in the current issue
- 200 RAREST ALBUMS EVER
As the new Rare Record Price Guide hits the shelves, we give you a run down of the most expensive albums out there. - DR. JOHN
Cures what ails you – the good doctor on New Orleans, heroin and Phil Spector’s guns - WILLIAM SHATNER
Where’s Captain Kirk? He’s right here, giving us nine minutes of his precious time
Rare Record Price Guide
- The world's leading authority on prices of rare and collectable records pressed in the UK.
- More Information
- Add this to your basket:
Softback | Hardback
R.C. Partners
- ConcertLive
- THE SOUND MACHINE
- RHINO MUSIC
- 991.com
- Beatles Links
- Wienerworld
- VIP Record Fairs
- Austin Record Convention
- Mega Record & CD Fair
- Record Collector's Guild
- RARO
- Arrowfile
- Ace Records
- Clear Spot
- Rockground
- Heritage Auction Galleries
- Popsike.com
- Astral Piper
- System Records
- Industrial Silence
- Genesis Publications Ltd.
- Vinyl Switch
- BBC 6 Music
- GEMM
- LP CD Reissues.com
- Blue Storm Music
- GrooveCollector.com
Clinic - Funf
Odds’n’sods from everyone’s favourite mask wearers
Could Clinic be Britain’s most bloody-minded band? Let’s look at the facts: they wear surgical masks; they hail from Liverpool but take the piss out of The Beatles; their influences seem to include the Velvets, The Monks and maybe even some old fairground organists; they don’t even use real words when they sing, for God’s sake. Yet it all gels together magnificently.
Funf is a sort of grab-bag of the band’s scarcer tracks that nevertheless won’t, it has to be said, set the collecting world alight. But no matter, because these all-too brief 12 slices (some barely stretch past 60 seconds) display Clinic’s microcosmic world as well as any of their albums. Sure, there’s nothing here as grand as the The Return Of Evil Bill single, but opener The Majestic wrong-foots the listener, being funereal in it’s pace (and menace). The confusinglymonikered J.O./Love Is Just A Tool, too, is wonderfully sedate.
Elsewhere, on hamonica/ melodica/feedback-tinged stomps such as Nicht (surely a template for the far inferior Brakes?) and Magic Boots, where the punk side bursts out, proceedings are far less exciting. Strange, that these almost make Clinic’s studied, crafted singularity seem formulaic.
Domino | REWIGCD 192
Reviewed by Jake Kennedy
<< Back to Issue 339
You might also like:
- ALBUM REVIEW: Do It! by Clinic
