The Menace

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Elastica's second album, The Menace, comes a full five years after their million-selling,
self-titled debut. A long wait, to say the least, but The Menace doesn't find Elastica making a radical change from the angular pop of their first album. The departure of guitarist Donna Matthews (who still plays on two tracks, "How He Wrote Elastica Man"--which also features the Fall's Mark E. Smith--and "Image Change") steered the band away from their punkier leanings and allowed them to fully explore the new wave path that they started down way back in 1995. Keyboards and synths now blend more completely with their spiky guitars, as do cheesy Casio tone beats and retro-futuristic samples, resulting in such hyperenergetic numbers as "Mad Dog" and "Your Arse My Place." Elastica still wear their influences on their sleeves--yep, they sure do like Wire--and they even manage to fit a legitimate cover onto the album (Trio's 1982 hit "Da Da Da"). Five years on, The Menace sees Elastica on the same ground as their debut, but rather than simply retreading it, they just dig deeper and unearth more treasures. --Robert Burrow

Music Review:

  1. The Sweetest Punch: Songs Of Elvis Costello And Burt Bacharach
  2. To Remember/To Forget [Explicit Lyrics]
  3. Too Rye Ay [Extra tracks] [Import] [Original recording remastered]
  4. Transistor
  5. Tune in Tokyo [EP] [Import] [Live]
  6. Uncollected [Enhanced]
  7. We Too Are One
  8. White Label Mix Series Volume I
  9. World of Echo
  10. 1985 - 1990: The A List

Music Review

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BBC Sessions

Robert DiDomenica: Three Orchestral Works

Sarasate: Zigeunerweisen Op20; Concert Fantasy on themes from Bizet's Op25

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Night Out With The Boys

Omar Chakil [Import]

Rabbit Songs

Rock Theatre [Import]

On Yoolis Night

One Minute Science

Pieds Nus Dans l'Aube [Import]

Orlando Contreras Y Sus Canciones

Melting Pot

Texas Rumba