Wives in Orbit (single): Difference between revisions
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== Reviews == | == Reviews == | ||
=== Bomp! === | |||
March 1979<ref>https://archive.org/details/Bomp21March1979/page/n32/mode/1up?q=%22Red+crayola%22</ref><blockquote>But check out the Crayola disc, it's not from the reissued album, but rather a new recording done by Mayo Thompson in the UK, backed by various local and NY punks. As one of the last functioning survivors of '60s avant-garde punk, he's managed to plug right into the current trends--this sounds a lot like Devo--and he's got all it takes to become a leader in '80s much. Good one, Radar. </blockquote> | |||
== Interpretations == | == Interpretations == | ||
* "I think singles are a really good thing, because you can get into a dialogue with things like- Yik Yak, which was aimed at Patti Smith and Judas Priest. I mean he’s like, Ya’ll think that Rock and Roll is the art form of the present. Well, that’s nice."<ref>https://fnewsmagazine.com/2005/04/dead-letters-to-lost-worlds/</ref> | * "I think singles are a really good thing, because you can get into a dialogue with things like- Yik Yak, which was aimed at Patti Smith and Judas Priest. I mean he’s like, Ya’ll think that Rock and Roll is the art form of the present. Well, that’s nice."<ref>https://fnewsmagazine.com/2005/04/dead-letters-to-lost-worlds/</ref> | ||
== References == | |||
[[Category:Singles]] | [[Category:Singles]] | ||
[[Category:Radar]] | [[Category:Radar]] |
Revision as of 12:38, 17 January 2023


Track listing
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Wives in Orbit" | |
2. | "Yik Yak" |
Personnel
The Red Crayola
Mayo Thompson (vocals, guitar, bass), Jesse Chamberlain (drums, backing vocals)
Technical
The Red Crayola (producer, arranged by), Doug Bennett (engineer), Paul Hodsman (engineer), Nigel Brooke-Harte (assistant engineer)
Cover art
Assorted Images
Reviews
Bomp!
March 1979[1]
But check out the Crayola disc, it's not from the reissued album, but rather a new recording done by Mayo Thompson in the UK, backed by various local and NY punks. As one of the last functioning survivors of '60s avant-garde punk, he's managed to plug right into the current trends--this sounds a lot like Devo--and he's got all it takes to become a leader in '80s much. Good one, Radar.
Interpretations
- "I think singles are a really good thing, because you can get into a dialogue with things like- Yik Yak, which was aimed at Patti Smith and Judas Priest. I mean he’s like, Ya’ll think that Rock and Roll is the art form of the present. Well, that’s nice."[2]