Huggy Bear: Basic Strategies 10"
âBasic Strategies for Going Outâ shares the two Peel Sessions recorded by Huggy Bear in 1992 and 1993. Eight tracks total, two previously unreleased songs, a revelatory early version of âHer Jazzâ and a fanatical gaiety throughout. For a band that so wholeheartedly invested in opposition, the chance to go up against the stifled decorum of the BBC pushed Huggy Bear to a nitroglycerin blaze. From the outraged to the rousing to the coy to the hell-bent, âBasic Strategies for Going Outâ reveals the extremes reachable by a band at ferocious work.
Released by arrangement with the BBC, âBasic Strategiesâ was mastered by Fred Thomas from the original session recordings. It is the first Huggy Bear recording issued since 1994, and at present their only commercially available release.
Our take: Basic Strategies is a 10â compiling two Peel Sessions from 90s UK punk / riot grrrl group Huggy Bear. If you arenât a devoted fan of the group, you might not realize itâs also the first Huggy Bear music released since the band dissolved in 1994. When Huggy Bear split, the members apparently didnât look back, and their music has remained frustratingly out of print since. I must admit, though, that Iâm not one of those devoted Huggy Bear fans. Their records have always been hard to find, so the only one Iâve ever owned is their split 12â with Bikini Kill, and even though I have that record, I havenât spent a ton of time with the Huggy Bear side. Thus, I am a Huggy Bear novice, but as a novice I assure you Basic Strategies rises well above âfor fans onlyâ status. As you might expect from a BBC recording, the fidelity here is striking, but also the bandâs performances are electrifying. I can imagine it must be very intimidating to go into the BBCâs studios to record a session. Surely some bands freeze up, but it sounds like this odd environment gave Huggy Bear a burst of energy. Stylistically, the songs range from sassy, garage-y songs that fans of Bikini Kill will flip for (âHer Jazzâ) to more pensive, loud/quiet/loud workouts like the Pavement-ish âNu Song,â with several songs lying somewhere in the middle, with fast, punk-ish drums and layers of fuzzed-out guitars with strong Sonic Youth vibes (some parts sound so much like Sonic Youth, in fact, that it has me wondering if Huggy Bear used alternate/open tunings like Sonic Youth did). Nearly every song strikes a great balance between being energetic, melodic, and immediate, yet also layered and sophisticated. The lyrics are also great, a kind of fractured take on riot grrrlâs confrontational politics, like Bikini Kill lyrics run through Mark E. Smithâs word blender. With eight short, exciting songs, killer period-appropriate artwork, and a tantalizingly cryptic insert, Basic Strategies has me hooked, and I look forward to wandering further down the Huggy Bear rabbit hole.
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Huggy Bear: Basic Strategies 10"
Huggy Bear: Basic Strategies 10"
âBasic Strategies for Going Outâ shares the two Peel Sessions recorded by Huggy Bear in 1992 and 1993. Eight tracks total, two previously unreleased songs, a revelatory early version of âHer Jazzâ and a fanatical gaiety throughout. For a band that so wholeheartedly invested in opposition, the chance to go up against the stifled decorum of the BBC pushed Huggy Bear to a nitroglycerin blaze. From the outraged to the rousing to the coy to the hell-bent, âBasic Strategies for Going Outâ reveals the extremes reachable by a band at ferocious work.
Released by arrangement with the BBC, âBasic Strategiesâ was mastered by Fred Thomas from the original session recordings. It is the first Huggy Bear recording issued since 1994, and at present their only commercially available release.
Our take: Basic Strategies is a 10â compiling two Peel Sessions from 90s UK punk / riot grrrl group Huggy Bear. If you arenât a devoted fan of the group, you might not realize itâs also the first Huggy Bear music released since the band dissolved in 1994. When Huggy Bear split, the members apparently didnât look back, and their music has remained frustratingly out of print since. I must admit, though, that Iâm not one of those devoted Huggy Bear fans. Their records have always been hard to find, so the only one Iâve ever owned is their split 12â with Bikini Kill, and even though I have that record, I havenât spent a ton of time with the Huggy Bear side. Thus, I am a Huggy Bear novice, but as a novice I assure you Basic Strategies rises well above âfor fans onlyâ status. As you might expect from a BBC recording, the fidelity here is striking, but also the bandâs performances are electrifying. I can imagine it must be very intimidating to go into the BBCâs studios to record a session. Surely some bands freeze up, but it sounds like this odd environment gave Huggy Bear a burst of energy. Stylistically, the songs range from sassy, garage-y songs that fans of Bikini Kill will flip for (âHer Jazzâ) to more pensive, loud/quiet/loud workouts like the Pavement-ish âNu Song,â with several songs lying somewhere in the middle, with fast, punk-ish drums and layers of fuzzed-out guitars with strong Sonic Youth vibes (some parts sound so much like Sonic Youth, in fact, that it has me wondering if Huggy Bear used alternate/open tunings like Sonic Youth did). Nearly every song strikes a great balance between being energetic, melodic, and immediate, yet also layered and sophisticated. The lyrics are also great, a kind of fractured take on riot grrrlâs confrontational politics, like Bikini Kill lyrics run through Mark E. Smithâs word blender. With eight short, exciting songs, killer period-appropriate artwork, and a tantalizingly cryptic insert, Basic Strategies has me hooked, and I look forward to wandering further down the Huggy Bear rabbit hole.
Original: $1,189.00
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Description
âBasic Strategies for Going Outâ shares the two Peel Sessions recorded by Huggy Bear in 1992 and 1993. Eight tracks total, two previously unreleased songs, a revelatory early version of âHer Jazzâ and a fanatical gaiety throughout. For a band that so wholeheartedly invested in opposition, the chance to go up against the stifled decorum of the BBC pushed Huggy Bear to a nitroglycerin blaze. From the outraged to the rousing to the coy to the hell-bent, âBasic Strategies for Going Outâ reveals the extremes reachable by a band at ferocious work.
Released by arrangement with the BBC, âBasic Strategiesâ was mastered by Fred Thomas from the original session recordings. It is the first Huggy Bear recording issued since 1994, and at present their only commercially available release.
Our take: Basic Strategies is a 10â compiling two Peel Sessions from 90s UK punk / riot grrrl group Huggy Bear. If you arenât a devoted fan of the group, you might not realize itâs also the first Huggy Bear music released since the band dissolved in 1994. When Huggy Bear split, the members apparently didnât look back, and their music has remained frustratingly out of print since. I must admit, though, that Iâm not one of those devoted Huggy Bear fans. Their records have always been hard to find, so the only one Iâve ever owned is their split 12â with Bikini Kill, and even though I have that record, I havenât spent a ton of time with the Huggy Bear side. Thus, I am a Huggy Bear novice, but as a novice I assure you Basic Strategies rises well above âfor fans onlyâ status. As you might expect from a BBC recording, the fidelity here is striking, but also the bandâs performances are electrifying. I can imagine it must be very intimidating to go into the BBCâs studios to record a session. Surely some bands freeze up, but it sounds like this odd environment gave Huggy Bear a burst of energy. Stylistically, the songs range from sassy, garage-y songs that fans of Bikini Kill will flip for (âHer Jazzâ) to more pensive, loud/quiet/loud workouts like the Pavement-ish âNu Song,â with several songs lying somewhere in the middle, with fast, punk-ish drums and layers of fuzzed-out guitars with strong Sonic Youth vibes (some parts sound so much like Sonic Youth, in fact, that it has me wondering if Huggy Bear used alternate/open tunings like Sonic Youth did). Nearly every song strikes a great balance between being energetic, melodic, and immediate, yet also layered and sophisticated. The lyrics are also great, a kind of fractured take on riot grrrlâs confrontational politics, like Bikini Kill lyrics run through Mark E. Smithâs word blender. With eight short, exciting songs, killer period-appropriate artwork, and a tantalizingly cryptic insert, Basic Strategies has me hooked, and I look forward to wandering further down the Huggy Bear rabbit hole.











