Rock 'n' Roll Times
martes, mayo 12, 2026
In Memoriam: Legendary "Donald Gibb" Dies At 71
jueves, mayo 07, 2026
Rocktrospectiva: The Return To The Form "Sugar Tax" Turns 35
Rocktrospectiva: The Fairly "Hard At Play" Turns 35
Hard at Play was a return to the straight-ahead blues-inflected pop/rock that made Huey Lewis and the News superstars in the early '80s. Unfortunately for many reviewers and fans, the album wasn't strong enough or consistently as other albums such as "Sports", or "Picture This", even thought, the band rocked with a renewed vigor and a handful of songs, including the anthemic hit "Couple Days Off," were as catchy as their older hitsthis is arguably the band sole Rock record.
Rocktrospectiva: The Massive "Schubert Dip" Turns 35
By the early nineties, everyone knew EMF (Epsom Mad Funkers), a name taken from a New Order fan club) that was the official version. But there was a song on the album called, precisely, EMF, in which the phrase "E! Ecstasy!, M! Motherfuckers motherfuckers" is repeated insistently, and in fact, that sounded much cooler than Epsom... we'll never know the real one, and also for their enduring and addictive hit "Unbelievable" and a promising career that placed them at the forefront of British alternative dance music. Schubert Dip was a huge success in England, his native country, as well as in the United States.
EMF consisted of James Atkin on vocals, Ian Dench on guitar, Derry Brownson on keyboards and samplers, Zach Foley on bass, and Mark Decloedt on drums. "Unbelievable" was part of their excellent debut album, Schubert Dip (1991). Upon entering the album, we found a blend of rock driven by Dench's excellent guitar riffs and techno, with samples featured in many of the tracks, in a way taking the banner of the most important movement to emerge years earlier in the British Isles, known as Madchester.
"Unbelievable" was released as a single in Great Britain in December 1990, well before the release of Schubert Dip, and achieved considerable success, although it would gain even more popularity in the United States, reaching number one in sales in July 1991. The excellence of this "one-hit wonder" clearly overshadows the rest of the album, and it is certainly disappointing how a band capable of creating such an infectious melody were unable to maintain that level of success for the remainder of their career.
It would be unfair to dismiss the album by saying it's "Unbelievable and 10 other tracks." Clearly, that song was the best, but there were others that are also very noteworthy. "I Believe," believe it or not, it was also a hit in the UK. Released after Unbelievable, it reached number three on the charts. Other remarkable favourites were"Travelling Not Running," and like many other tracks on the album, it started with vocal samples, although in this case, I can't place where they're from. Other outstanding track was the controversial "Lies", it was controversial because the first CD edition included a sample of Mark David Chapman (John Lennon's killer) reciting the first two lines of John Lennon's "Watching the Wheels," and Yoko Ono pressured for its removal, so all subsequent editions omit it. But putting aside the poor taste of including that fragment, the song is one of the best on the album, with simple yet direct lyrics: "You said too much, and what you said was a lie..." A short but clear message, isn't it?
miércoles, mayo 06, 2026
Rocktrospectiva: The Outstanding "Walking Wounded" Turns 30
Four tracks from the album were released as singles, including the drum and bass-influenced "Walking Wounded" and the house-influenced "Wrong", which became top ten hits on the UK Singles Chart, as well as the downtempo track "Single", which set Tracey Thorn's emotionally direct vocal against breakbeats, organ and strings, and "Before Today".
Walking Wounded drews on downtempo, drum and bass, and trip hop music, "compressing the wide open space of those then-nascent sounds into a pop format" and marked a change in the duo's approach to writing songs. Ben Watt produced various instrumental tracks, while Tracey Thorn wrote lyrics after listening to the completed tracks. In producing the tracks, Watt utilised samples from "unusual" sources; the song "Single", for instance, sampled Tim Buckley's "Song to the Siren" and Stan Tracey's "Starless and Bible Black". Thorn later recalled: "We really believed in ourselves and that comes across in the sound. We'd finally got to the point where we realised what our strength was: the softness and warmth of my voice against urban beats; the warm and cold, the soft and hard contrast. We got it perfect on this record; it was our pop triumph."
Rocktrospectiva: The Accomplished "The It Girl" Turns 30
The album was recorded in London over the winter of 1995 and 1996 and production was helmed by Stephen Street. Much of the content of the album is autobiographical. "Lie Detector" was written about Wener's frustration with "how women are stereotyped and put into boxes, and not allowed to escape the way they were originally viewed
The album was well received by critics and helped solidify Sleeper's status as a key band in the Britpop movement. Although it lacks a standout track on the level of Smart's "Inbetweener," Sleeper's second album, The It Girl, was a stronger effort, suggesting that lead singer/songwriter Louise Wener could develop into a distinctive talent.
Certainly, her melodies and hooks are uniformly better this time around, ranging from the bouncy "Sale of the Century" to the sighing melancholy of "What Do I Do Now?" Wener's lyrics continue to be underdeveloped and simplisitic, but her hooks usually make that tendency easy to ignore. The It Girl was an even stronger album is a clearer, more focused production. Although the sound of the album changed subtlely throughout the course of the record, the overall effect is numbingly similar. The rhythm section lacks drive and the guitars lack balls -- they blend together into one dull grind. Out of all of Stephen Street's productions.
Rocktrospectiva: The Cohesive And Consistent "Wild Mood Swings" Turns 30
The album saw the band explore various styles, similar to their double album Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me (1987), incorporating jangle pop with "Mint Car" and "Return", jazz with "Gone!" and mariachi with "The 13th". Robert Smith said the album title came from the fact that "Lyrically and musically, we cover more stuff than we have done in the past." The album exhibits jarring track placements, which contribute to the erratic and eclectic nature of the material, from lighter poppier songs to introspective, darker material.
The album saw various different changes towards the way the band approached recording their songs, such as the prominent use of computers and music software like Cubase, as well as live strings and brass instrumentation. It was also the first album released since drummer Boris Williams left the band for personal reasons in 1994 while guitarist Porl Thompson also left the group in 1993 to look after his children and joined English rock band Page and Plant.
Smith felt at the time that the previous line-up that had made Wish (1992) had "really done as much as we could. In some ways, in the back of my mind, I was slightly unsure as to what we could achieve, because we all knew each other so well. So the fact that it all kind of fell apart was a good thing. It was one of those haphazard, serendipitous things that worked in our favour."
However, Smith found it difficult to replace Boris Williams as he felt he was "a phenomenally good drummer," and found "replacing him was the most difficult thing. Not only did we have to find someone who would fit, who would get on with us and understand what the Cure is about, [he] also had to be as good a drummer as Boris, and it took months finding someone." Jason Cooper, formerly of the band My Life Story, replaced Williams on drums in 1995, answering to a Melody Maker advertisement made by the band anonymously with the brief "…famous group requires drummer – no metal heads…" Prior to Cooper's recruitment, other potential drummers included Ron Austin (The God Machine), Mark Price (All About Eve), and Louis Pavlou (Pink Turns Blue). All three drummers ultimately appeared on Wild Mood Swings. Perry Bamonte replaced Porl Thompson as the group's lead guitarist, leaving Roger O'Donnell, who returned in 1995 after leaving in 1990, to fulfil keyboard parts.
The album marked the first time the band did not work with David M. Allen as a producer since Japanese Whispers (1983). Robert Smith feared "that nothing new" would happen, had they worked with him again, saying: We've never really needed anyone to help on the creative or artistic side" and opted to get Steve Lyon, due to his younger age and his lack of "any preconceptions about the group.
The track "Club America", was inspired by a summer trip in 1994 that Smith had to New York with Perry Bamonte to watch the Football World Cup. After playing football with electronic band Depeche Mode and Daryl Bamonte, brother of Perry who would go on to work with the Cure shortly after, they all went clubbing. Smith admitted to playing "up to it then and awful lot more than I should have, and on the plane home, I wrote the song, because I was trying to, like, explain it away to myself. It's ironic, you know. I've had this photo taken with these celebrities, and I was there, and I did that, and I was full of self loathing! And that song is not anti-the girl in the "canary feather dress," it's actually anti-me because I was part of it." Rolling Stone noted Smith's put-on deeper voice on the song, citing borrowed "vocal tricks" from David Bowie and Iggy Pop, while also describing the sound as "upbeat" and that its sound invoked the "jaded thrills of nightclubbing in the American fun house." The song "Treasure" is inspired by the Christina Rossetti poem "Remember". Smith felt that the most personal songs on the album were "Want" and "Bare".
Initial recording began around the end of 1994, with just Robert Smith and Perry Bamonte. Simon Gallup fell ill shortly before the band scheduled to record and Boris Williams left the band the day before they began recording, and other members had yet to be found. The following year Roger O'Donnell and Jason Cooper would be hired.
The band settled in St. Catherine's Court, a Tudor house that was owned by actress Jane Seymour at the time, and were the first band to record there, since she began renting it out as a film set and recording studio since 1992. Other bands and musicians who would record there include Radiohead, for their acclaimed album OK Computer (1997), Robbie Williams and New Order. The band themselves would return there for the initial 1998 sessions of the follow up album Bloodflowers (2000).
Alongside many other changes to the band's working methods, they opted to use live brass instruments and string quartets in their songs. something that had previously not occurred in their recording processes. Strings would see use most notably on "This Is a Lie", which started out as a song based around an acoustic guitar played by Perry Bamonte. Smith recalled, "when I started playing around with it, it evolved into a string piece on the keyboard. I always had in mind that we'd be using strings, right from the very outset." He said recording in the house helped as "there was an instant atmosphere" for the string quartets. The band chose Audrey Riley's string quartet for the album as Smith felt she was "very aware of recording for contemporary pop" and that he had difficulties with previous musicians.
Smith said the band also used an Indian orchestra, a jazz quartet and Mexican trumpet players, and clarified "Everything on the album is real. In the past, I would have tried to keep it in the family, so to speak, and tried to attain a realistic sound through emulation or simulation. Now I feel much more comfortable having people around who are really good musicians."
The whole band were given much more input on the songs, allowing their ideas to be tested for inclusion "no matter how silly it was". Smith felt at the time, "It was the most fun I've ever had making a record, actually; it was brilliant. And that's why it took quite a long time, 'cause no one wanted it to stop. It was really good fun. We were paying for ourselves to live together in a house and make music, so why should we stop? Why should we go home?"
The mastering of the album was complete at Metropolis Studios, London with Robert Smith alongside Ian Cooper, who was suggested to Smith by producer Flood. This made for the first time Smith would be directly involved with the mastering process, which was due to his frustration towards being absent on the band's previous albums' mastering.
martes, mayo 05, 2026
New Music: Do Things My Own Way (Cornelius Remix)
Rocktrospectiva: The Shiny "Mad About You" Turns 40
Paula Jean Brown, who joined the Go-Go's as bass guitarist following Jane Wiedlin's departure, co-wrote the song with Jim Whelan, and Wiedlin and Charlotte Caffey sang back-up vocals. "Mad About You" was one of a few songs being considered for the fourth (unrecorded) Go-Go's album. The Go-Go's split, and "Mad About You" and two other songs co-written by Paula Jean Brown ended up on Belinda.
The music video was directed by Leslie Libman. It features Andy Taylor of Duran Duran and Carlisle's husband, Morgan Mason. During one scene she dances to a vinyl LP of Yma Sumac's Mambo!. The outdoor scenes are largely set in or near Palisades Park in Santa Monica, California.
The single's B-side, "I Never Wanted a Rich Man", was also included on Carlisle's first long playing work. The extended version of "Mad About You", originally on the A-side of the 12-inch single, was then included on the album compact disc re-release by Virgin in 2003.
Mad About You Track List:
7-inch single
- "Mad About You" (single mix)
- "I Never Wanted a Rich Man"
12-inch single
- "Mad About You" (extended mix)
- "Mad About You" (single mix)
- "Mad About You" (instrumental mix)
lunes, mayo 04, 2026
Albums: Montaña
The musical production of Montaña features the sonic vision of a large musical team: a sum of diverse talents resulting in the elemental fusion of producers who contributed their perspective and texture to each stage of the album. Fernando Boix was behind the production of the track "16", which delves into a sonic exploration reflecting on personal evolution over time. Meanwhile, Dan Solo collaborated on the track "Corre", where the initial inspiration comes from the cult film Run Lola Run.

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