Eddie, Old Bob, Dick And Gary

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (7 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 38:27

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ah the memories

johnnyv-muzkfrk

i have somewhere between 5 and 6 hundred albums,the majority of them are from the 80's so it's nice to finally be able to get a lot of them on cd from e-music.this cd is pure 80's new wave/punk at it's best.check out swords of a thousand men,wunderbar and three bells in a row and try not tapping your foot or dancing to it,listen and enjoy.

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Really Fun Album

ExpectoPatronum

I had completely forgotten about this band. When I saw them here, I suddenly remembered Wunderbar from the early days of MTV. Then it turned out that I also knew Swords Of A Thousand Men, but I didn't know the same band did both songs. The rest were a mystery to me. It turns out that all the songs on this album are completely infectuous and a real gas.

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They Say All Media Guide

Tenpole Tudor’s music is so defiantly silly and raucous that it would be easy to dismiss if it wasn’t quite so fun. Taking the punk aesthetic to an extreme, no one in Tenpole Tudor, particularly lead vocalist Eddie Tudor, can sing at all, so each song turns into a drunken, noisy singalong. And most of these songs are singalongs, filled with rousing choruses, big hooks, and clattering chords that are messy and infectious. What’s surprising about the group’s debut album, Eddie, Old Bob, Dick & Gary, is how many flat-out excellent songs are on the record. Combining ridiculous swords-and-sorcery imagery with laddish party anthems, nearly half of the record is invigorating, noisy rock & roll, with the boozy “Swords of a Thousand Men,” “Wunderbar,” “Three Bells in a Row,” “I Wish,” and “There Are the Boys” standing out among the clatter. The rest of the album isn’t quite as good, but it has reckless charm that makes Eddie, Old Bob, Dick & Gary a thrillingly primitive rock & roll record. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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