REVIEWS FROM MY VINYL COLLECTION

Tag: It Bites

IT BITES – Once Around The World

I bet when It BItes had a hit with Calling All The Heroes from their first album, that Virgin thought they had struck gold. I would love to have been in the room when the execs got a playback of this beauty. Produced by Steve Hillage, this is a modern prog masterpiece. Yes, there are songs with a great pop sensibility like Midnight and Kiss Like Judas, but they are tinged with these big prog arrangements.

Cards on the table time, this is one of my favourite albums ever. An absolute killer selection of tunes with melodies that send goosebumps all over your body. The production and arrangements are freakin’ amazing, there is not a bad second on the whole album. No one sings like Francis, a truly unique individual with an amazing voice and a killer guitar player as well.

Eight songs of pure joy and delight with melodies and harmonies oozing from every groove, but it’s the closing masterpiece of Once Around The World that is my favourite song. It feels like an homage to every classic prog band that has gone before them, but with a twist all of their own. A superb album that sounds huge and you should definitely add this to your ever expanding collection.

10/10 from The Grooveman.

IT BITES – The Big Lad In The Windmill

The general public were given a bit of a false impression of It Bites with the success of their second single Calling All The Heroes. With it being such a huge hit they were mistaken for a pop band of the time and they were lumped in with all the other frilly shirts and haircuts. In fact, they were anything but a pop band. They were the next in a long line of great Prog bands that Britain did so well. Yes, they had a great sense of melody and boy could they write a catchy hook and chorus, but then again so could Genesis.

The first track I Got You Eating Out Of My Hand lays it all in the table with the very catchy hook and chorus, and then the middle section goes all Prog with hints of fusion. It’s a great track! Just to show you how record companies have no idea how to market the bands they have, Virgin released All In Red as the lead single. Now, it’s a great song but was it a lead single? The answer is no it wasn’t, and it bombed. It’s a good thing they got it right with Calling All The Heroes or else It Bites could have died before they started.

Everything sort of revolved around frontman and guitarist Francis Dunnery, who has such a distinctive voice and was such a presence live, plus he is great guitar player. Mixed in with their brand of quirky pop/prog fusion are some epic tracks like You’ll Never Go To Heaven, and my favourite tune Screaming On The Beaches. Which is a wonderful song with a great hook and a quirky groove, but the chorus is so good. They would strike gold with their next album Once Around The World, but this is a great stepping stone for that one.

8.5/10 from The Grooveman.

IT BITES – Eat Me In St Louis

It Bites: the band that Virgin didn’t have a clue how to market. The main problem was that the first single that was released (Calling All The Heroes) was a smash hit nearly all over the world, but was not representative of the band’s music as a whole. They saw themselves as more of a progressive band, but the label wanted a pop band.

This was the 3rd and last album from the original line up, and was produced by one time Queen producer, Mack – it sounds fantastic. He captured exactly what the band was about. A bit late as inner band squabbles, drugs, general record company apathy, and most importantly, Francis leaving to go solo, would basically end this period of the band. Who knew a band as good as this would be hiding away in a small town in Cumbria? The main creative force and the main focus of the band’s arguments was frontman/guitarist Francis Dunnery, and keyboardist John Beck.

Positively Animal starts things off with a heavier sound than on previous efforts, and is a fantastic opener with a great vocal from Francis. Next up is Underneath Your Pillow, a trademark It Bites song – heavy on the melody and great vocal harmonies. One of my favourite It Bites tracks is next with Let Us All Go. A great riff, some great key changes, a superb melody and chorus, and killer harmonies. Next is the absolute monster, Still Too Young To Remember. The one track that screams Prog. A bonafide classic track which just builds and builds and is It Bites to the max. Side 1 closes with Murder of The Planet Earth – reminding us how bad we as humans treat the thing that keeps us alive.

Over to Side 2 we go and it starts with People Of America, which is a song that sounds as though it was recorded in ’89 with its pseudo electronic beginning. Sister Sarah is next and should have been a smash single – if only the record company cared about the band at this point. A great song with a rockin’ up tempo groove. Leaving Without You is the penultimate track and showcases the range and feel in Francis’ voice. Another really huge sounding song thanks again to the great production. Ice Melts Into Water closes the album out, and is a beautiful chill song with some great guitar and again with those harmonies.

The band still exists today and have released a couple of really good albums with John Mitchell replacing Francis. He does an admirable job, but Francis was such a strong character both sonically and visually within the band that maybe they should have changed the name. Anyhoo, a great album and would be a welcome addition to your collection.

9/10 from The Grooveman.