Call Of The West (1982) ( )

Artist: Wall Of Voodoo
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Format:  CD
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Product Summary
Label: Uni/irs
UPC: 00044797002625
Release Date: 5/4/1987
Buy.com Sku: 60095832
Item#: MXPG63
Format:  CD

Song Listing

Disc 1
Song TitleSample
1. Tomorrow ~ Wall Of Voodoo
2. Lost Weekend ~ Wall Of Voodoo
3. Factory ~ Wall Of Voodoo
4. Look At Their Way ~ Wall Of Voodoo
5. Hands Of Love ~ Wall Of Voodoo
6. Mexican Radio ~ Wall Of Voodoo
7. Spy World ~ Wall Of Voodoo
8. They Don't Want Me ~ Wall Of Voodoo
9. On Interstate 15 ~ Wall Of Voodoo
10. Call Of The West ~ Wall Of Voodoo



 
Album Notes and Credits

Notes & Personnel Info
Wall Of Voodoo: Stannard Ridgway (vocals, harmonica, keyboards); Marc Moreland (6 & 12-string guitars); Chas T. Gray (synthesizer, bass, background vocals); Joe Nanini (drums, percussion).
Recorded at Hit City, Los Angeles, California.
Personnel: Stan Ridgway (vocals, harmonica, keyboards); Charles T. Gray (vocals, synthesizer, background vocals); Joe Nanini (vocals, drums, percussion); Marc Moreland (guitar, 12-string guitar); Louis Rivera (percussion).
Wall of Voodoo's second full-length album, Call of the West, was a noticeably more approachable work than their debut, Dark Continent, and it even scored a fluke hit single, "Mexican Radio," a loopy little number about puzzled American tourists that's easily the catchiest thing on the album. But while Wall of Voodoo's textures had gotten a bit less abrasive with time, the band's oddball minor-key approach was still a long way from synth pop, and frontman Stan Ridgway's songs were Americana at it's darkest and least forgiving, full of tales of ordinary folks with little in the way of hopes or dreams, getting by on illusions that seem more like a willful denial of the truth the closer you get to them. There's a quiet tragedy in the ruined suburbanites of "Lost Weekend" and the emotionally stranded working stiff of "Factory," and the title song, which follows some Middle American sad sack as he chases a vague and hopeless dream in California, is as close as pop music has gotten to capturing the bitter chaos of the final chapter of Nathaniel West's The Day of the Locust. In other words, anyone who bought Call of the West figuring it would feature another nine off-kilter pop tunes like "Mexican Radio" probably recoiled in horror by the time they got to the end of side two. But there's an intelligence and wounded compassion in the album's gallery of lost souls, and there's enough bite in the music that it remains satisfying two decades on. Call of the West is that rare example of a new wave band scoring a fluke success with what was also their most satisfying album. ~ Mark Deming

Producer: Richard Mazda

Engineer: Jess Sutcliffe

 
Compilation Appearances
On The Charts: irsrecords
Left Of The Dial: Dispatches From The '80s Underground

 
Technical Info
Release Date : 10/25/1990
Original Release Date : 1982
Catalog ID : 44797-0026-2
Label : IRS
Number of Discs : 1
Runtime : 40m : 48s
Studio/Live : Studio
Mono/Stereo : Stereo
SPAR Code : n/a
UPC : 00044797002625

  
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