#13 Dark Entries - Live n' LOUD
saw where 
@scorchy said that he ranked this #6 in his post-punk countdown (which i missed?) - will find some time to pore over that thread - good lookin' out 
from their debut album, which are still such a kick to the teeth - they were operating in spaces nobody else had thought of prior, and they were so COTdamn 
tight as a band, a straight FACT which so many will never care to know or give two f**** about - but one cannot come away from full exposure to all their work from '79-'83 and not be cognizant of the talent ... the 
ferocious talent.
Daniel Ash owned that first platter with his seditious shredding ... him and Keef Levene (PiL) were the two most interesting and innovative guitarists operating during that window, and that includes all genres, mind you - all because 
you didn't hear the tree fall in the woods don't mean it weren't felled.
Danny were slapping angular passages and lunges all over the sludgey bottom of his dissonant rhythms - swooping in and out with them while never overwhelming Peter ... he indulges more in the live version i linked above - and the Murphy monolog gets a fist rammed right up it's keester in this iteration - the power harnessed in this live setting is jaw-dropping ... hail Danny!
#12  In The Flat Field 
title of their first album, and a perfect back end of the double Danny dose ... see all praise above, and apply generously to this one as well - Danny sounds as if he's just peeling notes off that ax ... it wails and moans and screams like a serf lowered on the Judas Cradle.
perhaps my favorite lyrics from them ... big brain bombast - 
in my yearn for some cerebral fix - laying the template for that familar "if it ain't done right it's pretentious" bent of the burgeoning genre they were birthing here - this are not the "mall goff" most of you are prolly most famiar with ... the early to mid 80s heyday of the scene owed more to Byron & Shelley & Poe & warped Victorian swooning than it did to Hot Topic & Spencers - this genre got swallowed and spit up by some real dumdums, not unlike it's wayward PUNK big brother ... once the gene pool were infested there were no turning back - but the creative and artistic heights of the purists were as glorious as any could wish for ... pockets of the original ethos still persevered, but the logs floating in the latter day were not of the O Henry variety - they were straight up, legit s*** drops.
*wik regaled us with quite a few tales of his Mary ... but the one nugget he dropped that grabbed my imagination most were that "In The Flat Field" were her all-time favorite jam ... "Scary Mary", indeed - i had a few pm convos about that with him, and they kinda went the way you are imagining - flat out f****** legends 
hammer me into blazing pain/moulding shapes - no shame to waste/and drag me there with deafening haste 










