Flower Power

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (17 ratings)
Flower Power album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 42:01

Write a Review 1 Member Review

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Guitar player's band

Daviso

If you enjoy guitar songs with well concieved hooks, distorted layers and plenty o' bar-riffing without the boring solos. The Pkids put it down consistently from record to record one string at a time. This is the raw makings of such an influential band it is almost silly they are not a house-hold brand like the pixies and one hit bands like Hum. This is a band's band where the vocals are 10% of what makes them 90% inspired guitar riff innovators of the 90's alternative scene. I thank denizen Sam Shiffman for turning me on way back when he said just get them all.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

A 1991 CD reissue of two self-released cassettes that originally came out in 1987 and 1988, Flower Plower is the Poster Children’s earliest and roughest material. The first four tracks, the entirety of the Flower Plower cassette, were recorded by Steve Albini just after the dissolution of Big Black, and they have that same startling immediacy. However, even at this very early stage, flashes of the Poster Children’s characteristic pop sense shine through the punky roar. The 11-track Toreador Squat album, from 1988, is even more comparable to later albums like DDD. The galloping opener “Hollywood,” a sparkling, Buzzcocks-like punk-pop song, is prime Poster Children, and the rest of the Iain Burgess-produced album is similarly catchy. Hüsker Dü is another obvious antecedent (“Modern Art” could be a Zen Arcade outtake), and “Question” sounds like the Minutemen covering the Gang of Four. Although the various strains in the Poster Children’s music aren’t quite unified yet and therefore this early material sounds a bit derivative, it’s also easy to hear how the group got from these tentative beginnings to the glories of Daisychain Reaction and RTFM. – Stewart Mason

more »