Mark E. Smith of The Fall was a divisive character, turning people on or off with his kinetic one-note, occasionally slurred, stream of consciousness vocal delivery. After a decade and a half of abrasive post punk, line-up changes and restlessness led to a stylistic change, accounting for several electronic and IDM influenced albums. 1993's The Infotainment Scan falls into this era, while still featuring a jagged guitar line, clean (or sterile) production on programmed drums and synth keyboards dominates the overall sound, featuring odd cover song choices and sonic stretches that left us scratching our heads. There's a lovable cantankerous aspect to Smith's vocals that endears us to his limitations, but hearing the band go full rave seemed to a bridge too far.
Intro - Paranoia Man In Cheap Sh*T Room
14:17 - Glam Racket
19:30 - It's a Curse
28:44 - Ladybird (Green Grass)
Outro - Lost In Music
#500: Nevermind by Nirvana
#499: In Thrall by Murray Attaway
#498: B-Sides Of The 90s
#497: Mack Avenue Skullgame by Big Chief
#496: To Bring You My Love by PJ Harvey
#495: Desert Rain by Indian Ocean
#494: Tribute Albums of the 90s
#493: Blokes You Can Trust by Cosmic Psychos
#492: Born To Quit by Smoking Popes
#491: Hello Halo by Pollyanna
#490: Electro-Shock Blues by Eels
#489: Origins - Muse In The 90s
#488: Dig by Dig with Scott Hackwith
#487: Spanaway by Seaweed
#486: Michael McDermott and Brian Koppleman revisit Gethsemane
#485: Lilith Fair in the 90s
#484: Less Is More by Even
#483: Good Weird Feeling by Odds
#482: Music Has The Right to Children by Boards of Cananda
#481: Ebbhead by Nitzer Ebb
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