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Epic Garden Music by Sad Lovers & Giants (CD, 1982)

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Product Identifiers

Record LabelCherry Red
UPC5013929138421
eBay Product ID (ePID)14050126647

Product Key Features

Release Year1982
FormatCD
GenreAlternative, Rock
Run Time59 Mins 57 Seconds
ArtistSad Lovers & Giants
Release TitleEpic Garden Music

Additional Product Features

DistributionInfinity Entertainment Gr
Country/Region of Manufacture(not USA)
Number of Discs1
ReviewsRecord Collector (magazine) (p.89) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "The Watford band have been compared to the atmospheric post-punk of, say, The Chameleons, Modern English or even Cocteau Twins...but the tranquil melodies and vocal style might equally provoke the spirit of post-punk Liverpool."
Additional informationLiner Note Author: Dominic McKenna. Working hard to further their penchant for hashing together paisley underground psychedelia and classic post-punk, Sad Lovers and Giants followed their first two acclaimed singles with the hefty EP Epic Garden Music in fall 1982. With a delicious blend of gloomy guitar and bass infused with punch and verve that recalls early Cure, and a sophisticated wordplay that was uniquely their own, the quintet split the songs between seaside and countryside, between earth and air, and inflected a little of each into the music. Absolutely cohesive and completely on track, the songs on this set are slick and smooth. From the opening "Echoplay" and the foggy "Clocktower Lodge," which walk a quiet edge, to the pure pop of "Alice (Isn't Playing)" and the ominous closer "Far From the Sea," which sounds as if vocalist Garce Allard sang his part through a window outside the studio, each moment is a masterpiece. And, though most of the songs maintain similar a tempo and intensity, "Clint" snaps heads around, while "Lope" features a sublimely off-kilter sax solo from David Wood. It's an addition that brings the closing dregs of a traveling circus to mind -- or, perhaps in a nod to the side's vibe, a closing seaside town that has turned a woolen shoulder to November wind and rain. Sorely overlooked outside of England, Sad Lovers and Giants may have been lost in the wake of the post-punk generation's heroes, but they haven't been forgotten. They remain a small pearl -- a gem of the ocean that birthed them. ~ Amy Hanson
Number of Audio ChannelsStereo