Daniel Amos: Fearful Symmetry

When it comes to 80s music, there is NOTHING stranger than born again Christian new wave. Some artists in this genre were out-and-out hypocritical, writing albums with heavy gay bashing lyrics  AND songs complaining of discrimination against born-againers. Steve Taylor was the worst of this lot, singing out of both sides of his mouth with “Whatever Happened To Sin?” (“I heard the reverend say/gay/is probably normal in the good Lord’s sight…I’m no morality nut/but/the reverend may be a little confused”) and “Meat The Press” (A Christian can’t get equal time/unless he’s a loony/committing a crime”). To be fair, I’m guessing (hoping?) Taylor wishes he could take back the worst of his 80s excesses…

On the opposite side of the fence is the band responsible for the album cover pictured here. Daniel Amos never indulged in the sort of nonsense some of their contemporaries did in attacking “non-believers”. Quite the opposite, Daniel Amos reserved their poison pens for members of their own movement. Here is a band that took aim at televangelists Jim and Tammy Bakker long before it became popular to do so on daytime television back in the late 80s.

The real genius of Daniel Amos–especially this album, Fearful Symmetry–is edgy electronic pop combined with a literacy startling when compared to some of their contemporaries. Where you had some Christian new wavers singing about going to hell forever (The 77s, an on-again/off-again new wave outfit, were exceptionally embarassing in that regard.) Daniel Amos chose to write songs invoking William Blake and wondering where the hell all the technological marvels of the space age got off to. Check the DA album Vox Humana for the insanely catchy “It’s the 80s, Where’s Our Rocket Packs?”

Fearful Symmetry is one of the best Daniel Amos albums of their long and bizarre career–this is a band which started out playing Eagles-style country-rock crossover music and suddenly flipped out into new wave. The band’s transition can be compared to when the Beatles started taking drugs…suddenly you had a whole new attitude informing the same group of songwriters previously satisfied with writing soppy three-minuters.

Vinyl sellers take note–I would pay LARGE DOLLARS to own the vinyl for this album. There are three simply perfect new wave tracks on Fearful Symmetry; “The Pool”, “Sleep, Silent Child” and “Shadow Catcher”. Oddly enough, this is the record founder genius Terry Taylor takes issue with, calling it “art rock”. But truly this is one powerhouse of a record with those three songs alone. “Neverland Ballroom” is amusing, “Instruction Through Film” is a Thomas Dolby-esque exercise, and I can completely do without “Sudden Heaven”. But this record is damn fine. You don’t need to be a born-againer to enjoy this and there’s no overt bible banging going on here. The religious imagery is appropriate where used and restrained enough to be **gasp** subtle. In an era where groups such as Ressurection Band and a gent named Rick Cua were hollering at people to “submit to Jesus” in so many words at maximum volume, Daniel Amos is the very picture of tolerant restraint, combined with great synth riffs, inspired arrangements (pun not intended) and ethereal imagery.

Hating the Legendary Pink Dots: Vinyl Mine

Vinyl Mine ran this post (not recently) about psych indie pioneers The Legendary Pink Dots. I myself enjoy the Dots–selected albums from the mile-long discography–but the pure vitriol against them in this post is so funny and all-consuming that I read it TWICE. I have a healthy respect for anyone who can vent their spleen so completely in pure, unadulterated disgust regardless of subject matter. Sure, Vinyl Mine and I disagree on LPD, but damn, what great fun to read. This one’s a great way to kill a long Friday afternoon at work.

The rest of the blog isn’t 100% vinyl-obsessed, but this is a great read. Recent reviews include Nice Strong Arm where a few brief pokes are taken at Bauhaus and Joy Division, but the thing that makes me keep coming back for more is the post about Neil Diamond.

Great stuff.

LP Mailer Resource: Sleeve City

I’ve played in my share of bands since 1992 and I never, ever wondered how a record album got mailed out once it was ordered. Even when I was tempted to start selling vinyl on eBay, I never got round to asking “Where the hell do you buy the mailers?” Part of that may have been due to the influence of my friends in Pink Filth, who simply used any cardboard boxes they could get from behind the supermarket. We used to have these box cutting sessions to mail out orders on the band’s label–slash up the boxes to size, bubble wrap the goods and coat them in cardboard.

Except that doesn’t quite work when you need a good first impression from an eBay buyer or other customers…so for the discriminating seller, there are places like Sleeve City (aka SleeveTown.com) that sell everything from cardboard mailers to heavy duty, white-label style LP jackets. You can also get gig cases for your vinyl…sturdy anvil cases with closing tops that hold 100 titles. This site is worth a look for anyone selling records.

Stereolab: Chemical Chords

I have no idea how this one passed me by in June, but the new vinyl by Stereolab, Chemical Chords is being hailed as one of their best. The album, MP3 download or CD, your choice. I’m always a bit skeptical of some new music that is recorded digitally then put on vinyl, but Stereolab has always had great analog textures to their music. Much like Chris Joss–a musician who uses recording techniques firmly rooted in the 21st century but still has a dedication to audio fidelity and actual honest-to-god instruments–Stereolab is always going to sound warm, interesting and perfectly suited for vinyl. I don’t have this one as I’ve just now been hipped to it, but it’s being added to the collection with haste.