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The Damned - Anything [Expanded Edition] (1986)

Track listing:
Volume 1
  1. Anything 4:48
  2. Alone Again Or 3:38
  3. The Portrait 3:50
  4. Restless 5:00
  5. In Dulce Decorum 4:49
  6. Gigolo 6:04
  7. The Girl Goes Down 4:36
  8. Tightrope Walk 4:23
  9. Psychomania 4:10
  10. Eloise (Extravagant Mix) 9:34
  11. Anything (Yet Another Mix) 5:55
  12. Gigolo (12' Mix) 4:48
  13. In Dulce Decorum (Dub) 4:41
Volume 2
  1. Eloise 7:49
  2. Temptation 4:10
  3. Beat Girl 2:22
  4. Anything (And Yet Another Mix) 5:05
  5. The Year Of The Jackal 5:51
  6. Thanks For The Night (Rat Mix) 3:58
  7. Anything (Instrumental Mix) 5:11
  8. Gigolo (Extended Single Version) 4:04
  9. Alone Again Or (Mixed Again) 6:29
  10. Psychomania (Live) 4:00
  11. In Dulce Decorum (Extended Mix) 5:59

Notes


After Captain Sensible left the Damned in 1984 when his solo career took off with the freak success of his single "Happy Talk," Dave Vanian took over the creative reins of the group, and he began nudging their music in a direction that reflected his growing interest in the goth movement. The Damned's flirtation with goth led to them signing a major label deal for the first time and enjoying one of their biggest commercial successes with the 1985 album Phantasmagoria. But if that album found the Damned looking gingerly into a new direction, 1986's Anything was the sound of Vanian and company falling down a well; fans were probably savvy enough not to expect the Damned to sound like a straightforward punk band by this point, but most of Anything barely even qualifies as rock 'n' roll. The solo keyboard piece "The Portrait" bears an unfortunate resemblance to Nigel Tufnel's "Lick My Love Pump," "Restless" and "In Dulce Decorum" meander at length for all their thunder (and John Kelly's echoing production makes everything thunders if it's meant to or not), "Gigolo" suggests a failed merger of pop and prog rock, and "The Girl Goes Down" is a faintly ridiculous song that borrows from a number of vintage pop styles without distinction. Only "Psychomania" and the title cut generate anything approximating the energy of the Damned's best music, and it's telling that easily the best song on the album is a cover, a reasonably faithful rendition of Love's "Alone Again Or." The Damned began to crumble after Anything, and the band broke up for a spell in 1989; somehow it all seemed fitting after releasing the worst original album in the group's catalog.