Maida Vale

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Maida Vale album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 41:54

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Not a collection, but a single great Peel Session

datawaslost

Despite what the All Music Guide says above, this is not a collection of Hefner's many Peel Sessions, but rather a single show they did live from Maida Vale in 2000, backed by a full horns section and Amelia Fletcher.. It's a great fleshed-out take on some of their later songs, and the 'We Love The City' tracks benefit greatly from the bigger sound. But you'll have to look elsewhere if you want to hear tracks from their other great (and so far uncollected) Peel Sessions.

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What happened to these guys?

killingpopstars

These tracks are really solid and great live. I'm dissapointed now that I heard these tracks. I never got the opportunity to see these guys play live. Try Greedy Ugly People for starters and if you like then download the rest. I think their sound is just now catching up with listeners with bands like Arcade Fire and New Pornographers. In music like everything else, it's all about timing.

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They Say All Music Guide

Die-hard radio geeks already know this just from the title: Hefner’s Maida Vale is a career-spanning compilation of the defunct band’s BBC radio sessions. (Maida Vale, y’see, is the leafy northwest London suburb where BBC Radio 1′s main studios are housed. However, ’70s proggers This Heat still keep the prize for best titular use of this location, on their own set of BBC sessions, Made Available.) Unlike many bands who simply go through a halfhearted selection of their best-known songs for their radio sessions, Hefner tend to shy away from their best-known material here: “The Greedy Ugly People” (featuring Amelia Fletcher on harmony vocals) is the only single side in these ten songs, with most of the rest being fairly obscure album tracks like the yearning “The Greater London Radio” and “Don’t Flake Out on Me.” The album highlight is a sardonically spirited take on “The Day That Thatcher Dies,” with a punchy faux-R&B horn section that sounds like it was lifted straight off a Style Council single. Although Maida Vale is, like all collections of BBC sessions, essentially a nice curio for fans rather than an essential release, it’s a nice complement to 2006′s other retrospective Hefner releases. – Stewart Mason

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