Where'd You Learn To Kiss That Way?

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (113 ratings)
Where'd You Learn To Kiss That Way? album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 36   Total Length: 157:07

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Byrds meet Lambrettas (slowed down)

midcoastmaine

Clever, inventive songwriting and singing by that one voice on every twee album (that guy sure gets around)

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Great But....

BeerMonster

Love this album..along with the other releases. Word of caution. Don't make the mistake I made. If you have Coastal,For Keeps and Snowball then you have most of this album. There are 12/36 new songs. Just thought I'd pass this along.

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Simple, earth-shattering

PnR

Much pop music sounds shallow, manufactured and uniform to me. Even at school I ended up preferring serious classical. So I was amazed at myself for giving a compilation of so-called 'twee pop' a five-star rating. And there is contrast! In successive songs you can hear skiffle, REM pop, New Order-style dancefloor, and sentimental crooning. When I listen to 'It isn't forever' I have to turn up the volume to enjoy the five-minute build-up followed by a finale which, craftily, never introduces the heavy drums you were expecting. And then it's all demolished by a wistful acoustic duo about a fading infatuation. Finally, I never knew until downloading this album that Saint Étienne didn't pen 'Let's kiss and make up'. Kudos to The Field Mice!

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How did I miss this?

Spikeysongs

Although I have a vague memory of John Peel raving about this band they totally escaped my attention. All I can say is thank goodness that I stumbled upon this rather excellent compilation. It's lovely! They were also an obvious influence on many other bands. The Saint Ettiene cover version of their "Let's Kiss and Make Up" being a case in point. Give them a whirl ...

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oh dear

music4thesoul

I'd forgoten completely about this band - what a bloody, crying shame they couldn't hack it and stay together - listen to any one of these tracks and you can hear nearly every band of their time right upto present day - I bet they have been so influential and I bet none of today's bands acknowledge that - what a lovely emusic find - thank you - oh yes do download this album(s) it is superb.

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Sigh...

thom.hammond

Fragile, elegant, lovelorn...mostly just bloody marvellous. 'So Said Kay' is a particular masterpiece. Give it a go.

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They Say All Music Guide

Although revered in certain indie circles, for far too long the Field Mice appeared in danger of languishing as the great lost pop band of the early ’90s, with their records out of print and fetching obscene prices on the collector’s market. A lavish two-disc retrospective worthy of their growing legacy, the extraordinary Where’d You Learn to Kiss That Way? finally restores the group to their rightful prominence, assembling all of the key tracks they released on the legendary Sarah label between 1988 and 1991. With their shimmering guitars, indelible melodies, lush arrangements, and Bobby Wratten’s heartbreaking songs, in retrospect the Field Mice now seem like the missing link between the Smiths and Belle & Sebastian — at their best (“Emma’s House,” “This Love Is Not Wrong,” “Coach Station Reunion,” and countless others), they achieve the same kind of pop transcendence, spinning tales of love and loss with an elegance and grandeur that are often breathtaking. And while it’s a shame Shinkansen didn’t opt to include a third disc and release the band’s complete recorded output, each of the 36 tracks which did make the cut sparkles. No longer lost, the Field Mice were simply a great pop band, and with Where’d You Learn to Kiss That Way?, their music might finally reach the wide audience it so richly deserves. – Jason Ankeny

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