The Glasgow School

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The Glasgow School album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 23   Total Length: 66:09

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Wanting more

robertb66

I wish there was more material by Orange Juice, like Rip it up, but this will suffice.

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It is Breakfast Time

cgmaisano

No, that's the correct name of the track. Also, this collection is amazing, one of my favorite albums ever. There's no Smiths without Edwyn Collins and Orange Juice.

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get the track names right!

dhr001

track 7 says "breakfast time". I don't know what song it is but it ain't "breakfast time".

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crooning, quirky pop -- the best there is!

hotdoorknobs

Yay Edwyn! Get this!

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They Say All Music Guide

Orange Juice’s three albums, along with compilations of various shapes and sizes, have floated in and out of print throughout the years. This hasn’t made it convenient for anyone curious about the band, whether the interest was sparked by Haircut 100, the Jesus and Mary Chain, Belle & Sebastian, Franz Ferdinand, the unlikely mainstream success of Edwyn Collins’ “A Girl Like You,” the history of post-punk, or the birth of indie pop. The Glasgow School, released in 2005 by Domino, contains the band’s four singles for Postcard, the bulk of Ostrich Churchyard (a disc released in 1992, containing early versions of what would become 1982′s You Can’t Hide Your Love Forever), a Stars on 45-style version of “Simply Thrilled Honey,” and a crude cover of the Ramones’ “I Don’t Care.” For a lot of people, the material here (dating no later than 1981) is where Orange Juice begins and ends. The band signed to Polydor soon after the latest song on this disc was recorded, and they promptly gave their sound a coat of shiny wax — so they helped invent indie pop, only to abandon it before their first album. Though the notion extends throughout Orange Juice’s discography, they were nothing if not fearless. What other way is there to describe lyrics like “I wore my fringe like Roger McGuinn’s/I was hoping to impress/So frightfully camp — you laughed,” or their wholly convincing (if occasionally gawky) way of bouncing the jangly folk-rock of the Byrds off the fat-bottomed disco drive of Chic, all the while creating an identity all their own? Both the singles and the Ostrich Churchyard takes are as crafty as they are crude, and if you can’t get past the amateurishness, there’s plenty of winsome attitude to win you over. This disc serves as proof that, along with Josef K, Associates, Altered Images, Simple Minds, Cocteau Twins, and the Scars, Orange Juice helped make Scotland a very productive resource during the post-punk/new wave era. – Andy Kellman

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