Crazy Rhythms [Bonus Tracks] The Feelies

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CD - Digi-Pak

  • Release Date: 09/08/2009
  • Original Release: 1980
  • Sales Rank: 4,132
  • Label: BAR/NONE RECORDS
  • UPC: 032862019623
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Vinyl LP$18.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Crazy Rhythms [Bonus Tracks]

1LISTENThe Boy with the Perpetual Nervousness 5:10
2LISTENFa Cé-La 2:03
3LISTENLoveless Love 5:05
4LISTENForces at Work 7:05
5LISTENOriginal Love 2:55
6LISTENEverybody's Got Something to Hide (Except for Me and My Monkey) 4:06
7LISTENMoscow Nights 4:24
8LISTENRaised Eyebrows 2:59
9LISTENCrazy Rhythms 6:08
10Fa Cé-La Single Version
11The Boy With the Perpetual Nervousness Carla Bley Demo Version
12Moscow Nights Carla Bley Demo Version
13Crazy Rhythms Live
14I Wanna Sleep in Your Arms Live

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

The Feelies invented a nerdy version of cool '80s rock that critics dubbed "geek chic." Four guys from the Jersey 'burbs who tucked in their shirts and buttoned up their collars, the foursome arrived in 1979 with epic guitar rave-ups augmented by a one-man polyrhythm named Anton Fier. Borrowing clean, pretty guitar sounds from the Byrds and the Velvet Underground, axe-men Bill Million and Glen Mercer took off for Zen planes formerly reserved for free jazz musicians and Tibetan monks. Their debut, CRAZY RHYTHMS, is one of the strangest, wildest guitar records ever recorded, boasting titles like "The Boy With Perpetual Nervousness" and "Raised Eyebrows" and featuring a clinically insane cover of the Beatles' "Everybody's Got Something to Hide Except Me and My Monkey." Mercer and Million's singing suggests David Bowie after a dozen cups of coffee, while Fier's unbelievably fast, impossibly complex drumming gave the music a rhythmic intensity worthy of James Brown. Years later, CRAZY RHYTHMS would influence scores of bands, especially R.E.M. (whose Peter Buck produced the band's belated follow-up, THE GOOD EARTH), but in 1980 it was a genre unto itself, and a masterpiece. Jon Dolan, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

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  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

Finally!by musicissoul

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November 11, 2009: I would never suggest that The Velvet Underground is the best rock and roll band of all time but I would suggest that they are the most influential. The Feelies "Crazy Rhythms" doesn't sound like any VU album but it is a continuing thread in the history of the "underground" pop tune - say hello to college radio! In other words, the songs are often too long and too dark and too emotional (polished singing and playing takes a backseat) to ever hit the pop charts. However, the craft of the pop song is still important; there are musical hooks that can't be denied . "Crazy Rhythms" is just that, strange but infectious. It is also a great guitar record (think Johnny Marr not Eddie Van Halen); the title is right on target. This record has been out of print for some time - 15 years maybe? - so I've been waiting for this record to come back out on CD for a long time. Finally, someone remembered just how important and how excellent this music is.