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Blondie

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (20 ratings)
Blondie album cover
01
X Offender (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:11
$1.29
02
Little Girl Lies (2001 Digital Remaster)
2:04
$1.29
03
In The Flesh (2001 Digital Remaster)
2:26
$1.29
04
Look Good In Blue (2001 Digital Remaster)
2:56
$1.29
05
In The Sun (2001 Digital Remaster)
2:40
$1.29
06
A Shark In Jets Clothing (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:35
$1.29
07
Man Overboard (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:20
$1.29
08
Rip Her To Shreds (2001 - Remaster)
3:20
$1.29
09
Rifle Range (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:37
$1.29
10
Kung Fu Girls (2001 Digital Remaster)
2:29
$1.29
11
The Attack Of The Giant Ants (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:20
$1.29
12
Out In The Streets (2001 Digital Remaster)
2:19
$1.29
13
The Thin Line (2001 Digital Remaster)
2:25
$1.29
14
Platinum Blonde (2001 Digital Remaster)
2:15
$1.29
15
X Offender (Original Private Stock Single Version) (2001 Digital Remaster)
3:13
$1.29
16
In The Sun (Original Private Stock Single Version) (2001 Digital Remaster)
2:38
$1.29
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 45:48

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eMusic Review 0

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Ira Robbins

eMusic Contributor

Ira Robbins co-founded Trouser Press magazine in 1974. (Think of it as a pre-Internet music blog). He was later pop music editor at Newsday and has written for ...more »

05.18.11
Blondie's debut features a marketable lack of rebellion
2001 | Label: CHRYSALIS

The keys to Blondie's future success could be discerned on their 1976 debut, but not in the music's amateurish charm so much as in its highly marketable lack of rebellion. For an offbeat band emerging from an exotic underground, Blondie was less inclined to break rules than to embrace familiarity and make it cool. (Skinny ties were, after all, just a standard fashion given an ironic afterlife.) The album is spunky entertainment, in line with the young group's nostalgic fandom and divergent enthusiasms. From the liner notes: "Blondie hates fun, but they have so much of it that…this blonde has come to give you a ton."

Singer Deborah Harry, perhaps practicing for her future as a movie actress, brings lighthearted theatricality to the innocuous attitude-mongering of "Rip Her to Shreds," "X Offender" and the West Side Story-inspired "A Shark in Jets Clothing." Matching the genial whiff of mock delinquency, the period sound by producer Richard Gottehrer (who had a personal hand in some important '60s records) is evocative rather than rote. So while keyboardist Jimmy Destri kicks in the needed dosage of classic Farfisa organ, he's unafraid to be modern, using majestic synthesizer for the surfin' sojourn of "In the Sun."… read more »

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Loved it back when, love it now...

Bluewaterdreams

I loved this album when it first came out (I was in 8th grade). Granted, an 8th grader doesn't have the greatest of tastes, but this music still sounds cool after all these years.

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eMusic Features

0

Icon: Blondie

By Ira Robbins, eMusic Contributor

In the fall of 1975, when Blondie could often be found playing the back room of Mother's, a gay bar-turned-rock club on West 23rd Street, it seemed far from likely that they (or, for that matter, any of the amazing bands at the forefront of New York's quixotic rock scene) would go very much further. Or that they even wanted to. While Blondie's self-conscious revivalism held plenty of in-crowd appeal for the motley crew of… more »

They Say All Music Guide

If new wave was about reconfiguring and recontextualizing simple pop/rock forms of the ’50s and ’60s in new, ironic, and aggressive ways, then Blondie, which took the girl group style of the early and mid-’60s and added a ’70s archness, fit right in. True punksters may have deplored the group early on (they never had the hip cachet of Talking Heads or even the Ramones), but Blondie’s secret weapon, which was deployed increasingly over their career, was a canny pop straddle — they sent the music up and celebrated it at the same time. So, for instance, songs like “X Offender” (their first single) and “In the Flesh” (their first hit, in Australia) had the tough-girl-with-a-tender-heart tone of the Shangri-Las (the disc was produced by Richard Gottehrer, who had handled the Angels ["My Boyfriend's Back"] among others, and Brill Building songwriter Ellie Greenwich even sang backup on “In the Flesh”), while going one step too far into hard-edged decadence — that is, if you chose to see that. (The tag line of “Look Good in Blue,” for example, went, “I could give you some head and shoulders to lie on.”) The whole point was that you could take Blondie either way, and lead singer Deborah Harry’s vocals, which combined rock fervor with a kiss-off quality, reinforced that, as did the band’s energetic, trashy sound. This album, released on independent label Private Sound, was not a major hit, but it provided a template for the future. – William Ruhlmann

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