| | Roman Holliday Cookin' On The Roof CD Roman Holliday Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
New wave twang-teen popsters Roman Holiday sing out on tunes like "Jive Dive" and "No Ball Games" on this 1980's time capsule.
There are many great things about '80s music that everyone forgets. One of those things is that any band could try just about any style, or mix a few styles together, and if the public accepted it, then that band would have some taste of success. Adam Ant tried it until he got it right (but then kept altering it until he got it wrong.). Thankfully, Roman Holliday's brilliant mix of pop and swing styles clicked with audiences and predated the swing craze by 15 years. This is not to say that the band's version of the swing sound was pure and accurate, but its interpretation of the sound was fresh and exciting. Though packaged as a teen-oriented band, vocalist Steve Lambert and the boys could have been marketed to the teens' parents and grandparents with equal success. Light, breezy, fun, and innocent, Roman Holliday was made up of accomplished vocalists and musicians playing a fun mixture of swing, rockabilly, and pop with class and style. "Stand By," "Don't Try to Stop It," and "I.O.U." were radio hits (and singles), but there were plenty of party tracks on this platter. "Serious Situation" would have made a great single, with a pretty, piano-ballad intro leading intp into mid-tempo, horn-laden heaven. "Motor Mania" is a hoot. Even when the album cruises into auto-pilot ("Jive Dive," "No Ball Games," "One More Jilt"), the results are still more fun than one of Hugh Hefner's parties. One of the true original debuts of the '80s, this album should have been reissued on CD during the heyday of the swing revival of the mid- to late '90s. Those who were there to experience it firsthand will never forget it. ~ Steve "Spaz" Schnee
First time on CD, as part of the UK new wave renaissance series, 24-bit remastered Japanese reissue of 1983 album, features 11 tracks. BMG. 2004. Cookin' On The Roof Music Roman Holliday Cookin' On The Roof Songs | 1. | Don't Try to Stop It |
| 2. | Motor Mania |
| 3. | I.O.U. |
| 4. | Jive Dive |
| 5. | Midnight Bus |
| 6. | Cookin' on the Roof |
| 7. | Stand By |
| 8. | No Ball Games |
| 9. | Furs 'N High Heels |
| 10. | Serious Situation |
| 11. | One More Jilt |
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| | First Prize CD (2005) Japan; Limited Edition; Digipak; Mini LP Sleeve
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| | 16 Years Of Alcohol DVD (2003) Widescreen; Subtitled; DTS Sound
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| | By Divine Right Sweet Confusion CD (2004)
Cookin' On The Roof songs
$10.69 By Divine Right's fourth album, Sweet Confusion, is an interesting but ultimately very frustrating release. The Canadian quartet suffers from classic symptoms of split personality disorder. That is, for every really good song, there is a corresponding clunker. They seem torn between being a spunky power pop group in the same vein as countrymen Sloan or the Flashing Lights and being a shuddering rock machine. The little sprinkles of garage rock and blues also confuse the matter. When they stick to the melodic side of their nature, they craft some winning pop tunes, like "I Can't Do This By Myself," the percolating album opener "The Slap," and "Chinchilla Deluxe." Best of all are the singsongy "Soft Machine," which sounds like the Who if they were 15 years old in 2004 or Sloan if they wrote really dopey lyrics, and the sticky-sweet acoustic ballad turned epic "The Pearl," with guitarist Colleen Hixenbaugh providing some wonderful vocals. Why she didn't sing more on the album is a very pertinent question. By Divine Right also sound strong when they drift into dreamy indie rock territory. "Listen to My Angels" is a tough but spacy drone with some fine production work, and "Floating Away" is a lovely folk-psych ballad with a glittering arrangement. Unfortunately, the Mr. Hyde ...
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