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IV - Rattus Norvegicus

The Stranglers

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Album Review

Like the Vibrators, the Stranglers were an older band which managed to gain visibility and success through association with Britain's punk movement. Musically, the group is much more polished than some of their rawer brethren such as the Adverts and Siouxsie and the Banshees. The Stranglers' early work is most properly described as stripped-down pop played with a hardcore sensibility; fairly lengthy songs with frequent solo breaks, prominent keyboard usage, and occasional employment of vocal harmony sets them apart from their peers. But snarling lead singing that puts forth macho/critical/distasteful lyrics predominates here, clearly showing the group's punk affinity. Most of the songs on this album fit the description of hardcore pop to a tee, but there are a few deviations from this model. "Princess of the Streets" is a slow-tempo selection with blueslike echoes. The ambitious "Down in the Sewer" crosses the concept of episodic numbers like the Who's "A Quick One" with early-'60s instrumentals. And the energetic "London Lady" is almost a true punk song — or at least as close as the band gets to one. While not the equal of their best album, No More Heroes, this release is solid and worthwhile, a rewarding listen.

Customer Reviews

The First Album. Best Album. Desert Island Must Have.

This album was The Strangler's answer to the concurrent punk rock . It's artful, cockney, inventive, hard-edged, crass, insanely melodic, dark, beautiful and nasty. Punk was relatively monotonous garage band pounding. In retaliation, the Stranglers didn't destroy the past. They incorporated it into a much more authentically dark and humorous view of the world. The result is a bona fide CLASSIC of what was soon after called the 'New Wave'. If you appreciate going scary manic while laughing all the way, you will love this thing. Plus, this version is an 'extended' album in that it includes a bunch of fun b-sides from the same era. Rattus Norvegicus is the perfect 'My First Stranglers Album' for any curious buyer. BTW: NOT for pre-teens.

Biography

Formed: 1974

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

The Stranglers formed as the Guildford Stranglers in the southern England village of Chiddingfold (near Guildford) in 1974, plowing a heavily Doors-influenced furrow through the local pub rock scene — such as it was. Of the four founding members, only Hugh Cornwell had any kind of recognizable historical pedigree, having played alongside Richard Thompson in the schoolboy band Emil & the Detectives. According to Thompson, their repertoire stretched from "Smokestack Lightning" and...
Full Bio

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