01 March 2011

Felt "Crumbling the Antiseptic Beauty" (1982)

Crumbling the Antiseptic Beauty [debut]
release date: Feb. 27, 1982
format: cd (2003 reissue - CDMRED 25)
[album rate: 3 / 5] [3,10]
producer: John A. Rivers [recording engineer]
label: Cherry Red Records - nationality: England, UK

Tracklist: 1. "Evergreen Dazed" - 2. "Fortune" - 3. "Birdmen" - 4. "Cathedral" - 5. "I Worship the Sun" - 6. "Templeroy"

Studio debut album by Felt reissued in 2003 also on Cherry Red. The album credits only mention John A. Rivers as recording engineer but (producer) John Leckie also worked with the band in the studio, however, he is uncredited, and the role of a producer remains a bit of a mystery. The cover feature the founder and musical leader of the band, who was always only credited as simply Lawrence [aka Lawrence Hayward, birth name]. Somehow, everywhere you look for a style characterization of this album you meet the tag post-punk. I find this very difficult as the style is much more folk rock-based but with a brand new approach. That could then be referred to as jangle pop, which tracks this back to origins in the 1960s folk pop AND a mix with a certified fascination / inspiration in music by the American art rock art punk band Television as heard on Marquee (1977). Also, the band name Felt apparently derives from the song "Venus" from that specific album and upon listening to this song it's quite striking how close the music by Felt (on later albums) comes to the style of that particular song, or at least "Cathedral". The band is, however, far from just a copy of another band. Felt has a unique style of its very own, and here, as on their first three albums, they produce very simple, light, and repetitious compositions without much focus on lyrical framework. The album is perhaps mostly for fans and completionists but it truly signals the start of a very original journey led by Lawrence.
[ allmusic.com 3,5 / 5 stars ]