At the time of its 1996 release, Art Bourasseau's MuSick imprint's tag was "the Instrumental Label" (that has since changed), so this compilation of 16 wordless, but not necessarily vocal-less, recordings from around the country and even the world was a logical starting point. The liner notes are a little lame for a set of mostly obscure combos with short descriptions that try too hard to be cute instead of informational (the blurb for the Vice Royals reads "Making music for the movie of your life. Discover the magic -- ...
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At the time of its 1996 release, Art Bourasseau's MuSick imprint's tag was "the Instrumental Label" (that has since changed), so this compilation of 16 wordless, but not necessarily vocal-less, recordings from around the country and even the world was a logical starting point. The liner notes are a little lame for a set of mostly obscure combos with short descriptions that try too hard to be cute instead of informational (the blurb for the Vice Royals reads "Making music for the movie of your life. Discover the magic -- live the dream"), but the sounds are consistently raw and rocking. Surf is not surprisingly heavily represented by artists such as the little-known Lord Hunt & His Missing Finks and Los Straitjackets, the latter by far the most recognizable act here. But there is plenty of variety, with garage (Germany's the Cave 4), space rock (the Bomboras), spaghetti Western (the Fathoms, Ben Vaughn), trash (Boston's Four Piece Suit), and even blues (Los Straitjackets' Eddie Angel) all rearing their murky heads over the course of the disc's short but potent 40-minute running time. Nothing lasts very long, with Man or Astro-man?'s "Intoxica" clocking in at a concise but still not too brief 1:40 and the Tiki Tones' loungy "Sneaky Tiki" getting out of the way in 1:53, so if you don't like one style, another is waiting around the corner. Many of these acts never released full albums, or if they did they are all but impossible to find, so this serves as a clearing house for great lost bands such as Scratch Bongowax and the Travelers of Tyme that maybe only had a few short-lived singles in them before they moved on to the dark recesses of instrumental rock's dusty history. The sound quality is all over the place as befits the concept, but it's consistently listenable and even the most mono of tracks, such as Lord Hunt's "Twice Pipes," fit the primitive approach of the material. The audience for this might be limited to record geeks but it shouldn't be, because any rock & roll lover will find something to love within these 16 tracks, and instrumental genre fans will need this as an essential part of their collections. ~ Hal Horowitz, Rovi
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Add this copy of Instrumental Fire to cart. $5.19, very good condition, Sold by HPB Inc. rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Dallas, TX, UNITED STATES, published 1996 by Musick Recordings.
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