Product Details
Songs the Lord Taught Us

Songs the Lord Taught Us
Cramps

List Price: £8.99
Price: £5.97 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £15. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

48 new or used available from £4.20

Average customer review:

Product Description

An early (1980) effort by the simultaneously minimalist andover-the-top retro-shlockabilly kings, sympathetically produced by their fellow devotee of Southern culture on the skids Alex Chilton. Poison Ivy's guitar work here is her usual mix of trashcan chording and distorted surf riffs, and singer(?) Lux Interior is in particularly good faux-Elvis form onsuch instant classics of self-aggrandisement as "The Mad Daddy" and "I'm Cramped". The band, as is their wont, also throws in some interesting covers here, including the Rock and Roll Trio's "Tear It Up" and a version of '60s grunge pioneers the Sonics' "Strychnine" that's so primitive it makes theoriginal sound like Yes by comparison. In a word--wow.

Track Listing

  1. TV Set
  2. Rock On The Moon
  3. Garbageman
  4. I Was A Teenage Werewolf
  5. Sunglasses
  6. Mad Daddy
  7. Mystery Plane
  8. Zombie Dance
  9. What's Behind The Mask
  10. Strychnine
  11. I'm Cramped
  12. Tear It Up
  13. Fever
  14. I Was A Teenage Werewolf (2)
  15. Mystery Plane (2)
  16. Twist And Shout
  17. I'm Cramped (2)
  18. Mad Daddy (2)

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #49475 in Music
  • Released on: 1998-07-06
  • Number of discs: 1

Customer Reviews

Alex Chilton please take a bow5
I don't mean to take anything away from Lux Interior's band of weirdos but Alex Chilton (Yes, the frontman of Big Star fame) must take a good proportion of praise for this wonderful record.

Previous recording 'Off The Bone' hinted at the greatness with which this band could acheive but with Alex's help they found a sound that I find hard to describe. Like Gene Vincent covering 50's Rock 'n' Roll standards but with an underlying sense of dread and despair. There, thats the best I can do.

For the songs themselves I think opener 'T.V set' pretty much sets the scene: A great old riff with Lux Interior barking some of the greatest one-liners you are likely to hear this side of a Two Ronnies sketch.
This is an area I feel is much under appreciated in the vault of Lux's talents - his comic timing, with 'What's behind the mask?' being a particular highlight in that regard.

The Cramps had many other great records like 'A date with Elvis' but I feel that they never quite rediscoverd the sound they created with Alex Chilton - truly a one-off. Along with The Gun Club and The Fall, The Cramps hit on a sound which will never be beaten by any contempary artist however much money they throw at it.

Timeless debut.5
This is a great reissue of a great album- a blend of gothic, the rockabilly and too much horror/SF. This album is a minimal classic along with The Fall's 'Slates'- that Storks fans should check out to see why 'Is This It?' is the most over-rated piece of kak...Ex-Big Star man Alex Chilton produces the 1st, scary line-up: Lux & Ivy, the coolest drummer Nick Knox & the late, sinister Bryan Gregory...'TV Set' is the primal opener- a drum beat and searing guitar- no bass required!. 'Rock on the Moon' is dumb surf rock'n'roll that leads to 'Garbageman'- which is just as sleazy as anything by The Stooges. Superior trash! You can see why this was such an influence on Spacemen 3, along with the Gun Club's 'Fire of Love'. 'I was a Teenage Werewolf' takes its title from a classic slice of b-movie US paranoia (see Peter Biskind's book 'Seeing is Believing')- for those who liked the scene in the 50's diner in 'Pulp Fiction' you should love this!. 'Sunglasses after Dark' is a wonderful slab of surf feedback that predicts the joy that was 'Psychocandy'. 'The Mad Daddy' is a monster mash- too much George Romero, too many late night viewings of 'Carnival of Souls', too many readings of 'I am Legend'. 'Mystery Plane' is closer to the sound of the next album 'Psychedlic Jungle' (just as good)- it reminds me of 'Goo Goo Muck'. 'Zombie Dance'is another minimal slice of gothabilly; while 'What's Behind the Mask' predicts tracks like 'Green Fuz' & 'What's Inside a Girl?'. 'Strychnine' is a classic rockabilly song- too much speed& James Dean is a zombie. 'I'm Cramped' is kind of a theme tune- there is also a demo version here. 'Tear it Up' is a great thrash- Elvis jamming with the Stooges in the ruins of Sun Studios. The album ends with a cover of Peggy Lee's 'Fever' that makes perfect sense and features a great organ solo by Chilton (Booker C!!!). This is a fine, fine album that makes more sense with the march of time and one that deserves a place in any discerning record collection.