#1 Record/Radio City

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#1 Record/Radio City album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 24   Total Length: 73:18

eMusic Review 0

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Kandia Crazy Horse

eMusic Contributor

10.14.09
The Rosetta Stone of power pop
2006 | Label: Stax

Somewhere, armchair critics and befuddled Yankees are quibbling, neatly filing the first two records of Alex Chilton and Chris Bell away under "power pop." Yet, like Elvis and obvious Chilton precursor Jerry Lee Lewis, what else is Big Star's music really, released as it was on Memphis' own Ardent label (distributed through Stax, home of Otis Redding), recorded at the city's Ardent Studios by Dixie Fried auteur Jim Dickinson and named for a local supermarket chain? 'Spose if they'd been named "Piggly Wiggly" or "Winn-Dixie," there'd be less palaver. Of course, the long unsung quartet ascended to Rock Snob Encyclopedia fame mostly from laurels tossed their way over the past two decades by fellow Southern modernists R.E.M., who spearheaded the renaissance of Big Star-philia, Brits with Americana-envy and Midwesterners like the Replacements and Wilco, but the current Southern rock vanguard is hip, and includes tacit reclamation of Memphis' finest among the twisted skeins of their respective aural missions.

To be sure, Bell's post-band masterpiece I Am the Cosmos more overtly alludes to every suhthuhn boy's primary concern — God — but the lyrical themes, attenuated gospel-derived harmonies and underdog perspective of the mostly gorgeous, magnificent songs throughout both these albums sketch… read more »

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Hey kids get this!

Chris67

This is just an incredible record (or more accurately incredible records), period. If you can't bring yourselves to use 24 credits (hey emusic think about pricing this as a "deal"), try Radio City (tracks 13-24), then come back for #1 record (1-12) if you are hooked.

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goodbye to a monumental talent

midcoastmaine

I loved you, well. . nevermind, I've been crying all the time. I first got #1 Record the day of its release, and I've listened to it at least once a month since. It helped me learn what to listen to and what to listen for, and my life is better because of it. Thank you, boys. And if anyone out there hasn't heard this record, download it immediately. You won't be sorry.

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Farewell Alex

mikemos

Ye be missed. For new people, believe the hype.

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RIP Alex Chilton (12/28/1950-3/17/2010)

EVDebs

Alex Chilton may be gone, but this record will live on forever. If you don't have this yet, get it now! Perfect power pop!

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Best Thing on emusic!

Nyabinghi

The influence of this band can't be understated. They seem to inform everything that comes after. I still love Radio City better; looser production and the way each song just seems held together by a thread, like the band could fall apart in a moment. Better songs too! September Gurls a perfect pop song, so evocative and full of yearning--enough to make a grown man cry. The careening O My Soul and my favorite, Sitting in the Back of a Car. This stuff really sucks me back into the seventies but I wouldn't call it dated. Chilton's tender ballads are so innocent and reminiscent of that first teenage love; they just kill. Highly recommended!

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Not to belabor the point, but...

CANTBELIEVEIMPAYINGFORTHISCRAP

Yes, this 2-disc compilation is worth every ounce of hype. Big Star took everything the Beatles, Byrds, Velvet Underground et al. had done before them and created a masterpiece of moving, inspired, yet (at times) strangely intellectual music. #1 Record especially, which is on the whole better than Radio City if only because Chris Bell (Chilton's muse, RIP) only contributed to a few tunes. Not surprisingly, these are also the best songs on RC. Side note -- just HOW on EARTH did they get the ringing guitars on #1 Record to sound so crystal clear??? This was 1972!!!

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obscure and pure

Bobuar

Although Big Star has not blown up to the extent of the likes of Led Zepplin and Cheap Trick, they definitely should have. An esoteric following would later buy Chriss Bell's solo album like GBV fan's later would buy the Tobin Sprout solo album. Dedicated fan base that lasts for generations...

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The Classic

Aeschulus

Being born long after this album had been forgotten, I was introduced to it in college - and I was like, "Who the heck are these guys?" Well, these guys are some of the finer purveyors of the genre known as Power Pop - That 70's show themes aside, it's a gem that stands above contemporaries, such as the Raspberries. A must get!

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#1 is 5 Star, Radio City, 4

Peacenik

That ain't bad. This is an album that inspired the artists that inspired millions of indie kids. Even via that silly mash up on "That 70's Show." "Thirteen" shows you how a couple simple verses and harmonies combined can capture an emotion far more profound than the parts would indicate.

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Just the Best

theamazingrando

It's a good thing emusic doesn't make you pay by the quality of the song, or these albums would cost $12,000. As it is, you get to own some of the best sounds a human being can experience for the equivalent of a couple bucks. It's a good time to be alive.

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They Say All Music Guide

A two-fer combining Big Star’s first and second albums, #1 Record/Radio City remains a definitive document of early-’70s American power pop and a virtual blueprint for much of the finest alternative rock that came after it. The lone Big Star record to merit the full participation of founder Chris Bell, the brightly produced #1 Record splits the songwriting credits evenly between him and Alex Chilton (in the tradition of Lennon-McCartney). But from the beginning, the group is tearing apart at the seams: Bell and Chilton’s relationship seems less a working partnership than a battle of wills, and each possesses his own distinctive vision. The purist, Bell crafts electrifying and melodic classic pop like “Feel” and “In the Street,” while Chilton, the malcontent, pens luminous, melancholy ballads like “The Ballad of El Goodo” and “Thirteen.” Ultimately, their tension makes #1 Record brilliant. However, Radio City shifts gears dramatically: Bell is largely absent (though he guests, uncredited, on a few tracks, including the wonderful “Back of a Car”), allowing Chilton’s darker impulses free reign. From the raucous opener “O My Soul” onward, the new Big Star is noisier, edgier, and even more potent. Erratic mixing, spotty production, shaky performances — by all rights, Radio City should be a failure, yet Chilton is at his best when poised on the brink of disaster, and the songs hang together seemingly on faith and conviction alone. Each track recalls pop’s glory days, from the Kinks-ish snarl of “Mod Lang” to the Byrds-like guitar glow that adorns “Way Out West.” The much-celebrated “September Gurls” is indeed a classic — everything right and good about pop music distilled down to three minutes of pure genius. – Jason Ankeny

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