Create account Log in

Script of the Bridge (25th Anniversary Edition)

[Edit]

Download links and information about Script of the Bridge (25th Anniversary Edition) by The Chameleons. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 27 tracks with total duration of 02:05:34 minutes.

Artist: The Chameleons
Release date: 2008
Genre: Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 27
Duration: 02:05:34
Buy on iTunes $17.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Don't Fall 4:06
2. Here Today 3:50
3. Monkeyland 5:24
4. Second Skin 6:50
5. Up the Down Escalator 3:57
6. Less Than Human 4:12
7. Pleasure and Pain 5:11
8. Thursday's Child 3:32
9. As High As You Can Go 3:35
10. A Person Isn't Safe Anywhere These Days 5:43
11. Paper Tigers 4:16
12. View from a Hill 6:41
13. In Shreds 4:09
14. Dear Dead Days 4:31
15. Things I Wish I'd Said 5:12
16. Don't Fall (Live) 3:49
17. Here Today (Live) 3:51
18. Thursday's Child (Live) 3:46
19. A Person Isn't Safe Anywhere These Days (Live) 4:48
20. Less Than Human (Live) 4:01
21. Pleasure and Pain (Live) 4:31
22. Second Skin (Live) 6:01
23. Paper Tigers (Live) 4:07
24. Monkeyland (Live) 4:56
25. Singing Rule Britannia (Live) 4:19
26. Up the Down Escalator (Live) 3:59
27. View from a Hill (Live) 6:17

Details

[Edit]

With two years, numerous radio sessions, and incessant gigging under their belts since their debut single, "In Shreds," the Chameleons came to the studio determined to make a great first album with Script of the Bridge. To say they succeeded would be like saying Shakespeare did pretty well with that one Hamlet play of his. Script remains a high-water mark of what can generally be called post-punk music, an hour's worth of one amazing song after another, practically a greatest-hits record on its own: the John Lennon tribute "Here Today," "Monkeyland," "Pleasure and Pain," "Paper Tigers," "As High as You Can Go," the breathtaking closer, "View From a Hill." Starting with the passionate fire of "Don't Fall," Script showcases how truly inventive, unique, and distinctly modern rock & roll could exist, instead of relentlessly rehashing the past to little effect. The scalpel-sharp interplay between the musicians is a sheer wonder to behold, the Dave Fielding/Reg Smithies guitar team provoke nothing but superlatives throughout, and John Lever and Mark Burgess make a perfect rhythm section — while the crisp production of Colin Richardson and the band adds delicate synth lines and shadings, courtesy of early touring keyboardist Alistair Lewthwaite, and just the right amount of reverb and effects on the guitars. Add to that the words of Burgess, one of the few lyricists out there who can tackle Big Issues while retaining a human, personal touch, and it all just adds up perfectly. The best one-two punch comes from "Second Skin," a complex, beautifully arranged and played reflection on the meaning of music and fandom, and "Up the Down Escalator," an at once harrowing and thrilling antinuclear/mainstream politics slam. [An important note: avoid at all costs the original U.S. vinyl issue on MCA, which not only switches the song order but removes a full third of the songs. The 25th Anniversary edition, released by the Blue Apple label in 2008, provides a remastered version of the album on the first disc, while the second disc includes previously unreleased mixes of three Script songs, as well as a 1983 live set performed in Bremen.]