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The Jesus and Mary Chain's Psychocandy
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Barnes and Noble
The Jesus and Mary Chain's Psychocandy
Current price: $14.95
Barnes and Noble
The Jesus and Mary Chain's Psychocandy
Current price: $14.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
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The Jesus and Mary Chain's swooning debut
Psychocandy
seared through the underground and through the pop charts, shifting the role of noise within pop music forever. Post-punk and pro-confusion,
became the sound of a generation poised on the brink of revolution, establishing Creation Records as a tastemaking entity in the process. The Scottish band's notorious live performances were both punishingly loud and riot-spurring, inevitably acting as socio-political commentary on tensions emergent in mid-1980s Britain. Through caustic clangs and feedback channeling the rage of the working-class who'd had enough,
gestures toward the perverse pleasure in having your eardrums exploded and loudness as a politics within itself.
Yet
's blackened candy heart center – calling out to phantoms Candy and Honey with an unsettling charm – makes it a pop album to the core, and not unlike the sugarcoated sounds the Ronettes became famous for in the 1960s. The Jesus and Mary Chain expertly carved out a place where depravity and sweetness entwined, emerging from the isolating underground of suburban Scotland grasping the distinct sound of a generation, apathetic and uncertain. The irresistible
emerged as a clairvoyant account of struggle and sweetness that still causes us to grapple with pop music's relation to ourselves.
Psychocandy
seared through the underground and through the pop charts, shifting the role of noise within pop music forever. Post-punk and pro-confusion,
became the sound of a generation poised on the brink of revolution, establishing Creation Records as a tastemaking entity in the process. The Scottish band's notorious live performances were both punishingly loud and riot-spurring, inevitably acting as socio-political commentary on tensions emergent in mid-1980s Britain. Through caustic clangs and feedback channeling the rage of the working-class who'd had enough,
gestures toward the perverse pleasure in having your eardrums exploded and loudness as a politics within itself.
Yet
's blackened candy heart center – calling out to phantoms Candy and Honey with an unsettling charm – makes it a pop album to the core, and not unlike the sugarcoated sounds the Ronettes became famous for in the 1960s. The Jesus and Mary Chain expertly carved out a place where depravity and sweetness entwined, emerging from the isolating underground of suburban Scotland grasping the distinct sound of a generation, apathetic and uncertain. The irresistible
emerged as a clairvoyant account of struggle and sweetness that still causes us to grapple with pop music's relation to ourselves.