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December 26, 1999
HEY HO LET'S GO
By DAVE VEITCH
ANTHOLOGY: HEY HO LET'S GO The Ramones The year is 1976 and the best new musical group, at least according to Grammy Awards, is the Starland Vocal Band. As wise man Joey Ramone once sang, "We need change and we need it fast," and his group The Ramones were smart enough to know what to do and courageous enough to do it. With their 1976 debut, they emerged from Queens, Noo Yawk, with a cartoonish juvenile-delinquent image, a cache of short, fast and loud songs containing no more than three chords apiece, melodies inspired by The Beach Boys and the Phil Spector girl groups, and lyrics expressing their most base impulses (Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue, I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend, I Wanna Be Sedated, I Just Want To Have Something to Do). Unwittingly, they helped spawn punk rock and, by modifying their sonic barrage ever so slightly, enjoyed a 20-year recording career encapsulated on this superb two-CD retrospective. Almost half of the music here is drawn from the group's essential first four records, which reduced rock 'n' roll to its bare essentials with thrilling, wildly entertaining results. The remainder of Anthology cherry picks the best stuff from the spotty post-1978 albums, when producers such as Spector, 10CC's Graham Gouldman and Eurythmic Dave Stewart tried to sweeten the Ramones' sound with only intermittent success. The quartet would later flirt with heavy metal and political commentary, then, having travelled down every avenue open to them, they handed in their uniforms -- sneakers, ripped blue jeans, white T-shirts and black leather jackets -- for good in 1996. A marvelous trip, expertly retraced on these 58 chronologically arranged songs and nicely documented in the set's surprisingly upscale hard-cover booklet. By the way, whatever happened to the Starland Vocal Band? Track Listing
Disc1
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