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Barnes and Noble

The Album

Current price: $28.99
The Album
The Album

Barnes and Noble

The Album

Current price: $28.99
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British punk
began as a movement of self-proclaimed artists, thick with half-baked theories and aging hipsters trying to artificially stimulate a youth movement of their own. Hyperactive first-wavers
Eater
, however, offered a glimpse of what
punk
would soon become, the province of aggressive, inarticulate teenagers with a "loud-fast rules" philosophy that trumps any other consideration. The genuinely teenage
(ranging in age from 13 to 17) weren't interested in the Queen or White Riots; they wrote songs about daydreams, hot girls in math class, and bad-taste fantasies of prostitutes and necrophilia. All songs on their sole full-length release sound about the same, played with one stiff light-speed beat and a snotty vehemence to each track, adding up to a ridiculous classic. As fast and clumsy as the material is, there's an undeniable tunefulness at work, particularly in irresistible singalongs like
"No Brains"
and
"Room for One,"
and the sprightly single
"Lock It Up"
even attempts some naive vocal harmonies as they sneer at the upper classes. For critics who dismissed them as a novelty act or worse,
fire back with
"Public Toys"
("You paid to get in/So you lose"), and
"Get Raped"
is an example of what teenage boys think is funny, a willfully nasty putdown of a "scabby whore" augmented with heavy breathing and cat squeals.
revamp a few fave raves as well and truly make them their own, speeding up and stripping down
Velvet Underground
David Bowie
tunes until they're unrecognizable and reworking
Alice Cooper
's hit
"I'm Eighteen"
into the age-appropriate
"Fifteen."
Andy Blade
leads the charge with a mush-mouthed shout, and the spit flying from his lips is almost audible.
Ian Woodcock
's bass provides no low end whatsoever, nimbly downstroking with a comical treble tone, and guitarist
Brian Chevette
is all slop, thrashing out trashy fuzz and struggling to keep up with the temper tantrum beat (provided by drummer
Dee Generate
and an uncredited
Phil Rowland
). Original copies of
The Album
are expensive and hard to come by, but reissue collections like
All of Eater
The Compleat Eater
provide every recorded note from these delinquents. Don't expect coherent politics or social commentary, but for blathering speed, adolescent energy, and gleeful destructiveness,
can't be beat. ~ Fred Beldin

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Barnes & Noble does business -- big business -- by the book. As the #1 bookseller in the US, it operates about 720 Barnes & Noble superstores (selling books, music, movies, and gifts) throughout all 50 US states and Washington, DC. The stores are typically 10,000 to 60,000 sq. ft. and stock between 60,000 and 200,000 book titles. Many of its locations contain Starbucks cafes, as well as music departments that carry more than 30,000 titles.

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