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DB's - I Thought You Wanted To Know 1978-1981 2LP (colour vinyl)

Propeller Sound Recordings

DB's - I Thought You Wanted To Know 1978-1981 2LP (colour vinyl)

$55.95
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Limited edition colour vinyl.

Highly recommended.

"In the halcyon days of New York punk club CBGBs, there was a pinball machine located in the furthest corner away from the stage. In his memoir Spy In The House Of Loud: New York Songs And Stories, dB’s co-leader Chris Stamey remembers being drawn to that part of the room on the (frequent) occasions when the band on stage wasn’t quite as thrilling as legend would have you believe.

He wrote: “When a skilled player like Dee Dee Ramone nudged it just the right way, making all the lights go off at once, I would see that old pinball machine as a metaphor for what great rock records should do: trigger some kind of instant deep-brain response, bypassing the critical facilities, beyond analysis. Just neurons flashing all over the place… We wanted to shove the machinery. To make the lights flash off and on.”

In their initial burst, The dB’s managed to do that spectacularly well, two indie singles and a pair of UK-released 1981 LPs representing a dizzying synthesis of Television, Big Star and their British Invasion heroes The Move. However, the guitar-and-vocals duo of Stamey and Peter Holsapple, bassist Gene Holder and drummer Will Rigby never gained much purchase, their lasting influence confined to fingerprints faintly discernible on the next generation of jangly US underground bands – REM, The Replacements, et al.

This new collection of low-budget recordings and rediscovered live material captures The dB’s’ sketchy formative years, with their first low-budget A-sides – 1978’s (I Thought) You Wanted To Know, recorded with wayward Television guitarist Richard Lloyd, and the 1980 version of Holsapple’s breakneck Black And White steered by future REM co-producer Don Dixon – receiving their first official reissue. It captures a fleeting moment when The dB’s should have become power-pop contenders, and highlights the cubist twists and baroque underpinning that would condemn them to become one of the archetypal cult bands." - Uncut


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