Pure Mania

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (27 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 34:42

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Fuck a bunch of punk purists

genebean

It's just great songs, delivered hard and fast, and Knox is STILL doin' it after 30+ years....

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Genius Hacks

MadDogM13

Proof positive that even studio hacks can produce magic every once in awhile. This music will keep your vintage punk rock raving quite nicely.

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Desert Island Disc for me

hellothere

"Punk Bandwagon-jumpers"? Nonsense, these guys were fully formed and a force to be reckoned with by mid-1976. Perhaps they cut their hair, but who didn't after seeing the Pistols? Even The PISTOLS cut their hair! But seriously, this LP is full of inventive, brash and sexually charged tunes that stick... you will love this, give it a chance...

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They Say All Media Guide

Were the Vibrators real punks? Maybe not, but then again, were the Stranglers? Or Eddie and the Hot Rods? Even more to the point, was Steve Jones? Plenty of rock careerists jumped onto the punk/new wave bandwagon in the wake of the Sex Pistols’ success (and more than a few folks, like Jones, stumbled into the new movement by accident), but unlike most of them, the Vibrators took to the fast/loud/stripped down thing like ducks to water, and both Knox (aka Ian Carnarchan) and Pat Collier had a genius for writing short, punchy songs with sneering melody lines and gutsy guitar breaks. If the Vibrators were into punk as a musical rather than a sociopolitical movement, it’s obvious that they liked the music very much, and on that level their debut album stands the test of time quite well. Pure Mania boasts a bit more polish (and less politics) than many of the albums from punk’s first graduating class (such as Damned Damned Damned or The Clash), but if you’re looking for a strong, satisfying shot of chugging four-square punk, cue up “Yeah Yeah Yeah,” “No Heart,” “Petrol,” or “Wrecked on You” and you’ll be thrown into a gleeful pogo frenzy. Maybe Pure Mania isn’t purist’s punk, but it’s pure rock & roll, and there’s nothing wrong with that. – Mark Deming

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