For a Few Dollars More performed by Al Caiola
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Fifth Dimension performed by Arling & Cameron
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Summer performed by Buffalo Tom
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When Dreams Turn to Dust performed by Cathy Dennis
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Heaven Up Here performed by Echo & the Bunnymen
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Way Form 3 (If You Ever) performed by Elegia
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Eat Yourself performed by Goldfrapp
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Shake And Crawl performed by House Of Love
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| | : I liked the House of Love - and 'Christine' is a genre-defining classic. But like many of the other sub-Valentines clones (Chapterhouse, Boo Radleys, etc.), I thought some of their tunes suffered from being slow and uneventful. Like you, I love minor chords - but I think other bands did that multi-layered guitar sound better. But hey, it's just my opinion and all that. : The House of Love were brilliant and way ahead of their time, not to mention sadly overlooked in the pages of pop music history. They were hardly "Sub-Valentine Clones" - the band's sound dates back to their origins in 1986. The members of My Bloody Valentine were struggling to define their sound at that point (they were still working through their goth phase!). Guy Chadwick was a masterful songwriter and Terry Bickers was the preeminent guitarist of his time. Nobody knew their way around a stack of effects pedals better than him. Best songs: Safe, Christine, Destroy the Heart, Loneliness Is A Gun... This band's music is nothing short of superb.
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Daphne (Laurel Tree) performed by Kayak
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Carcara performed by Nancy Ames
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2002 - A Hit Song performed by The Free Design
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| | : heh..brilliant commentary. : Wow. I never thought of that song as such an exploded schematic. But it does shed light on their own self awareness even if unintentional at the time.
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