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The Soft Boys - A Can of Bees (Bonus Tracks Edition) (1979)

The Soft Boys - A Can of Bees (Bonus Tracks Edition) (1979)

BAND/ARTIST: The Soft Boys

Tracklist:

01. Give It to the Soft Boys 2:00
02. The Pigworker 4:33
03. Human Music 4:31
04. Leppo and the Jooves 5:28
05. The Rat's Prayer 3:22
06. Do the Chisel 3:06
07. Sandra's Having Her Brain Out 4:09
08. Return of the Sacred Crab 2:57
09. Cold Turkey 4:20
10. School Dinner Blues 2:24
11. Wading Through a Ventilator (Live) 3:58
12. Let Me Put It Next to You (Bonus Track) 2:04
13. Blues in the Dark (Bonus Track) 4:12
14. When I Was a Kid (Bonus Track) 5:08
15. Love Poisoning (Bonus Track) 4:37
16. The Asking Tree (Bonus Track) 5:14
17. Muriel's Hoof / Root of the Clones (Bonus Track) 4:11
18. Have a Heart Betty (Mark 1) [Bonus Track] 2:42
19. Rock 'n' Roll Toilet (Mark 1) [Bonus Track] 3:16
20. Heartbreak Hotel (Bonus Track) 4:42

The Soft Boys, like so many other underground miscreants in the '70s, spent their formative years (unbeknownst to them) generating enough critical capital to earn much sought-after biographical adjectives like “influential” and “underrated.” The Robyn Hitchcock-led, Cambridge, England-born, pseudo-psych rock outfit's shared love for all things Byrds, Beatles, Dylan, and Syd Barrett was both venerated and blown to smithereens on their 1979 debut long-player, A Can of Bees. More angular and jarring than the band’s beloved 1980 follow-up, Underwater Moonlight, Hitchcock, Kimberly Rew, Morris Windsor, and Andy Metcalfe sounded positively possessed, channeling both '60s progressive rock and late-'70s punk into an unholy guitar-driven onslaught fueled by Hitchcock's surreal lyrics: opening a record with a line like “feel like asking a tree for an autograph” is one thing, but backing up those words with an atonal, apocalyptic blues riff is another. It’s an often brutish affair that works more often than it should, with highlights arriving by way of the pounding and addictive “Leppo and the Jooves,” the incendiary “Do the Chisel,” and the impossibly dumb but nearly perfect pop gem “Sandra’s Having Her Brain Out.” A Can of Bees has seen its fair share of iterations over the years, often boasting multiple bonus cuts and conflicting track listings (the impossibly prolific Hitchcock would eventually become notorious for this with his solo releases), but they’re all more or less complete, and the material continues to inspire, even if it’s only a handful of ears at a time.



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  • User offline
  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 20:36
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Many thanks for Flac.
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  • RobertZZ
  •  wrote in 00:07
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Thanx for the Soft Boys' albums!