Unlimited 1979-1983 [Import]

Track Listings

 
1. White & Green Place
2. In the Air
3. Building Bridges
4. Simmer Till Done
5. Stretch
6. Where's Deke?
7. Silent Street
8. Man of Tribes
9. Searching for a Feeling
10. All Wrapped Up!
11. Dancing on My Boomerang

Unlimited 1979-1983,Maximum Joy,Crippled Dick Hot,Dance Music,Electronic,Pop,Post-Punk,Rock
Unlimited 1979-1983
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • Excellent music, disappointing sound quality
  • great gem of an album from a before-their-time group
Unlimited 1979-1983
Maximum Joy
Manufacturer: Crippled Dick Hot
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
Hardcore & PunkHardcore & Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music | Vinyl Records | American Punk | British Punk | Emo | Garage Punk | Hardcore | Post Hardcore | Proto Punk | Punk | Punk Revival | Punk-Pop | Riot Grrl | Ska Punk | Straight Edge
Post-PunkPost-Punk | New Wave & Post-Punk | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
ElectronicaElectronica | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Dance Pop | Dance & DJ | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Rock | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Dreams Interrupted
  2. So Young But So Cold: Underground French Music 1977-1983
  3. Nao Wave: Brazil Post Punk 1982-1988
  4. Boom in the Night
  5. 1980-82 Collected

ASIN: B000BKFG2G
Release Date: 2005-11-04

Tracks:

  1. White & Green Place
  2. In the Air
  3. Building Bridges
  4. Simmer Till Done
  5. Stretch
  6. Where's Deke?
  7. Silent Street
  8. Man of Tribes
  9. Searching for a Feeling
  10. All Wrapped Up!
  11. Dancing on My Boomerang

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Excellent music, disappointing sound quality.......2006-01-18

The other reviewers here did a great job of evaluating the music, but to save a lot of people the unpleasant surprise, I think I should mention that this CD has been entirely mastered from VINYL. Not crackly, but not exactly crisp either. For the sake of the music, please allow the original label(s) to reissue the CD from the original masters. Thanks.

4 out of 5 stars great gem of an album from a before-their-time group.......2005-12-22

To be perfectly honest, I'd never heard of Maximum Joy before I listened to Unlimited (1979-1983). As it turns out, they were a fairly progressive pop group that mixed a touch of afrobeat and funk (and a touch of reggae) in with their adventurous pop music. The result is something that is vibrant and buoyant still over two decades after it originally came out. During their heyday, the group even recorded a couple BBC Peel Sessions with the legendary John Peel. Unlimited (1979-1983) is a collection of rare and hard-to-find 7" and 12" tracks, and for fans of retro-leaning pop music, it's a true gem.

The album opens with "White & Green Place (Extraterrestrial mix)" and from the one track alone it's obvious that the group is working in a different area that most artists of the time (although concurrently, the Talking Heads were pulling some similar strains of music together). The track mixes funk basslines with bursts of horns and all kinds of pummeling percussion while singer Janine Rainforth adds her playful vocals. In fact, it's the horns and Rainforth that are key components of almost every song on the release, with different elements around them changing and keeping things interesting.

On "In The Air (7" Version)," the group hustles out a horn-laced disco-funk track while "Building Bridges / Building Dub" is just what the title states, with echo effects raining down on another infectious bass line, horns, and more spoken-word style vocals. On "Stretch (Disco Mix / RAP)," the group gets even more lively, bursting at the seams with strutting chikka-chikka guitars, saxophone, rattling percussion, and odd alternately screamed and sung vocals that continue the positive message of the group (with Rainforth screaming, 'Don't say maybe / Tell me YES!') .

Even when they shift up styles, the group sounds completely ahead of the curve, and when they tone things down and drop off into more atmospheric work (as on "Silent Street"), they sound like the precursor to trip hop groups like Laika with spacey sound effects and dubby bass that swirl around minimal beat work. With several tracks running well over six minutes long, the group probably could have whittled things in places and made their work even more tight, but considering their slight jazz influence, the extended workouts don't sound too out-of-place. Completely different than some of the groups creating claustrophobic music at the time, Maximum Joy is definitely a group worth rediscovering (if you don't mind lots and lots of horns in your pop music).

(from almost cool music reviews)

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