Track Listing 1. MP Speaks, An 2. Monetaries 3. International Narcotics Traffic, The 4. Way of the World, The 5. Antinature 6. Charles Windsor 7. Vision of Peregrine Worsthorne, The 8. Well of Loneliness, The 9. Wicked Palace Revolution, The 10. God Made the Virus 11. Funeral, The 12. Child Soon in Chains, A 13. In the Dark Times 14. Procession of Popular Capitalism, The 15. I'm on the Side of Mankind as Much as the Next Man 16. And Tomorrow the Stock Exchange Will Be the Human Race 17. Now Is the Time For an Iron Hand 18. Drinking Song of the Merchant Bankers, The 19. Write to Your MP Today 20. Use a Bank I'd Rather Die 21. I Worked Myself up From Nothing 22. Well, The 23. Fed Point of View 24. Get a Knife Between Your Teeth 25. Take the Shortest Way With the Men of Violence 26. You'll Have to Put an End to Them
| Details | | Distributor: | Infinity Entertainment Gr | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Many politically aware bands emerged in England during Margaret Thatcher's tenure as Prime Minster, but few were as vocal about their negative views of Thatcher's policies as McCarthy, who fused razor-edged political sarcasm to a glittering jangle-pop skeleton. This CD complies the band's first and third albums, released in 1987 and 1990 respectively--collectors may wish to note that the standalone CD of I AM A WALLET contains four bonus tracks not on this release. Standouts from WALLET include the bristling "Antinature," which ends with the sardonic comment "Nuclear power?/Yes please," and "The Vision of Peregrine Worsthorme," where calm, pretty guitars disguise a seething evisceration of journalistic soap-boxing. WALLET also includes "God Made the Virus," which adds sweet violins to chiming guitars over which Malcolm Eden sings a completely straight-faced and utterly sarcastic endorsement of a particularly repellent theory about AIDS. Standouts from BANKING include "Now is the Time for an Iron Hand," where Tim Gane's signature jangling guitar is augmented by a touch of distortion, and "I Worked Myself Up from Nothing," which features vocals by Laetitia Sadier, who went on to form the similarly-minded--though musically different--Stereolab with Gane.
Editorial Reviews There are hints of The Smiths, but beyond that it's like a freak of nature, they sound like nothing else. Mojo
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