| The Saints were to Australia what the Sex Pistols were to Britain, and 
        the Ramones to America. Picking up the germ planted by the defunct Stooges, 
        MC5, Velvet Underground, and New York Dolls, the Saints sparked the Far 
        East punk rock movement with a blasting, blistering, scorching sound no 
        one had heard before. Moreover, the Saints were blitzing the unsuspecting 
        in their home of Brisbane in 1973, long before the Sex Pistols or the 
        Ramones had even begun. Australians today hold the Saints in greater reverence 
        than any rock band in its history, save for the Easybeats. After their 
        incendiary, self-released debut 7" single "(I'm) Stranded" 
        b/w "No Time" blew minds of a raving British press on import 
        in 1976, subsequent sales of the single proved to the industry that the 
        upstart punk movement was in fact commercially viable. The Saints pocketed 
        a worldwide deal with EMI Australia, who rush-released "(I'm) Stranded" 
        in Australia and Britain (and in the U.S., on the heavyweight punk label 
        of the time, Sire records) to capitalize on the new trend. This first 
        LP was actually nothing but eight rough-and-raw demo tracks the band had 
        no intention of releasing, plus the two sides of the much better, cleaner-sounding 
        single. The heavy, buzzing racket on the eight demo tracks borders on 
        unintelligible, they're so cheaply recorded, but nothing can stop a collection 
        of cracklers this intense, with two absolutely astounding, blues-heavy 
        ballads thrown in for great balance -- "Messin' With the Kid" 
        and "Story of Love" drip with genuine, bratty soul. Of the hard-fast 
        tracks, even today's punk fans are amazed at the sheer tenacity and outright 
        fire of "Nights in Venice," "One Way Street," and 
        "Erotic Neurotic." Hear history burning.  (by Jack Rabid, All 
        Music Guide) |