"A warning: the sleeve to Marquee Moon lists not only
songwriting and instrumental credits, it lists guitar solo credits. Blues
riffing duels with stately arpeggios, Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd bend
notes beyond recognition, and songs stretch well beyond the five-minute
mark.
But Marquee Moon is not music for guitar shop clerks. Punk
rockers, maybe. Poets, probably. People who appreciate melody piled on
melody, and songs crammed full of an album's worth of ideas - definitely.
Verlaine and Television were originals in 1977, and Marquee Moon still
sounds special today. You can hear them defining punk and new wave: "I
get your point/You're so sharp" from "See No Evil" pretty
much invented the new wave lyric, and the occasional afterbeat guitars
and and high hat shuffles show them experimenting with reggae before The
Clash brought it to the punk masses. Meanwhile, the guitars spiral into
a different atmosphere altogether.
Verlaine and Lloyd push at the edges of "Friction," "Marquee
Moon" and "Guiding Light," stuffing them full of melodic
invention but never cutting the tethers that keep them grounded in simple,
classic rock 'n' roll. Excited but focused, this may be the best guitar
playing ever put to a rock record, and it makes a special set of songs
into a magical, must-have album."
"No pop/rock collection is complete without this album. I have been
trying to track it down for years and finally... Why is it a classic?
Well after the likes of Velvet Underground, along came a new breed of
guitar pop. It ended up somewhere between garage rock and post-punk but
with Tom Verlaines lyrics this album ends up flawless. There really isn't
a bad song on here and everything is catchy. Recently quoted #2 in Steve
Albini's list of essential albums. If you can find it, buy it! "
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When the members of Television materialized in New York,
at the dawn of punk, they played an incongruous, soaring amalgam of genres:
the noirish howl of the Velvet Underground, brainy art rock, the double-helix
guitar sculpture of Quicksilver Messenger Service. As exhilarating in its
ambitions as the Ramones' debut was in its simplicity, Marquee Moon still
amazes. "Friction," "Venus" and the mighty title track
are jagged, desperate and beautiful all at once. As for punk credentials,
don't forget the cryptic electricity and strangled existentialism of guitarist
Tom Verlaine's voice and songwriting. (Rolling Stone)
Total album sales: Under 500,000
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