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Alex Chilton ‎– Take Me Home And Make Me Like It

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Artist: Alex Chilton

Title: Take Me Home And Make Me Like It

Label: Munster Records ‎– MR 372

Format: Vinyl, LP

Country: Spain

Published: 2017

Style: Garage Rock, Rock & Roll

Media: Mint 

Cover: Mint / Sealed

 

This is a new, unopened album in its original packaging.

Take Me Home And Make Me Like It comprises unrehearsed, first-take recordings by Alex Chilton, recorded in 1975. Notes by Alex Chilton and producer Jon Tiven; 180 gram vinyl.

“This is music performed with some of the most callous abandon ever to have been allowed in a recording studio. Many of these tracks have a raw cinéma vérité atmosphere applied to recorded rock and roll. My own performances seem to be either obnoxious or attempting an insufferable cuteness, but often they achieve a compelling electricity in their spontaneous excitement. We recorded over a few days in the fall of 1975. I was very into a loose, unrehearsed first take sort of approach to recording music. I learned from producer Jim Dickinson the method of throwing a very impromptu rendering of a song onto tape. . . . This method gives a fresh, sometimes anarchistic quality to the performances. The first day of the sessions was approached in this way. The second day went according to the producer’s more conservative method of planning and rehearsal. All in all there is some hot, untamed rock and roll on this disc.” –Alex Chilton, 1992.

“This record is meant as an addendum to Singer Not The Song (1977) / Bach’s Bottom (1981) and not a substitution. The idea that somebody would be interested in anything beyond what had already been released is lunacy considering the underwhelming reaction the record industry had to it at the time. When Munster asked if I’d like to take a look at releasing anything that wasn’t out previously, I had to say yes. Now you have it, all the contents of the first crazy night of recording, plus some new ways to look at some of the other material. . . . It’s sort of similar (not musically, but in terms of the producer/artist relationship) to the Blowin’ Your Mind! album by Van Morrison (1967) — you can sense the underlying tension, and not every track is a ‘success’, but it is mighty powerful. . . . Alex was not about melody at the time, he wanted to repudiate his Big Star work and make a sinister record that threatened people. Without half trying, Singer Not The Song did accomplish that. It became one of the first punk rock/new wave records, the very first EP for the genre.” –Jon Tiven, Jan 2017

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