*Reissued on CD for the first time in 2001 by Renascent.
This pressing Contains 15 tracks total and
features remastered audio.
Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Post Punk
Label Number: REN CD4
☠: Selected by Lass
© 1980-2001 Renascent
Despite the production's rough edges, the limited budget that fostered
it, and the feeling that it sounds more like several A-sides and a
couple decent B-sides thrown together than a singular body, Jeopardy is a
caustic jolt of a debut that startles and fascinates. With the
plaintive intro of the rhythm section, a spidery guitar, and incidental
synth wobbles (which all sounds surprisingly Neu!-like), "I Can't Escape
Myself" begins the album unassumingly enough until reaching the terse,
one-line chorus that echoes the title of the song; suddenly, from out of
the blue, all the instruments make a quick, violent, collective stab
and retreat back into the following verse as singer Adrian Borland
catches his breath. The reverb placed on his voice is heightened at just
the right moments to exacerbate the song's claustrophobic slant. The
ecstatic onward rush of "Heartland" forms the back end of a dynamic
one-two opening punch, with a charging rhythm and blaring keyboards
leading the way. It seems to be the spawn of XTC and U2, just as giddy
as something from the former (think Go 2) and almost as anthemic as
something from the latter (think Boy). Much later on, near the end,
"Unwritten Law" comes along as one of the Sound's best mid-tempo mood
pieces -- one of their greatest strengths. It also shows how much a
simple shading of synth can affect a song, as it affects it with a
melancholic smear that no other instrument could possibly provide. In
all honesty, they weren't breaking any new ground here. Their influences
were just as apparent as the ones donned by the other bands who
inhabited similar post-punk territory. Smart journalists of the time --
meaning the ones who truly listened and were aware of the band's past --
knew well enough that the Sound belonged in the same league as the
bands they were compared to and not somewhere in the bushes. Hardly
coattail jockeying, the Sound were developing and growing alongside
them. If you're thinking this sounds like someone's telling you that you
need Jeopardy just as much as you need Kilimanjaro or Unknown Pleasures
or Crocodiles, you're right again. [Renascent's 2002 reissue offers a
fine remastering job and the four-song Live Instinct EP as a bonus.]
tags: the sound, the sound band, jeopardy, 1980, 2001, flac,







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