Album Details

Hit Parade 1

RELEASE
LABEL
Manifesto Records
GENRES
Pop/Rock, Alternative Pop/Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock, Indie Rock

Album Review

The Wedding Present have been unanimously despised by the British music press following a brief honeymoon period in the mid-'80s. When they announced their desire to issue a single a month for a whole year, one particularly caustic Melody Maker journalist pointed out that she now had two low spots in her monthly cycle to endure. It must also be said that RCA were not too enamored of the projected release schedule when David Gedge first put his idea to them. For many, though -- including discerning onlookers like long-standing friend and supporter John Peel -- the Wedding Present's single-a-month blitz in 1992 was one of the highlights of that year. The band were at their peak: They'd just recorded their best record, Seamonsters, with Steve Albini, and they were beginning to stretch their sound beyond the coy romanticism of old. However, the real joy of the singles -- good as they were -- was Gedge's esoteric choices for B-sides, including the Go-Betweens' "Cattle and Cane," Altered Images' "Think That It Might" (Gedge was a huge fan of their overlooked Bite album), and the Monkees' "Pleasant Valley Sunday." Diverting, original, and great fun.
Alex Ogg, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Blue Eyes
  2. Cattle and Cane
  3. Go-Go Dancer
  4. Don't Cry No Tears
  5. Three
  6. Think That It Might
  7. Silver Shorts
  8. Falling
  9. Come Play With Me
  10. Pleasant Valley Sunday
  11. California
  12. Let's Make Some Plans