Shopping > Music > The Feelies > Crazy Rhythms

The Feelies - Crazy Rhythms (CD)

Crazy Rhythms
$19.99 - $80.09
5 out of 5.0 stars 2 Ratings (2 Reviews)

Album Details: Crazy Rhythms

Release Date:08/21/1990
Label:A&M Records
UPC:075021531925

Other Available Formats: Crazy Rhythms

User Reviews: Crazy Rhythms

  • Overall:

    Wow, really good!

    By brianc  Apr 19, 2002

    I was suprised at how good this album was. It really does have "Crazy Rythms". The closest thing to it in comparison would be a mix between the Velvet Underground meets the Pixies. Of course these guys are before the Pixies, and cooler than the Velve...t Underground. Just look at the cover, you have to buy this album. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    If Devo never bought any synths...

    By ChrisG  May 15, 2000

    The debut album by the Feelies is unsurpassed in its simplicity and effect. Most of their later work really pales in comparison. Here, they take a very pared-down style and keep building on it to create music, that while simple, makes for a very com...plex and cathartic atmosphere. There's not what would normally be considered "poetry" in the lyrics, yet its directness remains one of the greatest testaments on record. At once self-assured (their musicianship) and nervous (the wavering voices and purposefully half-hearted back-up vocals), Crazy Rhythms will make you sit up and take notice. If not at first, it will eventually get you. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Crazy Rhythms

  • All Music Guide

    Even the cover is a winner, with a washed-out look that screams new wave via horn-rimmed glasses, even more so than contemporaneous pictures of either Elvis Costello or the Embarrassment. But if it was all look and no brain, Crazy Rhythms would long ago have been dismissed as an early-'80s relic. That's exactly what this album is not, right from the soft, haunting hints of percussion that preface the suddenly energetic jump of the appropriately titled "The Boy With the Perpetual Nervousness." From there the band delivers seven more originals plus a striking cover of the Beatles' "Everybody's Got Something to Hide" that rips along even more quickly than the original. The guitar team of Mercer and Million smokes throughout, whether it's soft, rhythmic chiming with a mysterious, distanced air or blasting, angular solos. But Fier is the band's secret weapon, able to play straight-up beats but aiming at a rumbling, strange punch that updates Velvet Underground/Krautrock trance into giddier ...realms. Mercer's obvious Lou Reed vocal inflections make the VU roots even clearer, but even at this stage of the game there's something fresh about the work the quartet does, even 20 years on -- a good blend of past and present, rave-up and reflection. When the group's later label, AM, finally got around to reissuing the album for the first time stateside, a curious bonus was included: a version of the Rolling Stones' "Paint It, Black," recorded by the later lineup of the band in 1990. Mercer's voice is noticeably different from his decade-old self, but it's an enthusiastic rendition not too far out of place. - Ned Raggett, All Music Guide Read more Less

Compare Prices: Crazy Rhythms

Store Store Rating Price Notes/Coupons

Amazon.com Marketplace

48 Ratings

(29 Reviews)

Write a review

$80.09Total Price N/A New Item

4 Coupons & Deals

fantastic prices with ease & comfort of amazon
Go to Store

SecondSpin.com

Write a review

$19.99Total Price N/A New Item

2 Coupons & Deals

Go to Store

Rate & Write a Review: Crazy Rhythms

All fields marked with * are required
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
Maximum of 4,000 characters
Cancel

Rate & Write a Review: Crazy Rhythms

Thank You. Your review has been posted.
View your postClose

Biography

The Feelies

Of the countless bands to emerge from the New York City underground during the post-punk era, few if any were as unique and influential as the Feelies; nerdy, nervous and noisy, even decades later their droning, skittering avant-pop remains a key touchstone of the American indie music scene. Named in reference to Aldous Huxley's paranoid classic -Brave New World, the Fe... Read more