Aaaaaaaaaand this is where I finally run out of stock in terms of All Pearls, No Swine. This volume was compiled sometime last year, as I slowly tried to regrow the wealth of APNS volumes I had when I started this lil' blog adventure. Then again, that was *checks notes* 30 months ago, so even if I was saving up on APNS in the last months, posting about one and a half (statistically speaking) per month, the stock is finally at zero. Fear not, the archives are still full of stuff, but I have to compile and knock this stuff in shape again. Off to work, lazy ol' OBG!
Meanwhile, enjoy All Pearls No Swine Vol. 38, in which we visit the 90s for a third time. And boy, is this volume 90s. As with the other volumes, the 90s - one of the decades I lived through as an active music listener - is less about the musical archaeology that defines the 70s-set volumes, where I dig through tons of obscure and little known stuff to find the pearls. The 90s sets are a mix of some obscurities, chart entries that were and are maybe underappreciated and the occasional 'bubbling under' alternative rock track. In the case of this compilation, there are a lot of the latter ones. It's almost like a hipster hitparade kind of thing. We got James, Mazzy Star, The Mabuses, Compulsion and The Sundays, among others. Not to mention the mighty La's with the classic "There She Goes", for my money still the best jingle-jangle revival song of all times.
Of the 'underappreciated chart entries' we could cite Martika, who followed up her breakthrough debut album with something more serious, which obviously meant collaborating with Prince, who used her lyrics to craft "Love Thy Will Be Done". Still a wonderful song and single, that was even a US top ten hit at the time but seems almost forgotten today, much like its singer. Dubbed the hispanic Madonna, when her self-titled debut with number one hit "Toy Soldiers" exploded in 1988, she walked away from the music industry in 1992 even before all the singles from follow-up Martika's Kitchen had been issued, citing a burnout and the pressures of fame. "Sailing On The Seven Seas" came out pretty much around the same time as "Love...Thy Will Be Done", and even became a Top 3 hit in the UK and a top ten hit in a number of European countries, while bubbling under in the US. Lead singer Andy McCluskey was leading a whole new group under the old Orchestral Manoeuvers In The Dark moniker, which didn't please everybody at the time, but it's a wonderful dance-rock stomper that deserves to be rediscovered.
Another throughline for this volume: Great cover versions! Who doesn't love great cover versions? Here we got three: Sinead O'Connor's outstanding take on "Ode To Billie Joe", Mary Lou Lord's acoustic reinvention of Van Halen's "Jump" and The Afghan Wigs' groovy take on TLC's "Creep".
On the vet watch in this volume: Alice Cooper, who sings the anthemic "Stolen Prayer" with its author Chris Cornell. Glenn Frey with the quite lovely "Brave New World", John York with the wonderful comp closer "Lady On The Highway" and Tom Waits with the ultra atmospheric and weirdly reassuring "Hold On". There's also the reformed Flying Burrito Brothers, by now in - I'm not joking - its 48th (!!!) incarnation, trying to be hip with the alt country crowd by covering Son Volt's "Windfall" a mere two years after the original came out. [I'm not sure how many noticed, but I originally announced this song for APNS Vol. 34, the last 90s-set volume, in that volume's write-up and to my surprise find that there is a "Windfall" on that collection, but it's the Son Volt original. Huh. I mean great song, good for that volume - whose write up is now changed - but that's a weird mix up, as I originally only had the Burritos "Wiindfall" in my APNS 9Os folder]
So, you know, the usual: smorgasboard of diverse stuff, all good. Same as it ever was. As All Pearls, No Swine slide into an unknown future, enjoy this throwback to the 90s...



















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