Showing posts with label Doug and the Slugs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doug and the Slugs. Show all posts

Friday, April 13, 2012

Doug and the Slugs: Tales From Terminal City (1992)




For an even briefer moment then their fellow eighties CanCon radio stars, The Payola$ (see HERE), Doug and the Slugs were a part of the Vancouver punk scene documented in Bloodied but Unbowed (see HERE). By the time of Doug & The Slugs final release, 1992's Tales From Terminal City, which seeks to re-capture the wordier, rawer nature of their earliest work but in 1992 there wasn't much call for good-time, smart-alecky pop songs, least of all in the in the Pacific Northwest.




Before the MoFo's at MF locked my files, MRML had posted EVERY (out-of-print) Doug & The Slugs albums and you can see them  here!




Hey Sluggers, I've had plenty of requests for a new (and improved rip) of this late period D & S album, so feel free to give us your reaction in the COMMENTS section!


Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Doug and the Slugs: Love Shine (1984)



For an even briefer moment then their fellow eighties CanCon radio stars, The Payola$ (see HERE), Doug and the Slugs were a part of the Vancouver punk scene documented in Bloodied but Unbowed (see HERE). The band edged closer to bland as the decade wore on but as chart fare of the era goes they were never less then decent, as "Love Shines" nicely demonstrates.






These new D & S rips and scans were generously provided by ace archivist BristolBoy from My Life's A Jigsaw, who deserves a flurry of thanks!





Before the MoFo's at MF locked my files, MRML had posted EVERY (out-of-print) Doug & The Slugs albums and you can see them  here!





Hey Sluggers, let us know what you think of this later period single in the COMMENTS section (which is where you'll find the single link).

Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Doug and the Slugs: Real Enough (1982)




For an even briefer moment then their fellow eighties CanCon radio stars, The Payola$ (see HERE), Doug and the Slugs were a part of the Vancouver punk scene documented in Bloodied but Unbowed (see HERE). The band's leap into the mainstream worked out just fine as the band's singles, like the doo-wop-ish "Real Enough" made the radio way more fun.





These new D & S rips and scans were generously provided by ace archivist BristolBoy from My Life's A Jigsaw, who deserves a flurry of thanks!





Before the MoFo's at MF locked my files, MRML had posted EVERY (out-of-print) Doug & The Slugs albums and you can see them  here!






Hey Sluggers, let us know what you think of this slick little number in the COMMENTS section (which is where you'll find the single link)


Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Doug and the Slugs: Too Bad (1981)



For an even briefer moment then their fellow eighties CanCon radio stars, The Payola$ (see HERE), Doug and the Slugs were a part of the Vancouver punk scene documented in Bloodied but Unbowed (see HERE). Once the band re-recorded their debut single, "Too Bad" the band left the underground and waded into the mainstream, adding some great catchy, clever, pub-ish new wave to staid Canadian radio.






Before the MoFo's at MF locked my files, MRML had posted EVERY (out-of-print) Doug & The Slugs albums and you can see them  here!



These new D & S rips and scans were generously provided by ace archivist BristolBoy from My Life's A Jigsaw, who deserves a flurry of thanks!





Hey Sluggers, let us know what you think of "Too Bad" in all it commercial glory in the COMMENTS section (which is where you'll find the single link)


Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Doug and the Slugs: Too Bad (1980)



For an even briefer moment then their fellow eighties CanCon radio stars, The Payola$ (see HERE), Doug and the Slugs were a part of the Vancouver punk scene documented in Bloodied but Unbowed (see HERE). The band rate passing mention in the movie because of this 1980 independent single, "Too Bad" which would later be re-recorded and find them swept away as Canada's part of the new wave that inundated radio in the late seventies and early eighties. (The B-side, "The Move", has never been re-issued)





Before the MoFo's at MF locked my files, MRML had posted EVERY (out-of-print) Doug & The Slugs albums and you can see them here!





These new D & S rips and scans were generously provided by ace archivist BristolBoy from My Life's A Jigsaw, who deserves a flurry of thanks!


 



Hey Sluggers, let us know what you think of this rare version of the band's debut single in the COMMENTS section (which is where you'll find the single link)


Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Doug and the Slugs: Tales From Terminal City



COMMENTER THANK YOU'S (#2 in an intermittent series).
(As MRML's thanks to the great commenters, those who add to the
conversation here, I'll be trying to fulfill some of their requests.
This one is for West Coast Doug (whose last name is not Bennett)

(Poster from D & S' Facebook page - click to enjoy!)

This is Doug & The Slugs final release, which seeks to re-capture the wordier, rawer nature of their earliest work but in 1992 there wasn't much call for good-time, smart-alecky pop songs, least of all in the in the Pacific Northwest.


Believe it or not MRML has posted EVERY (out-of-print) Doug & The Slugs albums and you can find them here!



Tales From Terminal City link is in the comments fixed link added, just scroll down a bit!


Speaking of comments, don't forget to leave one in support of the departed Mr. Bennett and his Gastropod Mollusks.




Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Friday, June 4, 2010

Doug and the Slugs: Slugcology 101(1979-1988) Plus the Entire Discography! (almost)


Last week I spent $2.00 at flea market for a copy of Doug and The Slugs greatest hits, a.k.a. Slugcology 101. And it wasn't just for a quick post material either; since I've started this series the band is the highest it's been in my regard since 1980 when I heard a radio concert where Doug did a long monologue about how he was accosted by a mysterious stranger in a bar who told him he had to become the greatest rock singer of all time (the memories are pretty dim, I confess).

Doug never did fulfill that mission. Despite being a lyricist who could combine Elvis Costello's angry acuity with Dashiell Hammit's obsession with sleazy-living and leading a band that, when not showing off for American radio, will remind you of some of those other Pub Rock vets turned New Wave aggregation like Nick Lowe's Rockpile or Graham Parker's Rumour.

Still, some might resent Doug and The Slugs for profiting from the New Wave, while fellow Vancouver-ites of the era, like Art Bergmann, D.O.A., The Pointed Sticks et al, never got their due. But that sick injustice does not diminish these clever, catchy, well-crafted songs (even those late eighties hits, which sound much better when jumbled up non-chronologically on Slugcology). And if any one thinks a band selling 50,000 copies of their hit records and being on the Meatballs II soundtrack back in the eighties had it made, they should read this quote from Doug Benet buried in in the Slugcology liner notes: "Thanks to...our children to whom Dad was often 'that guy with the funny hair who's always away or asleep."

Call me mushy-headed but I think it's Slug Time!



 
Slugcology 101 is now available at iTunes


Biopunk commented "I had no idea you posted so much Doug and the Slugs! " and in case anyone wants to know just how much, here's their entire discography (minus their less-known 1992 album Tales From Terminal City, for which I would require a rip n 'scans from some generous reader). Just click on the links provided and you'll get a slug!

Cognac and Bologna is here











Wrap It! is here











Music for the Hard of Thinking is here











Popaganda is here












Doug Bennett's Solo album, Animato, is here.











Tomcat Prowl is here.











And, by the way, ViaComClosedMeDown... over at Down Underground has posted a cassette rip of a strange looking Doug and the Slugs release (likely a repackage) here.



Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Doug Bennet: Animato


I had a request for the sole solo outing by lead Slug, Doug Bennet from 1986. So here you are.


As even an occasional visitor might ascertain, Animato (and even the last couple of releases by Vancouver pop band Doug and The Slugs), is not in the typical, relentless style of MRML's usual material - not with the backing vocal trio, The Memphis Horns, that big beat drum sound and that slight touch of Bruce Willishness - but Bennet never stopped writing memorable songs and for that I'm glad to pay tribute to his memory.



Animato link is in the comments

Update: A second link has been placed further down on the comments in case anyone is having trouble with the first link.


Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Doug and The Slugs: Tomcat Prowl



The most eighties of D & S' albums but there is some real charm beneath the sheen.







Let us know what you think of this in the COMMENTS section (link for Tomcat Prowl is HERE)


Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Friday, February 26, 2010

Doug and the Slugs: Popaganda


Doug Bennet and his Slugs grew stronger as musicians and composers but the eighties was a harsh mistress and those who sought her love drenched themselves in echo-ey beats and key-tars. To be fair as a biased man can be, that approach worked for some English bands who led with their haircuts but it tended to embarrass those who'd learned their trade in more organic times. Popaganda is actually a fine pop album and they saved the worst of the eighties damage for their Tomcat Prowl album (or so I'm told, I've never heard it). Hope you all enjoyed the Slugginess!



Popaganda
L.P.



Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Doug and the Slugs: Music for the Hard of Thinking


It's hard to say exactly when The Eighties, in the the pejorative sense, began. Certainly by 1983 things were already pretty dodgy. By that time Doug and the Slugs' retro-mindedness and predilection for gimmickry ended up insulating them, at least somewhat, from the winds of crap then blowing gale force.




Music for the Hard of Thinking L.P.



Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Doug and the Slugs: Wrap it (1981)


For their second album Doug and the Slugs, sharpen their attack a bit but they remain simple fun.



Wrap It L.P.


Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Doug and the Slugs: Cognac and Bologna (1980)


[It's] your basic rock and roll but with a certain Kafka-esque, grass roots, Pavlovian, existential, Calvanistic, Zen, New York liberal Jewish intellectual kind of slant to it.
Doug Bennett
Doug and the Slugs were a Vancouver bar band gone New Wave that got a big push in Canada in the very early eighties. The band (Doug Bennett on vocals, John Burton on guitar, John "Wally" Watson on drums, Richard Baker on guitar, Simon Kendall on keyboards and Steve Bosley on bass) survived in some form till Doug Bennett passed on in 2004.


(This song kinda crosses Elvis Costello with SCTV's Five Neat Guys.)

The band debuted with Cognac and Bologna in198o, and it's clearly aimed at being a radio-friendly take on the work of those wordy, angry young white men like Graham Parker, Elvis Costello, Joe Jackson (as well as his fellow Canuck Phillip Rambow). While not of those artists' caliber as singer, song-writer or band-leader, this album proves that in 1980 the "new music" bandwagon had room for a man and his backing band who were just out for a good time and a good song. As someone reviewing the Superman musical of the sixties said, "It's a merry adventure into the ridiculous".


MRML Readers: leave us a comment with your views on Doug and the Slugs and whether you want to hear more!




Cognac and Bologna is now available at iTunes!


Canadian Norm McDonald (warning 4:30 of 90's sit-com-ness first) used "Too Bad" as the theme of his short-lived show.


Support the Band!!

Homepage

Amazon 

iTunes

Facebook Fan Page