Great Rock Albums of 1982: The Jam- The Gift
I hope that everyone had a very nice Christmas and will have a Happy New Year and that Santa brought you all the music you wanted. He did bring me the new AC/DC album like I asked and I enjoyed it first listen. Being a parent or step parent in this case, I got to see my stepson open his Christmas card and discover two tickets to see Amon Amarth, Huntress and Savage Messiah in Bristol on January 18. I must thank Stone at Metalodyssey. His post alerted me to the upcoming concert and I would have missed it if I hadn’t seen it in one of his posts. Thank you Stone and I will be posting about that gig after I see it.
Now onto The Jam’s 1982 album “The Gift.” If I had been listening to The Jam back in the day and heard this album when it came out after listening to their previous albums, I would have immediately accused them of selling out. “The Gift” marks a departure from the hard, aggressive punk sound that they had been known for. I mean the opener for instance, “Happy Together” sounds more like a happy top 40 song then a traditional Jam punk anthem. However, the song does break with the precedent set by the other albums I have covered for 1982 and is not the hit single. Surprisingly enough, the big single from the album and probably their most successful song, “A Town Called Malice” is probably the closest song to The Jam of old on the entire album and probably why it’s a good song. At least they tried to keep to their traditional roots somewhat. The rest of the album, although not bad lacks that kick I liked about their previous albums. Paul Weller was trying to stretch out a little and you got to respect that but for me, it just doesn’t excite me the way the earlier Jam material did.
Track Listing:
1. Happy Together
2. Ghosts
3. Precious
4. Just Who is the Five O’Clock Hero
5. Trans Global Express
6. Running on the Spot
7. Circus
8. The Planner’s Dream Goes Wrong
9. Carnation
10. A Town Called Malice
11. The Gift
Paul Weller- guitar, lead vocals
Bruce Foxton- bass, backing vocals
Rick Buckler- drums
While “The Gift” would go to number one, it would also lead to the break up of the band. Bruce Foxton and Rick Buckler wanted to stick to the more punk sound while Weller wanted to branch out more. It appears that this disagreement might have shone through on the album because while it goes to new places, it does so without the angry conviction that had gotten The Jam to where they were in the first place.
Next post: Toto- IV
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This entry was posted on December 29, 2014 at 2:00 pm and is filed under 1980s, Music, Rock, Uncategorized with tags a, AC/DC, Amon Amarth, British, Bruce Foxton, Classic Rock, hard rock, Huntress, metalodyssey, Paul Weller, punk, Savage Messiah, The 1980s, The Gift, The Jam. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
6 Responses to “Great Rock Albums of 1982: The Jam- The Gift”
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December 29, 2014 at 2:03 pm
I don’t know a lot of these songs, but damn the Jam could play. I do love the singles. Happy New Year!
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December 29, 2014 at 2:10 pm
It is true, they could certainly play. I more prefer their earlier stuff and I agree, the singles are brill. Happy New Year to you too.
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December 29, 2014 at 11:50 pm
Haven’t listened to this in awhile, but as my memory would serve me, it’s pretty rad. Nice review.
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December 31, 2014 at 11:05 am
Thanks you. It’s not a bad album, I just don’t think it has the teeth the previous Jam albums have.
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January 4, 2015 at 5:47 pm
The only one i know is ..Malice, i really love that track.
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January 4, 2015 at 6:51 pm
It is a very good track, probably one of their best singles.
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