Track Listing 1. Family Entertainment 2. Girls Don't Like It 3. Male Model 4. I Gotta Getta 5. Teenage Kicks 6. Wrong Way 7. Jump Boys 8. Here Comes The Summer 9. Get Over You 10. Billy's Third 11. Jimmy Jimmy 12. True Confessions 13. She's A Runaround 14. I Know A Girl 15. Listening In 16. Casbah Rock 17. Smarter Than U 18. Emergency Cases 19. Top Twenty 20. Really Really 21. Mars Bar 22. She Can Only Say No 23. One Way Love
| Details | | Number of CDs: | 1 | | Producer: | Roger Bechirian, The Undertones | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Distributor: | Universal Music | | Recording Mode: | Stereo |
Album Notes The Undertones: Feargal Sharkey (vocals); Damian O'Neill, John O'Neill (guitar); Mickey Bradley (bass); Billy Doherty (drums).Recorded at Eden Studios, London and Mrs. Simms Shed, Derry, England. Includes liner notes by Paul Lester.Northern Ireland natives The Undertones were formed in 1976 and disbanded seven years later. Though they only made a small impression in their day, they've been appreciated more since their demise. The Undertones wedded sharp hooks to incessant driving music and were something like a more Beatle-ish Ramones. This self-titled album was their first full-length release, and it's chock full of spunky pop nuggets. Songs like "Here Comes the Summer," "Teenage Kicks," "Jimmy Jimmy," and "Family Entertainment" manage to braid angst and hope with anthemic verve. Feargal Sharkey's unique voice has a crisp and clear tenor, flush with vibrato. While he pushes his singing to its upper limits over the furiously rocking band, his voice retains a purity that harks back to the crooners of decades prior. Unable to make any significant inroads in North America, The Undertones were ultimately undone by commercial frustrations. However, their music has aged far better than that of many of their punk and new-wave era contemporaries.
Editorial Reviews Ranked #90 in Q's 100 Greatest British Albums Q (06/01/2000)
4 stars out of 5 - ...A minor classic: brisk songs of young, working class life delivered with sulphate pep and a melodic sense that's more Sweet than Eater... Q (05/01/2000)
Included in Q's 100 Best Punk Albums. Q
...Spotty schoolboys with frogs in their satchels, they wore their exhuberance unchained... Alternative Press (10/01/1994)
Ranked #50 among The Greatest Albums Of The '70s. NME (09/18/1993)
Ranked #21 in Mojo's Top 50 Punk Albums - ...[The album] melds fabulous buzzsaw guitar with a lyrical predilection for adolescent angst... Mojo (03/01/2003)
3.5 stars out of 5 - ...[Features] the pure yearning of Feargal Sharkey's voice and writer John O'Neill's catchy visions... Rolling Stone (10/30/2003)
Included in Q's 100 Best Punk Albums.Q (6/00, p.61) - Ranked #90 in Q's 100 Greatest British Albums Mojo (3/03, p.76) - Ranked #21 in Mojo's Top 50 Punk Albums - ...[The album] melds fabulous buzzsaw guitar with a lyrical predilection for adolescent angst...NME (9/18/93, p.19) - Ranked #50 among The Greatest Albums Of The '70s.Q (5/00, p.132) - 4 stars out of 5 - ...A minor classic: brisk songs of young, working class life delivered with sulphate pep and a melodic sense that's more Sweet than Eater...Alternative Press (10/94, p.114) - ...Spotty schoolboys with frogs in their satchels, they wore their exhuberance unchained... Q
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