Thursday, July 16, 2020

Echo and The Bunnymen stun with their debut Crocodiles


Echo and the Bunnymen : Do It Clean


On July 18 of 1980 Echo and the Bunnymen ushered in the "New Psychedelia" or "neopsychedelic" scene with their UK#17 debut album Crocodiles. Forging 60's rock and lyrical imagery with punk anger, the Liverpudlian quartet would consistently release decent albums throughout the 80's. Frontman Ian McCulloch, however, quickly tired of the "psychedelic" description.

"Whoever the turd was who first said that, they should chop his head off," Mac the Mouth said. "It doesn't mean anything, 'psychedelic'. If only rock critics could learn to be as original as we are. If the music's got a dreamlike quality, maybe it comes from dreams. It doesn't have to be drug induced. We get drunk like once in a blue moon but that's about it."


Despite the silly name, Echo and the Bunnymen were seeking to record an album that was anything but. McCulloch has told Smash Hits earlier that year " I reckon it's more to do with a dark mood; dark music you play on your own in the dark, which is how I like listening to my favourite music: stuff like Bowie and Leonard Cohen."

There are also echoes of  Love and especially The Doors. Rob Dickens, who signed the band to Warner's Korova imprint said of McCulloch:

 "The singer looked so charismatic. He was beautiful. His voiced had that Jim Morrison ring to it. The songs weren't well-formulated, but you say 'Star' in neon above his head."


Contemporaneous reviews were mostly ecstatic.Writing for NME in 1980 Chis Salewicz described the album as "being probably the best album this year by a British band".  And there was this review in Smash Hits



In the US Robert Christgau gave the album a B , writing :

 If anything might convince me that the term "psychedelic revival" means something it's "Villiers Terrace," a real good terror-of-drugs song. And the music flows tunefully, in a vacant, hard-rock sort of way. But oh, Jimbo, can this really be the end--to be stuck inside of Frisco with the Liverpool blues again?




And Rolling Stone's David Fricke gave the album 4 our of 5 stars writing

Instead of dope, McCulloch trips out on his worst fears: isolation, death, sexual and emotional bankruptcy. Behind him, gripping music swells into Doors-style dirges (“Pictures on My Wall”), PiL-like guitar dynamics (“Monkeys”), spookily evocative pop (“Rescue”) and Yardbirds-cum-Elevators ravers jacked up in the New Wave manner (“Do It Clean,” “Crocodiles”).


Recent releases include ten extra tracks, mostly early versions and live versions of the songs on the album. There will be many more posts about these Happy Death Men to come.

1 comment:

  1. If Echo & The Bunnymen had only ever recorded "Stars Are Stars" it would still be enough. That such a song could come from four such young men is really something.

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