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MP3 The Silent Boys - Progression: 1986 - 1991

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  1. play button
    Band From Heaven
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    Happy Now
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    I Wanted to See You
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    Scream
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    Country Punk
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    Plastic Cowboy (4-track)
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    Remember
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    Starry Skies
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    Batman
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    Brave New World
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    Saturday
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    Shot!
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    Black and White
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    You Cant Give In
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    See You Later
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    Leningrad
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    Eternity
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    India
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    Im So Still
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    Plastic Cowboy
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    My Hometown
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    Dreaming Away
  23. play button
    People Change Like the Weather

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Description:
23 tracks of smart and slightly rough guitar pop compiled from the Silent Boys' 80s recordings. Inspired by Creation Records, C-86, Brit post-punk, NZ ethereal pop, and The Feelies.

23 MP3 Songs in this album (60:06) !
Related styles: POP: 80's Pop, POP: Jangle Pop

People who are interested in The Cure Joy Division The Feelies should consider this download.


Details:
The Big Take-Over

80s fanzines had a bad attitude about Anglophile bands, but that was xenophobia, as this collection reminds. This Virginia band has released their albums this decade, but Progression reveals they were inspired bastard children of Brit post-punk, C-86 jangle-guitar, and New Zealand ethereal pop back in those halcyon days. Heard now, the nascent 'Boys are roughly like Joy Division and early Cure backing Lawrence in Felt (apparently with a key assist from our Feelies), and the opening "Band From Heaven" reverently refers to the Fall's classic 1979 7" "Totally Wired." There's resemblance, too, to the Liverpool explosion (Bunnymen, Wah, Teardrop Explodes) and early Creation Records bands, with singer Wallace Dietz retaining some of the icy semi-detached bravura of those bands. This is fun while a new fourth LP, Princess By the Sea, looms. (Jack Rabid)

BabySue.com

Originally formed in the 1980s, The Silent Boys reformed in 1999 and have since released three new albums (Beauty Tips, Wishing Well Eyes, One Step Closer). This CD collects some of the band's best tracks from their early days. Some of the low fidelity pop cuts on this album bear a slight resemblance to The Television Personalities...while others sound just like what they are: lost garage pop nuggets from the past. The sparse sounds on this album are probably too peculiar for the casual listener, as the guys in The Silent Boys were (and probably still are) playing for a very select audience. There's a lot to take in here...23 tracks of smart and slightly rough guitar pop. The more you listen to this band's music...the more it grows on you. Our favorite tracks include "Band From Heaven," "Scream," "Black and White," "India," and "Dreaming Away." (Rating: 5/6)

Adequacy.net

Iâm not gonna lie: I like re-issues of 80s post-punk and indie-rock gems. A handful of these, including ones by Crippled Pilgrims and Dumptruck, have stood the test of time and sound prescient. The Silent Boys has now released Progression: 1986-1991 as a retrospective of its early days. The band has re-formed and released a few albums in recent years, but itâs the early recordings that still generate interest.

Listening to any album from the late 80s requires a little context in order to be fully appreciated â itâs hard not to sound dated, after all, and only a few records sound truly timeless. Progression has some dark material a la Joy Division (âBatmanâ is even a little like a Fire Engines song with its herky-jerky guitar) but isnât afraid to cop a Feelies stance now and again, as on âBlack and Whiteâ and âRemember.â âSee You Laterâ could also be a Feelies B-side, with maybe a nod or two to Translator and Green on Red.

If the earliest works sound too derivative, itâs forgivable. There was a lot of sharing going on at the time. âScreamâ has the hallmarks of early Goth, for example, with its reverbed chorus and quasi-tribal rhythm supplemented of course with prominent bass. What passed for sinister and subversive for the time, though, strikes us today as pretty tame and mild. Sometimes laughably so.

Because Progression compiles 23 tracks over 5 years, itâs in some ways a document of what was hip at the time for each of those years. The Silent Boys doesnât exactly have a distinctive style of its own but rather seem to be taken along with the currents of the times. âLeningradâ might have some cliched lyrical content (something about passionâs fire growing âhigher and higherâ), but musically itâs a successfully nervous stab at dark pop. âEternityâ takes a page from O Positiveâs âSay Goodbyeâ at the beginning and then fuses it to a very Fiction Bridge guitar sequence and it too coalesces nicely. Yeah, it was probably a powerful song in its day. Music since has taken the bite out of this more dated material. By the way, the vocals, drums, and guitar on âEternityâ end up making it self-consciously sound like a lost Joy Division single, which was most likely the intent.

Itâs always cool to have another document from that period of time, or at least it is for completists who still break out the old LPs now and again. If The Silent Boys doesnât inform as much as reflect the sounds of the times, thatâs OK: Progressionâs still a decent glimpse at what was going on back then. As a bonus, âStarry Skiesâ sounds like a cross between the aforementioned Fire Engines and Haircut 100. Itâs those kind of unlikely hybrids that are the most curious and instructive. (David Smith)

Dagger

I had no idea that Virginian Wallace Dietz (who IS The Silent Boys) has been perfecting his craft for over two decades. I first heard about the band from the indiepop list and Wallace was nice enough to send me a few of his previous releases (them being 2007âs ONE STEP CLOSER, 2006âs WISHING WELL EYES and 2004âs, BEAUTY TIPS). This, as the title implies, is an odds and sods collection spanning those 5 years in the late 80âs and into the 90âs. Thereâs 23 songs in all and thereâs some interesting liners where Wallace describes the comings and goings of his life when the songs were recorded. The songs definitely sound of another time, a handful of the tracks, like âScreamâ and âPlastic Cowboyâ sound like they could have been recorded for the Factory label (some Joy Division influence there an even a big New Order influence on the opening cut, âBand from Heavenâ) while others are janglier and bear more of a Feelies influences (âSee You Laterâ, âI Wanted To See Youâ, etc.) and plenty of C86 and Sarah Records moments creep in as well. The band is more than the sum of its influences, however, and if you like any or all of the bands mentioned here then this will be a most pleasant surprise. (Tim Hinely)


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