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Buttons: From Champaign to Chicago

Current price: $22.99
Buttons: From Champaign to Chicago
Buttons: From Champaign to Chicago

Barnes and Noble

Buttons: From Champaign to Chicago

Current price: $22.99

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Maybe it's something in the water (or in Old Style beer), but Illinois has a rich history as the Midwest's Mecca for power pop; in the 1970s and early '80s, the Land of Lincoln was home to hundreds of bands that were serving up soaring melodies, guitar-powered hooks, earnest vocal harmonies, dancefloor-filling rhythms, and as much Beatles-like personality as they could muster.
Cheap Trick
were the Illinois band who were able to sell updated pop to the masses that filled the arenas, and
Shoes
proved a band could rise from a basement studio and score a major-label deal and international attention, but the vast majority of Illinois power pop bands played the clubs for a few years, left behind some demo tapes or self-released singles, and then vanished without a trace. The archivists at the
Numero Group
pay loving homage to the glory days of Illinois power pop with
Buttons: From Champaign to Chicago
, a compilation that features 19 lost classics of Midwest pop, most of which are as hopelessly obscure as any record collector could wish.
are represented with one early track, "In My Arms Again," but for the rest of the acts, claims to fame are a bit dubious --
the Names
were featured in the memorably clumsy low-budget horror flick
Terror on Tour
,
the Vertebrats
' "Left in the Dark" was later covered by
the Replacements
and
Uncle Tupelo
(
, of course, has chosen to feature their lesser-known "Diamonds in the Rough" instead), and
the All Night Newsboys
were the victims of a notorious practical joke in which their roadie was paid to vanish with their gear the night they were set to open for
Heart
John Cougar Mellencamp
, with several major-label scouts in attendance. And while most of these bands came of age in the New Wave era, "Be for Me" by
the Jets
, recorded in 1973, makes it clear that the pop underground was lurking about in Illinois long before skinny ties made their comeback. The pleasant surprise is how uniformly good these bands are -- while a few tunes mostly get by on their energy and charm, "It's a Miracle" by
is a brilliant
rip; "Holiday" by
Nines
is manna from Farfisa heaven; "So Lifelike" by
the Jerks
is a sly and catchy variation on the theme of
the Who
's "Pictures of Lily," and if
Band of Jocks
had the worst name ever, "At Practice" is pretty brilliant. Anyone who ever had a taste for a cool hook in the pre-Reagan era will fall like a ton of bricks for
, and younger pop enthusiasts will be wowed by its strength and variety. ~ Mark Deming

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