All Over The Place

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (87 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 30:57

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When this first came out

Capnmidnight

I fell in love, and it was so much more than adolescent lust, I fell in love with their minds and talent. With this album I actually considered these guys the best American rock'n'roll band going. There is a dorm room on the campus of the University of North Dakota that is still haunted by the transcendent sounds of this disc. A stone cold classic or the phrase is meaningless.

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The Best of Bangles

battlefeverj

Compared to their later works, this one sounds more honest and true to their roots. Don't pass this one up if you consider yourself even a casual Bangles fan. No gimmicks, just talent!

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The one to own

EMUSIC-00B90163

Forget everything that came after. If what you know is "Manic Monday" or "Walk Like An Egyptian," try "Live" or "He's Got A Secret." This made a huge impact on college campuses when it came out. After that? Perpetual disappointment.

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Not bad

Psychsound

Not great, but not bad. Best songs here: When the Hero Takes a Fall, and Going Down to Liverpool. Tell Me and All About You are also quite enjoyable.

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They Say All Media Guide

While the Bangles would later embrace a radio-friendly pop production style (and enjoy attendant commercial success) that separated them from their early peers, they were the only figures from the L.A. paisley underground scene who would go on to become genuine multi-platinum rock stars, and while their first full-length album, 1984′s All Over the Place, showed that some of their rough edges were already being buffed away, of their major-label output it’s the record that most openly embraces the folk-rock and garage rock influences that fueled their earliest music. Vicki Peterson’s lead guitar and the band’s stellar harmonies are the vehicles that drive these 11 songs, and if producer David Kahne was already pushing the group in a more commercially ambitious direction, there’s no disguising the psychedelic guitar figures on “Dover Beach” or the Byrds-meets-Raiders jangle of “Tell Me,” and the choice of the Merry-Go-Round’s “Live” as a cover is especially telling. All Over the Place is also the Bangles’ most unified full-length album; Susanna Hoffs hadn’t yet been singled out as the star of the show, and the round-robin lead vocals, stellar harmonies, and tight, concise arrangements make them sound like a real-deal rock band, and the set’s gentle but insistent sway from British Invasion-styled rock and West Coast pop feels natural, unforced, and effective. And when drummer Debbie Peterson and bassist Michael Steele feel like rocking out, the Bangles generate a lot more heat than they’re usually given credit for, most notably on “Silent Treatment.” The Bangles’ second full album, Different Light, would sell a lot more copies, but All Over the Place is easily their best and most satisfying LP. – Mark Deming

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