Premium Only Content

My Top 20 albums of 1980 No 5
Dexy’s Midnight Runners Searching For the Young Soul Rebels: 30th Anniversary Special Edition Review
Tracks
1. Burn It Down
2. Tell Me When My Light Turns Green
3. The Teams That Meet in Caffs
4. I'm Just Looking
5. Geno
6. Seven Days Too Long
7. I Couldn't Help If I Tried
8. Thankfully Not Living in Yorkshire It Doesn't Apply
9. Keep It
10. Love Part One
11. There, There, My Dear
"The first of three Dexys masterpieces and one of the greatest UK debuts ever."
The first of the three disparate Dexys masterpieces and one of the greatest UK debuts ever, this was - with hindsight - the bridge between punk and new romanticism. Upon its 1980 release it just sounded weird: brazen yet beautiful, both lovingly retro and caustically original. Kevin Rowland had growled in Midlands punk bands but now felt an epiphany. Soul, he decided, was the best way to channel dissent and desire. He recruited musicians who could actually play - and play horns - and layered lyrics over shapes mapped out by Stax and Motown.
The pulsating result opened up new rooms in the house of groove, yet it’s Rowland’s persona which dominates. His stressed, committed vocals and tumbling torrents of words remind one how rarely we hear visionary auteurs in pop. Even in 2010, moments here scrape the dust from your ears. (A second disc offers numerous radio sessions and demos.) It just so happens that it’s the least brilliant of the hallowed Dexys triptych, yet Too-Rye-Ay and Don’t Stand Me Down reached giddying zeniths.
Rife with "you-talkin’-to-me?" attitude, its chart hits were staccato stomp Geno and the (superior) There, There My Dear, in which Rowland rants at an "anti-fashion" phoney who affects to like Sinatra. (Like many Rowland-isms, this was misunderstood - he loves Sinatra.) Burn It Down (nee Dance Stance) opens with a radio playing snippets of dinosaur rock, punk and even The Specials before it’s flicked off and the horn trio urge you to "welcome the new soul vision". Rowland is in his element railing against perceived sleights: his causes include the Irish, literature and a hunger for R-E-S-P-E-C-T. While the octet’s instrumentals and covers are sharp, the slower, introspective, narcissistic numbers are the bigger clue that here was a major voice. In I’m Just Looking and I Couldn’t Help It If I Tried, Rowland becomes a white existential Otis, chiefly by sheer willpower and self-belief.
Doubt was to disturb him, as it does all great artists. This though was the sound of a soul released from a straitjacket. While his then Two Tone rivals will always read as prose, this still blazes as poetry.
-
2:05:52
JohnVicarysMusicPassions
1 month agoTop 150 Albums of All Time No 90 through to 81
372 -
LIVE
The Quartering
2 hours agoWar In The Streets & How Bad Will It Get?
7,573 watching -
LIVE
Dr Disrespect
4 hours ago🔴LIVE - DR DISRESPECT - BLACK OPS 7 - GIVE ME BACK MY NUKE
1,608 watching -
12:51
Dr. Nick Zyrowski
5 hours agoDoctors Got It Wrong! How to RAISE Testosterone Levels Forever
3201 -
1:14:40
Mark Kaye
3 hours ago🔴 Trump FUMES As Police Abandon Chicago At Pritzker's Orders
3.05K8 -
56:24
DeVory Darkins
2 hours ago $23.59 earnedFederal Judge issues shocking order against Trump as Chicago Mayor pulls insane stunt
58.8K117 -
1:24:59
Sean Unpaved
3 hours agoPoll Plunge & Mile-High Mayhem: Texas & Penn State Crash, Sunday's Fireworks, & Broncos Stun Eagles'
15.2K -
9:24
Ken LaCorte: Elephants in Rooms
1 day ago $0.12 earnedThe secret of Indian store owners
1062 -
8:30
Millionaire Mentor
23 hours agoJames Comey PANICS After Pam Bondi Reveals What’s Coming Next
3007 -
LIVE
Jeff Ahern
59 minutes agoMonday Madness with Jeff Ahern
107 watching