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An assured, relatively loose follow-up to the fraught and frayed Jeopardy, From the Lion's Mouth entrenched the Sound's stature as no mere flash in the pan. It should have shot them directly between spots occupied by the like-minded Joy Division and Echo & the Bunnymen as post-punk legends, but the Fates had something else in mind, and so the quartet took their place right next to touring mates the Comsat Angels in the section marked "Deserved Better." With some semblance of a recording budget, the Sound went into the studio with talented producer Hugh Jones on board to accentuate the band's winning atmospherics. As a result, the sound is fuller, less pungent. And speaking of winning, the snake-charming opener "Winning" is like a dash of cold water in the faces of all the bands that were wallowing and withering away at the weeping well: "I was going to drown/Then I started swimming/I was going down/then I started winning." This, in a sense, exemplifies the point that the Sound were not mopes. They had their problems with life, but rather than just vent or escape from them, they confront them and ask questions and attempt to sort it all out. Most of the record has an effortless thrust to it, and only occasionally -- for maximum effect -- does the Sound whip out the heavy artillery. If "The Fire" sounds too bombastic and pummeling, listen closer. The bass is the lead instrument, the keyboards are just as prominent as the guitars, and it only sounds like chest beating compared to the rest of the songs. From the Lion's Mouth shifts, glides, winds, accelerates, and decelerates with all the grace and precision of an Olympic downhill skier. And what a great record it is. [The Renascent label's 2002 reissue offers spectacular sound and slyly hides the fair 1982 single "Hothouse" within the last track. Prior to his death, Adrian Borland voiced his wish to have the reissue stick to the original running order with no bonus tracks for purity's sake, so the label's (appreciated) move appears to be a sneaky way of going around it.]
© Andy Kellman /TiVo
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Mayers, Writer - Green, Writer - Dudley, Writer - The Sound, MainArtist - Borland, Writer
© 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd ℗ 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd.
Mayers, Writer - Green, Writer - Dudley, Writer - The Sound, MainArtist - Borland, Writer
© 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd ℗ 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd.
Mayers, Writer - Green, Writer - The Sound, MainArtist - Borland, Writer
© 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd ℗ 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd.
Green, Writer - Dudley, Writer - The Sound, MainArtist - Borland, Writer - Biltoo, Writer
© 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd ℗ 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd.
Mayers, Writer - Green, Writer - The Sound, MainArtist - Borland, Writer
© 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd ℗ 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd.
Mayers, Writer - Green, Writer - Dudley, Writer - The Sound, MainArtist - Borland, Writer
© 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd ℗ 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd.
Janes, Writer - The Sound, MainArtist - Borland, Writer
© 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd ℗ 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd.
Green, Writer - Dudley, Writer - The Sound, MainArtist - Borland, Writer - Biltoo, Writer
© 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd ℗ 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd.
The Sound, MainArtist - Borland, Writer
© 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd ℗ 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd.
The Sound, MainArtist - Borland, Writer
© 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd ℗ 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd.
Album review
An assured, relatively loose follow-up to the fraught and frayed Jeopardy, From the Lion's Mouth entrenched the Sound's stature as no mere flash in the pan. It should have shot them directly between spots occupied by the like-minded Joy Division and Echo & the Bunnymen as post-punk legends, but the Fates had something else in mind, and so the quartet took their place right next to touring mates the Comsat Angels in the section marked "Deserved Better." With some semblance of a recording budget, the Sound went into the studio with talented producer Hugh Jones on board to accentuate the band's winning atmospherics. As a result, the sound is fuller, less pungent. And speaking of winning, the snake-charming opener "Winning" is like a dash of cold water in the faces of all the bands that were wallowing and withering away at the weeping well: "I was going to drown/Then I started swimming/I was going down/then I started winning." This, in a sense, exemplifies the point that the Sound were not mopes. They had their problems with life, but rather than just vent or escape from them, they confront them and ask questions and attempt to sort it all out. Most of the record has an effortless thrust to it, and only occasionally -- for maximum effect -- does the Sound whip out the heavy artillery. If "The Fire" sounds too bombastic and pummeling, listen closer. The bass is the lead instrument, the keyboards are just as prominent as the guitars, and it only sounds like chest beating compared to the rest of the songs. From the Lion's Mouth shifts, glides, winds, accelerates, and decelerates with all the grace and precision of an Olympic downhill skier. And what a great record it is. [The Renascent label's 2002 reissue offers spectacular sound and slyly hides the fair 1982 single "Hothouse" within the last track. Prior to his death, Adrian Borland voiced his wish to have the reissue stick to the original running order with no bonus tracks for purity's sake, so the label's (appreciated) move appears to be a sneaky way of going around it.]
© Andy Kellman /TiVo
About the album
- 1 disc(s) - 10 track(s)
- Total length: 00:46:54
- Main artists: The Sound
- Label: Rhino
- Genre: Pop/Rock Rock Alternative & Indie
© 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd ℗ 1981 Warner Music UK Ltd
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