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More Specials

By: Specials
Label: Two Tone
Released: 25 Mar 2002
RRP: £8.99
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Customer Reviews

The Specials overcome `difficult second album syndrome' - By: Mr. S. Bailey, 16 Nov 2008
With 1980's adventurous More Specials the Coventry band overcame the 'difficult second album syndrome', a fate which has befallen many an artist over the years. They did this by broadening their musical palette; where their classic debut (effectively) embraces the ska & reggae of Prince Buster, The Skatalites & Toots & The Maytals, this album sees them venturing into a wider variety of genres, including northern soul (`Sock It To `Em J.B.'), spaghetti westerns soundtracks (`Stereotypes') & easy listening (`Enjoy Yourself (It's Later Than You Think)'). That is not to say they jettisoned all that made The Specials so exciting & different: lead singer Terry Hall still delivers his vocals with a flat, deadpan delivery & the lyrics & subject matter remain rootedin the prosaic. In place of the girlsin footless tightsin night clubs & concrete jungles of their first album, More Specials has a wealthy, naive young women from the provinces who is bedazzled by the bright lights of London (`Hey, Little Rich Girl') & refers to a budget clothing retailer well-known on British high streets (`Man At C&A').

This is not necessarily an album for those who came to The Specials as lovers of the home-grown 2-Tone Ska movement that included Madness, The Selecter & The Beat (`Not so much Channel 1 [the recording studioin Jamaica], as Radio 2' as style magazine The Face correctly pointed out at the time). It is, however, a bold experiment which generally pays off.

Missing Songs - By: Ms. M. C. Furlong, 29 May 2008
Great Album But Where's Rude Boys Outta(Version) Jail And Braggin' And Trying Not To Lie? Two Great Songs Missing From One Great Album, Worth Looking Elsewhere With Whole Album Intact In My Opinion.
Exactly What it Says on the Tin - By: Ian Wood, Author of 'Here's 2 Absent Fathers', 01 May 2008
The difficulty of producing a perfect debut album is how can you follow it. The Specials debut album & live sound with its up-date of Ska had not only been a huge successin it's own right but had started a movement with bands such as Madness, The Beat & Bad Manners becoming over night successes but kick started the careers, long over, of the stars of sixties Ska. Conscious not to repeat them selves unofficial group leader, Jerry Dammers, & soundman, the late Dave Jordan set about the impossible.

Opener is the standard `Enjoy Yourself' & although Ska legend Prince Buster played this song The Specials go for a orthodox rock-pop arrangement to open the albumin urgent party style. `Man at C & A' is the Terry Hall's perfect state on the Nation addressin a punk ska hybrid which flows perfectly into Roddy Radiation's rockabilly masterpiece `Hey, Little Rich Girl'. Ska pleasers `Do Nothing' (later to be the albums hit single) & the perfect `Pearl's Cafe' take us back to the classic Specials sound before the Northern Soul anthem `Sock it to `em JB' ends side one leaving usin wonder that a Ska band could play Northern Soul this well.

Side two opens with the taster single, cocktail jazz dub reggae `Stereotypes' with its two piece constructions gives us a Neville Staples toast which is perhaps a little too long. Calypso instrumental `Holiday Fortnight' is a lot better than it has any right to be & acts as the perfect bridge to Hall & ex-Bodysnatchers Rhoda Dakar's duet anti-love song `I Can't Stand it'. Parody of `Going to Barbados' `International Jet Set' is the perfect embodiment of the new Specials sound with it's muzzack influence coming to the fore. This is etherised with the perfect closer a Bontemps organ driven reprise of `Enjoy Yourself' which always leaves me wanting to play the whole thing over again.

And so now we know how to follow a perfect debut album, you make a perfect follow up album.

Sounds even better now than when I was 15! - By: S. GIBSON, 02 Sep 2006
I was a bit of a rude boy, backin 1980. I have fond memories of strutting around North Londonin my Harrington jacket, Fred Perry shirt, white socks, braces & tassled loafers. I wasn't a skinhead then but I am now! When CDs came out, I stupidly gave away all my vinyl to charity shops, including More Specials.

Making a welcome return to my music collection, More Specials is such an overlooked gem. I notice it did make it into "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die" but you are unlikely to find itin a top 50 or 100 list.

It's difficult to put into words why this album is such a treat. It's somehow timeless, borrowing from the '60s & '70s, rootedin the '80s but not out of placein the '90s & '00s. In fact, it doesn't sound at all dated. I recommend playing along side the likes of Massive Attack, Gorillaz & Lilly Allen, all clearly inspired & influenced by The Specials.

Finally, a word to the wise. Check the small print on the back of the CD & buy the enhanced CD which includes original videos of Ghost Town & Rat Race - two very special singles.
The most influential album of the last 25 years?? - By: Jerome O'Shea, 28 Jun 2004
OK, maybe that was a bit strong but this really is a CLASSIC!!! Like the previous reviewer said you really can trace a line from this group (and especially this album) to groups as diverse as Happy Mondays/Black Grape, Tricky, Massive Attack, The Streets, Plan B & Lily Allen.

The Specials were one of the biggest groupsin the country when they released this & it was always seen as a bit of a letdown by the hardcode skinhead/rude boy fanbase compared to their debut. But, to those that love groups that mess with the formula it has become seen as a work of near genius.

Can you imagine the careerists of today like the Kooks or Razorlight doing an album of Bulgarian Folk Music or ambient house? Of course you can't, they are too worried about shifting units & marketing to risk real experimentation with the music. The Specials made an album featuring muzak, the sort of stuff you hearin hotel lifts & supermarkets & mixed it with lyrics about alienation, the futility of the saturday night beer boy life & paranoia about impending nuclear war & you could still dance to it!

If you haven't got this album - get it now! I bought itin 1981 aged 9 & I still love it to this day. The only slight grumble is that there are no extras. It must surely be worth the deluxe treatment including 'Bragging not trying to lie' & 'Rude boys outta Jail (version)' - the free seven inch that came with copies of the album backin the dim & distant. There is also some great B sides from that time & amazing live tracks (the Specials were the greatest live band ever - fact!!).

So, buy this & Enjoy yourself (it's later than you think).


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