A.O.O.F.C
recommends
Mizar6

babydancing




Get this crazy baby off my head!

3.10.07

Tom Tom Club


tomtomclub-close2thebone1983




Tom Tom Club - Close to the Bone - 1983 - Sire

Great album from the vastly underrated Tom Tom Club. Great polyrhythmic experiments, with an urban electronic touch, and dreamy dub reggae vibes. Although it wasn't such a commerial success as it's predecessor "Tom Tom Club", the album is a favorite among fans.

TRACKS

"Pleasure of Love" - 6:33
"On the Line Again" - 4:56
"This is a Foxy World" - 3:39
"Bamboo Town" - 3:56
"The Man With the 4-Way Hips" - 5:48
"Measure Up" - 5:05
"Never Took a Penny" - 3:33
"Atsababy! (Life is Great)" - 4:02

MUSICIANS

Wally Badaro, Tyrone Downie, Chris Frantz, Roddy Frantz, Rupert Hine, Raymond Jones, Steve Scales, Steven Stanley, Alex Weir and sisters Lani, Laura & Tina Weymouth.

BIO (Wikipedia)

The Tom Tom Club are a New Wave band set up in 1980 by Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz, also members of Talking Heads. Although originally established as a side project, the Tom Tom Club enjoyed early success with hits such as "Genius of Love" and "Wordy Rappinghood", which were taken from their self-titled first album which was released on Sire in the US and Island Records elsewhere in 1981. "Genius of Love" has been sampled or reinterpreted by many artists, including rapper Redman, Funkdoobiest and Mariah Carey in her hit single "Fantasy". "It's Nasty" (1982) by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five was one of the early rap versions of the song - however, the sample was re-recorded by a live band, as was common practice at the time. Another version, "Genius Rap" (1981), by Dr. Jeckyll & Mr. Hyde was the first version. Early pressings of their first album featured short versions of "Genius of Love" and "Wordy Rappinghood" but to capitalise on the club success of these songs, Island reissued the album with the full 12" versions in 1982. A new single "Under the Boardwalk", which was the group's second and final UK hit, replaced another song "Booming and Zooming". The following year, the group released a follow-up, Close to the Bone, which was similar in style to their first album but didn't fare as well despite songs such as Pleasure of Love and The Man With The Four Way Hips. Despite this disappointment, The Tom Tom Club appeared in the Talking Heads concert film, Stop Making Sense in 1984. There was then a four-year gap until the band's next album, the first version of Boom Boom Chi Boom Boom. By this stage, the band's deal with Island had expired and Boom Boom Chi Boom Boom was released outside the US on Fontana. The album saw the group adopt a more conventional rock song with a harder edged sound and a hint of menace in the lyrics of some songs. The group's line-up was also solidified along more conventional commercial lines. Whereas the previous two albums had been recorded by a loose collective of a dozen musicians, the Tom Tom Club was now reduced to the trio of Weymouth, Frantz and Weymouth's sister Laura Weymouth. There were, however, a number of prominent guest musicians on the record including Lou Reed and Talking Heads frontman David Byrne on a cover of Reed's "Femme Fatale". The fourth member of Talking Heads Jerry Harrison also featured on some tracks. As with Close to the Bone, the album wasn't a commercial success although Suboceana got some radio play. The album was the first Tom Tom Club album to be issued on CD and the Japanese CD version featured an added bonus track, the b-side Devil, Does Your Dog Bite? which was also featured on the soundtrack "Married to the Mob." "Suboceana" was also remixed for dance clubs by house-music pioneer Marshall Jefferson. The following year, in a bid to recapture the attention of the US market, the group and Sire decided to issue a radically altered version of the album in the US. The US version of Boom Boom Chi Boom Boom replaced four songs with four others, one of which I Confess was a total overhaul of the original album's Mighty Teardrop. The running order of the rest of the album was shuffled while the artwork was revamped. However, the changes had little effect on the album's US commercial success, which was minimal. The group's later albums have also met with little success.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

thank a lot. I love tom tom club's debut album. and this one is hard to find

A.O.O.F.C said...

Hi! Dirty. Tom Tom Club & Talking Heads...great music. TVM for visiting A.O.O.F.C. Come back soon.