Monday, September 15, 2008

Toy Love - Cuts




Two Disc comp of everything recorded by this MUST HEAR! Extremely influential NZ band, I cannot stress enough, Truly ledgendary, Everyone has a band They wish they could travel back and Join and these Guys take the cake for me. Punk energy, oddball quirkyness and ultra melodic charm abounds. Do your ears and life a treat and prepare to fall in love with the mighty Toy love!. - Gozz




It's difficult to overstate the importance of Toy Love on the nascent New Zealand indie scene of the early 1980s, but prior to the release of the comprehensive anthology Cuts, those who weren't in Dunedin at the time during the group's under-two-years lifespan had to take it on faith; even when it was possible to find a copy of the band's sole album, a poor mix and botched mastering job that robbed it of its low end had caused the band itself to disown it. Regardless, without Toy Love, not only would there have been no Tall Dwarfs (where singer Chris Knox and guitarist Alec Bathgate next ended up) and potentially no Bats (future home of bassist Paul Kean), but it's imaginable that the impetus behind Flying Nun Records and the whole next wave of Dunedin bands, from the Clean to the Chills, would have sounded much different, had they existed at all.Disc 1 of Cuts contains the entirety of the band's released output: three singles and the aforementioned album, remastered off of a safety copy of the long-missing original tapes and completely remixed to the band's specifications. Anyone who has ever heard Toy Love before now understands what the band had been complaining about: these songs have never sounded better, with Kean's bass and Jane Walker's needly garage rock keyboards far more prominent in the mix than ever before. This gives songs like "Death Rehearsal" and the paranoid, chanted "Photographs of Naked Ladies" some much-needed heft to balance Knox's quirky, hectoring vocal style and Bathgate's trebly guitar scratch. The overall effect is very close to contemporaneous records by the Fall. Cuts' first disc also includes the band's 1979 debut single for the New Zealand office of Elektra Records, which presents the band as a more straightforward power pop outfit almost like the Kiwi answer to Shoes. The rest of the disc, recorded for the local indie Deluxe Records, proves how much better the DIY aesthetic fits this inventive, stylistically restless band. Disc two consists of 19 1979 demos, only three of which (early versions of the album's "Squeeze," "Toy Love Song" and "Frogs") ever saw release, on the groundbreaking New Zealand compilation AK79. As might be expected, this disc is far less essential: the demos for songs that made it onto the album tend to simply be shorter and less imaginatively produced, and the handful of rejects ("Unscrewed Up," "Lust," "I'm Not Bored," "1978," "15," "Wanna Die With You") didn't make it onto the album for fairly obvious reasons. Still, it's just the sort of thing one likes to see on this kind of archival release, along with the beautifully executed, info-rich 36-page booklet. Cuts is a necessary purchase not just for Tall Dwarfs fans, but for New Zealand indie archivists in general; it's the best such album since the Chills' Secret Box.


Disc 1
Disc 2

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Can't argue with most of this but a few points of clarification. Toy Love was formed in Auckland when the Dunedin band The Enemy lost its bass player who went back home. They spent most of their time in AK from then on but also toured, although Dunedin fans wouldn't have seen much of them. The remastering was done off a DAT tape so a true remix wasn't possible. Deluxe were actually a Sydney Australia label, not local, and the album was recorded in Sydney while the band was living there for a few months. Ironically the "DIY aesthetic" you speak of was recorded in a much more sophisticated studio in Sydney (EMI) than the first two singles which were from a small AK studio.

Gozz said...

Thanks a tonne for the Info, I mistakenly forgot to reference it to Allmusic due to a brain failure I guess. I had been thinking the info sounded a bit out of place in areas.

gomonkeygo said...

Has anyone mentioned a problem with Disc 1? I've downloaded it twice but it won't extract. One of the files is corrupt, according to WinRAR. I think it has "meat" in the title?

Thanks for all the great music, too. I've got a Chris Knox CD I've never seen posted anywhere, if you'd like it for the blog. "Songs of You and Me" - I think it's two different albums on one CD. Excellent stuff.

Let me know if you do want it - I'll rip and upload it for you.

Ariel said...

Try this:
http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?jyezddnymtm

I'm going to be without internet access for a couple of days, so if that doesn't work, I won't be able to help you again until Monday. Maybe Gozz will be able to sort things out.

As for the Chris Knox CD, that would be very nice of you to upload it. I'll post it as soon as I'm able to get online again. Thanks!

Anonymous said...

oh man, i downloaded disc 1 once and now i'm desperately looking for disc 2... and i can't find it anywhere... could you reup this for me?

Anonymous said...

plz re up disc two for us!!!! thanks for all that youve done!!!

Multranewsapp said...

Very thoughtfful blog