Last night a friend mentioned that he was going to drive out to Naperville to see the Psychedelic Furs at the Naperville Ribfest. Oh how the mighty have fallen.
Nevertheless, this brief conversation sent me directly to my old Psych Furs records, and god-motherfucking-damn are they good.
Their eponymous 1980 debut is amazing, with songs like "Sister Europe" and "Imitation of Christ" (with one of my favorite lyrics: "Jesus is a woman too") and deep cuts like "Wedding Song" and "We Love You."
In 1981, Talk Talk Talk gave us "Dumb Waiters," the original (and best) version of "Pretty In Pink," "She is Mine" and one of my all time favorite Psych Furs tracks, "All of This and Nothing."
In 1982, Forever Now yielded "President Gas," "Love My Way," and "No Easy Street."
1984's Mirror Moves opened with the fantastic "Ghost In You," scored a hit with "Heaven" and closed with "Highwire Days."
After that I kind of stopped listening, I guess, though in 1991, I did buy World Outside and vividly recall listening to it on the way to work at a job I hated on the day after I'd learned that my grandfather (in perfect health) had been killed in a car accident (not his fault). I sang along:
why wait?
there's a world outside
why wait?
for the reasons why
it ain't always what i want
it ain't always mine
why wait?
there's a world outside
you can't win
coming from the state you're in
you don't see
my reflections and my scenes
At 16, these were fucking potent lyrics. When I arrived at work at the job I hated (a ride operator at Kiddieland) I found my manager first thing and quit, telling him boldly (and in retrospect, somewhat absurdly) that there's a world outside, and I couldn't waste my time running rides and cleaning up puke.
I don't have that record anymore, but it will always occupy a special place in my heart.
So say I, so say us all: God Bless The Psychedelic Furs.
Tuesday, July 3, 2007
I follow where my mind goes
Posted by The Swan
Labels: Angst, nostalgia, Psycedelic Furs
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1 comment:
I imported the first two records as soon as I got an iPod. The bonus tracks on Talk Talk Talk were really great.
You nailed exactly what I like about each record, Swan. Good post.
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