CD86 (album)
CD86: 48 Tracks from the Birth of Indie Pop is a compilation album of artists from the original C86 era, released in 2006 by Sanctuary Records. It is compiled by Bob Stanley of Saint Etienne.
CD86 | |
---|---|
Compilation album | |
Released | 2006 |
Genre | Indie pop Post-punk Indie rock |
Label | Sanctuary |
To coincide with its release, the Institute of Contemporary Arts hosted "C86 - Still Doing It For Fun",[1] an exhibition and two nights of gigs celebrating the rise of British independent music.
Background
Released in 1986, the original compilation album C86 became very influential, and is today credited as the birth of indie pop. Stanley notes: "It was the beginning of indie music. It's hard to remember how underground guitar music and fanzines were in the mid-'80s. DIY ethics and any residual punk attitudes were in isolated pockets around the country, and the C86 comp and gigs brought them together".[2] For the original's twentieth anniversary in 2006, Stanley compiled the set of songs that was released as CD86.[3]
Description
CD86 is inspired by C86. Only three of the songs on C86 appear on CD86; fifteen of the original groups on C86 have alternative tracks on CD86.[3] Several tracks were little-known before the album's release.[4]
Reception
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [5] |
Pitchfork | 6.8/10[4] |
Prefix magazine | 8.0/10[3] |
Writing in Prefix magazine, Greg Ingber gave the compilation a good review, noting that over twenty years the songs have stood the test of time very well. Ingber argues that while some may see C86 as not much more than a footnote in pop history, the CD86 compilation demonstrates that the scene was more than that.[3] Nitsuh Abebe disapproved of the revised track-list, saying that "Stanley's set actually runs the risk of convincing old indie-pop kids that the music they spent their youths on wasn't that great." Abebe felt that the later compilation's choices were too narrow in terms of genre, and criticized Stanley for not including more of the tracks included on the original C86.[4] Nick Hasted was similarly ambivalent, noting that the revised compilation would never have the influence of the original.[2] Both Hasted and Abebe recognized, however, that CD86 contained numerous good songs.
Track listing
There are 48 tracks on 2 CDs.[6]
Disc 1
- "Velocity Girl" – Primal Scream
- "The Sun, a Small Star" – The Servants
- "Around and Around" – Hurrah!
- "Why Does the Rain?" – The Loft
- "Vibrato" – East Village
- "Pristine Christine" – The Sea Urchins
- "What Went Wrong This Time" – The Siddeleys
- "Anorak City" – Another Sunny Day
- "Get Out of My Dream" – Clouds
- "Golden Shower" – The Boy Hairdressers
- "Ask Johnny Dee" – The Chesterfields
- "He Blows In" – The Raw Herbs
- "Paul McCartney" – Laugh
- "You Didn't Love Me Then" – The Hit Parade
- "Like Frankie Lymon" – The Weather Prophets
- "Sunday to Saturday" – The June Brides
- "I Had an Excellent Dream" – The Dentists
- "Everybody Knows the Monkey" – Mighty Mighty
- "E102" – BMX Bandits
- "Talulah Gosh" – Talulah Gosh
- "Cut Me Deep" – The Jasmine Minks
- "I'll Still Be There" – Razorcuts
- "Therese" – The Bodines
- "Paradise Estate" – Television Personalities
Disc 2
- "Upside Down" – The Jesus and Mary Chain
- "Really Stupid" – The Primitives
- "It Always Rains on Sunday" – The Groove Farm
- "Black Country Chainsaw Massacre" – Pop Will Eat Itself
- "Come Get Me" – 14 Iced Bears
- "Sign on the Line" – Fizzbombs
- "Anti-Midas Touch" – The Wolfhounds
- "This Boy Can Wait" – The Wedding Present
- "Bible of the Beats" – Age Of Chance
- "Safety Net" – The Shop Assistants
- "Just Too Bloody Stupid" – Close Lobsters
- "Dukla Prague Away Kit" – Half Man Half Biscuit
- "Don't Slip Up" – Meat Whiplash
- "I Could Be in Heaven" – The Flatmates
- "If I Said" – The Darling Buds
- "Poised Over the Pause Button" – This Poison
- "Jack and Julian" – The Bachelor Pad
- "On Tape" – The Pooh Sticks
- "Flowers Are in The Sky" – Revolving Paint Dream
- "Whole Wide World" – The Soup Dragons
- "Frans Hals" – McCarthy
- "Like an Angel" – The Mighty Lemon Drops
- "Why Popstars Can't Dance" – Big Flame
- "Baby Honey" – The Pastels
References
- ICA website, C86 - Still Doing It For Fun, October 2006, http://www.ica.org.uk/?lid=12257 Archived 2006-12-03 at the Wayback Machine
- Nick Hasted (October 27, 2006). "How an NME cassette launched indie music". The Independent. London. Retrieved November 17, 2011.
- Greg Ingber (February 12, 2007). "Various Artists CD86". Prefix. Retrieved November 17, 2011.
- Nitsuh Abebe (February 15, 2007). "Various Artists CD86: 48 Tracks from the Birth of Indie Pop". Pitchfork. Retrieved November 18, 2011.
- "CD86 - Various Artists | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 2016-01-05.
- Jason Ankeny. "CD86 Various Artists". Allmusic. Retrieved November 18, 2011.