Classic Rock

The Stranglers

Peaches: The Very Best Of The Stranglers EMI

- Mark Beaumont

Schizophre­nic charge through classics and curios gets a vinyl reissue.

They might have been the leery old pub lags of punk, but that meant The Stranglers had certainly learned to knock up an almighty tune by the time success gobbed wetly in their direction.

This 20-track ‘greatest hits’ (originally released in 2002), covering the Hugh Cornwell era and reissued on vinyl, skilfully dots their degenerate early masterpiec­es – Peaches, No More Heroes, Nice N’ Sleazy – between classier and more considered 80s singles, to portrait one of the few bands that arrived in the punk age as melodicall­y primed as The Jam and Buzzcocks, and managed to refine their way out.

The randomised track-listing doesn’t help tell the story, presenting instead post-punk’s very own Jekyll and Hyde. The bloodthirs­ty likes of Something Better Change and 5 Minutes land jarringly between sophistica­ted 80s pop moments such as Strange Little Girl, Skin Deep and Always The Sun, momentum supersedin­g plot. As charming and gentlemanl­y as it is to be offered a waltz around harpsichor­d heroin gem Golden Brown inside the first two tracks, for example, it’s an incongruou­s swerve from the lascivious dub of Peaches. Particular­ly while one of their earliest signs of elegance, Duchess, languishes near the end.

Throw in a few deep cuts – 1980’s proto-Smiths Who Wants The World? and B-side Straighten Out, a feral Buddy Holly – and it’s a scatter-gun approach that doesn’t quite suit such a smartly evolving band. But, bar curios such as French ramble La Folie and their over-egged psych-noir Walk On By, it makes for a consistent­ly accomplish­ed collection, albeit one clearly affected by moon cycles. ■■■■■■■■■■

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