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    The Complete Stiff Recordings

    Dr. Feelgood - The Complete Stiff Recordings

    01/03/2006 | Grand Records 

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    All Music Guide Review

    Dr. Feelgood and Stiff Records seem like the perfect match. Under the direction of Lee Brilleaux, Dr. Feelgood was perhaps the key band to push pub rock toward punk, thanks to their hard-driving, relentless rock & roll, coupled with their love of reckless rock & roll and drunken pranks, Stiff was the label that bridged pub and punk. Of course, this describes Dr. Feelgood and Stiff Records in the mid-'70s, when they were both at the beginning of their stories, but they didn't team up then: they teamed up a decade later, when Stiff was on the decline and Dr. Feelgood had metamorphosed from a tough group of rock & roll revivalists to genuine working band, soldiering on through shifts in the lineup and shifts in mainstream tastes, so they were kind of forgotten by the public at large. In other words, neither party was at their peak, so the music captured on Grand's 2005 double-disc set The Complete Stiff Recordings is not exactly what fans of either pub or punk would have in mind from merely reading the title. This is not raw, raucous, rock & roll; this is an old-fashioned band that is valiantly trying to swim with the tides of the '80s, so that means they've brought in drum machines, ratcheted up the synths and tried to sound modern even if they'd much rather be covering Johnny Cash's "Get Rhythm" and Bobby Charles' "See You Later Alligator," which they do here. Dr. Feelgood did have sympathetic producers for their two albums for Stiff -- Will Birch produced the 1986 Brilleaux LP, Dave Edmunds helmed the 1986 single of "See You Later Alligator," Pip Williams produced 1987's Classic -- but everybody involved is trying to sound like the times, sometimes for better (Birch pulls off an effective slice of synth-soul on "Don't Wait Up"), sometime for worse (complete with canned synth-horns, "Alligator" is truly ghastly).

    Of the two albums, Brilleaux's is the stronger effort, largely because Birch does keep the focus on the band, never succumbing to the robotic pulse that plagued Jeff Lynne's '80s productions of Dave Edmunds, or the work that Edmunds does with Feelgood here. If that's the nadir of new wave oldies rock, Williams' work on Classic falls somewhere between the two extremes, never sounding as misdirected as the Lynne/Edmunds axis but sounding far bigger and slicker than Birch's work, as if this was intended to sit next to Brothers in Arms on the charts when Feelgood would have been better served with something simpler. And Classic is really overblown: at its worst, the cavernous drums are pushed to the front and are dressed with clunky synths, and this makes such an impression, it's easy to forget that there are some cuts here that either play up the band's interaction well or actually use the sound to its advantage, as on the lively, Nick Lowe-esque shake-n-pop of "Spy vs Spy." These are the reasons why The Complete Stiff Recordings are worth investigating by fans of Feelgood, Stiff and pub rock: decades after these albums were originally released, it's easier to appreciate not just the good stuff here, but to marvel at how even bands singularly unsuited for the big sound of the '80s nevertheless succumbed to it. So, it's not essential listening per se, but for those dedicated fans of Dr. Feelgood and Brilleaux -- as well as the handful of listeners fascinated by oldies rock given a new wave polish -- this is worth investigating. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

    The Complete Stiff Recordings Track Listing

  • Track#
  • Title
  • time
  • lyrics
  • 3
  • Big Enough
  • 2:44
  • Sound Clip for Big Enough from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 4
  • Don't Wait Up
  • 4:01
  • Sound Clip for Don't Wait Up from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 5
  • Get Rhythm
  • 2:52
  • Sound Clip for Get Rhythm from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 7
  • Play Dirty
  • 3:38
  • Sound Clip for Play Dirty from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 8
  • Grow Too Old
  • 3:16
  • Sound Clip for Grow Too Old from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 9
  • Rough Ride
  • 3:27
  • Sound Clip for Rough Ride from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 10
  • I'm a Real Man
  • 3:02
  • Sound Clip for I'm a Real Man from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 11
  • Come Over Here
  • 1:56
  • Sound Clip for Come Over Here from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 13
  • Don't Wait Up
  • 5:39
  • Sound Clip for Don't Wait Up from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 14
  • Something Good
  • 2:19
  • Sound Clip for Something Good from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 19 (2)
  • Break These Chains
  • 4:00
  • Sound Clip for Break These Chains from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 20 (2)
  • Heartbeat
  • 3:18
  • Sound Clip for Heartbeat from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 22 (2)
  • Highway 61
  • 4:00
  • Sound Clip for Highway 61 from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 23 (2)
  • Hurricane
  • 3:58
  • Sound Clip for Hurricane from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 25 (2)
  • Nothing Like It
  • 3:31
  • Sound Clip for Nothing Like It from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 26 (2)
  • Spy vs Spy
  • 3:15
  • Sound Clip for Spy vs Spy from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 27 (2)
  • Crack Me Up
  • 5:11
  • Sound Clip for Crack Me Up from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 28 (2)
  • Lights of Downtown
  • 3:23
  • Sound Clip for Lights of Downtown from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • 29 (2)
  • A Touch of Class
  • 3:01
  • Sound Clip for A   Touch of Class from The Complete Stiff Recordings


  • Credits of The Complete Stiff Recordings

    • Stephen Foster
    • Producer, Liner Notes, Compilation, Research, Digital Remastering


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