Dream Police

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Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 45:52

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Wayne Robins

eMusic Contributor

Wayne Robins has been a journalist specializing in music for more than 40 years. Since his first paid assignment, reviewing the Rolling Stones 1969 Oakland show...more »

06.30.09
Relentlessly uptempo, hooky, smart new wave pop for knowledgeable people
1986 | Label: Epic

Dream Police, Cheap Trick's third studio album, was recorded in 1978 but its release was delayed by the unexpected success of Live in Budokan in Japan and, ultimately, the United States. "Delay" was relative in those days, when it was not unusual for a band to release two albums in a year: Dream Police came out in 1979, Cheap Trick's fifth album in three years. This was the new wave moment: England had Elvis Costello, L.A. had The Knack, and Cheap Trick split the difference, the pride of Rockford, Ill. Dream Police is prime Cheap Trick, relentlessly uptempo, hooky, smart and tight, the product of years of playing every VFW gig in the Quad Cities. "The House is Rockin '(With Domestic Problems)" shows their gift for mixing teen angst and big riffs, and "Gonna Raise Hell" is an arena rocker as simple and irresistible as AC/DC. They switch gears smoothly with "Voices," which was a "Beatlesque" ballad before that term got worn out. "Writing On the Wall" has the easy bopping presence of a Nick Lowe tune, and like Lowe, they transcend clichés by both acknowledging them and challenging them: the unexpected chords and complex arrangement of… read more »

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Raise Hell

Tabbycat

I always wanted to start a Cheap Trick tribute band called "Nap Patrol". I remember clearing out a bar once by playing "Voices" on the jukebox. Some people got no taste. Like the guy who photographed this album cover. However, "Dream Police" is ten times crazy.

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yes, yes...

madwyoming

an absolute benchmark in 70's rock. there is no denying cheap trick as being one of the greatest bands ever. this album is up there in rock legend! yes, yes!

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A Classic

speelman

After their smash album, "Live At Budokan", Cheaptrick comes back with their strongest record yet in "Dream Police". The title cut was an instant classic, "Gonna Raise Hell" has a bit of that late 70's New Wave flavor, "Voices" has their classic beatlesque sound and my favorite deep cut is "Need Your Love", first featured on the Budokan disc. If you could only own one disc by Cheap Trick, this would be in your final two to choose from.

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Essential Listening

LotusFan

Overshadowed by the massive popularity of Live From Budokan, Dream Police is Cheap Trick's best studio album...and one of the best rock albums of the 70s. Some 30 years after they were recorded, the songs still sound fresh and the hooks stick in your head. The video for the Dream Police single was brilliant as well, but released before the advent of MTV and Friday Night Videos.

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Great Power Pop Record

bdfstl2

Does CT deserve to be maligned because they were on Sony? Was there such a thing as indie labels in 1979? After you've mastered Surrender and Budokon, this should be next. Jr should take it out the real Sony crap, not classic power pop that influenced all the indie stuff we love today.

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Classic Cheap Trick

ToasKokopelli

I don't care the what label this on, this is a fine record recording by some of the kindness people in rock and roll. The glam side of Cheap Trick, but all nine songs are some my favorite rock and roll.

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They Say All Media Guide

At Budokan unexpectedly made Cheap Trick stars, largely because “I Want You to Want Me” had a tougher sound than its original studio incarnation. Perversely — and most things Cheap Trick have done are somehow perverse — the band decided not to continue with the direct, stripped-down sound of At Budokan, which would have been a return to their debut. Instead, the group went for their biggest, most elaborate production to date, taking the synthesized flourishes of Heaven Tonight to extremes. While it kept the group in the charts, it lessened the impact of the music. Underneath the gloss, there are a number of songs that rank among Cheap Trick’s finest, particularly the paranoid title track, the epic rocker “Gonna Raise Hell,” the tough “I Know What I Want,” the simple pop of “Voices,” and the closer, “Need Your Love.” Still, Dream Police feels like a letdown in comparison to its predecessors, even though it would later feel like one of the group’s last high-water marks. [An expanded edition of Dream Police was released in 2006 with four bonus tracks.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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