In the blog's infancy, I used to do a series called Fables of the Deconstruction. It was basically a listen to an early version or demo of a song put up against the final released version found on a single or album. So often, too many cooks in the kitchen would mean the unpolished bedroom recording was the superior take. That's more or less the way I feel about today's pick from Strawberry Switchblade. There are a few versions of "Go Away" to compare and contrast, but the beautiful 1983 B-side to "Trees and Flowers" is the definitive version for me. By the time the song became a deep cut on the band's debut album, it's almost unrecognizable. The time period, however, is not. As with the previous post, the 1982 demo is from the band's days as a quartet, and the feel is decidedly post punk... and awfully good too.
Go Away (1982 demo)
Go Away (1983 B-side)
Go Away (1985 album version)
Good to see you are still down that Switchblade rabbit hole Brian
ReplyDeleteI agree, Brian, the second version here is by far and away the best.
ReplyDeleteYup....the b-side version has always been the definitive for me. Good call Brian.
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