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Bangles (EP)

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AllMusic[1]
Robert ChristgauB[2]

Bangles is the eponymous first EP by The Bangles.[3] It was released in 1982 by Faulty Products and reissued in 1983 by I.R.S. Records when Faulty Products went out of business. The songs remained widely unavailable thereafter, with only occasional rereleases of individual songs. The whole five-song EP was eventually reissued as part of the Bangles' 2014 compilation, Ladies and Gentlemen... The Bangles!.

This would be the group's last release to feature original bassist Annette Zilinskas, who left in early 1983 and was replaced by Michael Steele.

Background

The Bangles began in Los Angeles as a garage rock band, popularly associated with similar bands from the area in the Paisley Underground music scene.[4] After self-releasing a well-received debut single, "Getting out of Hand" (1981), the group was signed by music industry executive Miles Copeland to his new record label Faulty Products, an independent U.S.-based subsidiary of I.R.S. Records.[4] The band quickly recorded a five-song mini-album which was released in June 1982.[1]

Composition

The EP includes four original songs penned by bandmembers, as well as "How Is The Air Up There?", a cover of the 1960s single by New Zealand band The La De Das.[1]

Track listing

  1. "The Real World" (S. Hoffs/V. Peterson)
  2. "I'm in Line" (D. Peterson/V. Peterson/S. Hoffs)
  3. "Want You" (V. Peterson)
  4. "Mary Street" (S. Hoffs/V. Peterson)
  5. "How Is the Air Up There?" (S. Duboff/A. Kornfeld)

Credits

The band's full musical credits are listed on the EP's back cover:[5]

Vocals are credited to Vicki and Debbie Peterson and Susanna Hoffs on every track. Vicki Peterson sings the lead vocal on "Want You" and "How Is the Air Up There?" while Debbie Peterson sings "I'm In Line"; Susanna Hoffs sings "The Real World", and she and Vicki Peterson share the lead on "Mary Street". Annette Zilinksas provides vocals only once, as one of the backing harmonists on "Want You".[5]

Music industry veteran Craig Leon served as the record producer.[5] Leon was already well known in rock and indie circles for his production work with the Ramones and Blondie.[6] Leon also played piano on "Mary Street" and "The Real World",[5] and the latter song includes additional piano work by Ethan James.[5] The album cover art was designed by Ewa Wojciak with photography by Bob Seideman.[5]

Shortly after the EP's release, Annette Zilinskas left the band and was replaced by former Runaways bassist Michael Steele.[4]

Musical style

The Bangles' early years were informed by a 1960s garage rock sensibility,[1][4] and the 1982 EP maintains a stylistic link between the "Getting out of Hand" debut single and the band's first full-length album, the critically acclaimed All Over the Place (1984).[1] Music critics often note the irony of their subsequent rise from guitar-based rock devotees to "one of the most successful chart groups of the '80s with their slickly produced synth pop".[1][4] In his book Music: What Happened?, Scott Miller names "The Real World" as one of the top songs of the 1980s, and remarks of the EP: "Those who know only 'Eternal Flame' might be amazed at how inventive and together they were in their relative infancy".[7] The Bangles themselves consider the early material, lesser-known though it was, to be vital to their own story: as Susanna Hoffs told Billboard in 2014, "I think it's as representative of who we really are and as authentic as anything the Bangles have ever done. There's a kind of architecture to those songs – three-part harmonies, guitar-driven, jangly over a kind of garage rock rhythm is who we are now, still, as much as we were back then."[6]

Release

The original EP was released on vinyl in 1982 by Faulty Products (catalog #FEP 1302).[8] The label folded at the end of the year, and Copeland's major label, I.R.S. Records, rereleased it again in 1983 (catalog #SP-70506).[8] The EP was issued for the first time in France in 1987. Three songs of the EP were first released on CD in 1988 as a 3" CD single (the single mix of "The Real World", "How Is The Air Up There?" and "Mary Street"). The first two songs and "I'm In Line" were later included on a 1992 Bangles compilation issued in France.[9]

The full five-song set, however, remained out of print since its initial vinyl release until 2014, when it was included on the album Ladies and Gentlemen... The Bangles!.[6] Featuring numerous early Bangles rarities, this compilation also includes a previously unreleased demo version of "The Real World", shorter and sung in a different key.[6]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Lhote, Morgan. Bangles at AllMusic. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  2. ^ Christgau, Robert. "CG: The Bangles". Robert Christgau. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  3. ^ "Bangles may be new Go-Go's". Ottawa Citizen. February 18, 1983. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e Larkin, Colin, ed. (2011). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (5th ed.). London: Omnibus Press. p. 2006. ISBN 9780857125958.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Bangles (Liner notes). The Bangles. Faulty Products. 1982. FEP 1302.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  6. ^ a b c d Graff, Gary (November 24, 2014). "The Bangles Song Premiere: Hear 'The Real World' From Their New Compilation". Billboard.com. Billboard. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  7. ^ Miller, Scott (2010). Music: What Happened?. Alameda, CA: 125 Books. p. 117. ISBN 9780615381961.
  8. ^ a b Thompson, Dave (2015). Goldmine Record Album Price Guide (8 ed.). Iola, WI: F+W Media. p. 35. ISBN 9781440243721.
  9. ^ Bangles at Discogs (list of releases)