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Thursday 22 September 2016

IVY GREEN - Ivy Green (1990)

Review by: B.B. Fultz
Album assigned by: Mark Maria Ahsmann



Note : I was one of the two or three people that asked for a good album to review, rather than a deliberately bad album, so this review will not be a “panning” per se. I thought maybe this was important to mention because nearly all of the other albums in this round were bad (at least in the opinion of the people who assigned them).

Ivy Green is a late 70s punk album by the band Ivy Green. It has most of the earmarks of early punk -- short song lengths, simple chord structures played at a fast tempo, and clipped, snotty-sounding vocals where you can't always make out the words but you know it's something being repeated over and over. It's very much a straightforward punk album from the days when punk was still new and exciting. The band does a competent job with it, as long as you don't mind them borrowing from other bands left and right. You've heard all these songs before, even if they were different songs by different bands when you heard them. 

The Ramones influence is obvious from the very first song. As soon as you hear the chainsaw buzz of "I'm Sure We're Gonna Make It" you know where these guys are coming from, and have a good idea where they're going. The more you listen, the more shades of 1978 you'll find. "Another Sub-Culture Going Bad" has the barked vocal style of Johnny Rotten over a simple guitar phrase that would be right at home on Bollocks, and "Sue" sounds like some obscure 60s surf rocker that would have been covered on the Great Rock & Roll Swindle. "Why Not Tonight" also sounds like a song from the early 60s updated for the punk age -- the rockabilly drive on that one reminds me of Johnny Cochran. I can't tell if Ivy Green listened to a lot of 60s music themselves, or if they subconsciously picked up that sound by imitating other punk bands who listened to a lot of 60s music. 

They settle into this basic punk/proto-punk groove and stick with it for 36 minutes. Once in awhile they deviate from the pattern (a little) -- "Every Day The Same" has some breaks in the monotonous guitar-buzz where they try for something a little different -- but for the most part the songs all sound similar, and rarely stray beyond the stereotypical punk sound of 1978. 

The album is very much a product of its time, with all the good qualities (drive, youthful aggression, cool guitar tones) and bad qualities (stripped down structures, monotonous sound) that go with it. If you like punk, you'll probably like this album. If you dislike punk, you'll probably hate it. Ivy Green doesn't try to be much more than just another punk band, but what they try they succeed at. Which is more than you can say for many other bands who tried for bigger things and failed. And even if Ivy Green’s debut was not exactly a milestone in the history of music, it's a pretty cool album all the same.

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