The Chameleons - John Peel Session (1990)

  • 25 Oct, 13:44
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Artist:
Title: John Peel Session
Year Of Release: 1990
Label: Strange Fruit
Genre: Alt Rock, Post-Punk, New Wave
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 49:34
Total Size: 121/316 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. The Fan & The Bellows 3:27
02. Here Today 3:44
03. Looking Inwardly 4:26
04. Things I Wish I'd Said 5:06
05. Don't Fall 3:53
06. Nostalgia 3:29
07. Second Skin 6:06
08. Perfumed Garden 4:37
09. Dust to Dust,Return of the Roughnecks 3:26
10. One Flesh 4:46
11. Intrigue In Tangiers 4:13
12. P.S. Goodbye 2:21

Post Punk band formed in 1981 in Middleton, 6 miles north of Manchester. Mark Burgess had been in The Clichés, while Reg Smithies & Dave Fielding were in Years (3). Dave was in a school band called Sen. The three started without a drummer and got the attention of the legendary Radio 1 DJ John Peel. After the recruitment of drummer John Lever of The Politicians (6), their first single "In Shreds" on CBS, made number 42 on John Peel's Festive Fifty in 1982. They originally signed with CBS, but they disagreed with how they should sound. CBS dropped them after the one single, despite encouraging sales. They soon signed with Statik. However, Statik was distributed by Virgin, so they couldn't qualify for the independent charts and were thus overlooked by the music press.
The debut album, "Script of the Bridge", was recorded in Rochdale during a six-week period. The band was really pissed when they found out about the reduced version which was released by MCA in the US. They then became unhappy with Statik and tried to get away from them, but were bound by contractual obligations. After their second album, "What Does Anything Mean? Basically", they signed with Geffen. While signed to Geffen, the band released what was to be their last album together for fifteen years, "Strange Times" as the band literally fell apart, acrimoniously, with grief after the 1987 sudden death of band manager Tony Fletcher.
The dawning of a new millenium saw an ending to the 'hostilities' as the band buried hatchets, kissed and made friends once more, culminating in a reforming of the group, and a new 'unplugged' album entitled 'Strip' -- with live albums following beyond.