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Crazy Rhythms
 
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Crazy Rhythms

FeeliesAudio CD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (September 8, 2009)
  • Original Release Date: 2009
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Bar None
  • ASIN: B002H3ETI2
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #51,534 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 
1. The Boy With The Perpetual Nervousness
2. Fa Cé-La
3. Loveless Love
4. Forces At Work
5. Original Love
6. Everybody's Got Something To Hide (Except Me And My Monkey)
7. Moscow Nights
8. Raised Eyebrows
9. Crazy Rhythms

Editorial Reviews

The Feelies, debut album Crazy Rhythms released in 1980, is finally back in print. The much loved group of hyper active indie rockers from Haledon New Jersey influenced the sound of college radio and inspired many to pick up guitars and form bands. Crazy Rhythms is a masterwork of perfectly honed minimalist rock 'n' roll that leaps and darts into the corners of the listeners consciousness, a true sonic achievement that Rolling Stone called one of the 100 Best albums of the 1980s. Fans of the Velvet Underground, Wire and Brian Eno's early solo albums will surely appreciate their forces at work.  Bonus material including demos, b-sides and new live recordings will be included via download cards inserted in the LP and CD versions.

 

Customer Reviews

26 Reviews
5 star:
 (20)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (26 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Indie Rock Ground Zero, October 7, 2005
By 
Blake Maddux (Arlington, MA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Crazy Rhythms (Audio CD)
Crazy Rhythms, while not one of the biggest-selling records of all time, is clearly a key source of what would come to be called "indie" or "alternative" rock in the 1980s. Granted, The Feelies had their influences, but they were inspired by these bands to innovate rather than imitate. Granted, the vocals may at times sound about as close to Lou Reed as is humanly possible, and the influence of this record can be heard in everything from early R.E.M. to Clap Your Hands Say Yeah. Still, The Feelies created an inimitable and completely unique sound with their 1980 debut.

Like any band formed in suburban New Jersey, The Feelies paid their dues in The Big Apple. Within a few years, the Village Voice had dubbed them "the best underground band in New York". In a town that was feeling its way through the aftermath of disco and punk, The Feelies carved a real niche for themselves. Like The Ramones, The Feelies' songs had a palpable sense of urgency to them, but they were rarely blink-and-you'll miss 'em 2-minute blasts ("Fa Ce-La" being the exception that proves the rule). Like Talking Heads, the rhythms - vocally and musically - were tense and nervous, but with a menacing quality that may have been somewhat muted in the Heads' music by their art school/world music aspirations. And while Gang of Four's album Entertainment! made the word "angular" a permanent addition to the rock criticism lexicon, Crazy Rhythms necessitated the use of the word "caffeinated". (I must look like a robot going haywire as I sit outside this coffee shop tapping along with the songs.)

Lyrically, the songs on Crazy Rhythms do not seem to be about anything. They are there mainly to give the listener something to sing along with and occasionally chuckle at (eg, "he never helps out in the yard", "you remind me of a TV show/that's alright, I watch it anyway"). The title of the opening track - "The Boy With The Perpetual Nervousness" - is as amusingly unironic as the title of the CD, as is the repetition of "crazy feelies" in the title track. Still, it is the instrumental sound that makes this record such a fascinating musical document. The end of the first track makes it sound like the band has to tire itself out just to slow itself down. On the other hand, "Forces At Work" is on for a minute-and-a half before you realize that it has even started. ("Moscow Nights" takes a good 30 seconds to get moving, too.) And on yet another hand, "Fa Ca-La" starts out with a few seconds of bouncy acoustic strumming, but then slams on the gas and veers outta control for the remaining 2 minutes.

The guitars on this record are often thin and high-pitched, standing in stark contrast to the fat, low-end power chords of punk. Pay particular attention to the solo at the end of "Loveless Love". It has a slithery, "look what I can do" attitude about it that sums up the band's sound perfectly. The incessant downward strumming is another obvious indication of The Velvet's influence, while the jangley minor chords and gentle arpeggios are the blueprint for R.E.M.'s early records. (Peter Buck, who cited the band as a major influence, would return the favor by producing The Feelies' 1986 record The Good Earth.) When guitarists Glenn Mercer and Bill Million duke it out, the results are nothing short of incendiary.

But like I said, this CD isn't called Crazy Rhythms for no good reason. Hence, it is no huge surprise that percussion is a particularly effective weapon for the band. At times it marches the song along confidently, other times it sprinkles bells and woodblocks into the mix. Listen to "Raised Eyebrows", on which the percussion runs serve as hooks that are usually reserved for guitar riffs, and will make an air drummer of even the most self-respecting of us. (Note on the CD's sleeve that each member is credited with percussion on one song or another.) And for most bands, cover songs are filler. On this record, "Everybody's Got Something To Hide Except For Me and My Monkey" is given such thorough Feelies treatment that it is unrecognizable until the lyrics kick in. It is sung in an irreverent tone, as if to say that they owe nothing to Sir Paul for the song, and perhaps they are right. "Paint It Black", which was recorded years later and added to later pressings of the record, gets a nice fresh coat applied to it, too.

Crazy Rhythms is original, innovative, influential, inimitable, quirky, challenging, and compelling. (Heck, the album cover itself is worth 1,000 words.) I may sometimes disagree with Chicago Sun-Times critic Jim DeRogatis, but I owe him a huge debt of gratitude. It was from his mention of The Feelies in a review of The Strokes that I first heard of the band. Curious, I shopped all over greater Boston in futile pursuit of this CD. After signing up for ebay - where it rarely went for under $30 - for the first time, and searching all over the web, I finally found a used copy for about $10.

This has proven to be quite a bargain. Two years after buying the CD, I am as fascinated by it now as I have ever been. (What I wouldn't give to have seen The Feelies in New York in 1979. That would have been a show to tell the grandkids about.) I was still way behind on the indie rock of the 80s and 90s when I first heard Crazy Rhythms, but even then it seemed to me that I was hearing the source of much of it. Its influence is also pretty obvious in the new millennium in The Strokes, The Yeah Yeah Yeahs, and Interpol. Like The Velvet Underground & Nico, Crazy Rhythms seems to be one of those CDs that inspired all of its too few listeners to start a band. And while The Velvet Underground proved that rock stars did not have to be pop stars, the Feelies proved that they didn't have to be cool guys either. A generation of both fans and artists should be eternally grateful.

One final note: It is easy to discover The Feelies and feel kinda proud of yourself, as if you are in on a secret that very few others know about. Well, the fact is that you are in on such a secret, and turning others on to it can be a pretty rewarding experience. For that reason, it is also tempting to overrate this CD, and give it 5 stars as a way of saying, "this is a really good CD that only I and a few other people know about". Yes, it is easy to do that. But it is a 5-star record all the same, IMHO, and one of my personal favorites in the truest sense of the term.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Crazy Rhythms" Influence Lives Far Beyond the Feelies, January 13, 2005
By 
Gavin B. (St. Louis MO) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Crazy Rhythms (Audio CD)
Hoboken NJ's favorite sons, the Feelies were among of handful of east coast bands (Bush Tetras, Eight Eyed Spy,Sonic Youth, Mission of Burma being others) that were in the vanguard of the New York City's post-punk movement at the dawn of the Eighties.

This record, "Crazy Rhythms" is the only Feelies album that the notoriously difficult founders, Glenn Mercer and Bill Million exercised creative control. It was issued in 1980 on the one of the earliest indie labels, Stiff and subsequently the influence of "Crazy Rhythms" has long outlived the lifespan of the Feelies.

A lot of Mercer and Million's musical ideas about minimalism, dynamics, tonality and musical texture were seized upon by the core of musicians that comprised emerging "alternative rock" movement.

I've heard the Feelies glibly refered to as, one of the earliest alternative rock bands, but by the end of the Eighties, the "alternative" genre had become another marketing tool to sell music. Alternative music was term invented by market researchers to sell product and the Feelies hated the idea of being a consumer product. You have to understand that bands like the Feelies, Sonic Youth and Mission of Burma ridiculed conventional notions of commercial success, so it would be an act of heresy to glorify the Feelies as alternative band.

There are inevitable comparisons to Velvet Underground and Television, but much of "Crazy Rhythms" is so strikingly original it's as if the band's sound was developed in a hothouse devoid of any environmental influences. Having seen the band live shortly following the release of "Crazy Rhythms" I can tell you that the band's spazzy, anti-charisma and bouncing off the wall energy was very different from the studied cool of the Velvets or muscular guitar sound of Television.

What makes "Crazy Rhythms" so groundbreaking is, well, uh...the crazy rhythms. Prior to recording the album the Feelies fired drummer Vinny DeNunzio and replaced him with a wildly inventive young drummer named Anton Fier. Fier's frenetic, tom-tom heavy drumming became a third voice in the rhythmatic dialoge in the percussive guitar crossfire between Mercer and Million. Fier's drum kit work was impressive but it was the unconventional percussion that gave the Feelies their signature sound. Fier a keen ear for dynamics and understood the interplay between quiet and loud volume adds drama to music. Fier used West African tribal rhythms and an array of percussion instruments to add texture to the sound of the Feelies.

The Feelies sat out most the Eighties unable to negotiate creative control over their music if they signed for a major label. Fier went on to join the legendary Lounge Lizards and has become one of stalwart innovators in the downtown music scene in New York.

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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A lost gem of a lost era, December 5, 2003
This review is from: Crazy Rhythms (Audio CD)
In 1994 this new band came out. The were completely nerdy looking with thick-framed glasses, dressed as though they were on the set of Happy Days, had quirky catchy songs, and their album cover was nothing but them looking directly into the camera with a blue background. They were called Weezer, and they were great. Unfortunately, aside from the core of their music, their formula was 14 years too late.

Rewind to 1980, five years before my birth, when four guys from New Jersey released an album that would forever be one of the most underrated albums of all time. When pressing play, do not be confused, the silence is all part of the Feelies trademark. The song that begins "The Boy With the Perpetual Nervousness" is a narrative of which is fairly self-discriptive. The Feelies ARE the boys next door that didn't mow the yard and help their mother with groceries. The music is jangly and hardly abrassive, they flow smoothly yet have all the nervous aspects of a true nerds. 'Fa Ce La' is follows the same formula (as do most the songs, however this album is hardly redundant) except there is a heightened emphasis on the guitars -- which by the way are simply incredible. The next three songs 'Loveless Love', 'Forces at Work', and 'Original Love' are the highlites. 'Loveless Love' is very non-chelant in it's catchiness, 'Forces at Work' is layered complexity that sounds as though it were made by working bees, and 'Original Love' is about the closest thing to a 'normal' pop song on this record. The title track is equally great and pretty much does what it's title intends. Also the Stones/Beatles covers are top notch.

The Feelies are clearly great musicians who worked according to their own creed. This album is jangly and smooth and sounds as though it were made by the cast of Revenge of the Nerds. If ever you are on drugs and want something to blow your mind OR you just want to sit back and listen to some simple tunes, this is the one album that is capable of doing both. Dig it. By the way, The Feelies should sue Weezer for copywrite enfringement.

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Crazy Rhythms is The Feelies' first studio release.
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