Amazon.co.uk Review
Stiff Records specialised in making stars of left-of-centre acts that didn't fit neatly within boundaries. Former pub-rocker Ian Dury's debut,
New Boots and Panties!, set forth the manifesto of a visionary nearly on par with short-term label mate Elvis Costello. Linking a savage verbal wit and a fiction writer's eye for detail with a command of music from punk parody (the hilarious "Blackmail Man") to sophisto-funk ("Wake Up and Make Love with Me"), Dury was one of the most English of artists. More to the point, though, he was the only Dury-ish one.
--Rickey Wright
Review
It’s a wonderful irony that the two lyricists who most embodied punk’s libertarian role in helping banish the last vestiges of straight-laced Victorian values in the mid-70s were the two who most resembled a Dickensian nightmare. Johnny Rotten and Ian Dury both sought release from a social system designed to keep working class oiks like them in their place, and although one approached the task through head-on confrontation and the other with art school nuance, the message was the same: Think For Yourself.
After hundreds of pub gigs as Kilburn & The High Roads, Dury went solo in 1975, writing New Boots and Panties!! over the following year with young and precocious multi-instrumentalist jazzer Chaz Jankel, recording it on the fly with session rhythm section Norman Watt-Roy (bass) and Charley Charles (drums), soon to be the core of The Blockheads. With major record companies running scared of the graphic lyrical content, independent label Stiff licensed it and stepped into a storm around Dury’s misunderstood signature single Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll, which duly had him banned from BBC radio. Absent from the album’s earliest pressings, Sex & Drugs… was misconstrued as a celebration of debauchery and hedonism when it was actually a call for people to question their daily grind.
It was far from a lone jewel. Sweet Gene Vincent is a blast of rockabilly hero worship for a kindred spirit, felt by Dury not least because of their common disability – Dury’s leg wasted through childhood polio, the Virginia Whisperer’s through a drunken motorbike crash. Lustful opener Wake Up and Make Love With Me sets out Watt-Roy and Charles’s stall as the pub rock JBs; the squalid Billericay Dickie shows that TOWIE has no new light to shed on Essex ways; Clever Trevor and Plaistow Patricia (with its child-unfriendly opening gambit of "A***holes, bastards, f***ing c***s and p****s") were down-at-heel characters straight out of an imagined modern Dickens novel.
Dury’s work quickly mellowed (well, relatively), but the combination of cheeky ire, libertarianism and jazzed-up music hall punk on New Boots… was defiant, original and, 35 years later, stands as a mighty missing link between The Kinks and Blur.
--Andy Fyfe
Find more music at the BBC This link will take you off Amazon in a new window
CD Description
180gm vinyl release from best sourced master tapes, meticulous original artwork and supplied in high grade plastic wallet.
About the Artist
An unlikely pop star, physically disabled by childhood polio, and after a number of years in the less successful pub rock band Kilburn & The Highroads, at the age of 35, Ian Dury took the charts by storm in October 1977 with his debut solo album on the infamous Stiff label: New Boots And Panties. With no hit single to drive it, almost unbelievably NB&P peaked in the Top 5 of the albums chart. Even Dury's famous single Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll (which failed to hit the Top75 Singles Chart) was not included. This album remains one of the most essential to emerge from the punk era, infused with Dury's famous wit and wordplay. Dury went on to have a number of hit singles albums and recorded until his death in May 2000. The sleeve is the iconic photo shot of Dury and his young son Baxter leaning on the window of a lingerie shop in London.
Product Description
DELUXE EDITION : 2CD set. Remastered original CLASSIC with a 17 track bonus disc of demo versions