Over The Edge

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Over The Edge album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 36:37

eMusic Review 0

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Nils Bernstein

eMusic Contributor

04.04.12
An economic classic of tight, melodic songs and heavy distortion
2000 | Label: Zeno

Portland’s Wipers were a massively influential band from the Pacific Northwest punk scene who got a blip of posthumous mainstream interest when Kurt Cobain repeatedly cited them as an influence. 1983′s Over The Edge follows a steely, aggressive debut, and an expansive, psychedelic follow-up, Youth Of America. It distills Wipers’ unique brand of emotional, overdriven guitar rock into an economic classic of tight, melodic songs and heavy distortion.

One minute into the opening title track, you have, in a sense, heard all you need to about Wipers — the song is as passionate a statement of intent as “God Save The Queen.” This fearless, spat-out emotion is no doubt what inspired Cobain; unlike most punk music of the time, Sage’s songs are as melancholy as they are angry.

“Romeo” is the closest Wipers ever came to a hit single, though its allusions to Sage’s homosexuality (“Romeo cruises the streets at night…there is no Juliet”) are usually overlooked. Elsewhere, songs like “No One Wants An Alien” and “Messenger” sound almost infused with ’50s rock ‘n’ roll, but while persistent themes of alienation and rejection align it with punk, the only appropriate comparison for Wipers might be with the equally isolationist Oregonians, Dead Moon. Thirty years… read more »

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Sound Quality DOES Suck!

Funknik

I recently got the Wipers' box set and can say unequivocally that this rip/mastering SUCKS! I downloaded this record here a few years ago and have always loved it -- I just thought this was a really lo-fi recording, but NO! The sound from the box set is so much crisper and cleaner -- I can't believe eMusic would even sell this! Go get the box set -- it's awesome!

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Northwest legends

SenorPepe

One of the greatest, and most under-appreciated alternative bands ever. An enormous influence on so many Portland and Seattle bands that came after. Perhaps "Youth of America" and "Alien Boy" are better, but I love this one too. "Over the Edge", "Doom Town", and "Romeo" are faves even when the other albums are considered.

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Low fi is good fi

aitie

Comment on sound quality is inaccurate. It is fine for this pre-punk set and adds to the authenticity. Don't be jaded by the sterile, auto tune, note perfect recordings of today. This is what music without the emotion filtered out sounds like. Buy it.

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Sounds Quality Sucks

mADMAN

I've heard better recording from a cassette tape.

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Good Punk

MammothMan

Though Sage's best albums aren't available right now, this is still a "must" download. Its only downside is its monotony. The swirling guitars and similar minor key tempos create a mood that would be akin to if punk and shoegazing had a baby.

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wtf? where is the "alien boy" ep?

speckled

consume all the wipers you can, people.

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hints of daydream nation

EMUSIC-01CE6DF9

A fantastic album; to call it simply "punk" doesn't do justice to how subtle and atmospheric it is. More than anything else, it reminds me of "Daydream Nation." Yeah, it has the hard-driving aggressiveness of punk, but also the chiming, dissonant, hauntingly gorgeous guitarwork characteristic of late-eighties Sonic Youth. Check out "Doom Town," "So Young," or "No Generation Gap" and you'll see what I mean.

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Breakthrough 80's classic

CTK

It is for classics like this one that your Emusic subscription (and patience) is worthy. Left-handed guitarist Greg Sage and Co came from Oregon to treat us 80's kids in europe to what would become mainstream a decade later as "grunge" etc. Amazingly solid sound for a guitar-bass-drums trio and an unforgettable exp for those (of us) lucky to see them live way back then... Their old LP's still clocking playtime from time to time, I hope that "Youth of America" will soon be available to download too.

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Missing bonus tracks

starpower

A must have for 80s American punk. However the best way to get this is to hit Zeno for the first 3 CDs box set that has all of the extra tracks. 4-track Wipers, seriously!

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No thought required.

Synthmesc

You. Need. This. This is a classic, just get it now or be a fool forever. What's that? You want a description of the music? Fucking awesome, that's how I would describe it.

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They Say All Music Guide

A distant cousin of the preceding Youth of America but undoubtedly no less excellent and no less venomous, Over the Edge is a return to the easily digestible song lengths of Is This Real?; however, it all but leaves that debut in its wake. On the strength of some brave/smart radio stations that decided to play this album’s “Romeo” (a propulsive horn-flecked slammer in the vein of “Youth of America”), Wipers solidified their status as a certifiable force in the American underground of the early ’80s. Songs like “Messenger” and “What Is” show Greg Sage’s increasing skill as a pop songwriter. Despite the fusion of punk and pop, the record hardly mirrors the bands that would later be called punk-pop. In fact, this collision of the two elements makes what followed decades later seem twee. There’s just too much blood and sweat, and there’s too much tightly wound tension released. The overload is tempered somewhat on the album’s second side. The arrangements are sparse (and there are less guitar fireworks) when compared to their first-side counterparts, but the level of intensity is hardly sacrificed. Over the Edge is a kind of classic; it might have been created with guitars and drums, and it might have verse-chorus-verse song structures, but it’s doubtful that Wipers were allowing any influences to creep into the record. The version to own is actually hidden inside Wipers Box Set, which was released by Sage in 2001. While exhaustive at three discs, it shouldn’t cost any more than a typical single-disc release. It also sounds better, thanks to a fine remastering job. – Andy Kellman

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