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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Epitome of Aussie Fuzz Pop., January 4, 2002
Both the Tingles e.p. and Blind Love album are excellent in every way. Their really catchy tunes, at first listen might seem so catchy that they'd grow tired after a few listens, but 10 years on they still hold a special place in my music collection. Simon Day seems to have the knack of writing a timeless pop tune with sincere lyrics that, even when bordering on saccharine sweet, don't fatigue with age. Tingles 6 track e.p. precedes Blind Love on this re-released version. It ranges from the fast and fuzzy "Skin" (my favorite - and I assume, the inspiration for the title Blind Love) to the slow and morbid "My Bloody Valentine" and contained their breakthrough lead track "That Ain't Bad" which go the most airplay, and took them to No 1 on the Australian Charts. Blind Love, whilst being instantly likable contains the arguably Beach Boys influenced "Yes I Wanna Go" , and the appropriately titled "Strange" with it's experimental back-masking of some parts, with Simon's vocals mixed in a David Lynch-esque fashion. "The End" is a beautiful mellow finisher which makes it a good album to listen to whilst drifting off to sleep. If this collection has a drawback, it's the track sequence (and that's being really picky.) Due to the fact that "That Ain't Bad" appears on both Tingles, and Blind Love, it obviously only occurs once on this "compilation" as track one, as it first appeared on the Tingles e.p, which was a little distracting. But, hey, what else were they gonna do! Collectively this is one of those special albums where after a couple of listens I'm not tempted to skip one single track. (If you like this one - also check out the Hummingbirds album "Love Buzz" and Ratcat's other efforts "This Nightmare" and "Inside Out" if you can find them.)
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