And Don't The Kids Just Love It

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (117 ratings)
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Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 37:40

eMusic Review

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Mark Paytress

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
A wry, nostalgic and quintessentially English form of post-punk.
2006 | Label: Fire Records / The Orchard

At more than one remove from the main thrust of Rough Trade's guitar-wielding contingent were Dan Treacy's makeshift combo, peddling their wry, nostalgic and quintessentially English form of post-punk. There is a fey, almost music hall feel to "Part-Time Punks," the lead track on the band's second release, which included a rather prescient reference ("Then they go to Rough Trade/ To buy Siouxsie and The Banshees") to the label that would be their home between 1979 and 1982. By 1981, The TVPs had honed their imperfect pop — and written enough songs — to record an album, …And Don't the Kids Just Love It, best known for the infamous "I Know Where Syd Barrett Lives" ("'E was very famous/ Once upon a time…"). Despite his increasingly troubled personal life, Treacy's managed to keep the TVPs going down the decades, though it's the patronage of various Creation label bands and associates that's really helped grow the legend.

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adults can dig it, too

Drooch

For reasons I cannot defend, I came late to this particular album, but in the last few months it's become an all-time favorite, standing up to listen after listen. In its shambling, amateurish way it belongs on a par with the best of early Who or Kinks, with keenly-observed songs that effortlessly blend poignancy and absurdity. And for all their lo-fi post-punk aesthetic, they have a great sense of space and dynamics; they use feedback like it's another band member.

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interesting style

WVMMRH

this reminds me quite a bit of half man,half biscuit. i lke the style.

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Daily listen

Tussinup

For many years I thought this record was something that came to me in a very happy dream. I had trouble convincing anyone that there had ever been such a band as the TVP's. Finally found an import CD a couple of years ago. I listen to some of it almost daily. I'm incapable of critical distance or irony on this one. This is a great great collection of songs.

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Best Britpop of the 80ties

Taturo

Downloaderfromhell is absolutly right! I tried to get this album on vinyl for years and could not get it. Best Britpop ever.

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WOW! It's finally here! Hooray!

Stick-Up-Artist

This is one of Joe Strummer's favorite bands and it will probably be one of yours too!

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songwriting genius!

Downloaderfromhell

"..and don't the kids just love it" is the first and still the best TV Personalities album imho. Mr. Treacy is a songwriting genius, just listen to tracks like "A picture of Dorian Gray", "La grande illusion" and "Silly girl". His skills at that time were only matched by artists like Paul Weller or XTC. The next album "Mummy you're not watching me" is also worth checking out, although it isn't available on Emusic, but I hope this will soon change. 5 Stars!

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eMusic Features

Get Well Soon, Dan Treacy!

By J. Edward Keyes , Editor-in-Chief

Incredibly sad news in the UK today: Television Personalities frontman Dan Treacy is in a coma after surgery to remove a blood clot in his brain. Treacy is an underground icon -- MGMT honored him with "Song For Dan Treacy" on last year's TVP-inspired Congratulations and his shambling, part-sarcastic/part-heartbroken approach to pop has been cited as an influence by countless contemporary indie bands. Three years ago, Douglas Wolk wrote this excellent summarymore »

They Say All Media Guide

The first full album by Television Personalities, recorded after a four-year series of often brilliant D.I.Y. singles recorded under a variety of names, including the O-Level and the Teenage Filmstars, is probably the purest expression of Daniel Treacy’s sweet-and-sour worldview. The songs, performed by Treacy, Ed Ball, and Mark Sheppard, predict both the C-86 aesthetic of simple songs played with a minimum of elaboration but a maximum of enthusiasm and earnestness and the later lo-fi aesthetic. The echoey, hissy production makes the songs sound as if the band were playing at the bottom of an empty swimming pool, recorded by a single microphone located two houses away, yet somehow that adds to the homemade charm of the record. Treacy’s vocals are tremulous and shy, and his lyrics run from the playful “Jackanory Stories” to several rather dark songs that foreshadow the depressive cast of many of his later albums. “Diary of a Young Man,” which consists of several spoken diary entries over a haunting, moody twang-guitar melody, is downright scary in its aura of helplessness and inertia. The mood is lightened a bit by some of the peppier songs, like the smashing “World of Pauline Lewis” and the “David Watts” rewrite “Geoffrey Ingram,” and the re-recorded version of the earlier single “I Know Where Syd Barrett Lives,” complete with deliberately intrusive prerecorded bird sounds, is one of the most charming things Television Personalities ever did. This album must have sounded hopelessly amateurish and cheaply ramshackle at the time of its 1981 release, but in retrospect, it’s clearly a remarkably influential album that holds up extremely well. – Stewart Mason

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