Hmmm, time to bump the average score up I think! There's already been some great reviews and responses to them from benny so I'm not going to revisit those, suffice to say I agree wholeheartedly with the comments about Foxtons basslines. I think their decision early doors to swap instruments was erm instrumental in their distinctive sound.
In polls of best British bands The Jam regularly place well below the likes of Blur, The Stones Roses and The Oxfordshire Voldemort and his crew of musical death eaters. But then so do Joy Division and New Order which to any right minded person would show these list are mostly bollocks :-). Anyway I think The Jam are one of our great bands and Weller is underappreciated. It's like he's always been around and it's a bit too easy to take what he's achieved for granted.
Take this album for instance. Weller was was 20 when it was released, and Foxton and Buckler still in their early twenties, but it was their third album. I mention this because for all the talk of angry young men etc this is actually a remarkably mature album and captures much more than a bit of angriness but without at any point sacrificing the vitality and energy of youth. It's not always that sophisticated musically or lyrically but in terms of it's overall structure and pacing I think it's belies the ages of it's creators. Bimbo mentioned it felt mellow and even safe and though I disagree I can see where he's coming from. For a still very young song writer I think there's a decent amount of light and shade across the album, shifts of pace and mood whilst as a whole still retaining a cohesive sound and identity. That's something that even highly experienced bands struggle to get right to this day
Maybe it's an age thing, but to me it's both very much of it's time whilst still sounding fresh enough today. Though I think there's a couple of better songs on Setting Sons, I think this hangs together better as an album.
Though there are great songs on here I don't really think of it in those terms, I like to listen to this as a whole. It sonically captures the idea of youth brilliantly...full of vibrancy, quite cocksure of itself and sometimes even right, open to new ideas, developing your own world view but still being a bit endearingly gauche at times. It also, in its final track, has two of my top 100 lines in popular music but that's by the by. Whilst other bands are held up as innovators The Jam tend to get bracketed as revivalists but I think that does them a disservice as they are one of the most recognisable and distinctive bands these islands have produced and for me this is up there as a great British album. 9/10