Post-punk might've given way to the brighter and more pop-oriented sounds of new wave around 1982, but "post-punk" as a label has been affixed to many bands that have come and gone since, including a large cluster of herky-jerky yahoos that were floating around in the early 2000s, most of whom were quickly bundled together for their throwback appeal. The two-disc
Post Punk, an addition to the
Rough Trade Shops series, curiously binds two waves -- if you'll pardon the use of the word "waves" -- without considering the wealth of like-minded bands that came and went
between them. Nineties bands like
Six Finger Satellite,
Dog Faced Hermans, and
Trenchmouth could fit neatly into this design; however, the time apparently wasn't right for a revival of the '90s post-punk revival. That's a shame, because those bands were just as thrilling and are just as deserving of inclusion, if not more so than some of the lesser 21st century outfits. (What's more, the names are just as absurd as
Crispy Ambulance, one of the names here.) With or without the gaffe, Rough Trade has put together another lovingly packaged and attentively sequenced compilation. It doesn't take the easy route, and instead mixes the obvious in with some rare gleams that are liable to placate the most fussy obscurantist.
Scritti Politti's presence is likely to perplex those who are only familiar with the group's mid-'80s pop-chart run, yet their early days are ripe for the picking, best represented by the scratchy spirals and lazily swaying lurch of "Skank Bloc Bologna."
Delta 5 never made an album that rivaled anything from like-sounding Leeds peers
Gang of Four, but "Mind Your Own Business" -- steady peasoup-peasoup rhythm, hectoring group vocals, jagged guitars -- clings to the ribs as well as "I Found That Essence Rare." Other typically neglected acts, from
Family Fodder to
Essential Logic to
Maximum Joy, are featured alongside more familiar ones like
Wire,
PiL, and
the Fall. Out of the latest school,
the Rapture,
Erase Errata, and
Gramme lead the way, along with the sadly departed
Life Without Buildings, who bowed out in true post-punk fashion after a handful of singles and one great album. Along with continuing Rough Trade's excellent run of compilations,
Post Punk also rates with
In the Beginning There Was Rhythm,
New York Noise, and
Mutant Disco -- fellow retrospectives that are just as fun as they are historical.
–
Andy Kellman, Rovi