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Amy MacDonald Music

1977: Collector's Edition/Remastered

1977: Collector's Edition/Remastered
Artist: Ash
Label: Rhino
Category: Music

List Price: £17.99
Buy New: £11.68
You Save: £6.31 (35%)



New (22) Used (1) from £8.69

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 37 reviews
Sales Rank: 2967

Format: Box Set
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 3
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 5.8 x 5 x 0.8

EAN: 5051865045052
ASIN: B001FBIFPK

Release Date: November 3, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours

Tracks:

  Disc 1
  • Lose Control
  • Goldfinger
  • Girl From Mars
  • I'd Give You Anything
  • Gone The Dream
  • Kung Fu
  • Oh Yeah
  • Let It Flow
  • Innocent Smile
  • Angel Interceptor
  • Lost In You
  • Darkside Lightside
  • Season
  • Jack Names The Planets
  • Intense Thing
  • Uncle Pat
  • Get Out
  • Petrol
  • Obscure Thing

  Disc 2
  • A Clear Invitation To The Dance Part 1
  • Darkside Lightside
  • Girl From Mars
  • Oh Yeah
  • T Rex
  • I'd Give You Everything
  • Kung Fu
  • What Deaner Was Talking About
  • Goldfinger
  • Petrol
  • A Clear Invitation To The Dance Part 2
  • Lose Control
  • Jack Names The Planets
  • T Rex
  • Goldfinger
  • Angel Interceptor
  • Darkside Lightside
  • Oh Yeah
  • Innocent Smile
  • Lost In You
  • Petrol
  • Gone The Dream
  • Girl From Mars
  • Kung Fu

  Disc 3
  • Girl From Mars 4 Track Demo
  • Jack Names The Planets (La La Land Records 7" Version)
  • Don't Know (La La Land Records 7" Version)
  • Silver Surfer (From John Peel session in '94
  • Punk Boy
  • Different Today
  • Hulk Hogan Bubblebath
  • Day Of The Triffids
  • Luther Ingo's Star Cruiser
  • Astral Conversations With Toulouse Lautrec
  • Cantina Band
  • 5am Eternal
  • Gimme Some Truth
  • I Need Somebody
  • Sneaker
  • Get Ready
  • T Rex
  • Everywhere Is All Around
  • Does Your Mother Know
  • I Only Want To Be With You
  • A Life Less Ordinary (Tim Simenon Version)
  • Sick Party
  • The Scream

Similar Items:

  • Nu-Clear Sounds
  • Free All Angels
  • Meltdown
  • Twilight of the Innocents
  • Trailer

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Written and recorded while a teenage Tim Wheeler was doing his A-levels, 1977 (named after the year Star Wars was released) made Ash bona-fide indie starlets overnight, largely thanks to the quality of the singles it contains. Their timing couldn't have been better: the summer of 1996 belonged to the Union Jack guitar, and Ash were free to ride the wildsurf of the Britpop tsunami, electrifying everyone with the quirky ("Girl From Mars"), the funny (the Jackie Chan comedy of "Kung Fu") and the best Christmas song ever written by a guitar band--the heartwarming mixture love and science that was "Angel Interceptor".

It is unfortunately hindered by the trademark duvet production of Oasis man Owen Morris, which muffles Rick McMurrey's thunderous drums and does nothing for Wheeler's uniquely flat voice (one of the album's major shortcomings in itself). It also suffers from a monotony produced by its constant full-on nature which a couple of acoustic (or even slower) numbers would have fixed and balanced the album better. If these had replaced some of the more forgettable album tracks here ("Lost In You" and the needlessly bombastic "I'd Give You Any Thing"), then so much the better. Come to reminisce not just for the pubescent memories it evokes within the songs, but also the memories of the time it was released. Or, as Wheeler laments on the teenage love anthem "Oh Yeah", "I sometimes wish it was that summer again". --Ben Johncock


Customer Reviews:   Read 32 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars oh yeah 1977's taking me over   November 8, 2008
okay i was two years short from hitting my teens upon its 1996 release but 1977 by ASH was the album that more or less reflected my growing up in some way's and this re-issue is a slight premature considering they have only released 5 albums into their lifetime and are now focusing on just releasing singles but i suppose it does not hurt the album any further since this 3cd collection gathers all the three pieces best hits and rarities to make a great album even greater.

Disc 2 and 3 are purely for the borderline - obsessive as disc 1 when it was first released 12 years ago is the real deal tracks like "Oh Yeah" has a slow start that veers into a climatic build up of Wheeler's vocals as if he was describing whats life like as a teenager connecting with those finding growing up a real chore as thier voice and body changes while "Girl From Mars" is pure power pop at its best with its fuzzy guitars and dreamy vocals whilst the three piece doff off their hats to the kung fu referenced "Jackie Chan" and carrying on their love for star wars with "Angel Interceptor".

Even though they went on to release better albums with charlotte hatherly as a four piece but thier debut album is the definitive purchase as even though it has a nolstalgic appeal its songs have never aged.



4 out of 5 stars young irish kickstarts bring it   July 19, 2006
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

ash,when this was released were a young punky band with an ear for a single,this album was packed with top 40 singles such was their ability to get into the head of the average person,this is their debut album and isnt as scuzzy as their debut ep,but still has a nice rock feel to it,tim wheelers voice never screamed and for that i suppose lay the key to the albums success.It certainly seems like yesterday since i bought this but in fact it was ten years ago,and although the sound of this album may have suffered slightly over the years its still a landmark album for the group who have released single after single since,and while some of their albums since havent delivered,this is still the benchmark that they need to revisit.
The albums title is a reference to the year that two members of the band were born and the release of star wars,and its no surprise that the album has a few star wars references,not that im a fan of the star wars series but hey it pays to know a thing or two.
Like i said the album is packed with feel good ,sing a long moments such as the classic kung fu,goldfinger(what a song),girl from mars,gone the dream,oh yeah,lost in you,darkside,lightside.Its an album that is easy to take too as its simplistic poppy rock with good hooks,the album has one poor song if im to be a fair reviewer, and thats innocent smile which is pretty poor and i usually skip it if the truth be told,but all in all this isnt an album that challenges the bounaries of music but its an album of sheer enjoyment.



5 out of 5 stars ash at their best   December 24, 2005
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

best album from ash, not yet matched by their later albums. moving forward from the punk pop 'trailer', ash entered the mainstream with 1977. the punk pop undertones are still evident but 1977 moved forward with a bigger, more accessible sound. 9/10


4 out of 5 stars Ash - 1977   October 24, 2004
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Buzzing with youthful energy, Ash burst out of the traps at the height of Britpop with this debut. Named after the year Star Wars was released, 1977 begins with the sounds of an X-wing fighter plane soaring off into space. What follows is a variable collection of pop songs packed with oceans of guitar and blurred production. Tracks like Kung Fu, with it's aimless ramblings on the subjects of Jackie Chan and Fu Man Chu, betray the occasionally banal side of singer/lyricist Tim Wheeler's muse. Others, such as I'd Give You Anything and Lose Control, contain great rock riffs and creatively disorganised guitar solos, but little in the way of lyrical enlightenment. However, these minor imperfections are overshadowed by some of the murky brilliance this record contains. Take the wonderfully innocent Girls From Mars, for example; a warming tale of summer love, featuring the amusing choral couplet "We'd stay up late playing cards/Henri Winterman cigars". At first these observations seem ridiculous, but after repeat listening they acquire a certain charm. Oh Yeah is almost the in the same vein, yet far more hormonal, far less mysterious, and even better. Completed by evocative female backing vocals, Wheeler's teenage love anthem is the best thing on the album. Other delights include the riff-laden rock of Goldfinger and even a Christmas song, Angel Interceptor. An intriguing beginning for the Irish band.
Rating: 8



5 out of 5 stars 1977   June 17, 2003
 4 out of 6 found this review helpful

A total classic. This is the album that Ash are trying to get back to with their most recent LP ('Free All Angels') after the slightly dissapointing 'Nu-Clear Sounds'. It's also a vast improvement on the empty and immature 'Trailer'. It's such a strong album that almost any track could be a single. Albums like this are special, ya hear? Standout tracks: 'Lose Control', 'Goldfinger', 'Girl From Mars', 'Kung Fu', 'Oh Yeah', 'Angel Interceptor' and 'Darkside Lightside'. Thats over half the album, which says a lot.



 

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