Friday, 30 May 2008

X-Ray Spex

X-Ray Spex   
Artist: X-Ray Spex

   Genre(s): 
Rock: Punk-Rock
   



Discography:


Anthology CD2   
 Anthology CD2

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 11


Anthology CD1   
 Anthology CD1

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 26


Germfree Adolescents   
 Germfree Adolescents

   Year: 1978   
Tracks: 16




One of the great English punk bands of the late '70s, in that respect is only unitary thing unseasonable with the careers of X-Ray Spex and tether singer Poly Styrene -- they didn't record enough music. Formed in 1976 by schooling friends Marion Elliot (Cinnamene) and Susan Whitby (saxist Lora Logic), X-Ray Spex exploded onto the punk rocker picture with one of the era's majuscule singles, the women's rightist punk rally cry "Oh Bondage, Up Yours." With Logic's adolphe Sax stating the melody semi-tunefully and Jak Airport's guitar laying down a wash of ill-shapen chords, Styrene's vocal, specially on the chorus, is a wonder. Along with the former Sex Pistols and Clash singles, this was one of punk rock rock's great moments.


So, overly, was X-Ray Spex's debut LP, Bug Free Adolescents, which was great in cattiness of "Oh Bondage" non organism on it (a place that would be rectified with the 1993 CD reissue). Lora Logic was kaput (to form Essential Logic), simply her substitute, Rudi Thompson, played in as underlying a fashion, merely stayed in tune a small more than. The songs were guitar-driven punk-pop that combined outrage and aggression with a sense of estrangement and disenfranchisement around rearing mercantilism and an progressively unimaginative and hokey world. Styrene's songs were more likely to be about drowning in a sea of corporate-designed consumer fantasies than outright attacks against the political science. This didn't bastardly the songs were whatever less political; they but attacked the zeitgeist from a different vantage point.


Tragically, there was no immediate second X-Ray Spex criminal record. But in that location was Poly Styrene's only full-length solo record book, Semitransparency. Abandoning completely the flash guitars of X-Ray Spex, Semitransparency is quiet and jazzy in a way that anticipates the work of Ben Watt and Tracey Thorn in Everything But the Girl. It's a bit of a shock approach later Germ Free Adolescents, merely it's a beautiful album, and Styrene's telling, though not as exciting and disturbed, is often stunning. Consistent with her career up to this point, Poly Styrene dropped out of music completely shortly later on the release of Translucency and joined a London-based Hare Krishna faction. She emerged from "retirement" in 1986 with a wonderful EP titled Gods and Goddesses. In late-2006, the Spex got luxe treatment from Sanctuary Records with the release of Let's Submerge: The Anthology, a two-disc assembling that features pretty much the band's full recorded output and and then some.