Showing posts with label Bob Rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bob Rock. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 23, 2015
Payola$: Christmas Is Coming (A&M/1983)
From their third album, Hammer On A Drum, Vacouver's Payola$ released this Holiday gem in 1983. It's a mid-tempo love song filled with longing and loss, reverb on the snare and chorused guitars. It was the 80's thank you very much. It's a fine song, Holiday-themed or not. Nice, logical chord progressions in the verses. It was released on nice clear green vinyl in the US. Not too much to say other than it's not regarded as a holiday classic and it's a damned shame that it isn't.
Recommended holiday listening.
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
I.R.S. Mini-Albums (IR7700 Series): The Humans: Play / Payola$: Introducing (IRS Records/1980)
I.R.S. Records (International Record Syndicate) was formed by Miles Copeland in 1979. With distribution from A&M records, it was the most successful independent label (although its ties with A&M conflicts the notion that it's an "indie") of the 1980's. Nonetheless, it brought The Go-Go's, R.E.M., The Cramps and The Fleshtones to the general public at large (and responsible for distributing albums by The Buzzcocks, The English Beat and The Stranglers to a U.S. audience).
I.R.S. could sometimes be a little gimmicky to offset their impressive innovations. One such little gimmick, for want of a better word, was their 33 & 1/3 7" Mini-Album series (the 7700 Series). That's an EP to the rest of us. It lasted for all of two records: Play by The Humans and Introducing by Payola$ both released in 1980.
Payola$ were a Vancouver, BC band that featured producer Bob Rock (Areosmith, Motley Crue. Metallica) and had the hit "Eyes Of A Stranger", that was in the Valley Girl movie & soundtrack.
Introducing Payola$ (7701) is a pretty fine release. The lone stand-out track is "Jukebox", which is better than it has any business being. It's excellent. It was also re-recorded for their debut album In A Place Like This.
Very nice little collectables and true anomalies from I.R.S. Records. If you love New Wave (as I do), fetch these up.
Here's the video review:
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