Television Personalities
They Could Have Been Bigger Than the Beatles
They Could Have Been Bigger Than the Beatles
UPC: 809236123022
Format: CD
Release Date: Jul 14, 2017
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Full title: They Could Have Been Bigger Than The Beatles.
Television Personalities: Daniel Treacy, Mark Sheppard, Edward Ball, Bernie The Bass.
Recorded at Starforce Studios, Battersea, London, England between 1979 and 1982.
Audio Remasterers: Barry Woodward; Phil Vinall.
Recording information: Starforce Studios, Batter Sea, London, SW11 (1979-1982).
Led by the charmingly adenoidal Daniel Treacy, whose disregard for the niceties of production and arrangement doesn't hide his deceptively brilliant lyrical and melodic abilities, the Television Personalities first burst on to a moribund U.K. punk rock scene in the late 1970s, when they released such classic indie singles as the biting "Part Time Punks" (under the pseudonym The O-Levels), and "Where's Bill Grundy Now?"
This early-'80s collection of demos, outtakes, and other rarities is a delightfully anarchic mess of punk rock, budget psychedelia, and even the odd cover version, in this case the Creation's 1960s classic "Painter Man." The druggy "Psychedelic Holiday" is a pre-echo of the later Madchester scene's hazy experimentation, while "When Emily Cries" is a manifestation of the band's Syd Barrett obsession, complete with disaffected pop-art vocals and brain-scrambling guitar. The throwaway genius of this album is comparable to more hallowed eccentric works like Skip Spence's OAR or Barrett's THE MADCAP LAUGHS, though the Personalities' good-natured, naïve goofiness avoids both those albums' darker intimations of madness.
Television Personalities: Daniel Treacy, Mark Sheppard, Edward Ball, Bernie The Bass.
Recorded at Starforce Studios, Battersea, London, England between 1979 and 1982.
Audio Remasterers: Barry Woodward; Phil Vinall.
Recording information: Starforce Studios, Batter Sea, London, SW11 (1979-1982).
Led by the charmingly adenoidal Daniel Treacy, whose disregard for the niceties of production and arrangement doesn't hide his deceptively brilliant lyrical and melodic abilities, the Television Personalities first burst on to a moribund U.K. punk rock scene in the late 1970s, when they released such classic indie singles as the biting "Part Time Punks" (under the pseudonym The O-Levels), and "Where's Bill Grundy Now?"
This early-'80s collection of demos, outtakes, and other rarities is a delightfully anarchic mess of punk rock, budget psychedelia, and even the odd cover version, in this case the Creation's 1960s classic "Painter Man." The druggy "Psychedelic Holiday" is a pre-echo of the later Madchester scene's hazy experimentation, while "When Emily Cries" is a manifestation of the band's Syd Barrett obsession, complete with disaffected pop-art vocals and brain-scrambling guitar. The throwaway genius of this album is comparable to more hallowed eccentric works like Skip Spence's OAR or Barrett's THE MADCAP LAUGHS, though the Personalities' good-natured, naïve goofiness avoids both those albums' darker intimations of madness.
Tracks:
1 - Three Wishes
2 - David Hockney's Diary
3 - In a Perfumed Garden
4 - Flowers for Abigail
5 - King and Country
6 - Boy in the Paisley Shirt
7 - Games for Boys
8 - Painter Man
9 - Psychedelic Holiday
10 - 14th Floor
11 - Sooty's Disco Party
12 - Makin' Time
13 - When Emily Cries
14 - Glittering Prizes
15 - Anxiety Block
16 - Mysterious Ways
2 - David Hockney's Diary
3 - In a Perfumed Garden
4 - Flowers for Abigail
5 - King and Country
6 - Boy in the Paisley Shirt
7 - Games for Boys
8 - Painter Man
9 - Psychedelic Holiday
10 - 14th Floor
11 - Sooty's Disco Party
12 - Makin' Time
13 - When Emily Cries
14 - Glittering Prizes
15 - Anxiety Block
16 - Mysterious Ways