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Bananarama - Bananarama (CD)

Bananarama
$51.52 - $51.52
5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: Bananarama

Release Date:05/01/1984
Label:Polygram Records
UPC:042282003621

Other Available Formats: Bananarama

User Reviews: Bananarama

  • Overall:

    Wild Life

    By candyflipviva  Dec 11, 2000

    This is the 2nd effort by the band, and a very hard to find one as well. This was their first notice in american top 100 as an album and when they gained notice...good and raw, before they got all cutsie with S.A.W

Pro Reviews: Bananarama

  • All Music Guide

    For their second album, Bananarama underwent a telling change in persona, from the flyawayhaired, overallclad everygirls of Deep Sea Skiving into a sleeker and more glam look. Similarly, the album has a much more polished feel than the occasionally scattershot debut, which is not always a good thing; sticking with Tony Swain and Steve Jolley to produce the whole thing (the duo had shared production duties with three others on the debut), Bananarama tradeed their early tropicaltinged playfulness and ironic overtones for a more commercial sound that scored well on the charts (the terrific opener "Cruel Summer" was a worldwide hit, and several other tracks were U.K. hits) but was less unique than before. What's most unusual about Bananarama is the content of the songs. Lyrically, the album is surprisingly serious, with topics ranging from sectarian violence in Ireland ("Rough Justice") to domestic violence ("King of the Jungle") to drug use ("Hot Line to Heaven"), none of which are in kee...ping with the trio's frothy image. Indeed, under the singalong chorus, the album's best track, "Robert de Niro's Waiting," turns out to be the traumatized musings of a teenage rape victim, set to an improbably dreamy, carefree melody. Even comparatively light songs like "State I'm In" and "Dream Baby" have an oddly paranoid tone to them. Of course, the detour into mature themes didn't last long, as the group's next album introduced the chartbound frivolity of StockAitkenWaterman into the picture, but Bananarama in an intriguing and often excellent side trip. Important discographical curiosity: Original U.S. copies of Bananarama included an extended sevenminute take of "Hot Line to Heaven." After the fall 1984 release of the single "The Wild Life" (the theme to Cameron Crowe's second movie), U.S. copies of Bananarama were altered to include the new single at the start of side two, followed by the superior single edit of "Hot Line to Heaven." "The Wild Life" is one of Bananarama's finest singles, which makes its neartotal invisibility since then it's never appeared on any of the group's many compilations a mystery. - Stewart Mason, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Bananarama

The most successful British girl group in pop history, Bananarama formed in London in late 1981. Drawing equal inspiration for their name from the children's television program The Banana Splits and the Roxy Music song "Pyjamarama," the trio comprised lifelong friends Keren Woodward and Sarah Dallin along with Siobhan Fahey, whom Dallin befriended at the London College ... Read more