Social Climbers
50 top tracks
Social Climbers
50 top tracks
Albums

Social Climbers
Social Climbers

LOAF Recordings Presents: Domestic Pop Deux
Social Climbers

1981 - Cassette
Social Climbers

Samy's Indie Rock Playlist Autumn 2011
Social Climbers

State of the Union - Disc 1
Social Climbers

S/T
Social Climbers

Domestic Pop Deux
Social Climbers

Indie 69 October 2011
Social Climbers

The New Wave Complex - Volume 16
Social Climbers

New Wave Complex 16
Social Climbers

New Wave Complex Vol.16
Social Climbers

NW Complex Vol 16
Social Climbers
Biography
Personnel: ...Read more on Last.fm
Read more
Personnel:
Jean Seton Shaw (bass, vocals),
A. Leroy (farfisa organ, korg machine),
Mark Bingham (guitar, vocals)
Mark Bingham flirted with a number of projects prior to compiling the works of Social Climbers, including production work for MX-80 Sound and collaborations with New York's Glenn Branca. A. Leroy also worked with Charles Moulton, a choreographer, creating the music for his "Precision Ball Passing" pieces in the early 80s. Social Climbers' only album was indeed a compilation of three excellent, but poorly pressed 7" flexis put out by the band. Armed with just a couple of guitars, a rhythm box and an organ, you'd be forgiven for thinking that this album may not offer anything special, or that Social Climbers would simply mirror the b-movie aspirations of their New York peers, Comateens (which they do here there, particularly on 'Western World'). however, Bingham & Co. conjure up a highly original mix of quietly neurotic post-punk restraint. both the organ and rhythm boxes are used highly effectively, thanks to subtle production trickery and clever programming, neatly offset by the geeky garage-band vocals. tracks like 'Chicken 80', 'Chris & Debbie' and 'That's Why' are shining examples of the very best of post-punk DIY, thanks to both memorable tunes and a cool, if insular, atmosphere of moderate despair. as the album wanders comfortably over the stylistic map, each track in some way hits the spot, and most hit more than one. Every lo-fi collector should get to hear this. and what a tragedy that it was never followed up.
Social Climber photos at: http://www.imagedump.org/QT_movies/climbers.mov <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Social+Climbers">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
