’s vocals are at their powerful best especially when the song reaches its chorus where the whole band comes together at a maximally quiet crescendo. Working with the original’s Spanish influence, the guitar solo is matched with Spanish horns that really don’t seem to work with the song’s strengths but manage to help push the guitar to the forefro

Forgotten Album of the Month: King Missile

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Forgotten Album of the Month: King Missile With it being almost a year since this thing got started, I figured it would only be wise to dedicate the Forgotten Album of the Month to the first artist I covered here: King Missile. While most people know them solely for “Detachable Penis,” the rest of the album that song came off of, 1992’s Happy Hour , deserves to be remembered as well for being one of the best college rock records of the decade. Kicking off with one of their greatest songs, “Sink,” which is basically a combination of the same four lines repeated many different ways with many swirling textures behind it, the album is brilliant in its melding of spoken word/prose and great alternative rock. “Martin Scorsese,” a demented tribute to one of the greatest film directors ever is pure genius but one of the best songs is “It’s Saturday,” a song with just John S. Hall rambling on and Roger Murdock having a ball with a drum solo. The album just never ceases to amaze with its musical