The Jesus and Mary
Chain albums
      The Jesus and Mary Chain are a band that use simple emotions to great effect. Their songs might be "easy"
sounding to some with only a few chords and drum patterns used over and over, but to do a lot with nothing is
just as hard AND as interesting as doing something complicated. They have many great pop songs, along with
many great albums and album tracks. They are of that rare breed that makes great albums along with perfect
singles. Each of their albums has a distinct sound for sure, so if you heard a song seperate from the record you
could pinpoint where it came from. Though they have at least three great records (
Psychocandy, Honey's Dead,
Munki
), they are best as a singles band, and their 21 Singles compilation is great to begin your collection with.
To say this band was heavily influential is an understatement: My Bloody Valentine,
Yo La Tengo, Mazzy Star,
The Primitives,
Pixies, Urge Overkill, Interpol, none of these bands would be quite the same without the awesome
influence of the J&M Chain. Their best songs, "Sometimes Always", "Just Like Honey", "Catchfire", "Blues from a
Gun", "Cracking Up", strike deep emotions most people didn't know they had in them.


Band Members:                    William Reid - Guitar, Vocals
                                                Jim Reid - Guitar, Vocals
                                        - many random Bass and Drum players throughout the years, most famously Bobby      
                                           Gillespie who went on to form Primal Scream after his work on
Psychocandy.
                
Best Album: Psychocandy

Biggest Influences: The Velvet Underground, The Beach Boys, Suicide





                                                       1985
                                                       
Psychocandy -   8/8


       Psychocandy is in a league of its own, for many reasons: for a debut this is daring stuff; it combines
feedback with pop melodies, which is hardly a genre or anything (it means they loved The Velvet Underground
and The Beach Boys!), but it was influential; mainly it transcends its time while simultaneously being an easily
recognizable disciple of it. This album
had to come from the 1980's, but when the first verse of "Just Like Honey"
comes in, it sounds so good that you might forget you are listening to a song and not flying around the
universe. This is an album that is more than the sum of its parts, that varies between rockers and ballads, soft
and harsh, ever so fluidly. Once the initial impact and sound are drilled in to your head, you cannot make
yourself hate this record. A lot of the songs sound alike, eh? Whether they use the same drum beats ("Some
Candy Talking" and "Cut Dead"), have the same driving rhythm ("The Living End" and "Inside Me"), or have
feedback so loud you might wanna turn the treble down on your stereo (all of them), each song on here is a
separate entity that would sound great as a single, but sounds even better in the context of an album. A lot of
great albums are like this:
Exile on Main Street and Zen Arcade to name some precedents, Loveless and Bee
Thousand
to name some descendants. These kinds of records have a personality to them, a mood. The best
quality this album has though is not the feedback pop gimmick, it's the consistency, because at least thirteen
out of the fifteen songs are GREAT.
Psychocandy is not some one trick pony - it is a great idea executed
impeccably, and there is no other album just like it.   - Trevor e.y.

1.just like honey- 4
2.the living end- 4
3.taste the floor- 4
4.the hardest walk- 4
5.cut dead- 4
6.in a hole- 4
7.taste of cindy- 4
8.some candy talking- 4
9.never understand- 4
10.inside me- 4
11.sowing seeds- 2
12.my little underground- 4
13.you trip me up- 4
14.something’s wrong- 3
15.it’s so hard- 4





                                                       1987
                                                       
Darklands -   6/8


       The second J&M album destroys any kind of feedback melody label, but maintains the "pop" mood of the
previous album. The band shows they are great at creating atmosphere with minimal instrumentation, hell, that
might be their strongest point. The opening salvo is a nice one-two-three jolt of "Darklands" the sing a long,
"Deep One perfect Morning" the introspection, and "Happy When It Rains" the combination of both. The rest of
the record is entertaining enough, but not even the latter single quality of "April Skies" or dementia of "Nine
Millions Rainy Days" can prove as entertaining as the beginning. Maybe that is the records only down point: bad
pacing.
Psychocandy had perfect pacing where everything worked, but Darklands meanders too much for its
own good. The best song might be the closer "About You", an acoustic ditty. Hey, why not throw that in at the
end? It's just the impression the album leaves on you, "Awww, that was neat." The album is a good listen for
sure, but it could be more intriguing, and really is more of a die hard fan purchase than a stand out record.
- Trevor e.y.

1.darklands- 4
2.deep one perfect morning- 4
3.happy when it rains- 4
4.down on me- 3
5.nine million rainy days- 3
6.april skies- 3
7.fall- 2
8.cherry came too- 2
9.on the wall- 2
10.about you- 4





                                                       1989
                                                       
Automatic -    5/8


       Automatic is another step down in the Jesus and Mary Chain chain of chains. I mean records. Whatever.
Maybe...one third of the songs on here are great, the rest is just OBVIOUS DRUM MACHINE!!! BOOM CHICK
BOOM CHICK BOOM CHICK.......CHCHCHCHCCHHICK!!!! When there is a standout track, boy does it stick out
like a sore thumb. "Blues From a Gun" and "Head On" especially are just like, "Well, there's a single. What's
next?" "UV Ray? What is this garbage?!?!" Heh, its not that bad, as most songs vary between kinda good and
kinda boring, like any review of an album I give 5/8 too. Average. Mundane. The Mission Impossible movies. You
get it. There are some nice presents for the patient listener: "Gimme Hell" is the band's most twisted rocker,
while "Halfway to Crazy" and "Drop" are among the band's more underrated songs. Lyric sample: "Tounge tied
and tiiiied to the tounge." There's a disturbing image! I don't know what "Sunray" is; at first I liked it, now I don't.
Kind of like the record as a whole, oh wait, I never liked it. The band is heading toward a rut of over-produced
80's tripe on
Automatic, so the name sure does fit. - Trevor e.y.

1.here comes alice- 3
2.coast to coast- 2
3.blues from a gun- 4
4.between planets- 3
5.uv ray- 1
6.her way of praying- 2
7.head on- 4
8.take it- 2
9.halfway to crazy- 4
10.gimme hell- 4
11.drop- 3
12.sunray- 2





                                                       1992
                                                       
Honey’s Dead -  8/8


       A good three year break has done the band well. Regrouped and ready for action, Honey's Dead is the
best album the band has done since
Psychocandy. Hell, it's nearly as good as that one is! Gone is the dated
production of
Automatic, though this is still dance music for sure. There is still a very demented edge to some of
the songs, and it flows between rockers and ballads like other J&M albums. Its pure pop at heart though, and
quite the transition for the band. Really the singles and album tracks kinda blur together to make a cohesive
whole. "Far Gone and Out", "Rollercoaster", and "Sugar Ray" are obvious stand outs, but they are no better
than the chilling "Teenage Lust" and "Catchfire" or ballads "Almost Gold" and "Good for my Soul". "Catchfire" is
actually my favorite track on here, and it is well embedded in the fabric of the record. Maybe some songs,
"Tumbledown" and "I Can't get enough" in particular, are not quite as strong as the rest, but really the album
flows well form begging to end and it is hard to notice a lull at all. A great driving record, party record, really a
solid anytime record, and the band's second masterpiece to date.  - Trevor e.y.

1.reverence- 4
2.teenage lust- 4
3.far gone and out- 4
4.almost gold- 4
5.sugar ray- 4
6.tumbledown- 3
7.catchfire- 4
8.good for my soul- 4
9.rollercoaster- 4
10.i cant get enough- 3
11.sundown- 3
12.frequency- gf





                                                       1994
                                                       
Stoned and Dethroned -   6/8


       This album is a different tone than any previous record, which is not a bad idea. Dance pop is great, but
greater depth is attempted on here; the title is pretty accurate. Problem is, the album is too long at seventeen
songs and is spotty throughout. Much effort is required to get a feel of the record, and if you just kinda let it flow
like
Honey's Dead, you will be bored quite often. The good news is there are some great high points. "Between
Us" could have been right off of
Darklands; "Come On" is just plain fun; "Hole" is a typical negative-condition-
state-of-mind roller; and "Sometimes Always" just has to be heard. The band's best song, it is a pure flowing
duet between William Reid and Hope Sandoval (singer for the great Mazzy Star). The song is only two chords,
but never has the band sounded more confident or majestic; it is the harsh reality of a relationship thrown into
one of the most melodic pop songs ever recorded. After those four great tracks, there is plenty of good on here.
"Never Saw it Coming", ":She", "Girlfriend", "Feeling Lucky", among many others, are GOOD songs, but about
four songs such as "Bullet Lovers" (stuck right at track two), "Save Me", "God Help Me", and "These Days" could
and should have been cut. The album is too long to listen to without wanting to skip some stuff, so it is very
flawed. But the good is good, and the great is even better. - Trevor e.y.

1.dirty water- 3
2.bullet lovers- 2
3.sometimes always- 4
*
4.come on- 4
5.between us- 4
6.hole- 4
7.never saw it coming- 3
8.she- 3
9.wish i could- 4
10.save me- 2
11.till it shines- 3
12.god help me- 2
13.girlfreind- 3
14.everybody i know- 2
15.you've been a friend- 2
16.these days- 2
17.feeling lucky- 3
                                                        1998
                                                        
Munki - 7/8


       Munki is a glorious mess, a jamboree of experimentation and fun. Like the album before it there are
seventeen songs, but unlike that record, this is an entertaining listen through and through. Jim Reid writes
more than William, which is a change of pace, and could be the reason why the record sounds so different than
any previous one. No that can't be it, because there is such a revitalization present that both brothers must be
in on it! Ramones, Teenage Jesus, and Velvet Underground influences run rampant on here, and there are
many different kinda of songs. "Virtually Unreal" is a static prone mess of fun that harks back to
Psychocandy in
spirit; "Commercial" is the band's longest song at around seven minutes and it is realllllly out there in
strangeness; "Black" is a ballad that is repetitive but unique; "Supertramp" is less an ode to that band than a
tale of a super-tramp.....ah who am I trying to fool? Those high background vocals, pop attitude, it's a
Supertramp homage! But it's good I tells ya! Most of the album is good, and really, it's up to personal opinion to
pick favorites, so I ain't gonna do it for this record. "Crackin' Up" and "I Hate Rock N' Roll" are probably the best
songs, I will say that. It is popular belief that only the fans could love
Munki, but really this a great record that
any fan of rock music could love. Unfortunately, it is the bands last, and boy to they go out with a bang. They
were never a radio charting band and are not millionaires, but here their love of music comes through, and they
would not have it any other way. They might feel like freaks who are under appreciated, but they will stand the
test of time better than most. - Trevor e.y.

1.i love rock 'n roll- 4
2.birthday- 3
3.stardust remedy- 4
4.fizzy- 3
5.moe tucker- 4
6.perfume- 4
7.virtually unreal- 4
8.degenerate- 2
9.cracking up- 4
*
10.commercial- 3
11.supertramp- 4
12.never understood- 3
13.i can't find the time for times- 2
14.man on the moon- 1
15.black- 4
16.dream lover- 3
17.i hate rock n' roll- 4




Non Album Things



                                                        2001
                                                        
21 Singles -  9/8


      Not much to say here, except that this is a perfect singles collection! It really fits the band, who never had a
BAD record, but always had high points on their albums and EP's that are collected here. "Upsidedown",
"Sidewalking", and "Snake Driver" come off of different EP's and they are all good. For once, a greatest hits is
chronological and all of the nessescary songs are here like "Just Like Honey", "Darklands", "Head On",
"Sometimes Always" and "Cracking Up". Maybe I'd throw in "Gimme Hell" or "Catchfire" persoanlly, but this is
pretty stealler stuff, and IDEAL FOR ANYONE WANTING TO GET INTO THIS BAND. There, it has been said.  
- Trevor e.y.


1.upsidedown- 4
2.never understand- 4
3.you trip me up- 4
4.just like honey- 4
5.some candy talking- 4
6.april skies- 3
7.happy when it rains- 4
8.darklands- 4
9.sidewalking- 4
10.blues form a gun- 4
11.head on- 4
12.rollercoaster- 4
13.reverence- 4
14.far gone and out- 4
15.almost gold- 4
16.snake driver- 3
17.sometimes always- 4
18.come on- 4
19.i hate rock n' roll- 4
20.cracking up- 4
21.i love rock n roll- 4