| | Soft Cell Bedsit Tapes CD - Import Soft Cell Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
Made between 1978 and 1982, this early set of recordings features the pioneering 1980s U.K. synth-pop duo Soft Cell working up to its chart-dominating sound in a fascinating variety of sonic sketches.
Soft Cell's first demo tapes have frequently been bootlegged, most famously as Science Fiction Stories. They had never seen more than the most cursory commercial release, however -- four songs spread across a rare EP and a mid-'80s flexidisc. Yet they are, in many ways, the purest of all the band's recordings -- the sound of two art students who want to make music and couldn't give a hoot for commercial considerations. Certainly there's no "Tainted Love" or "Say Hello Wave Goodbye" in sight, as Marc Almond and Dave Ball take as their starting point a clash between the first Suicide album and the Normal's "Warm Leatherette," and just get weirder from there. "Potential," the opening cut, is so heavily in thrall to that archetype that it's easy to think you've put on the wrong record -- indeed, when the group self-released its first EP, drawing from this same stockpile of songs, that was one of the most common complaints. But dig deeper and a firm identity does begin to take shape -- arguably, "L.O.V.E. Feelings" remained the template for the duo's balladic tendencies until their second album, at least, while future B-sides "Fun City" and "Facility Girls" both draw from the same D.I.Y. document as the best of this set. Occasionally, the relentless primitivism of the electronics does get a little wearing; there was only so much you could do with the machines on the market at the time, and none of it sounds especially impressive today. But that's the fate of almost all the artists who were dancing on the frontiers of musical technology in the 1980s, including most of those who were actually releasing records then (Gary Numan and Ultravox among them). At the time, and for all their obvious precedents, Soft Cell were so far out on the edge that the odd false step isn't simply forgivable, it was unavoidable. Besides, they quickly make amends by delivering something so absolutely outrageous (Black Sabbath's "Paranoid," set to a soundtrack of very angry bees) that it's impossible to stop listening. Bedsit Tapes is not the Soft Cell collection that the casual listener has been waiting for. But anyone seeking a snapshot of a band on the brink of early-'80s greatness, but with none of the baggage that fame would demand, will fall in love with the group all over again. ~ Dave Thompson
Historical rare recording made between 1978 and 1982 by the now legendary 80's electro pop group Soft Cell. Originally, vocalist Marc Almond and synth player Dave Ball teamed to compose music for theatrical productions, and as Soft Cell, their live performances continued to draw heavily on the pair's background in drama and the visual arts. A self-financed EP titled Mutant Moments brought the duo to the attention of Some Bizzare label head Stevo, who enlisted Daniel Miller to produce their underground hit single "Memorabilia" the following year. This was the launch pad for the band to rise to international notoriety in their short and successful career. Soft Cell Bedsit Tapes Songs | 1. | Potential |
| 2. | L.O.V.E. Feeling |
| 3. | Metro Mrx |
| 4. | Bleak Is My Favourite Cliche |
| 5. | Occupational Hazard |
| 6. | Mix |
| 7. | Factory Fun |
| 8. | Science Fiction Stories |
| 9. | Purely Functional |
| 10. | Cut Above the Rest |
| 11. | Paranoid |
| 12. | Excretory Eat Anorexia |
| 13. | Cleansing Fanatic |
| 14. | Walking Make up Counter |
| 15. | Pyrex My Cuisine |
| 16. | Tupperware Party |
| Bedsit Tapes Music Review Purchase Bedsit Tapes CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Keith West Excerpts From...Groups & Sessions 1965-1974 CD (1995) (Import) United Kingdom
Bedsit Tapes album For Sale Pre-Order Now! Available: Tuesday, January 12, 2010
$16.19 Granted, this 24-track anthology will appeal almost exclusively to those with very deep British '60s/psychedelic collections, gathering bits and pieces from every stage of his career. It's also true that the best work West did is not actually on here, but on the eponymous (and only) album by Tomorrow, which is still easily available on CD. As a supplement to that Tomorrow album, though, this is pretty good, including rare 1965 singles by his pre-Tomorrow ...
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