Your cart is currently empty.
Marshall Crenshaw Marshall Crenshaw on Numbered-Edition 180g LP from Mobile FidelitySinger-Songwriters Self-Titled Classic Is Not "The Usual Thing": Mastered from the Original Master TapesThe Eighties
Marshall Crenshaw Marshall Crenshaw on Numbered-Edition 180g LP from Mobile Fidelity
Singer-Songwriters Self-Titled Classic Is Not "The Usual Thing": Mastered from the Original Master Tapes
The Eighties werent all bad. Heres proof. A five-star record that announced the arrival of a serious new talent and deviated from the slick artifice of the time, Marshall Crenshaw is the timeless sound of great pop, impeccable songwriting, and youthful enthusiasm. From the art-deco cover to a yearning rendition of Soldier of Lovefirst covered by the Beatles at a 1963 BBC Session and later turned into a surprise hit by Pearl JamMarshall Crenshaws 1982 debut is a gleeful throwback to rock n rolls soul, British Invasion, and rockabilly roots. Fans of Elvis Costello, Nick Lowe, and Weezer will want this.
Crenshaws passion for rocks golden era is palpable on every track here, particularly the radio smash Someday, Someway, breezy The Usual Thing, and persuasive There She Goes Again. Resemblances to Buddy Holly, Beach Boys, and the Beatles are by design. Before making the album, Crenshaw had played the role of John Lennon in a road-show revue of Beatlemania and grown weary of the mechanical feel of modern music. Delightfully out of time, Marshall Crenshaw is a tribute to the everlasting charm of carefree melodies, quirky hooks, simple bass lines, and jangling chords. This is an album that will get stuck in your head and stay there for days. Its also a record that takes full advantage of clean reverb and concise arrangements.
Mastered from the original master tapes, Crenshaws defining moment now features sound thats as brilliant as the tunes. Songs benefit from the newly realized spaciousness and warmth. Crenshaws subtly echoing vocals and lively guitar strumming naturally resonate, and instrumental touches such as the glockenspiel on Cynical Girl emerge as if the original sessions happened yesterday. Call it new-wave or power-pop, this is how music is supposed to sound.
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.