Jesus Jones – Liquidizer (UK)

49,99

It’s a product of its time, and it wanted nothing more than to be seen as such — the credits list for the album names every last sample source, ranging from Prince and Sonic Youth to Apocalypse Now and the news and views of 1988 and 1989. But it’s the breadth that makes Liquidizer a thrilling experience, even if the end results are oddly enough one-dimensional: instantly catchy power pop fed through industrial, techno, and hip-hop approaches, topped off with Mike Edwards‘ confident bark. However, it’s better than just another guitar pop album, and even if Jesus Jones reflected trends rather than started any on their own, their debut album was still a confident statement of purpose, demonstrating that yes, there was such a thing as wide-ranging listening eclecticism. As such, Liquidizer, like the late-’80s work of Jesus Jones’ grubbier brothers-in-arms, Pop Will Eat Itself, may not make anyone forget the two groups’ obvious joint inspiration, the Bomb Squad, but the principle was still the same: eat the World, spit out the results at loud volume. “Never Enough” was the overdriven semi-radio hit in America, but “Info Freako” is the real kicker of the bunch, with a blasting chorus that would silence most metal bands of the time and probably Edwards‘ best trademark “yeaaah!” Elsewhere, heavily processed aggro-tech-funk that’s kissing cousins with the likes of World Domination Enterprises and Renegade Soundwave slams up against bubble-salsa piano lines and Beach Boys backing harmonies, all aimed at instant memorability and, clearly, pop success without apology. Top it off with the aggressively friendly sarcasm of Edwards — he has his targets, however, couched in metaphor, and doesn’t spare them the edge of his tongue — and Liquidizer holds up better than might be expected. Compared to most wretched American nu-metal bands a decade later, Jesus Jones doesn’t forget the sheer fun of hip-hop as well as the potential rage.

In stock

Description

Food ‎– FOODLP 3, 79 3238 1 Vinyl, LP, Album, Stereo 1989 UK Press

Side 1.

1. Move Mountains 3:19
2. Never Enough 2:41
3. The Real World 3:03
4. All The Answers 3:48
5. What’s Going On 3:04
6. Song 13 4:04

Side 2.

1. Info Freako 2:51
2. Bring It On Down 2:37
3. Too Much To Learn 3:02
4. What Would You Know? 3:55
5. One For The Money 2:56
6. Someone To Blame 4:06

Credits:
Bass – Al Jaworski
Design, Art Direction – Stylorouge
Drums, Other [Inspires Samples] – Gen
Guitar – Jerry De Borg
Photography By [Back] – Christian Thompson
Photography By [Front] – Trevor Togees
Producer – Craig Leon
Sampler [Plays Samples] – Barry D
Voice, Guitar – Jesus (H) Jones
Written-By [All Tracks Written By] – Mike Edwards

Barcode and Other Identifiers
Barcode (Text): 0 077779 323814
Barcode (Scanned): 077779323814
Other (Printer’s code): SP89 10SP
Matrix / Runout (Label side B): FOODLP 3-B
Matrix / Runout (Runout side A, stamped): FOODLP 3 A-1U-1-1 D
Matrix / Runout (Runout side B, stamped [etched]): FOODLP 3 B-1U-1-1 D [TOWN HOUSE DMM]

Additional information

Weight0,5 kg

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