| | Department S Sub-Stance CD Department S Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
 |
|
Our Price: $13.59 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
Sub-Stance MP3 Album Price: $10.89
|  |
Recorded in the early 1980's. Personnel: Vaughn Toulouse (vocals); Mike Herbage, Mark Taylor (guitar, keyboards). Audio Remixer: David Tickle. Liner Note Author: James Nice. With his Bowie-on-a-bender voice and Teddy Boy-gone-punk image, singer Vaughn Toulouse was a born rock star. Unfortunately the Department S frontman only got as far as a couple of minor early-1980s hits with his band, and died of AIDS in 1991. This anthology captures a young British band filtering everything from glam to James Bond scores through an arch New Wave/post-punk sensibility, turning out some moody, infectious, memorable tunes in the process. Fronted by the flamboyantly mysterious Vaughn Toulouse, Department S haunted the fringes of the new wave scene like a batty aunt, looking down its nose at the chaotic strivings of its peers, while the band, itself, managed a career of such controlled chaos that it was no surprise whatsoever to discover that its was originally conceived as a non-existent concept. By the time the parties responsible for that earlier jape finally picked up musical instruments and began to actually play, half the record companies in Britain were chasing them; "Is Vic There?" -- the band's so-memorable debut single -- still bristles with the excitement of the age, a new wave anthem that should have set them up for life. Instead, an album recorded for Stiff went unreleased and, while there were a couple of more singles, Department S had folded by 1982. It would be another decade -- and in the aftermath of Toulouse's death -- before the album was finally given a release, but it was instantly revealed as everything the band had ever promised. Even "Is Vic There?" is occasionally humbled by its highlights ("Somewhere Between Heaven and Tescos," "Age Concern"), while "Going Left Right" stands among the finest songs of the entire post-punk early '80s. Sub-Stance rounds up the entire Department S catalog, opening with the album and continuing with five live tracks, four forgotten B-sides (including a tremendous cover of T. Rex's "Solid Gold Easy Action"), and an early demo. The resulting 22-track anthology should go a long way toward re-establishing Department S as every bit the legend they once threatened to be. ~ Dave Thompson Department S Sub-Stance Songs Purchase Sub-Stance CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Mike Garson Mystery Man CD (1990)
Sub-Stance songs
$12.09
| | Mike Garson Serendipity CD (1986)
Sub-Stance album
$13.35 (MP3 Available for Download)
| | Faces Nod Is As Good As A Wink... To A Blind Horse CD (1971)
Sub-Stance CD music
$6.45 (MP3 Available for Download) Faces: Ron Wood (vocals, guitar); Rod Stewart (vocals); Ian McLagan (keyboards); Ronnie Lane (bass instrument); Kenny Jones (drums). Personnel: Ronnie Wood (guitar); Kenney Jones (drums). The Faces' third album, A Nod Is as Good as a Wink...to a Blind Horse, ...
| | Motorhead No Remorse CDs (1984)
Sub-Stance MP3 Album
$18.59 (MP3 Available for Download) Motorhead includes: Ian "Lemmy" Kilmister (vocals, bass); Fast Eddie Clarke, Wurzel, Phil Campbell, Larry Willis, Brian Robertson (guitar); Philthy Animal ...
| | Gary Numan Jagged CD (2006)
Sub-Stance music CDs
$12.95 (MP3 Available for Download) Personnel: Gary Numan (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Gary Numan; Steve Harris , Steve ...
| | Graham Parker Don't Tell Columbus CD (2007)
Sub-Stance songs
$13.15 Personnel: Graham Parker (vocals, acoustic guitar, ...
| | Jethro Tull Through The Years CD (1998) (Import) United Kingdom
Sub-Stance album
$10.49 (MP3 Available for Download) UK 'Best Of' from UK prog act with more than 11 gold and 5 platinum albums in this country alone. Tracks include 'Living In The Past', 'Warchild', 'The Whistler' and a live recording of 'Locomotive Breath'. 13 tracks in all. Includes liner notes by Casserine Toussaint. EMI.
Includes liner notes by Casserine Toussaint. Personnel: Ian Anderson (vocals); Andy Giddings (keyboards); Martin Barre (drums). Recording information: 1968-1995. If you put every disc that Jethro Tull has released into a CD player and hit the "random" button, the first hour of music might sound like Through the Years. It's likely that more thought was put into the selections here, but not much more. Chronological order be damned, this compilation starts with the live version ...
| | Genesis Wind & Wuthering CD (1976)
Sub-Stance CD music
$10.49 (MP3 Available for Download)
| | Makers All-Night Riot! CD (1995)
Sub-Stance MP3 Album
$12.39
| | Hot Hot Heat Make Up The Breakdown CD (2002) (Import) Bonus Track; Japan
Sub-Stance music CDs
$38.09 Japanese edition of the Canadian indie rock act's 2002 album, includes the bonus track 'Apt. 101'. Warner. 2003.
Hot Hot Heat: Dustin Hawthorne, Steve Bays, Paul Hawley, Dante DeCaro. Japanese import edition includes a bonus track ("Apt 101"). Picking up where the Knock Knock Knock EP left off, Make Up the Breakdown completes Hot Hot Heat's transformation from a purveyor of the noisy synth-punk displayed on the band's debut into a polished, but still edgy, pop group. Where some of their contemporaries delve into '60s garage or '70s post-punk, Hot Hot Heat specializes in re-creating and reinvigorating the new wave of the late '70s and early '80s -- not the overly hairsprayed and eyelinered variety, but the geeky, abrasive pop pioneered by Elvis Costello, the Cars, Joe Jackson, and especially XTC, whose Drums & Wires and English Settlement seem to have been particularly influential on Make Up the Breakdown. The album's shiny but unobtrusive production adds to its retro quality -- it sounds like it's been hiding since 1981 and was just unearthed recently. That only adds to the charm of paranoid pop songs like "No, Not Now," "Bandages," and "Oh Goddamnit," which, with their tense hooks and witty wordplay, come close to matching the greatness of their influences. Fortunately, Hot Hot Heat avoids sounding merely derivative because of the vitality and enthusiasm the band brings to its music -- virtually every track on Make Up the Breakdown bristles with nervous energy and catchy melodies that are entirely the group's own. Indeed, that the album packs so many tightly wound pop songs into just over half an hour is both a blessing and a curse -- on the first few listens, Make Up the Breakdown tends to whiz by in a blur of yelped, Andy Partridge-esque vocals and angular riffs and rhythms. It's not until the final track, "Cairo," that the members of Hot Hot Heat catch their breath and open up their sound. Based on a pretty, winding piano melody, the song offers a darker, slightly different twist on their style and suggests that they're preparing to make an even bigger leap on their next album than they did on this one. Still, what Hot Hot Heat lacks in diversity is more than made up for in quality -- Make Up the Breakdown ...
| | A J Mcmahon Mek Man CD (2002)
Sub-Stance songs
$18.99
| | Go, Champs, Go! CD (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Sub-Stance album
$11.75
| | Last Laugh Meet Us Where We Are Today CD (2008) (Import) Import
Sub-Stance CD music
$31.89
| | Our Time Down Here Live Love Let Go CD (2009) (Import)
Sub-Stance MP3 Album
$18.15
|
|
|