Post by Fuggle on Jun 16, 2007 14:47:07 GMT -5
The Selecter -
The Best of The Selecter [1996]
1.Train to Skaville
2.Madness
3.The Selecter
4.Three Minute Hero
5.Missing Words
6.On My Radio
7.Neurotica
8.Murder
9.I Want Justice
10.I Really Don't Have The Time
11.Best Of Both Worlds
12.Toussaints Children
13.Use Me Up
14.Dial My Number
15.Celebrate The Bullet
16.Whisper The Rain
Neol Davies founded the Selecter with the aim of mating punk's manic energy with ska and reggae's steady-throbbing beats. Then he dressed Pauline Black in a suit and porkpie hat and pushed her front and center as lead vocalist. The Selecter were less nihilistic than the Sex Pistols and other punk crews, with a black-white configuration and female singer, and their political stance re the police, the government, and unemployment didn't have to be stated overtly in tunes like "Too Much Pressure," "On My Radio," and their 78 rpm version of Justin Hinds & the Dominos' "Carry Go Bring Come." It was implied. Together with the Specials and other groups, the Selecter fused black and white musical expression, kicking off the "two-tone" ska craze that captured the youth markets in Europe and America with a working-class antiestablishment stance that couldn't be bothered with more contemplative "message" music. In fact, ska's popularity has never died completely; it has merely gone underground now and again, only to force its way back to major record label recognition by virtue of its continually swelling fan pool.
--Elena Oumano
The Best of The Selecter [1996]
1.Train to Skaville
2.Madness
3.The Selecter
4.Three Minute Hero
5.Missing Words
6.On My Radio
7.Neurotica
8.Murder
9.I Want Justice
10.I Really Don't Have The Time
11.Best Of Both Worlds
12.Toussaints Children
13.Use Me Up
14.Dial My Number
15.Celebrate The Bullet
16.Whisper The Rain
Neol Davies founded the Selecter with the aim of mating punk's manic energy with ska and reggae's steady-throbbing beats. Then he dressed Pauline Black in a suit and porkpie hat and pushed her front and center as lead vocalist. The Selecter were less nihilistic than the Sex Pistols and other punk crews, with a black-white configuration and female singer, and their political stance re the police, the government, and unemployment didn't have to be stated overtly in tunes like "Too Much Pressure," "On My Radio," and their 78 rpm version of Justin Hinds & the Dominos' "Carry Go Bring Come." It was implied. Together with the Specials and other groups, the Selecter fused black and white musical expression, kicking off the "two-tone" ska craze that captured the youth markets in Europe and America with a working-class antiestablishment stance that couldn't be bothered with more contemplative "message" music. In fact, ska's popularity has never died completely; it has merely gone underground now and again, only to force its way back to major record label recognition by virtue of its continually swelling fan pool.
--Elena Oumano