Live 1981–82 Explained

Live 1981–82
Type:live
Artist:The Birthday Party
Cover:BP_Live_1981_82.jpg
Released:10 August 1999
Genre:
Length:73:53
Label:4AD
Prev Title:It's Still Living
Prev Year:1982
Year:1999

Live 1981–82 is a live album by The Birthday Party and released in August 1999. The performances were "[c]ulled from the private collection of founding member Mick Harvey with assistance from super fan Henry Rollins".[1]

Reception

The album received very positive reviews from various sources. "Though various live releases had emerged over the course of the band's existence," writes Ned Raggett for Allmusic, "no full-length capturing of the Party's particular bacchanalia approved by the group had officially emerged until this release [...][The album] threatens at all points to leap from the speakers and throttle innocent bystanders." Tim Peacock of Record Collector called it "a vital addendum to the pioneering Aussies’ oeuvre." Matt Mernagh of Exclaim! writes: "the only live album from these Australian bastards is a brilliant effort in capturing pure chaos. Whether it’s Nick Cave’s howls and murderous screams, Harvey’s squalor of blues guitar playing, Rowland S. Howard’s high pitched guitar riffs, Tracy Pew’s thumping bass being buried in the background and Phil Calvert’s hammering drum sound, this beast finds the band at their peak. [...] By performing so well together, the frenzied noise has been planned, although it doesn’t seem like that could be humanly possible." He notes the audience response as being "enthused and stunned at the same time." He finds the only downside of the album to be the fact that it "has been taken from three different locations and melded into one piece of music" instead of being from a single live show.[1] The sound quality of the performances received praise, as did the band's cover of "Fun House", the latter of which has been described as "viciously maul[ed] and deface[ed] [in comparison to the original]"[2] and a "relentless eight-minute thrash [...] with Jim ‘Foetus’ Thirlwell riding shotgun on sax that provides a suitably Bacchanalian climax."

Track listing

Personnel

Birthday Party

Credits

Release history

RegionDateLabelFormatCatalogue
United Kingdom19994ADCAD 9005 CD
29 July 2013LP, CDCAD 9005
United States30 July 2013

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Birthday Party Live 1981-82. exclaim.ca.
  2. Web site: Live 81-82. Peter. Murphy. Hotpress.
  3. Web site: The Birthday Party - Live 81-82. Discogs.