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The Alarm|Standards

Standards

The Alarm

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During the early '80s, the Alarm were seen as rivals to U2 -- a Welsh variation of the passionate Dublin quartet, driven by the same righteous anger, anthemic hooks, and love for the Clash. They never quite matched their inspirations in terms of sales or critical respect, despite a series of acclaimed records that were minor sensations during the '80s. By the time the career retrospective Standards was released in late 1990, the band had already been somewhat forgotten, partially because they never had a big crossover hit, and also because they were forever tied to the Reagan/Thatcher era. Consequently, the Alarm were relegated to also-ran status and nearly forgotten by anyone who didn't actively read the music press in the '80s -- not an entirely fair fate, yet not an entirely undeserved one either. Listening to Standards, a thoroughly representative, basic collection of their singles and significant album tracks, confirms that the band were certainly not without talent or charms, but they suffered at the hands of state-of-the-art record production. They have a number of solid anthemic songs -- "Sixty Eight Guns," "Marching On," "Spirit of '76," "Sold Me Down the River," among them -- but it's hard to hear them as anything other than a product of their times, largely due to the glossy, shiny production. Such studio skills were evidently designed to make the band sound a bit like U2, but the band's music didn't have the jagged edges of U2 -- it was straight-ahead, driving rock, derived from the earnestness of folk-rock and the Clash's huge, rallying sound. This is not necessarily a bad thing, and it did produce some satisfying music, all of which is included here. But it ultimately produced music that was a sign of the times, not music that transcended it. The Alarm remain an interesting footnote because, ironically, while they strove to make music mean something in a slick commercial age, they were constantly plagued by overly slick productions -- an irony only the '80s could produce, actually.

© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo

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Standards

The Alarm

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1
The Road
00:03:13

Mike Peters, Composer - The Alarm, Producer, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, Composer

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1990 Capitol Records, LLC

2
Unsafe Building
00:04:06

Mike Peters, Composer - The Alarm, Producer, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, Composer

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1990 Capitol Records, LLC

3
The Stand (Long Version)
00:04:43

Mick Glossop, Producer - Mike Peters, ComposerLyricist - Kevin Kelly, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Dave Sharp, ComposerLyricist - The Alarm, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, ComposerLyricist

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1983 Capitol Records, LLC

4
Sixty Eight Guns (Single Version)
00:03:15

Alan Shacklock, Producer - Mike Peters, ComposerLyricist - Eddie MacDonald, ComposerLyricist - The Alarm, MainArtist

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1984 Capitol Records, LLC

5
Where Were You Hiding When The Storm Broke? (Single Version)
00:02:57

Chris Porter, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Alan Shacklock, Producer - Mike Peters, Composer - The Alarm, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, Composer

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1984 Capitol Records, LLC

6
Absolute Reality
00:03:26

MIKE HOWLETT, Producer, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Mike Peters, Composer, Vocals, AssociatedPerformer - Nigel Luby, Recording Engineer, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - David Sharp, Guitar, AssociatedPerformer - The Alarm, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, Composer, Bass Guitar, AssociatedPerformer - Nigel Phillips, Drums, AssociatedPerformer

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1985 Capitol Records, LLC

7
Strength
00:05:35

MIKE HOWLETT, Producer - Mike Peters, ComposerLyricist - Dave Sharp, ComposerLyricist - Nigel Luby, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - The Alarm, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, ComposerLyricist - Nigel Phillips, ComposerLyricist

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1985 Capitol Records, LLC

8
Spirit Of '76
00:07:06

MIKE HOWLETT, Producer - Mike Peters, Composer - Nigel Luby, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - The Alarm, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, Composer

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1985 Capitol Records, LLC

9
Rain In The Summertime
00:05:11

David Leonard, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Jay WilliS, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - JOHN PORTER, Producer - Tony Platt, Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Mike Peters, ComposerLyricist - Dave Sharp, ComposerLyricist - The Alarm, Producer, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, ComposerLyricist - Nigel Phillips, ComposerLyricist

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1987 Capitol Records, LLC

10
Rescue Me
00:03:20

JOHN PORTER, Producer - Tony Platt, Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Mike Peters, Composer - The Alarm, Producer, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, Composer

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1987 Capitol Records, LLC

11
Sold Me Down The River
00:04:10

Tony Visconti, Producer, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Mike Peters, Composer - The Alarm, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, Composer

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1989 Capitol Records, LLC

12
Devolution Workin' Man Blues
00:04:11

Tony Visconti, Producer - Mike Peters, Composer - The Alarm, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, Composer

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1989 Capitol Records, LLC

13
Happy Christmas (War Is Over)
00:03:41

John Lennon, ComposerLyricist - Yoko Ono, ComposerLyricist - The Alarm, Producer, MainArtist

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1990 Capitol Records, LLC

14
Marching On (Single Version)
00:03:32

Mike Peters, Composer - Steve Tannett, Producer - Aricentus, Producer - Harry Murlowski, Producer - Ian Wilson, Producer - The Alarm, Producer, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, Composer

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1982 Capitol Records, LLC

15
Blaze Of Glory
00:06:04

Chris Porter, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Alan Shacklock, Producer - Mike Peters, Composer - Dave Sharp, Composer - The Alarm, MainArtist - Edward Macdonald, Composer

(C) 1990 Capitol Records, LLC ℗ 1984 Capitol Records, LLC

Album review

During the early '80s, the Alarm were seen as rivals to U2 -- a Welsh variation of the passionate Dublin quartet, driven by the same righteous anger, anthemic hooks, and love for the Clash. They never quite matched their inspirations in terms of sales or critical respect, despite a series of acclaimed records that were minor sensations during the '80s. By the time the career retrospective Standards was released in late 1990, the band had already been somewhat forgotten, partially because they never had a big crossover hit, and also because they were forever tied to the Reagan/Thatcher era. Consequently, the Alarm were relegated to also-ran status and nearly forgotten by anyone who didn't actively read the music press in the '80s -- not an entirely fair fate, yet not an entirely undeserved one either. Listening to Standards, a thoroughly representative, basic collection of their singles and significant album tracks, confirms that the band were certainly not without talent or charms, but they suffered at the hands of state-of-the-art record production. They have a number of solid anthemic songs -- "Sixty Eight Guns," "Marching On," "Spirit of '76," "Sold Me Down the River," among them -- but it's hard to hear them as anything other than a product of their times, largely due to the glossy, shiny production. Such studio skills were evidently designed to make the band sound a bit like U2, but the band's music didn't have the jagged edges of U2 -- it was straight-ahead, driving rock, derived from the earnestness of folk-rock and the Clash's huge, rallying sound. This is not necessarily a bad thing, and it did produce some satisfying music, all of which is included here. But it ultimately produced music that was a sign of the times, not music that transcended it. The Alarm remain an interesting footnote because, ironically, while they strove to make music mean something in a slick commercial age, they were constantly plagued by overly slick productions -- an irony only the '80s could produce, actually.

© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo

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