I thought I would mix it up this week and look at some treasured records that in my personal view, and for whatever reason, did not receive the acclaim they deserved. I have listed these in chronological order: –
Squirrel Bait – Skag Heaven 1986
Hailing from Louisville, Kentucky they were quantified in the emo/mathcore genre (1983-1988). Influenced by peers Black Flag and more distinctly Husker Du who they supported. I discovered them via a Bob Mould quote in the NME singles review ‘as the finest thing he’d ever heard’
This second and final album contains 10 songs but is only 25.45 in length. Standout track is ‘Kid Dynamite’ with bracing intro and alarming refrain ‘I don’t need no pig stomping on my buzz’ and has muttered unintelligible incantations. Others to note are ‘Choose Your Poison’ with Black Sabbath War Pigs intro and ‘Slake Train Coming’ which thunders along.
The record is scuzzy and full of youthful vigour and dark lyrics. It sounded utterly vibrant as an 18-year old and still holds up to scrutiny now.
Former members played with the Breeders and Lemonheads and original member Britt Walford subsequently formed semi legendary Slint.
Dumptruck – For the Country – 1987
Formed in 1983 in Boston Massachusetts. This was their third album and they decamped to Rockfield Studio in Wales for some solitude to record it. It is country rock in the finest tradition evoking comparisons to Neil Young, Green on Red and Buffalo Tom.
It has a yearning timeless quality and it is a ‘go to’ album for me. Standout tracks are ‘Friends’ ‘Brush me Back’ ‘Hung Out on the Line’ and ‘Dead Weight’.
Through no fault of their own the band got sucked into a record label contract dispute meaning no new material could be recorded and subsequently disbanded in 1991. Half of the band reformed and recorded new material as recent as 2018, but with diminishing returns.
Joy Zipper – American Whip – 2002
Dream pop duo from New York, Tabitha Tindale and Vincent Cafiso, who are also a married couple.
Album recorded initially in Glasgow and then co-produced and mixed by Kevin Shields of My Bloody Valentine. It has a wonky sugar-coated beauty with a 60’s vibe and razor-sharp lyrics. Gorgeous sultry vocals complement each other perfectly and it is lovingly recorded. I hear snippets of Mercury Rev, Raveonettes and Velvets in there.
‘Christmas Song’ could just possibly be the most shimmering gem of a Xmas song ever written. I also like ‘Baby you should know’, ‘33x’ and the fine outro ‘Valley Stream’ book ends the record.
Their last known recorded material was a contribution to a Smith covers album in 2011.
Former Cellmates – Who’s Dead and What’s to Pay 2008
Formed in Sunderland by ex-Leatherface bassist. Leatherface received Husker Du comparisons but I never really saw that link and much prefer this album.
The record could arguably be vaguely derivative at times and I can imagine not to everyone’s tastes but for me it is imbued with a lot of soul and passion and chugs along mercilessly and has a shambolic charm. There is a bit of Buffalo Tom and Springsteen in there and it has a country rock tinge.
Stand out tracks are ‘Always’, ‘Here’s to the Pretty Girls’ and ‘Why would you Pray for Me?’. They recorded 4 albums between 2005 and 2014 and I am not sure whether they are still operational.
Sennen – Where the Light Gets In (2008)
Based in Norwich in 2002 before decamping to London. They are named after a Ride track, and they are the only one of the five listed I have seen live.
I bloody love this band, who have produced five fine albums between 2005 and 2016 and I could have picked any of them but have selected the second album. Strictly in the post-rock shoegazing genre, displaying a hypnotic lush yearning sound, coruscating guitar and whispered harmonies resembling Loop and MBV.
Standouts are ‘Your Hand in Mine’ and ‘A Lifetime Passed’ which are gentler lovely tracks, that recall Teenage Fanclub ‘Grand Prix’ era. Also ‘Just Wanted to Know’ which morphs into a long thunderous outro.
My overall favourite track of theirs is ‘Falling Down’ off third album Age of Denial which builds layer by layer to a tumultuous conclusion, resembling ‘Ithica 27/9’ by Mogwai and ‘Dirge’ by Death in Vegas.
In my humble opinion, they remain the most criminally underrated band I have encountered.
Now, I would be fascinated to know what would be contained on your lost album list, even if you can only think of one.
Thank you for this blog – I have only heard one of these Jimmy, I will endeavour to listen to the others at some point. Following the excellent (and vital) #BrokenRecord campaign led by @MrTomGray I have a self imposed ban on Spotify and am reliant on music I have paid for, so new purchases ahoy!
Here are five albums from me. I am not sure how lost they are though!
“Drop Out” by East Village is a warm sunshiney day of a record, all jangly guitars and warm musical hugs.
“A Life With Brian” by Flowered Up is the greatest baggy-indie-dance record you might not have heard?
“Title TK” by the Breeders is my favourite Breeders album. not so obscure I know – hell they are famous! – but I had missed this album on release and hence was “lost” for me for a number of years. So glad I found it.
“Scenes From the Second Storey” by The God Machine heavy, light, dark, twisted, angry screams of repeated lyrics… All the ingredients for a happy teenager/mid life crisis.
“Masters Of Reality” by Masters of Reality, huge riffs, killer grooves and songs masquerading as stories.
Hopefully some new music here for someone out there to enjoy. Thanks again for the blogs Jimmy 🙂
Thanks for the positive feedback Dave and your own Top 5 list. The East Village record sounds especially interesting!