The Jam - The Jam At The BBC (2002)

  • 05 Jun, 20:11
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Artist:
Title: The Jam At The BBC
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Polydor
Genre: Rock, Punk
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 01:53:17
Total Size: 983 Mb / 297 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

CD 1
John Peel - Recorded 26.4.1977: Transmitted 2.5.1977
1. In The City
2. Art School
3. I’ve Changed My Address
4. Modern World
John Peel - Recorded 19.7.1977: Transmitted 25.7.1977
5. All Around The World
6. London Girl
7. Bricks & Mortar
8. Carnaby Street
"In Concert" 1.6.1978, Paris Theatre, Regent Street.
9. Billy Hunt
10. In The Street Today
11. The Combine
12. Sounds From The Street
13. Don’t Tell ‘em You’re Sane
14. Modern World
15. "A" Bomb In Wardour Street
16. News Of The World
17. Here Come The Weekend
18. All Around The World

CD 2
John Peel - Recorded 29.10.1979: Transmitted 5.11.1979
1. Thick As Thieves
2. Eton Rifles
3. Saturday’s Kids
4. When You’re Young
Studio B15 Live 25.10.1981
5. Absolute Beginners
6. Tales From The Riverbank / Interview
7. Funeral Pyre / Interview
8. Sweet Soul Music
"In Concert" 19.12.1981, Hippodrome, Golders Green.
9. The Gift
10. Down In The Tube Station At Midnight
11. Ghosts
12. Absolute Beginners
13. Tales From The Riverbank
14. Precious
15. A Town Called Malice
16. In The Crowd
17. Circus
18. Pretty Green
19. Start!
20. Boy About Town

Amid the plethora of Jam compilations and anthologies issued, the arrival of a full BBC sessions collection was long overdue. Past glimpses into the archive, after all, were never less than illuminating, and the knowledge that the single session (from February 1977) released on a Strange Fruit EP in the late '80s was merely the first of five broadcast between 1977-1981 had long frustrated fans and collectors. The Jam at the BBC doesn't quite answer every prayer. Three discs wrap up four of the studio sessions, together with three In Concert live broadcasts; absent, for who knows what reason, is a mid-1978 session for DJ David Jensen's show, featuring spiky renditions of "News of the World," "The Night," and the then-latest single "'A' Bomb in Wardour Street." Live versions of the first and last named offer vague consolation, but the lack of completeness is irritating. On the plus side, the growth of the band from the deeply indebted post-mod rockers who first emerged in the shadow of punk to the brightly individualistic successors to the throne of classic Kinks and Who is documented with unrelenting precision. The opening blast of eight songs from two John Peel sessions races past in a roar of snarling adrenalin; the first In Concert, from June 1977, likewise. A leap to 1979, however, finds the band furiously pushing the post-punk envelope, as "Eton Rifles" and "When You're Young" place a questing finger firmly on the pulse of late-'70s youth disaffection; skip over to the bonus third disc included with initial pressings of the package, and an hour-long concert broadcast from the same year finds the band juggling ambition and energy with almost untoward enthusiasm. Sandwiched between "Mr Clean" and "Private Hell," "The Butterfly Collector," truly one of Paul Weller's most accomplished numbers, has rarely sounded more fragile. The remainder of the set is devoted to 1981, a session/interview dominated by the unabashed nostalgia of "Absolute Beginners" and reinforced by a note-perfect rendition of "Sweet Soul Music" and a near-Christmas fan club concert that rounds up the best of the band's most recent hits, and peaks with a positively fiery version of the funk workout "Precious." Added to the neo-Two Tone instrumental "Circus" and a dirty grind through "Pretty Green," the Jam's scarcely remembered flirtation with the fringes of the early-'80s Brit-funk scene comes screaming back into focus. Completed by a booklet rounding up the bandmembers' own recollections of both the band and the BBC, The Jam at the BBC captures a side of the Jam that their core catalog has long cried out for. It might well be the best album they've ever released.