Gomez - Bring It On
by Cila Warncke
published: 10 / 5 / 2018

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intro
Cila Warncke finds that an outsized 20th Anniversary Edition four CD re-release of Gomez's Mercury Music Prize winning 'Bring It On' captures the brash charm of their youthful debut
Aged nineteen , I wrote for 'R.O.A.R.', the King's College London student newspaper. On this tenuous ground I called Virgin Records to petition for tickets to a Gomez gig. A woman told me to stop by the office. There, she gave opened a cupboard and waved a casual hand at a stack of CDs: "Do you need the album?" It was the first time I realised people would give me music, just for putting words to paper. Like the first hit of some dangerous drug, that 'Bring It On' CD was the gateway to a peripatetic music writing career that hasn't quite died. Listening to the remastered 'Bring It On' that anchors this sprawling release, I am struck by how fresh its scruffy charm sounds, nineteen years on. The album reels, wobbles, and soars with more enthusiasm than expertise but that is precisely what saves it from hollowness. That, and grit of their feedback-soaked sound and Ian Ball's forty-a-day voice. Gomez was eclectic in the true sense: they mashed up rock, root, blues and electronics before putting those pieces together became fashionable. What's more, they did so without studying the self-importance of their Britpop predecessors. Their bonhomie and rough finish was the ideal antidote to Blur's art-school mockney and Oasis's lairy egotism. Their best songs vault the years: 'Whippin' Piccadilly' is a stoned electric jam redolent of dark pubs and city lights; 'Here Comes the Breeze' is lofted by an irresistible chorus and tethered by Ball's smoked vocals; while 'Get Myself Arrested' matches Beck's 'Loser' for disaffected, lo-fi swagger. Even the dubious 'Tijuana Lady', a song notable mostly for the awfulness of the lyric: "I know that I'm no head honcho/But I'll keep you warm in my silky poncho" is forgivable on the basis that the band members were, well, kids. Its youthful chutzpah was rewarded with the 1998 Mercury Music Prize. Which they survived to build a musical career that marches on. This four CD set, packed with live cuts, demos and thirty-five previously unreleased tracks, is the perfect way to celebrate how it all began.
Track Listing:-
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Grace Jones (2014)
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Hawkwind (2022)
Hot Pepper (2018)
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Iron Butterfly (2014)
John Cooper Clarke (2016)
Joni Mitchell (2021)
Lapre (2020)
Loft (2021)
Madness (2014)
McCarthy (2015)
Mercury Rev (2019)
Miscellaneous (2020)
Miscellaneous (2014)
Monochrome Set (2015)
Mothmen (2015)
Neil Innes (2020)
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (2015)
Party Day (2021)
Pele (2017)
Phil Alvin (2015)
Phil Ochs (2016)
Primitives (2015)
Roger Mcguinn (2018)
Rubik (2021)
Sorrow (2018)
Television Personalities (2018)
Terry Allen (2016)
Townes Van Zandt (2015)
Trashmen (2020)
Ty Segall (2022)
Ub40 (2015)
VIPS (2020)
Wolfhounds (2015)
Zz Top (2018)
Band Links:-
https://www.gomeztheband.com/https://www.facebook.com/gomez/
https://twitter.com/gomeztheband
Picture Gallery:-


interviews |
Interview (2011) |
In our second interview with them, Mercury Prize winning band Gomez's drummer and percussionist Olly Peacock speaks to Ben Howarth about their new and seventh album, 'Whatever's On Your Mind' |
Interview (2006) |
live reviews |
Roundhouse, London, 21/6/2011 |
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Mercury Music Prize winners Gomez have always been more out than in fashion, but Ben Howarth watches them play a near perfect set to promote their new album 'Whatever's On Your Mind' at the Roundhouse in London |
Hammersmith Apollo, London, 23/11/2006 |
features |
Gomez (2006) |
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Mercury Prize winners Gomez recently released a new album 'How We Operate' and toured the United Kingdom. Anna Gudaniec photographs them exclusively for Pennyblackmusic at Shepherd's Bush Empire in London |
digital downloads
reviews |
How We Operate (2006) |
![]() |
Self-deprecatingly, but excellent comeback album of sorts from the under rated and out-of-fashion Gomex |
Split The Difference (2004) |
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