Rattus Norvegicus - The Stranglers
I'm getting this in now as I have a pretty busy start of the week with City in town for a practice and friendly match, and not sure how much time I'll have after today.
To cut to the chase as others have noted, Dave Greenfield on keyboards and Jean-Jacques Burnel on bass are the stars of this album, and that cannot be understated.
It turns out I had heard and have a track from this album before. In double-checking my Living In Oblivion, The 80's Greatest Hits collection, I did see "(Get A) Grip (On Yourself)" on Volume 1, which is a song I liked the best and remembered hearing before.
So when I too was wondering how a song from 1977 made it on an 80's compilation, I read this in the liner notes:
"A classic piece of seething punk from the class of '77, the burbling "(Get A) Grip (On Yourself)" was one side of the Stranglers' stunning debut single. Not many bands used keyboards in those Luddite days, but the Stranglers always did have an m.o. all their own."
That song sounded more new-wave to me with the heavy keys opening to it, but I've learned this week is not a band that fit most categories of its time. My familiarity with The Stranglers wouldn't be until I enjoyed hearing them on college radio during their "third phase" in 1986 with "Always The Sun", which was the only song of theirs I recall making it to US FM radio. That was clearly a departure from what I heard here.
The other song of note for me was "Hanging Around", which I too enjoyed, and was heavy on the keys and bass presence. I thought Hugh Cornwell's vocals worked best on those two songs, and also on "Goodbye Toulouse".
It wasn't a long debate on "London Lady", "Peaches" (fantastic bass line opening), or "Down in the Sewer (Medley)" that those would have worked better for me as instrumentals.
While I heard parts of the Doors keys influences from the first note of "Sometimes", it was "Down in the Sewer" that dare I say sounded a bit like Deep Purple in the beginning. To its credit, that song got nearly 2 minutes of just enjoyable music before the vocals came in.
The lyrics or delivery on most of the songs not mentioned simply just didn't do it for me. That's probably the biggest knock on this album for me, because musically, I did enjoy their debut.
Musically, this is an 8, vocally a 3, so I'm on a 5.5/10 overall on this.
The ironic lyric of the day for me: "Please don't talk much, it burns my ears"