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Showing posts with label Tom Verlaine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Verlaine. Show all posts

Friday, 4 December 2020

"Adventure" by TELEVISION – April 1978 US and UK Second Studio Album on Elektra Records featuring Tom Verlaine, Richard Lloyd, Fred Smith and Billy Ficca (September 2003 US and October 2003 UK Elektra/Rhino Expanded & Remastered Edition CD Reissue with Four Bonuses – Dan Hersch Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...






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Rating: ****
 
"...Glory Days..."
 

Like so many of my generation (I came at the Seventies from 1970 onwards) - the second half of that stunning decade from 1975 to 1979 was so many things - fantastic, exhilarating, awful, confusing and so full of new genres, bands and formats - it was frankly dizzying. 

What people also forget is that aside from the spitting and pogoing at gigs and homemade clobber posing on the street (the sheer visuals), both the UK and US Punk, New Wave and Alternative Rock bands were genuinely exciting - especially the American big boys like Talking Heads, The Ramones, Richard Hell, Dead Kennedys and such - on up to The Motels, Jim Carroll and even Canadian Philip Rambow, they all grabbed our attention. 

But none more so than TELEVISION - a band who like The Verve effortlessly engendered hero worship on a biblical scale – especially for some reason in Blighty. Their March 1977 British debut album "Marquee Moon" was a wonder (and it charted here which it didn’t in the USA) - the kind of LP that makes me weak at the knees even now despite that kind-of-crappy artwork. 

So it was probably not surprising that fans and worshippers alike felt like someone had wee-weed on the Mona Lisa when 1978's ever so slightly anaemic "Adventure" turned up in April. It was undeniably a lesser-work, great sounding, but rushed (rambling instrumental bits) even though there were those moments of magic. When they disbanded shortly after its American failure and Verlaine and Lloyd went off to solo and other projects – it kinda got stuck at the back on my vinyl record pile to be sold into secondhand stores when funds got tight. But as so many astute reviewers have pointed out - ok it's not MM - but it is Television and frankly Frank Frankfurter - in 2020 at the age of 62 - that does the tomato ketchup for me. But which issue to buy on CD?

Most will have noticed that if you type in 'Television Adventure CD' into Amazon's search bar, you immediately get thrown onto the cheap 1993 variant on Elektra 960 523-2 (Barcode 075596052320) which is new for about five and half quid. But this 8-track basic variant is not the one you want - the peach you need is the Rhino reissue from September 2003 (USA) and October 2003 (UK) with Four Bonus Tracks (one hidden). This is one of those rare instances where a Remaster and four Bonuses elevate a 3-star album up into a 4-star CD reissue by virtue of their dual quality (I provide the exact Barcodes below to locate either of the Rhino US or UK CD reissues). Here are the foxholes and the glory days...

US released 23 September 2003 - "Adventure" by TELEVISION on Elektra/Rhino R2 73921 (Barcode 081227392123) is an Expanded & Remastered CD Reissue with Four Bonus Tracks (One Is Hidden). The British issue was released October 2003 on Elektra/Rhino/WSM 8122-73921-2 (Barcode 081227392123) – both play out as follows (60:22 minutes): 

1. Glory [Side 1]
2. Days 
3. Foxhole 
4. Careful 
5. Carried Away 
6. The Fire [Side 2]
7. Ain't That Nothin'
8. The Dream's Dream 
Tracks 1 to 8 are their second studio album "Adventure" - released April 1978 in the USA on Elektra Records 6E-133 and April 1978 in the UK on Elektra Records K 52072. Produced by JOHN JANSEN and TOM VERLAINE - it peaked at No. 7 in the UK (didn't chart USA). 

BONUS TRACKS: 
9. Adventure - PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED Album Outtake (5:38 minutes)

10. Ain't That Nothin' (Single Version) - July 1978 US 45-single A-side on Elektra E-45516. The A-side single edit is 3:56 minutes (LP version is 4:53 minutes) with "Glory" from the album as its B-side.

11. Glory (Early Version) - PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED Album Outtake (3:39 minutes)

HIDDEN TRACK:
12. Ain't That Nothin' (Run Through) - PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED Album Outtake (9:48 minutes)

The gatefold card digipak is unusual in that it has an extra inner-flap housing the Elektra Records logo CD (original 1978 US label design) whilst the first flap has the 16-page booklet with new liner notes by ALAN LICHT (see photos). The lyrics to the eight songs and the outtake "Adventure" are on the inner flaps too while the booklet features black and whites of our four heroes – Tom Verlaine on Lead Vocals, Guitar and Keyboards (all songs written by him except "Glory" which is a co-write with Richard Lloyd), Richard Lloyd on Lead Guitar and Vocals, Fred Smith on Bass and Vocals and Billy Ficca on Drums. There are other photos of the band in the back of some glass-strewn Transit van and a copy of the single Ain't That Nothin' in its US Elektra/Asylum label bag. The sorry history of the band is told that includes comments from Verlaine on the cold US reaction and bad sound engineers at British gigs. For a band that has been so influential, even now in 2020 and over 40 years later, their lack of success on home turf still seems inexplicable.

The Remaster is done by one of Rhino’s most experienced Audio Engineers – DAN HERSCH who along with his partner in tape-research crimes BILL INGLOT - have touched on huge swathes of the mighty WEA catalogue across decades of their releases. This Adventure thing rocks and rolls and is fantastically clear. I was expecting perhaps amateur hour with the outtakes – but no – they sound amazing, as does the LP. 

It opens strongly with "Glory" where a girlfriend dons emotional and physical boxing gloves and spars with Tom over halos, wet red lips and mirrors in vans. When they issued a 45-single to finally promote the album in September 1978, Elektra chose "Ain't That Nothin'" with "Glory" on the flipside – a mistake methinks because I would swear that "Glory" would have drawn in that Cars audience "My Best Friend's Girl" (but who knows). There is a touch of The Byrds in the jangle-prettiness of "Days" - a touch of her hand - standing on a bridge of dreams (gorgeous guitar work from both of the boys). "Foxhole" rocks out like a snot-nosed son of some wicked Lou Reed and Mick Hunter riff off the "Rock 'n' Roll Animal" live album - Verlaine wanting to know where his guardian angel is - dressed up to the poser nines in a relationship dug out. That fantastic pinging guitar solo of Verlaine's on "Foxhole" is just brilliant and full of power on this remaster. "Careful" is pop-Television and its "I don't care..." voices feels false and weedy but I love the old-school romance of "Carried Away" where he could even be Springsteen with the E-Street Band the way he makes that organ sound.  

Side 2 opens with "The Fire" - 5:57 minutes of guitar Television where it begins with Verlaine using a knife as a bottleneck for slide guitar - its slow holding-our-breath vibe feeling all weird and 50ts spacey. It's not the most immediate of Television tunes but there is a doomy vibe to the guitars and words about falling that draws me back after all these years. Riffage ala "Marquee Moon" ahoy with "Ain't That Nothin'" - a flicking-guitar chugger that's good but still feels suspiciously unconvincing until that cool chorus arrives. Six minutes and 45-seconds of "The Dream's Dream" brings the LP to a good if not a tad underwhelming finish. But what lifts me up are the Bonuses - all wicked especially the near ten-minute 'run through' of "Ain't That Nothin'" which is a Hidden Track. I used to slap this on CD-Rs in Reckless playlists and about five minutes into its so-Television guitar drone, the relentless almost Kraut rhythms would bring punters to the counter eager to know 'who is this!'

Yes - reviewers are right to call "Adventure" the complacency-riddled relative to its big brother and "It's A Wonderful Life" war hero - "Marquee Moon". But for me, the Bonuses on this fabulous sounding Rhino CD have saved the day. 

"Moved by the hand that was never a fist..." Verlaine sings on the album-title outtake "Adventure" - get this 2003 CD variant and discover why...

Monday, 4 August 2014

“Marquee Moon” by TELEVISION (2003 Rhino 'Expanded Edition' CD - Greg Calbi Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry…




"…Talk To The Mountain…"

When you think of the staggering influence America's TELEVISION has exerted over so many budding bands and songwriters - it's strange now in the glaring hindsight of 2014 to know that in the eye of the Punk and New Wave hurricane they were largely a British phenomenon. The New York band's 1977 debut LP barely scraped the lower 200 in the USA album charts but stood proudly at 28 in the UK. Both singles off the album - "Marquee Moon" (March 1977 on K 12251) and "Prove It" (July 1977 on K 12262) charted well in Blighty too (30 and 25). Their 2nd album "Adventure" from 1978 even went to No. 7.  But none of it seemed to mean zip in the no-chart action States...

Whatever way chart-history judges them - I stare at this LP's rather dull artwork now and still get a sheer tingle of excitement. I've loved this record for nearly 40 years and it still sounds so ludicrously fresh to me when so many others have gone by the wayside. And dare I use that most clichéd of words - this album and their sound as a band is as influential now as The Clash, The Jam and even The Sex Pistols. So it's cool to see this superb expanded and remastered CD do that legacy proud. Here are the green-coloured vinyl details...

Released October 2003 on Rhino R2 73920 (Barcode 081227392024) - "Marquee Moon" by TELEVISION comes in a card digipak with an extra flap and this 'Extended Edition' CD pans out as follows (77:27 minutes):

1. See No Evil
2. Venus
3. Friction
4. Marquee Moon
5. Elevation
6. Guiding Light
7. Prove It
8. Torn Curtain
Tracks 1 to 8 are their debut album "Marquee Moon" - released February 1977 in the USA on Elektra Records 7E-1098 and K 52046 in the UK.

Tracks 9 to 13 are BONUSES new to CD:
Track 9 is "Little Johnny Jewel (Part 1 & 2)" - the A&B sides of their rare debut 7" single in the USA only on Ork Records 81975.
Tracks 10, 11 and 12 are 'Alternate' Versions of album tracks "See No Evil", "Friction" and "Marquee Moon"
Track 13 is called "Untitled Instrumental"

The 20-page colour booklet has liner notes by noted New York writer ALAN LICHT (even picturing that Ork Records 45 on Page 18) with snaps of Tom Verlaine, Richard Lloyd, Fred Smith and Billy Ficca and the CBGB's nightclub. The CD repros the Butterfly label of the original Elektra records America LP while the quality-remaster has been carried out by one of my favourite tape engineers GREG CALBI (assisted by Lee Hulko). For more of Calbi's fabulous work see reviews for Supertramp's "Breakfast In America" and Paul Simon's "Graceland". He's also done Bob Dylan (the SACD remasters), John Mayer, Paul McCartney and hundreds more. The audio is fabulous - full of muscle and presence without ever being overdone.

Neither Rock nor Punk - TELEVISION (like Talking Heads) were the very epitome of NEW WAVE and that jagged Yank edge they had seemed exotic to me then and still does. It some respects it's a perfect album - 8 great tracks that all work. It opens with the killer "See No Evil" (lyrics above) emblazoning that Television sound and melody into your heart. "Friction" still has that angry edge while the near eleven-minutes of "Marquee Moon" is stunning. The album finisher "Torn Curtain" has a melodrama that reminds me of Patti Smith's "Easter".

I had though the extras would be filler - but no. The alternate of "Friction" has more guitar work but it's sloppy and not as tight as the finished article - and you can hear why it was dropped for the more polished version. Fans will know that the title track was put out on 7" and especially 12" single in the UK on Elektra K 12252 with a MONO variant of "Marquee Moon" on the B-side (the STEREO album version is on the A). But it's not on here. Rhino have obviously decided to exclude that in favour of the Previously Unreleased Alternate Version (and a good choice it is too). The "Untitled Instrumental" would have made a great B-side - especially if some lyrics had been drummed up for it. Their next platter "Adventure" was good too but just lacked that edge of greatness the debut had.

So there you have it - what a band and what an album.

"...Face to face with a world so alive..." - Verlaine sings on "Venus". 
Get this slice of New Wave Americana in your life pronto...

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