Dirty Looks

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Dirty Looks album cover
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Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 38:35

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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 »

04.22.11
Dirty Looks, Dirty Looks
1980 | Label: Stiff Records / ZTT

The same year Stiff found Any Trouble in the north of England, it also roped in this hard-hitting skinny-tie trio from New York City — Staten Island, to be precise, the land of David Johansen, the Wu-Tang Clan… and not much else musically. Led by singer-guitarist Patrick Barnes, the band had done only a handful of club shows before the trans-oceanic summons to London for recording. The first of Dirty Looks 'two albums sets a pair of ebullient power pop gems ("Let Go" and "You're Too Old") in a varied program that otherwise touches on doo-wop ("Lie to Me"), reggae ("Disappearing") and rockabilly ("Drop That Tan").

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Excellent and overlooked

EclecticDan

Contemporaries of The Equators, the Dirty Looks were another example of a high-talent, dead-end group on Stiff Records. One of my favorite albums (yes, I bought it on vinyl when it was released in 80)- it has tremendous sentimental value due to association with college years, but I believe the music stands on its own. Very good writing and great musicianship! This is a tight trio -think Buddy Holly Trio or Dada - you know immediately they belong together, and the result is greater than the sum of its parts. Follow the progression from Lie to Me, Take a Life, Let Go and 12 O'Clock High - social commentary, cynicism and just plain youthful fun. This is great stuff that probably would have been forgotten if not for eMusic. Download this and have a party - it is meant to be played loud!

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Emusics Review is dead wrong

Jayceerocker

More Than just wu Tang & david Johansen came from Staten island Debbie Harry & a Little band called Blondie hailed from that little island of staten & Dirty Looks was a damn cool Bands just for good measure

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This Is Real New Wave

dannylectro

Nowadays, whenever music critics use the term "new wave," they are generally referring to eighties synthesizer pop. In reality, that decade also produced a lot of stripped-down guitar-based rock 'n' roll. However, since very few of those artists scored American Top 40 hits, they are conveniently forgotten. Dirty Looks was one of those bands. Much like the Stray Cats, Dirty Looks were a New York-based trio who found it necessary to go to England to get a record deal. Dirty Looks, however, were not rockabilly. Instead, they were one of the most original powerpop bands of that time period. While their three-part harmonies and highly melodic songs evoked the mid-sixties British Invasion, their actual sound was much more modern and post-punk. Their self-titled debut beautifully captured this sound and should have been a massive hit. Sadly, it barely scraped the British album charts. Such an injustice for this fine collection of rocking pop songs.

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Great Little Power Trio

Tah-Ko

Hey magic26 - don't fret too much about them disbanding. They broke up a quarter of a century ago. And unless you lived in the NYC area, you probably wouldn't have seen them. I did see them at a show at a seedy club in downtown Manhattan, and heard "Let Go" on the radio at WPIX - a short-lived but great new wave/punk station, and I thought they were a blast (I also thought they were British at the time!? i.e. Joe Jackson Band, The Vapors, etc.) After the live show, I remember thinking that unlike many punk/new wave bands of the time, that they actually were skilled musicians. Anyway, they were quickly forgotten, but that song always stuck with me. Over the last few years, I tried to find anything I could on the net about them, and this is the first legitimate music download service to have their music and some info on them. Kudos to e-music!

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sounding good

magic26

Dirty Looks is sounding pretty good.Its a shame that the band already disbanded and that I didnt know about them when thay were around

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Stiff Records

By Ira Robbins, eMusic Contributor

Many of the entrepreneurs who founded small record labels in the '70s took it as an article of independent faith that they would — and should — only release music by artists they liked. Expanding on the genre traditions of such great companies as Atlantic (R&B), Motown (soul) and Chess (blues), the best of these d-i-y-ers had such consistent and reliable taste that the labels, as much as their artists, gained loyal adherents. Dave Robinson and… more »

They Say All Music Guide

There’s a rich history of American bands going to the U.K. in hopes of getting their big break, but Dirty Looks were lucky enough to manage this without having to leave New York City. Dave Robinson, one of the founders of the legendary British label Stiff Records, saw the Staten Island-based trio while visiting the Big Apple and wasted no time signing them, and judging from their self-titled debut album, it’s not hard to see why — while Dirty Looks’ attack was harder and leaner than most of the acts who recorded for Stiff at the time, the songs have hooks galore, Patrick Barnes’ lead guitar rings loud and clear throughout, bassist Marco Sin and drummer Peter Parker drive the band with energy to spare, and the guys know how to walk the fine line between cool and geeky with aplomb. While the single “Let Go” is the best thing on Dirty Looks, a handful of other gems can be heard here as well, including the cheerfully snarky “You’re Too Old,” the frantic lyrical push and pull of “They Got Me Covered,” and the rockabilly-influenced curtain-closer “Drop That Tan.” There’s hardly a shred of waste on Dirty Looks — the performances are streamlined and to the point, with the three players sounding remarkably tight and earnest without getting pretentious. Dirty Looks isn’t quite power pop and it doesn’t hit quite hard enough to be punk, but the middle ground it stakes out is a pretty fun place to be. – Mark Deming

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