| "One of my all time favorite bands, The Mekons can don the guise 
        of punk, rock, insurgent country, dub, spoken word, rant & roll, Tex-Mex 
        swing among any other genre you can attempt to describe. Always interesting 
        and never compelled to record for the sake of sales the band has kept 
        the DIY spirit up to the present. This is a rollicking ride and you're 
        all invited to come along. If you don't own any Mekons this is a good 
        place to start. The guys/gal can also be found in the company of the Waco 
        Brothers, Pine Valley Cosmonauts, Rico Bell and the Snake Handlers and 
        various solo efforts. There are no notes pertaining to the cover art, 
        but it's an eyecatcher all right." (TralFaz-Arcives) | 
  
    | The Edge of the World is a pivotal album in the Mekons' enormous oeuvre, 
        for it's the record that introduces Sally Timms' remarkable voice into 
        the group's mix of country, folk, punk, and noise textures. Either on 
        its own or in tandem with longtime singers Jon Langford and Tom Greenhalgh, 
        Timms' voice adds an attractive new texture to The Edge of the World. 
        However, in retrospect, this is not the countrified album its initial 
        reviews claimed, or at least not entirely. The opening "Hello Cruel 
        World" is a grinding post-punk downer that slowly accelerates into 
        a desperate, hoarse cry with no noticeable country or folk elements. "Bastard" 
        ups the anger and desperation considerably, this time adding a stomping 
        fiddle tune and one of Langford's most spiteful, spittle-flecked vocals. 
        Timms makes her lead vocal debut on the majestically dismissive "Oblivion," 
        which has the most striking chorus on the album. After that strong trio 
        of tunes, the rest of the album refines those musical styles and lyrical 
        themes to varying degrees, with the rollicking "Slightly South of 
        the Border" and the remarkable "Alone and Forsaken" the 
        highlights. The Edge of the World is one of the Mekons' finest efforts. 
        (by Stewart Mason, AMG)  |