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Walls Have Ears
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Barnes and Noble
Walls Have Ears
Current price: $18.99
Barnes and Noble
Walls Have Ears
Current price: $18.99
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Size: CD
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's best live albums shed light on their mood and creative process at the time of recording, and
is no exception. Gathering recordings from their second tour of the U.K. in 1985, the album reveals them as a band on the verge of a breakthrough -- even though they weren't quite ready to share it yet.
, the owner of
,
's U.K. label at the time, recorded their April and October shows in London and a date at Brighton Beach and issued them as
in 1986, shortly before the release of their third album,
. Since those shows featured
songs as works in progress, the band objected to
, and it was quickly pulled, only getting an official release on
's
label nearly 40 years later.
Despite its thorny history, this is an exhilarating portrait of the band's shift from their no wave beginnings to the more complex and melodic style that defined their later work. As they tear through songs from
, and what would become
delivers reminder after reminder of just how dangerous the group sounded at this time. Though the
edition cleans up some of the original's murky sound quality, the extra noise is a feature, not a bug; within the thunderous, sludgy churn of "Kill Yr. Idols," it's possible to hear the birth of grunge, shoegaze, and alternative rock as they'd come to be known for decades afterward. "Blood on Brighton Beach," an ultra-noisy rendition of "Making the Nature Scene" taken from the band's November Brighton date, merely heightens the fury in
's vocals and the gouging guitars that surround her ("Burning Spear," where
plays an actual drill, sounds almost tame by comparison). Within this context, the songs destined to appear on
feel especially singular: "Green Love," an embryonic incarnation of "Green Light," clears away most of
' din in favor of shimmering chasms that foreshadow the stunning rendition of "Expressway to Yr. Skull." Though this is one of the first times
played this iconic song live, it's a note-perfect performance filled with all of the swelling, vertiginous ecstasy of its final form. That this moment and the rest of the October show at ULU London make up
' most revelatory performances probably has a good deal to do with the addition of
to the band. However, the April date at the Palais London -- one of
's last shows with
-- is more than solid, with blazing versions of live favorites "Brother Jam-Z" and "Death Valley '69" as well as "Ghost Bitch" and "The World Looks Red." Having your mind and eardrums blown at any of these shows would have been amazing, but witnessing
reclaim this part of their history with an official, cleaned-up version of
comes close. ~ Heather Phares