| | Best Of The Beta Band CD Beta Band Discography of CDs
 |
|
Our Price: $15.39 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
|  |
A somewhat peculiar way to send off a very peculiar band, The Best of the Beta Band is a two-disc compilation (priced as a single) intended for newcomers and collectors alike, with disc one a best-of and disc two a recording of one of the last gigs. Any Betas fan is bound to have at least one problem with the selection of tracks on the first disc. That's to be expected. One notion that nearly every fan will agree on, however, is that each of the band's albums has its own identity and would be better off left, and therefore experienced, intact. (The real nuts griped when the first three EPs were simply bound together.) You do want the albums, from front to back, with all the exposed seams and strokes of genius tied together, as they were intended to be heard. But this is a fine point of entry, containing the five proper singles and most of the other best-known moments, including a lumbering anthem that crosses Primal Scream's "Loaded" with Harvest folk rocker Michael Chapman's "It Didn't Work Out" ("Dry the Rain"), a bewildering epic (that tries not to be an epic) with incidental orchestral sweeps ("It's Not Too Beautiful"), and a gorgeously spare ballad that might or might not be about an alien who lost his memory and fell in love after wrecking his spacecraft ("Gone"). After a jovial "Good evening, London -- how the f*ck are you?" the live disc rolls through nine of the 16 songs heard on the best-of, in addition to "Dr. Baker," "Quiet," "Dog's Got a Bone," and a riotous "House Song." Since the crowd knows about the planned breakup, it's very appreciative, and the Betas make a convincing case for being considered a live band as much as a studio band. The booklet is a gas, containing a series of graphic jokes where you would normally see a career summary involving phrases like "criminally underrated," "wildly influential," and "critically acclaimed but commercially underappreciated." ~ Andy KellmanMagnet (p.90) - "Thoughtful, dreamy and catchy, their music garnered praise from critics everywhere..." Mojo (Publisher) (p.118) - 3 stars out of 5 - "[The] songs seem to be the result of some experiment in lucid daydreaming, with all the capacity for excitement and obscurity that entails." Best Of The Beta Band Music Best Of The Beta Band Songs Best Of The Beta Band Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Best Of The Beta Band CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Best Of The Beta Band CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Franz Ferdinand CD (2004)
Best Of The Beta Band album
$8.99
| | Innocence Mission Now The Day Is Over CD (2004)
Best Of The Beta Band CD music
$11.35
| | Human League Original Remixes CD (2005) (Import) England; Remastered
Best Of The Beta Band music CDs
$14.45
| | Best Of Dire Straits & Mark Knopfler: Private Investigations CDs (2005)
Best Of The Beta Band songs
$17.49
| | A-Ha Analogue CD (2005) (Import)
Best Of The Beta Band album
$17.09
| | Las BBC In Session CD (2006) (Import) United Kingdom
Best Of The Beta Band CD music
$11.99
| | Billie Holiday Singin' The Blues CD (2002)
Best Of The Beta Band music CDs
$6.29
| | Harvest Ministers Feeling Mission CD (1995)
Best Of The Beta Band songs
$10.09
| | Jorge Rico Magic Of The Panpipes, Vol. 3 CD (2000)
Best Of The Beta Band album
$7.89
| | Yusef Lateef Psychicemotus CD (1964) Remastered
Best Of The Beta Band CD music
$9.89
| | John Lennon Sometime In New York City CD (1972) Remastered
Best Of The Beta Band music CDs
$14.65 While Lennon claimed to have always been politically minded, given his working-class upbringing in class-conscious England ("I've been satirizing the system since my childhood," he once mused), rock-pop sensibilities, clever wordplay, or matters of the heart usually took precedence in his musical output. But here Lennon and Yoko, accompanied by New York's Elephant's Memory, sing and scream freely against sexism in "Woman Is the Nigger Of The World" and "Sisters, O Sisters." They protest incarceration in "John Sinclair," "Attica State," and "Born In A Prison," colonialism in "Sunday Bloody Sunday" and "The Luck Of The Irish," and racism in "Angela."
The richness of Phil Spector's production fills out the danceable grooves on nearly every track. Also featured is Lennon's paean to his adopted home, "New York City," with allusions to doping clerics and transsexual rockers as well as the highly quotable line, "What a bad-ass city!" On the bonus disc, Lennon and Ono get it on with Zappa and the Mothers in live sets from London and New York. Things heat up considerably with "Cold Turkey," freak out with "Don't Worry Kyoko," and veer into the ridiculous with audience participation on "Scumbag." SOMETIME IN NEW YORK CITY is some of the groovin'-est, most tuneful agit-prop ever committed to disc.
The first album co-billed to John Lennon and Yoko Ono to actually contain recognizable pop music, Sometime in New ...
| | Superstar Christmas CD (2008)
$6.29 |
|
|