Perfect Teeth
1993
Malcolm X Park
1988
Twister
1988
biography
[+]
The flagship act of frontman Mark Robinson's own TeenBeat label, Unrest
was a towering pillar of the American indie rock community throughout
the early '90s -- from the tongue-in-cheek garage noise of their
earliest efforts to the shimmering, manic pop thrills of their later,
most enduring work, the band was a paragon of DIY virtue, perfecting a
genre-hopping eclecticism and knowing, ironic lyrical outlook that
virtually defined the sound and feel of college rock in the pre-grunge
era. Robinson, bassist Tim Moran, and drummer Phil Krauth formed Unrest
while students at Wakefield High School in Arlington, VA; borrowing
their name from a Henry Cow record, the fledgling trio soon made its
debut on the first TeenBeat release, the 1985 cassette compilation
Extremism in the Defense of Liberty Is No Vice. Comprised of 25 tracks
bootlegged from a show at the Washington, D.C. venue the 9:30 Club, the
tape was released in an edition of about 60 copies, and sold primarily
to Robinson's classmates; among the featured acts were Jungle George
& the Plague, led by another Wakefield student, Andrew Beaujon, who
later led the much-acclaimed Eggs and briefly tenured with Unrest
as well. TeenBeat itself would over time emerge as one of the most
respected American independent labels of its period, evolving from the
Xeroxed covers of early cassette releases to a prolific flow of
beautifully designed releases inspired by Robinson's abiding affection
for the lavish packaging of the British imprints Factory and 4AD; the
company's ever-changing roster reflected its founder's diverse tastes,
issuing recordings from artists spanning from Versus to Gastr del Sol to
Blast Off Country Style. TeenBeat's sophomore release, the Unrest!
cassette, followed in the spring of 1985; recorded live to two-track in
Moran's living room, the tape was soon trailed by another cassette, Lisa
Carol Freemont, serving early notice of the prodigious output which
defined the band's career -- at the same time, Robinson and Krauth even
collaborated in another band, Clarence. All of Unrest's
releases catalogued Robinson's ever-shifting lyrical and musical
obsessions, which (especially at the outset of the group's existence)
often resulted in jarring track-to-track juxtapositions embracing
everything from punk to funk. The band's more radical experiments make
their unofficially self-titled 1987 full-length debut easier to admire
than actually enjoy: recorded with bassist Chris Thomson filling in for
Moran, the LP was pressed in an edition of 1,050, each with a cover
hand-decorated by friends -- since every cover was different, each copy
had its own title. (An expanded edition appeared on Matador in 1993
under the title Fuck Pussy Galore and All Her Friends.) Bassist Dave
Park signed on for Unrest's
second album, the 1988 Caroline Records release Malcolm X Park --
although the disc as a whole lacks focus, the lovely pop entries "Can't
Sit Still" and "Christina" hint at the brilliance of later efforts.
Silent in 1989 but for the "Catchpellet" single, the trio resurfaced a
year later with their third LP, Kustom Karnal Blackxploitation,
highlighted by their interpretation of the Heathers soundtrack's satiric
protest anthem "Teenage Suicide." With the 1991 single "Yes, She Is My
Skinhead Girl," Unrest
achieved indie rock sainthood -- a joint release with the K Records
label, its skittering, oddly propulsive pop approach signaled the band's
creative breakthrough, also earning strong critical notices. However,
it was the arrival of bassist Bridget Cross that truly fortified the Unrest
sound -- a onetime member of Velocity Girl, her throbbing, insistent
rhythms closely evoked the pioneering bass lines of New Order's Peter
Hook, complementing Robinson's own Factory Records fixation and offering
the perfect counterpoint to the frenzied strumming of his guitar work.
Appropriately enough, Cross made her debut on the 1991 Sub Pop Singles
Club release A Factory Record, a four-song collection of obscure covers
from the Factory catalog including a brilliant reading of Miaow's "When
It All Comes Down." The 1992 album Imperial f.f.r.r. remains Unrest's defining moment, a sprawling yet laser-focused pop masterpiece boasting the single "Cherry Cream On." The follow-up, 1993's Perfect Teeth,
arrived as a joint release with the 4AD label -- featuring onetime
Miaow frontwoman Cath Carroll on the cover (a longstanding Robinson
heroine, she'd later issue several solo LPs on TeenBeat) and jokingly
crediting Duran Duran's Simon LeBon with production duties, the record's
highlight, "Make Out Club," even earned airtime on MTV. The EP Animal
Park appeared in early 1994, but at the peak of their success, Unrest then disbanded -- while Krauth mounted a solo career, Robinson and Cross reunited in the short-lived Air Miami.
Robinson then went on to issue a series of solo records, variously
credited to projects including Olympic Death Squad and Flin Flon.
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5 comments:
part 1
http://www46.zippyshare.com/v/97938946/file.html
part 2
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nice post. Perfect Teeth is such a great album :)
Compilation Girls Voices 2013
With female bands 80's,90's,00's!
link download: http://toforamesmo.blogspot.com.br/2013/03/coletanea-girls-voices-2013.html
thanks a lot!!!
Thanks for this - I can't remember when I last listened to Perfect Teeth and it holds up really well.
Part 1
http://www54.zippyshare.com/v/xvImRkZF/file.html
Part 2 (Perfect Teeth)
http://www65.zippyshare.com/v/pElyOntD/file.html
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