Low Budget

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Low Budget album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 59:34

eMusic Review 0

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Chris Hunt

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Ray Davies rediscovers his sense of humor.
2000 | Label: KOCH Records / Entertainment One Distribution

Finally reaping reward from their US touring, Low Budget was the best and most successful Kinks album for some time, even though many of its themes were long-term Ray Davies pre-occupations: the National Health Service, petrol shortages, life on the breadline. On Low Budget though, Davies rediscovered his sense of humor, the title track a semi-autobiographical take on his own legendary penny-pinching nature: "Money's rare there's none to be found/ So don't think I'm tight if I don't buy a round". The deadpan lyricism was harnessed to contemporary rock power riffs and presented with the charismatic delivery of a master showman. It was an album that recaptured some of the spontaneity of old, partly because it was largely recorded in New York rather than in Ray's own North London Konk Studios. "Pressure" was even recorded in one take, something Davies had not allowed for some time. Standout cuts included the epic "Catch Me Now I'm Falling," the minor US hit "I Wish I Could Fly Like Superman" and "Moving Pictures."

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The Kinks

EMUSIC-02A3CE23

i love this album! :) my dad and i's favorite band! i wish i was born in the era :) so worth the money!

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Strong late-70s era Kinks.

TheLarch

“Not as inspired as earlier efforts,” according to some, but this reviewer likes it just fine. A strong showing from ’79 and, in my opinion, just as good as “Misfits”.

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It has been a long time.

anglerbryan

Some songs are as true today as 1979.I know I've been on a low budget lately.I like Misfits better though.

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Middling

billymaci

Some decent songs here but looks like The Kinks decided the best way to break America was to try and add the Rolling Stones to their sound. How did they get away with using the Jumping Jack Flash riff in Catch Me Now I'm Falling?

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One of their Best

Dipsy

Superman and Catch me Now I'm Falling (Captain America Calling) along with Low Budget (which reminds me of a very cheap but fun friend of mine); these songs got a bit of bite to them but are great to listen to.

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Awesome - Best Kinks album ever!

pjk33

This is by far the best Kinks album available and I'm surprised it is on this site. Great from the first note to the last...

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Left Behind

epignosis11

I'd had fond memories of this release and downloaded it greedily. While I mildly enjoyed getting re-acquainted with forgotten standards like "Catch Me Now I'm Falling" and "Superman" (despite the disco beat)this disc hasn't aged well.It just doesn't transcend it's times the way The Kinks' British invasion material does.

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Indeed ...

jdship

As rickstervc says, this is the best of the Arista records, and the last with production that hasn't dated. A lot of this became staples of the arena tours, but the best songs are the ones that didn't translate -- "In A Space," "Little Bit of Emotion" and "Moving Pictures" are terrific, and "Misery" was Ray's best rocker in years.

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The Best of the Arista Years

rickstervc

Low Budget is the high point of the Arista years, filled with stadium rock standards like "Attitude," "Pressure," and the title track. It's not near as raw as the 60's hits, but many of these tracks have aged quite well. Even the one that hasn't aged well, "(I Wish I Could Fly) Like Superman," with a synthesized disco beat, still maintains some charm. I think all the Arista studio albums-Sleepwalker, Misfits, Low Budget, Give The People What They Want, State of Confusion and Word of Mouth have a some great songs and an equal amount of filler. Pick and choose from the above albums, and you'll end up with about 30 great tracks. Or save yourself some time and download "Come Dancing With The Kinks."

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Low Budget doesn’t have a narrative like Preservation or Soap Opera, but Ray Davies cleverly designed the album as a sly satire of the recession and oil crisis that gripped America in the late ’70s — thereby satisfying his need to be a wry social commentator while giving American audiences a hook to identify with. It was a clever move that worked; not only did Low Budget become their highest-charting American album (not counting the 1966 Greatest Hits compilation), but it was also a fine set of arena rock, one of the better mainstream hard rock albums of its time. And it certainly was of its time — so much so that many of the concerns and production techniques have dated quite a bit in the decades since its initial release. Nevertheless, that gives the album a certain charm, since it now plays like a time capsule, a snapshot of what hard rock sounded like at the close of the ’70s. Perhaps not so coincidentally, Davies’ songwriting fluctuates throughout the album, since it’s dictated as much by commercial as artistic concerns, but the moments when he manages to balance the two impulses — as on the disco-fueled “(Wish I Could Fly Like) Superman,” the vaudevillian “Low Budget,” “A Gallon of Gas,” the roaring “Attitude” (possibly their best hard rocker of the era, by the way), and “Catch Me Now I’m Falling,” where Davies takes on the persona of America itself — are irresistible. Low Budget may not have the depth of, say, Arthur or Village Green, but it’s a terrifically entertaining testament to their skills as a professional rock band and Davies’ savvy as a commercial songwriter. [The CD was also released with bonus tracks.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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