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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sounds Great 20 Years Later ..., December 14, 2002
The 2nd album has been one of my favorites since it was released in the early 80s. Great quirky pop music. The two primary songwriters are Chris Stamey and Peter Holsapple. They tend to compliment each other in a Lennon/McCartney or Difford/Tillbrook sort of way.If you like this, there are other CDs by the dB's and later work by Holsapple and Stamey that you should check out: 1. Like This - dB's after Stamey left - hard to find on CD. While I miss Stamey, this still pretty good. 2. Sound of Music - again, post-Stamey and again, hard to find on CD. I like it a little better than Like This - there is a little more richness in the songwrtiing. 3. Ride the Wild Tom Tom - full band, this is their earliest material. There are some throwaways, but most of it is very solid - great Stamey/Holsapple tunes you can't find elsewhere. 4. Fireworks and It's Alright - two post-dB's Stamey solo albums. I prefer the first one, which is a little more introspective, but both are excellent. 5. Sneakers - Racket - very hard to find, this is a pre-Wild Tom Tom CD with Stamey and Mitch Easter. Sounds like ... the dB's and Let's Active ... very cool. Includes an early dB's song or two. Similar in feel to the Tom Tom CD. 6. Mavericks - post-dB's reunion of Stamey and Holsapple. A little less poppy than the dB's, but great stuff. All this stuff is out-of-print, but you can find it over time on ebay, Gemm or your local used record store. Great band - enjoy!
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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Insanely Catchy, Quirky Music, February 1, 2002
I'd heard great things about these records in my younger days, but never actually had the scratch to buy them until a week ago. I remembered their existence due to a name-check by The Loud Family, another great underrated band.The dB's were a tight rock group that based themselves around the songwriting talents of Chris Stamey and Peter Holsapple. Holsapple's songs were somewhat "straighter" and in something of a classic rock vein. They sometimes featured catchy choruses, ringing guitars, and subtle bridges that make all the difference. They were frequently about troubled romantic relationships, and tended to lend themselves to loud singing. He was on a path not dissimilar to Elvis Costello, albeit with lyrics that actually said something clearly. Best examples - "Black and White", "Big Brown Eyes", "We Were Happy There". Meanwhile, Stamey revelled in quirkiness, in a way not dissimilar to early David Byrne. His vocals sometimes sound like those of a snotty kid turned loose in a studio. He veers his songs towards sonic adventurism - seemingly aspiring towards a Beach Boys/Sgt. Peppers vibe, with twists in it. His songs are hit-or-miss, but when they hit they're quite a power-pop rush. Best examples - "Happenstance", "Tearjerkin'", "Espionage". Artistically, these two LPs seem to be the band's peak. The two writers complemented each other, in terms of the songs they brought in as well as their vocal harmonies, and the band played very sharply (the rhythm section was very active). Stamey left after these two LPs; the other three continued the band and had mild success playing Holsapple's songs, their peak being 1984's "Like This". I highly recommend this disk.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
It Crawled From the South, September 17, 2003
It's strange how we associate some music with certain moments/periods in our lives, but it's true. For me, the dB's are there in just about every memory of college in Fairbanks, AK. That's where I was introduced to their music in a conversation with a girl I was head over heels for, but too shy to say. She was telling me about this song called "Amplifier", and how if I could find it, I had to play it on my next show at the college radio station (later she would introduce me to The Jam and the Smithereens' "Behind the Wall of Sleep"). As if by design, the next week I found a bargain bin tape of the dB's "Like This" (which featured a remake of the song)at the student union. I was immediatly smitten with the rich vocal harmonies, snappy lyrics that were goofy and heartfelt at the same time, and THE tightest rythm section I'd yet to hear. Of course, when I played it for her, she revealed there was another record they did that had the same song and was even better! My search began, leading to later records like "The Sound of Music" (and it's blue-collar anthem, "Workin' For Somebody Else" which quicly became a staple of my radio show) and the Chris Stamey LP, "It's Alright" (which is worth having just for "Cara Lee", as another reviewer so rightly put it). Finally, on a spring break trip to Wasilla (a little town an hour north of Anchorage, but 5 hours from Fairbanks), I found it. Holsapple and Stamey had just released "Mavericks". I picked up the tape so we could listen in the car, and again, by merest of circumstances, there was "Repercussions" on CD. from the Big Star-meets-Wall of Sound production on "Living a Lie", the one-two punch of "We Were Happy There" and "Happenstance", with its roller coaster of spare then busy arrangement; then the jaw dropper: "From a Window to a Screen". If it's possible, everything in this song sounds like it's in the background, or coming from another room. Again, the whole record is amazing, but I keep coming back to that first half. And as luck would have it, I was able to find "Stands for Decibels" on my next trip down to Wasilla, at the same record store, no less. What struck me was how quirky compared to "Repercussions" this one seemed at first. Opening with the hyperactive kiss-off, "Black & White" and the keyboard-heavy funk workout ala "96 tears" of "Dynamite" (with the weirdest vocal harmony of the band's recorded output). Then Stamey catches me off guard again in "She's Not Worried", the dream child of Boyce & Hart and the Beach Boys. The next few songs ("the Fight" through "Cycles per Second") return to the long-lost "college rock" sound of the 80's that so many bands from the south perfected like Pylon, Guadalcanal Diary and of course, IRS-era R.E.M. Finally, Holsapple and Stamey earn all those comparisons to Chilton/Bell, Lennon/McCartney, etc. with "Big Brown Eyes" and "Moving in Your Sleep". Believe me, at first, many of these songs will seem to be going in two different directions sometimes and as others have said, Stamey can come across too clever for his own good. But hear them out all the way through, and you just may find little touches and harmonies striking you by surprise when you least expect it. For the last 12 years, the dB's have been the one band I try to get all my friends into and they've been an influence on my own songwriting as well as leading me to other great bands like the Posies and Big Star. Sadly, their music is incredibly hard to find (even more so now than when I began my quest in 1991), and if you're a fan of guitar pop, great songwriter teams, quirky new wave-meets-British invasion college rock, you really REALLY owe it to yourself to check the dB's out. I'm glad I did, and thank you Angie, wherever you are.
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