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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Payolas -- a great Canadian band of the '80s,
By
This review is from: Between Rock & Hyde Place - Best of (Audio CD)
This great Canadian band of the '80s led by Bob Rock and Paul Hyde deserved a much wider audience. But fortunately their greatest hits are available on this compilation. "Where Is This Love," "Romance," "Eyes Of A Stranger," "It Must Be Love," and "You're The Only Love" are the gems of this varied collection. But don't let the love theme of these titles fool you -- the other songs have a much harder edge that will appeal to those who liked the post-punk echoes in New Wave. But this band is at its best when they just let the music flow and the songs sell themselves. The expansive sound and compelling lyrics of "Where Is This Love" make it the crown jewel of the collection -- the gradual layering of acoustic guitars with synthesized sounds suggest both the vastness of space and wide-sweeping earthly vistas. The lyrics with their "hammer on a drum" metaphor deal with a boy's desire to escape from an abusive home, but the mood of the song is surprisingly uplifting as it also expresses the longing for a spiritual love. This song alone is worth the price of the CD. The Payolas are a unique band and it's hard to describe their sound. You might call it a marriage of New Wave and mainstream rock with an occasional tropical flavor. The fresh, joyful exuberance of "It Must Be Love" reminds me of Men At Work's "Upstairs In My House" and "People Just Love To Play With Words." "You're The Only Love" is a superbly crafted romantic ballad, and the mysterious reggae-influenced "Eyes Of A Stranger" won a Juno Award (Canada's Grammy) for single of the year. If you like music from the '80s and the skillful integration of natural and synthesized sounds, Best Of Payolas might become one of your favorite CDs.
19 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
THE BEST OF...? PLEASE!,
By MIKE PHILLIPS (wilmington'de) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Between Rock & Hyde Place - Best of (Audio CD)
Once the music critic darlings of Canada, the Police-esque Payolas have all but faded into obscurity when they were one of the best of the 80's bands. So this is the best the Payolas are to be remembered by?Most of the cuts are from the same album! How about the incredible Won't Be Any Prisoners, or the anti-domestic violence Hammer on a Drum, or the giddy Waiting for the Light to Change or the perennial x-mas favorite Christmas is Coming? The Payolas deserve much better. The only reason they even get 2 stars is for the band themselves! And where are the original recordings, anyway. I can't find them on Amazon or anywhere else, much like the great missing CDs of bands like Dave Edmunds, the Dellords and Roman Holliday!
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
An excellent overview of artistic decline,
By
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This review is from: Between Rock & Hyde Place - Best of (Audio CD)
Canada's Payola$ started out as a great, anthemic punk/new wave pop band, but by the time they were done, they'd descended into David Foster-produced commercial bid hell. The eleven songs here are in chronological order, allowing us to carefully trace the band's artistic decline. It begins strong with "China Boys" and "In a Place Like This" and includes the smartly crafted, reggae-inflected "Eyes of a Stranger," but it goes downhill from there. Insult is added to injury in that the group's dreadful final album Here's the World For Ya is represented by more songs (4) than any of their other records. Even fans of 80s commercial fluff (like Chicago, Foster's other clients at the time) will have a hard time swallowing the final four.This is not the best way to be introduced to the Payola$, but unless some enterprising label is going to reissue the band's albums, it's unfortunately the only way. "In a Place Like This" is almost worth the price on its own. Almost.
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