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The Complete Demos 1980-1986
Barnes and Noble
The Complete Demos 1980-1986
Current price: $22.99
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Barnes and Noble
The Complete Demos 1980-1986
Current price: $22.99
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The title of this 16-song collection,
Complete Demos 1980-1986
-- clocking in, as true short-sharp-blasts of
hardcore
should, at just under a half-hour -- might lead you to believe it's less focused on a certain time frame than it really is. Although it was recorded between 1980 and 1986, all but three of the tracks were done between March 1980 and July 1980. In essence, then, it's like hearing an unreleased
Adolescents
debut album with three bonus tracks, as all of the 1980 recordings predate their actual 1981 self-titled debut (also referred to among the faithful as "the blue album"). Seven of the songs on the 1980 demos (which include two versions of
"Wrecking Crew"
) would be redone for
The Adolescents
, so as you'd expect, they're very much in the early Southern Californian
style of the official album. Although the speed and energy jumps off the VU meter, fans can't get too over the moon, as the fidelity is often pretty mediocre. True, that's not something that matters to
punk
listeners as much as it does to followers of many other styles of music. But be warned that, although this will certainly be of interest to
devotees, the sound is quite substandard on about half of this material, the vocals suffering the most. The first four tracks, in fact, were recorded in
Tony Reflex
's garage in March 1980 on cassette. Though they brim with prototypical teenage rebellion, even the more forgiving aficionados might find the
lo-fi
result a significant loss, since none of these four songs were redone for
. Things improve a lot on the four May 1980 numbers done at
Phantom Studios
-- and you can hear the band's attack getting fuller and more metallic -- but the five July 1980 cuts, recorded at
the Casbah
in Fullerton, are pretty muddy. (As the liner notes admit, the original tapes for
recordings were lost, and what you hear on this CD was "mastered from nth generation collector tapes.") Again the sonic mush is a loss for serious
worshipers, as among
material are versions of
"Creatures,"
"Self Destruct,"
and
"Amoeba,"
as well as the simplistic-to-the-point-of-moronic
"Do the Eddie."
Rounding out this archival release are the previously unreleased 1981 track
"Richard Hung Himself,"
the last to be recorded by the early-'80s
, and later (as done by
D.I.
) a highlight of the
Suburbia
soundtrack
. There are also two efforts from 1986, when the group reunited after a gap of about five years. ~ Richie Unterberger
Complete Demos 1980-1986
-- clocking in, as true short-sharp-blasts of
hardcore
should, at just under a half-hour -- might lead you to believe it's less focused on a certain time frame than it really is. Although it was recorded between 1980 and 1986, all but three of the tracks were done between March 1980 and July 1980. In essence, then, it's like hearing an unreleased
Adolescents
debut album with three bonus tracks, as all of the 1980 recordings predate their actual 1981 self-titled debut (also referred to among the faithful as "the blue album"). Seven of the songs on the 1980 demos (which include two versions of
"Wrecking Crew"
) would be redone for
The Adolescents
, so as you'd expect, they're very much in the early Southern Californian
style of the official album. Although the speed and energy jumps off the VU meter, fans can't get too over the moon, as the fidelity is often pretty mediocre. True, that's not something that matters to
punk
listeners as much as it does to followers of many other styles of music. But be warned that, although this will certainly be of interest to
devotees, the sound is quite substandard on about half of this material, the vocals suffering the most. The first four tracks, in fact, were recorded in
Tony Reflex
's garage in March 1980 on cassette. Though they brim with prototypical teenage rebellion, even the more forgiving aficionados might find the
lo-fi
result a significant loss, since none of these four songs were redone for
. Things improve a lot on the four May 1980 numbers done at
Phantom Studios
-- and you can hear the band's attack getting fuller and more metallic -- but the five July 1980 cuts, recorded at
the Casbah
in Fullerton, are pretty muddy. (As the liner notes admit, the original tapes for
recordings were lost, and what you hear on this CD was "mastered from nth generation collector tapes.") Again the sonic mush is a loss for serious
worshipers, as among
material are versions of
"Creatures,"
"Self Destruct,"
and
"Amoeba,"
as well as the simplistic-to-the-point-of-moronic
"Do the Eddie."
Rounding out this archival release are the previously unreleased 1981 track
"Richard Hung Himself,"
the last to be recorded by the early-'80s
, and later (as done by
D.I.
) a highlight of the
Suburbia
soundtrack
. There are also two efforts from 1986, when the group reunited after a gap of about five years. ~ Richie Unterberger