Type and hit ENTER

Commonly used tags...

Brighton Festival Brighton Fringe Brighton Pride British Sea Power Cinecity Lewes Psychedelic Festival Locally Sourced Lost & Found Love Supreme Festival Mutations Festival Nick Cave Poets Vs MCs Politics Rag'n'Bone Man Record Store Day Save Our Venues Six Of The Best Source Virgins Streets Of Brighton Street Source Tattoos The Great Escape Tru Thoughts Unsung Heroes
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Advertise
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Advertise
Features

Six Of The Best: Debut Albums

Jun 24, 2009
-
Posted by SOURCE Writers

The only way is up – so opined gangly pop bleach-top Yazz back in the day. For her, like so many others, the only way was unfortunately down after a brief sojourn in the sun. Debut albums are your life’s work to date, mining every emotion and experience you’ve been through. The follow-up is often written in the back of the van to an unforgiving deadline, and plenty fail to deliver. Here’s a selection of those who led the field early doors but fell at the second fence.

THE SPECIALS – THE SPECIALS
The Specials’ eponymous debut not only secured their reservation at rock’s top table, it confirmed the 2-Tone label and associated movement as punk’s sharpest successor. A mix of vintage ska covers and band-penned originals under the production wing of Elvis Costello, it’s an absolutely essential, era-defining purchase. They followed it up, however, with More Specials, a largely stinky mix of lounge muzak and samba with sparse attraction for all but the most blindly devoted. (NC)

TRICKY – MAXINEQUAYE
The signs were good when Tricky’s version of Karmacoma – re-titled as Overcome¬- took the stoned, world music low point of Massive Attack’s Protection and turned it into a sultry, slutty piece of low slung neo-hip hop. So zeitgeisty that it shared samples with Portishead’s contemporary Dummy, it was much darker, thus avoiding that album’s over-exposure. One place where it was ubiquitous though was the bedroom, where it disguised the orgasmic groans of 1995’s most sordid sex acts. (JK)

MONKS – BLACK MONK TIME
One of the most strikingly original bands of the mid 60s produced their sole studio album, released only in Germany in March 1966, which has since become something of a legend exerting influence far beyond its modest initial sales. The stomping, repetitive bass and drum groove, the splatter of fuzz guitar, the flailing vocals and loud organ outbursts. Their one album was revolutionary, but sparked no revolution, it appeared out of nowhere then disappeared to nowhere. (AS)

THE FALL – LIVE AT THE WITCH TRIALS
Not actually live (though Mark E Smith now has around 40 live albums he’d like to sell you), The Fall’s debut was nonetheless recorded in a single day, and mixed the next. Surprisingly approachable, LATWT benefits from Bob Sargeant’s clear production, and a reasonably accomplished band (none of whom, bar Smith, would make it to the next LP). Closing epic Music Scene indicates the belligerence to come, as The Fall play determinedly on through the engineer’s overheard admonishments (“OK studio, that’s plenty…”) (SH)

THE SUNDAYS – READING WRITING & ARITHMETIC
Some debuts are great because they are the catalyst for new movements. This gentle piece of jangy indie from 1990 isn’t going to start a revolution, but falls into the category of LPs that are full of great songs. Pretty and fey, it was the early 90s soundtrack to the tears of indie fans who found The Smiths a bit racy. Despite going gold in the UK and US its legacy has been unjustly ruined by Tin Tin Out’s soulless facsimile of Here’s Where The Story Ends. (JK)

GEORGE MICHAEL – FAITH
Don’t snigger, Slash out of Guns’n’Roses is a big fan of this record. And rightly so. George always had a great pop sensibility with Wham! and here he polished it into an eminently sophisticated commercial package. This was the pop-star-grows-up template that all jettisoned boy-banders since have tried to emulate. Faith, I Want Your Sex, Father Figure, what’s not to like? Er, the follow-up. Pompously titled Listen Without Prejudice, Vol 1, it and his subsequent albums should have been called Record Without Decent Songs, Vols 1-4. (NC)

Six Of The Best
Jun 24, 2009
Email
SOURCE Writers
Sometimes an article is a bit of a team effort, and those are tagged SOURCE Writers. If you’d like to be part of that team, hit the Contact link at the top and get your work on this website.
← PREVIOUS POST
Club Review: Spellbound
NEXT POST →
PTMY: July 2009
Mailing List

Recent Posts
  • The Elephant in the Room Review
    May 6, 2026

    A stunning piece of theatre and true story of Joseph Merrick, known as the Elephant Man, with incredible voices and sublime pictures created on stage.

  • The Age Of Consent Review
    May 6, 2026

    Day two of Brighton Festival saw a joyous celebration of Bronski Beat's classic debut album by a host of contemporary queer and trans artists.

  • Lovett Review
    May 5, 2026

    A truly stunning origin story of Mrs Lovett before Sweeney Todd, performed with grounded authenticity and superb, detailed and intriguing acting.

  • Kohlhaas Review
    May 5, 2026

    A gripping whirlwind of an evening as Arinzé Kene opens Brighton Festival with this frenetic world-premiere.

  • The Final Episode Review
    May 1, 2026

    An intriguing very short one woman play about a worrying conspiracy theory, exploring the consequences of actions and how easy something innocent can turn nasty.

  • The Damned, Wednesday 25th November
    Apr 30, 2026

    The Damned and, fellow punk trailblazers, The Saints celebrate 50 years of punk at The Dome this November.

  • Thee Sacred Souls, Weds 15th July
    Apr 30, 2026

    San Diego's Thee Sacred Souls bring their contemporary take on classic Chicano California Soul to Brighton this summer.

  • The Charlatans Review
    Apr 28, 2026

    The Charlatans wowed a sold out Dome crowd with superb Scottish sibling newcomers The Cords kicking things off in style.

Website developed in Brighton by Infobo
Copyright © Brighton Source 2009-2023
Six Of The Best: Debut Albums - Brighton Source