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Dance, The – Do Dada [ORANGE VINYL] - New LP
Dance, The – Do Dada [ORANGE VINYL] - New LP
Modern Harmonic Records

Dance, The – Do Dada [ORANGE VINYL] - New LP

Regular price $ 26.00 $ 0.00

NYC 1980-1983 circa

Groundbreaking Post-Punk Art-Funk! Do Dada captures The Dance surfing the emerging No Wave scene across their earliest recordings, featuring cuts from their early EPs paired with previously unissued gems! Pressed on colored vinyl!

 

A New York based early 80's No Wave band that spun off from The Model Citizens after one EP produced by John Cale while other old band-mates formed Polyrock. Material's Fred Maher joined them on drums for some recordings. The band was fronted by Eugenie Diserio, known for her sexy homemade fashion designs and her sultry voice that often played off suggestive lyrics.

Review by Fred Thomas: New York band the Dance was active from late 1979 to sometime in 1983, rising out of Manhattan's downtown art punk scene with a sound that fused elements of funk, no wave, global rhythms, and danceable if dissonant high-energy rock. While they didn't reach the same levels of acclaim as the Talking Heads, the Slits, or even more immediate peers like DNA or the Bush Tetras, the Dance created a hybrid of high-tension sounds on the same level as all of those bands that was evident from their first self-produced, self-released 12" EP, 1980's Dance for Your Dinner. Compilation release Do Dada collects that EP as well as alternate mixes of songs from later records, non-album tracks, and other unreleased material. The frenetic energy of the band's first four songs is almost uncontainable, from the eerie falsetto vocals and slippery bass line of "She Likes to Beat" to the caustic funk push, unexpected violin/percussion breakdown, and constant unhinged vocalizations of "Do Dada," a song emblematic of the anything-goes stylistic approach of the N.Y.C. scene the Dance were part of in the early '80s. There's an extended mix of the slick, slightly gothic groove "In Lust" (taken from the band's 1981 debut LP of the same name) as well as the dubby swells of non-album B-side "Dubbin' Down" and two versions of the previously unreleased "Into the Future," an emphatic and chaotic original mix and a sample-heavy mix by Arthur Baker that sounds almost unrecognizable from the first. The material on Do Dada draws from every phase of their brief lifespan and offers a great idea of how their sound changed and held on to its core elements as they burned quickly and ferociously.


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