At the time this was groundbreaking stuff. 1986?s ?Infected? was the first concept album about AIDS, and was backed up with a full-blown film similar in grandeur and ego to Pink Floyd?s?The Wall? except it dispensed with anything as vulgar as a plot and went straight for imagery. The rampant, slightly leftfield music evolved from The The mainstay Matt Johnson?s bunker, shot through with social comment upon Thatcher?s Britain. Top Ten singles routinely dealt with war, disease, death, and the forthcoming apocalypse (?Armageddon Days Are Here Again?, released in 1989 predicted a Third World War fought between Islam and Capitalism ).The The always felt like an aberration: how did this get into the shops?
Some of the production now of this is dreadfully dated - what was cutting edge in 1983 just doesn?t cut it anymore. But the raw songwriting underneath it cuts through the bullshit and speaks to the inner dialogue of near enough all people. Oddly enough, unlike most artists, The The started off big and political, and then slowly got smaller and more personal as time went on.
The big leap came in 1989 when The The were joined by Johnny Marr of The Smiths, James Eller, and David Palmer on drums. Instead of twenty-something paranoia, the album that spawned forth - the misunderstood ?Mind Bomb? - was a late night collision of God, War, and Love. It sounded like Jesus and Satan fighting in a back alley - and the successor,?Dusk? was an exposed,naked album of perverse love songs.
The last third of the album sees the newer model The The, a raw, bluesy set of hyper-literate, uncommercial modern blues songs, about as far removed from the first handful of songs as you can get, yet essentially exactly the same artist viewed from a different angle. It's music for dark rooms late at night.
The end of this collection sees The The in limbo, free of a major label deal, going alone as an independent, presumably into the world of diminishing sales and retrospectives, of which this is the first. A limited edition second CD comes with some copies, but this is largely unessential 12? mixes of tracks that exist in far superior versions on the first CD: worth getting for the completist, tedious repetition for anyone else.
If you?re thinking of spending money on a record this month, try to skip beyond the stuff HMV have on big shelves at the front of the store. Head for this and discover the closest thing Britain gave us to a voice for the 80?s.
infected
Re: infected
mark
Re: infected
The The - 45 rpm : 1982-2002
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indeed!
Mind Bomb > Infected
Best British band of the 80s?
Hell yeah. By miles and miles and *miles*. Rock music that matters is hard to come by nowadays...
nooo!
infected < mind bomb
by a long way
Yes, actually!
Mind Bomb > Infected and Infected < Mind Bomb are the same statement... :p
aah no, I got my symbols wrong.....
infected > mind bomb!
By a huuuuuuuge margin
Proslo, may i suggest that you do not know what the fuck you are talking about. And if you are making a statement about how Thethe were the best British band of the 80's how can you not:
1. Realise that Thethe are NOT a band but a label for the output of a single individual Matt Johnson
2. Mention Soul Mining, which was his greatest album by quite a margin.
the the = collcective
at least, that's how i refer to them. One man with many others swishing by cf the fall?
2. yes soul mining is the greatest. the absolute greatest :)