Showing posts with label The Beat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Beat. Show all posts

30 September 2017

The Beat "Special Beat Service" (1982)

Special Beat Service
release date: Sep. 30, 1982
format: cd (1987 reissue) / digital (2012 remaster)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,58]
producer: Bob Sargeant
label: I.R.S. / Shout! Factory - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "I Confess" (4 / 5) - 2. "Jeanette" - 4. "Sole Salvation" (4 / 5) - 5. "Spar Wid Me" - 7. "Save It for Later" - 9. "Pato and Roger a Go Talk" - 10. "Sugar & Stress" - 11. "End of the Party" - 12. "Ackee 1-2-3"

3rd and final studio album by The Beat originally released on Go Feet and as the first two albums produced by Bob Sargeant. Since Wha'ppen? from '81 the sextet has been expanded to an octet by the addition of Wesley Magoogan on clarinet & saxophone and by Dave 'Blockhead' Wright on piano & keyboards. Once again, the band has changed its style and musical output, although, the foundation are more or less the same. With the 1980 debut album I Just Can't Stop It the band blasted in on the albums chart list in the UK with strong biting lyrics and tight ska revival with bold bits of new wave - on the following '81 album they found back to the roots of ska and related styles of reggae and r&b and subdued new wave ingredients. On this, they sort of put it all together in a new melting pot with the addition of synthpop and / or early shapes of sophisti-pop, although, it still remains 2-tone ska revival.
All in all, the album is more of a coherent whole than its predecessor, but there's quite a long distance from the debut to this one where the arrangements include bolder use of keyboards and horn sections. Nonetheless, the album is still very much in the spirit of The Beat - there's the ever-present political and social awareness that bonds with The Specials and The Selector - and more so than e.g. Madness and Bad Manners, who appears as having a similar starting point, but here, The Beat makes use of styles and arrangements that associates it with acts like Elvis Costello and especially Squeeze.
The album wasn't the critical nor commercial success they had witnessed with its two former albums, and only 6 months later, The Beat was no more. Internal conflicts and different ideas on musical direction ended one of the strongest and most successful bands of ska revival. The two vocal frontmen, Ranking Roger and Dave Wakeling soon after founded another interesting band, General Public, and guitarist Andy Cox and bassist David Steele teamed up with vocalist Roland Gift and formed Fine Young Cannibals.

10 February 2017

The Beat "Wha'ppen?" (1981)


original cover
Wha'ppen?
release date: June 1981
format: vinyl (BEAT 3) / cd (1999 remaster)
[album rate: 3,5 / 5] [3,64]
producer: Bob Sargeant
label: Go Feet Records - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: A) 1. "Doors of Your Heart" (4 / 5) - 2. "All Out to Get You" - 3. "Monkey Murders" - 4. "I Am Your Flag" - - B) 2. "Walk Away" (4 / 5) (live)

2nd studio album by The Beat is like the debut produced by Bob Sargeant and originally released on the band's own label, Go Feet. The sextet remains intact, but it's quite evident that the style has altered since I Just Can’t Stop It from 1980. The tempo has slowed down and it's much more an experimentation with a huge fusion of styles.
Instead of the more original ska revival and 2-tone there's clearly more focus on reggae and calypso with steel band and dub.
The album was released to mixed reviews but still sold quite well reaching #3 on the national albums chart list and NME ranked the album #4 on its 'Albums of the Year' end list.
The album contains some very fine compositions, but the overall impression is a release with many loose ends - some fillers, and perhaps also what appears as an incoherent release, partly because of the strong debut with its tight original sound and sheer energy, but also because of an indistinct direction and blend of too many styles. That said, Wha'ppen? may not equal the strong debut but it's really no near a mediocre album - it simply contains too many fine compositions..
The '99 remaster has a different track listing and comes with several bonus tracks. [ allmusic.com, Records Mirror, Rolling Stone 4 / 5 stars ]


1999 cover


28 June 2016

The Beat "I Just Can’t Stop It" (1980)

vinyl cover
I Just Can’t Stop It [debut]
release date: May 16, 1980
format: vinyl (BEAT 1) / cd (1990 reissue)
[album rate: 4 / 5] [3,95]
producer: Bob Sargeant
label: Arista / Go Feet - nationality: England, UK

Track highlights: 1. "Mirror in the Bathroom" (4 / 5) - 2. "Hands Off… She’s Mine" (4 / 5) (live) - 3. "Two Swords" - 6. "Rough Rider" - 8. "Ranking Full Stop" - 9. "Big Shot" - 10. "Whine & Grine / Stand Down Margaret" - 11. "Noise in This World" - 12. "Can’t Get Used to Losing You" - 13. "Best Friend" - 14. "Jackpot"

Studio album debut originally released on Go Feet Records by The Beat (aka The English Beat / aka The British Beat), a sextet founded in Birmingham 1978 consisting of Dave Wakeling on lead vocals & rhythm guitar, Ranking Roger (aka Roger Charlery) on vocals & toasting, Andy Cox on lead guitar, David Steele on bass, Everett Morton on drums and with Saxa (aka Lionel Augustus Martin) on saxophone. The Beat released its first single releases on 2 Tone Records much like other ska revival acts like The Selector, The Specials and Madness. The Beat then signed with mother-label Arista and formed its own sub-label Go Feet Records. The name of the band was The Beat; however, because of an American band with that name (later identified as Paul Collins' Beat), they were launched as The English Beat in North America and as The British Beat for the Australian market. The original album release contains 12 tracks, the US re-issue comes with two bonus tracks (#5, "Tears of a Clown" and #8, "Ranking Full Stop" both of which had been released in '79 as a 7'' single (by 2 Tone). Much like The Specials and Madness, The Beat was highly inspired by the original Jamaican ska and also covered songs by Prince Buster - here: tracks #5 and 8, and the band's saxophone player, Saxa, had in fact played with Prince Buster and other Jamaican acts.
Stylistically, The Beat plays "2-tone" new wave in an original blend with 2-tone and pop reggae, which puts the band in the same drawer as Madness, The Specials, The Selecter and Bad Manners, but The Beat still sounded quite original with its bold focus on new wave, which in another way linked the band close to bands like The Clash, Magazine and Squeeze.
The album was met by critical acclaim and it peaked as high as #3 on the British albums chart list, and the best faring single, track #1 reached #4 on the singles chart list in the UK.
It's quite an achievement to produce this list of quality songs on the band's debut, also because many songs point in various stylistic directions: #1, 11 and 13 are tight new wave compositions, #5, 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 are fine 2-tone songs with harmonic pop reggae, and track #2, one of my favourites, is the sheer positive conglomerate of all styles in one song.
Highly recommendable.
[ allmusic.com, Rolling Stone, Spin 5 / 5, Smash Hits 4,5 / 5 stars ]