Wheels In Motion

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (13 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 50:00

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Pretty Good

Ultrasaurus

Not as good as "Where Are All The Nice Girls", but still pretty good. First three song are good, title track is great. I think the songs lose a bit from the 80s studio trickery and the very obvious multi-track/overdub approach to the recording. Their debut has such a great live band feel, the performance here is lackluster, but some good songs, get Nice Girls first.

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Classic New Wave

Shteeve

You may know Clive Gregson today as a folkie (or Richard Thompson sideman) but once upon a time he headed up this killer new wave/power pop band, whose first two records were on par with Elvis Costello's or Graham Parker's, or honestly, anyone else's at that time. WHERE ARE ALL THE NICE GIRLS has been available on CD, but this never has, and I just about fell out of my chair when I saw it here today. Listen to the first two tracks and you'll be hooked. Highly, highly recommended.

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They Say All Media Guide

Any Trouble’s 1980 debut was a wonderful slice of new wave flavored pub/pop/rock, which despite a fair amount of critical buzz, never really delivered on its commercial promise. With its second release, 1981′s Wheels in Motion, produced by Mike Howlett (A Flock of Seagulls, Berlin), the band took a slightly more sophisticated, studio approach with singer/songwriter Clive Gregson’s songs, veering away from the breakneck, live energy of Where Are All the Nice Girls?, which for the most part simply captured their feverish stage act in a studio setting. Still, whatever spark Wheels in Motion may lack is negligible thanks to the caliber of the material here. A handful of first-rate Gregson originals kick-start the proceedings, including the cautionary, albeit hopeful opener, “Trouble With Love,” the irresistible power pop of “Open Fire” and the infectious rocker, “As Lovers Do.” Several cuts in, the deliberate “Eastern Promise” is nearly as good, while “Power Cut” ranks just a rung below. Elsewhere, Richard Thompson’s “Dimming of the Day,” the only non-Gregson original, is given a slick, but affecting treatment. Moments of heavy-handed cynicism, as on the otherwise terrific, “Walking in Chains,” as well as a couple of lackluster tracks drag things down to some extent, but still Wheels in Motion’s highlights rank with the best work of Clive Gregson’s career, both with and without Any Trouble. – Brett Hartenbach

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