SOUNDS OF FUTURE PAST AND PRESENT PERFECT

Blondie

Eat to the Beat

  • AMG Review of Eat to the Beat

    Amg
    William Ruhlmann
    All Music Guide

    Just as Blondie's second album, Plastic Letters, was a pale imitation of their self-titled debut, Eat to the Beat, their fourth album, was a secondhand version of their breakthrough third album, Parallel Lines: one step forward, half a step back. There was an attempt, on such songs as "The Hardest Part" and "Atomic," to recreate the ock/disco fusion of the group's one major U.S. hit, "Heart of Glass," without similar success, and, elsewhere, the band just tried to cover too many stylistic bases. "Die Young Stay Pretty," for example, dipped into an island sound complete with modified eggae beat (a foreshadowing of the upcoming hit "The Tide Is High"), and "Sound-a-Sleep" was a lullaby that dragged too much to be a good change of pace. The British, who had long since been converted, made Eat to the Beat another chart-topper, with three major hits, including a number one ranking for "Atomic" and almost the same success for "Dreaming," but in the U.S., which still saw Blondie as a slightly comic one-hit wonder, the album was greeted for what it was -- slick corporate ock without the tangy flavor that had made Parallel Lines such ear candy.

"Dream as if you'll live forever. Live as if you'll die today."
over 2 years ago

So says James Dean, and I think he is right. I hate hate hate working in this cubicle so much...it is stifling and suffocating. I have especially big dreams of running away to join the circus...only my circus is the the music business. I can honestly say that I would be more happy sweeping the floors at a record label or even a record store for that matter, than pushing all of this paper which ...

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