eMusic Review
Recent reissues of their early classics Entertainment! and Solid Gold were well-received by a new audience, and modern-day darlings Franz Ferdinand and Kaiser Chiefs have namechecked them with awe, so it was almost inevitable that the Leeds-based masters of angular, industrial, funk-tinged indie would rear their heads again. But the decision to revisit their former glories runs the risk of dividing longtime fans. For some, it will seem like a pointless attempt to recapture the youthful energy of yore, while others will welcome the chance to hear the old faves with a fresh coat of paint.
While the likes of "At Home He's a Tourist" and "I Love a Man in Uniform" may lack the urgency of the originals, others ("To Hell With Poverty", "Damaged Goods") often benefit from a wee bit of tinkering, the players more in sync with their instruments after so many years. The 14 tracks were mostly recorded "live" in the studio, perhaps in an attempt to recreate the DIY ethic of the first versions, but the sound is a tad muddy in places. It's worth investigating, but hardly life-changing.