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In the late 70's, parka-clad thousands
took to beaches of Brighton to defend the Mod way of life, depicted
in the classic film Quadrophenia. Bands like The Jam, Purple Hearts,
Secret Affair, The Lambrettas, and countless others re-ignited the
R&B influenced, energetic pop sound that had been missing in punk,
yet still containing the intensity and emotion of the UK punk movement.
Here in the United States, rock critics tend to cite this "power-pop"
movement in terms of it's Chicago roots, most notably Cheap Trick,
Green, Shoes, and Material Issue.....which is fine to the members
of MegaSuperUltra, the 12 songs on "Power Pop Art" have been crafted
from the very core of rock. The music is full of quick changes,
stops, starts, and cleverly honed lyrics mingled with irresistible
melody. These songs are non stop action, obviously based on the
Mod styles and ideals of 1960's England but given an distinct American
twist. The world is ready for this "brand" of feel-good pop again,
directly targeted to the new high-paced Scooterist movement that
is bubbling strong in the underground once again.
Sounds like: The Jam, The Who, XTC, and
Elvis Costello all wrapped up together
For Fans of: The Strike, Teenage Frames,
Œ79 UK Mod revival bands, Manual Scan, Detour Records UK, Odd Numbers,
Mega Super Ultra
- Power Pop Art - Jump Up. On listening to this surprisingly powerful
trio first thought is that this is as good, and in some cases better
than anything around during the '79 Mod Revival. Power chords abound
throughout. There's not a bum track contained anywhere among the
twelve. With a sound reminiscent of The Jam at their peak, other
reference points being The Buzzcocks and The Chords, this power
pop package is quite simply awesome full of power pop at its very
best. --Scootering Magazine UK Feb 2000
MegaSuperUltra:
Power Pop Art (Jump Up) MegaSuperUltra are the sound of the Mod
revival era (¹79 -¹82 approx.) incarnate. Earnest vocals (reminiscent
of XTC¹s Andy Partridge in a hurry) and lyrics, crisp clean production,
and snappy bass and drums in support of guitarist/vocalist Tom Shover¹s
power chord pandemonium. From their parkas, to the target images
in the liners, to their tunes, these lads ain¹t afraid to show their
roots. (12 tracks. 35:01 playing time.)----Mohair Sweets Mag Canada
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