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Metro Music
View on Wikipedia| Metro Music | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | February 1980 | |||
| Recorded | August 1979 | |||
| Studio | Manor Studios | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 40:17 | |||
| Label | Dindisc | |||
| Producer | Mike Howlett | |||
| Martha and the Muffins chronology | ||||
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| Singles from Metro Music | ||||
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| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Christgau's Record Guide | B−[2] |
| Record Mirror | |
| Smash Hits | 8/10[4] |
Metro Music is the debut album by Canadian new wave band Martha and the Muffins. It was released in 1980 on Dindisc, the first album release for the label, and contains the international hit single "Echo Beach".
The cover image design by Peter Saville is a map of Toronto, the band's hometown, and is based on a map from the National Topographic System of Canada.[5]
The entire Metro Music album also formed the first part of Martha and the Muffins' 1987 compilation Far Away in Time.
Release
[edit]The album's first single, "Echo Beach",[6] became a hit in several countries, reaching number three in Canada, number one in Portugal, number five in Australia and number 10 in the United Kingdom in March 1980. It also reached number 37 in the United States on the Club Play Singles chart.[7] A slightly different recording of "Saigon" was released as a follow-up single in the UK a few months later,[8] but failed to chart. In Canada, the follow-up single was "Paint by Number Heart"[9] — it climbed to number 69. The album itself was certified gold in Canada (50,000 units) on September 1, 1980; "Echo Beach" was certified gold there (5,000 units) on the following October 1.[10]
Track listing
[edit]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Echo Beach" | Mark Gane | 3:38 |
| 2. | "Paint by Number Heart" | Martha Johnson | 4:23 |
| 3. | "Saigon" | Johnson, Daniel Millar | 4:23 |
| 4. | "Indecision" | Johnson | 4:25 |
| 5. | "Terminal Twilight" | Gane, Martha Ladly | 4:42 |
| 6. | "Hide and Seek" | Gane, Ladly | 3:57 |
| 7. | "Monotone" | Johnson | 2:46 |
| 8. | "Sinking Land" | Gane | 5:27 |
| 9. | "Revenge (Against the World)" | Gane | 3:31 |
| 10. | "Cheesies and Gum" | Gane, Ladly | 3:05 |
Personnel
[edit]- Martha Johnson – keyboards, vocals
- Martha Ladly – keyboards, trombone, vocals
- Mark Gane – synthesizer, guitar
- Carl Finkle – bass
- Tim Gane – drums
- Andy Haas – saxophone
Chart performance
[edit]Album
| Chart (1980) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Australia (Kent Music Report)[11] | 46 |
| UK Album Chart[12] | 34 |
| U.S. Billboard 200[13] | 186 |
Singles
| Single | Chart (1980) | Position |
|---|---|---|
| "Echo Beach" | Canada | 3 |
| "Echo Beach" | Australia (Kent Music Report) | 5 |
| "Echo Beach" | UK Singles Chart[12] | 10 |
| "Echo Beach/Paint By Number Heart" | Billboard Club Play Singles[7] | 37 |
References
[edit]- ^ Badgley, Aaron. "Metro Music – Martha and the Muffins". AllMusic. Retrieved September 17, 2011.
- ^ Christgau, Robert (1990). "Martha and the Muffins: Metro Music". Christgau's Record Guide: The '80s. Pantheon Books. ISBN 0-679-73015-X. Retrieved November 2, 2011.
- ^ Hall, Philip (March 15, 1980). "I thought Muffin the Mule was... until I discovered...". Record Mirror. p. 22.
- ^ Starr, Red (March 6–19, 1980). "Albums". Smash Hits. Vol. 2, no. 5. pp. 30–31.
- ^ Saville, Peter (2003-08-15). Designed by Peter Saville. Princeton Architectural Press. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-1-56898-422-3. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
- ^ "Martha And The Muffins - Echo Beach" – via www.45cat.com.
- ^ a b Metro Music - Martha and the Muffins > Charts & Awards > Billboard Singles at AllMusic. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
- ^ "Martha And The Muffins - Saigon" – via www.45cat.com.
- ^ "Martha And The Muffins - Paint By Number Heart". Discogs.
- ^ "Gold Platinum Database: Martha and the Muffins". Music Canada. Retrieved 22 October 2011.
- ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 193. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
- ^ a b "MARTHA & THE MUFFINS - full Official Chart History - Official Charts Company". www.officialcharts.com.
- ^ Metro Music - Martha and the Muffins > Charts & Awards > Billboard Albums at AllMusic. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
Metro Music
View on GrokipediaBackground
Band formation
Martha and the Muffins formed in Toronto in 1977 amid the burgeoning new wave scene at the Ontario College of Art, where songwriters Mark Gane and Martha Johnson, who were dating at the time, came together as the band's creative core. Gane, a guitarist, and Johnson, initially on keyboards before taking lead vocals, assembled the initial lineup with the addition of fellow students David Millar on guitar, Carl Finkle on bass, and Tim Gane—Mark's brother—on drums. This quartet debuted at the college's Halloween party later that year, marking their entry into Toronto's vibrant music community centered around Queen Street West clubs.[8][9][10] The band's name, "Martha and the Muffins," was deliberately chosen to evoke a lighthearted, whimsical tone in contrast to the confrontational monikers of many punk acts of the era, reflecting their art-school roots and desire to stand apart from aggressive posturing. The group quickly honed their sound through daily practices and live performances at venues like the Beverley Tavern, where they built a local following despite rudimentary setups and occasional technical hiccups, such as detuned guitars during sets. These gigs helped refine their quirky, angular new wave style blending pop hooks with experimental edges.[11][12] Lineup adjustments occurred in early 1978 as the band evolved: Millar shifted to the role of sound engineer, allowing space for saxophonist Andy Haas from Detroit to join, while Martha Ladly was recruited for keyboards and backing vocals, adding a second Martha to the ensemble and enriching their harmonic layers. This revised sextet—Johnson, Gane, Ladly, Haas, Tim Gane, and Finkle—intensified their club circuit appearances, capturing the energy of Toronto's underground scene. By mid-1978, they recorded demo tapes featuring early compositions like "Echo Beach," which circulated beyond local circles. In 1979, these demos reached Interview magazine critic Glenn O'Brien, who forwarded them to Virgin Records executive Dave Fudger, securing the band's signing with Virgin's Canadian operations and paving the way for professional recording opportunities.[10][13]Early career and influences
Following their formation in Toronto, the band released their debut single "Insect Love" in 1978 through an independent label, which received notable airplay on local Toronto radio stations and helped build an initial fanbase in the Canadian new wave scene.[14] The band's sound was heavily shaped by influences from prominent new wave and post-punk acts, including Talking Heads for their angular rhythms and intellectual edge, Blondie for their pop-infused punk energy, and XTC for their quirky, melodic experimentation, resulting in a distinctive blend of post-punk grit with accessible pop sensibilities.[15][16] In 1979, seeking expanded opportunities amid a burgeoning UK scene, the band travelled to England, where their demos caught the attention of executives and led to a signing with the Dindisc label, a Virgin Records imprint known for championing innovative new wave talent.[14][17] Prior to this breakthrough, the band had circulated early demos to several major labels, enduring rejections that underscored the challenges for emerging Canadian acts in breaking into the international market, before finally securing the pivotal Virgin deal that propelled their career forward.[14]Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording sessions for Metro Music took place at The Manor Studio near Oxford, England, in August 1979, following the band's relocation from Toronto after signing with Virgin's Dindisc imprint. Additional mixing occurred at The Manor and Advision Studios in London later that year.[18][10] The sessions allowed the group—comprising Martha Johnson (vocals, keyboards); Mark Gane (guitar, synthesizer); Martha Ladly (keyboards, backing vocals, trombone); Carl Finkle (bass); Tim Gane (drums); and Andy Haas (saxophone)—to experiment extensively with synthesizers and unconventional rhythms that blended post-punk drive with new wave textures. Producer Mike Howlett, formerly of Gong, guided the process, emphasizing live energy in the performances despite the band's relative inexperience with major studio environments.[19][14] Key creative decisions included reintroducing Gane's guitar riff in tracks like "Echo Beach" to enhance structure, as suggested by Howlett, and capturing Johnson's vocals, which were recorded with a head cold adding rasp.[5]Production team
The production of Metro Music was spearheaded by Mike Howlett, a former member of the progressive rock band Gong, who took on the role of primary producer.[20][19] Howlett, known for his work with post-punk and new wave acts, guided the album's sound, drawing on his experience to blend the band's raw energy with polished arrangements.[21] Engineering was managed by Richard Manwaring, who oversaw the recording at The Manor Studio in Oxfordshire, England, during August 1979, with assistance from Lawrence Diana.[1][22] Mixing occurred at The Manor and Advision Studios in London, ensuring a cohesive sonic profile that highlighted the album's new wave edges.[23] Additional production input came from Howlett himself, who played synthesizer and sequencer on the track "Terminal Twilight," adding atmospheric layers to the composition.[1] Dindisc label executive Carol Wilson, who founded and directed the imprint, played a crucial role in signing Martha and the Muffins and providing oversight for final approvals on the project.[24]Musical content
Style and themes
Metro Music blends new wave and post-punk styles with pop accessibility, characterized by angular guitar riffs, synthesizer elements via keyboards, and the personable yet awkward vocals of Martha Johnson, often delivered in a conversational manner. The instrumentation features a classic rock lineup augmented by saxophone, creating jagged, edgy textures alongside hypnotic jangle and slithery guitar lines. This combination yields an energetic sound that shifts between guitar-driven new wave pop and more experimental post-punk arrangements, drawing from art rock influences in its rhythmic complexity, including syncopated beats and sound collages.[6][25][26] Lyrically, the album delves into themes of urban alienation, interpersonal relationships, and escapism, mirroring aspects of Toronto's suburban existence during the late 1970s. Tracks evoke a sense of disconnection from modern city life, with sarcastic reflections on suburban conformity and the longing for escape through imagined distant places or routines. These narratives highlight youthful alienation from stifling environments, blending personal introspection with broader social commentary on everyday experiences in an urbanizing landscape.[25][27] The songs maintain a concise structure, averaging around four minutes in length, which contributes to the album's taut, focused energy without unnecessary elaboration. This brevity, paired with unconventional forms and rhythmic intricacies inspired by art rock, underscores the band's experimental leanings while ensuring broad appeal. In terms of production polish and overall vitality, Metro Music shares similarities with contemporaries like The Pretenders, emphasizing a refined yet raw post-punk edge.[19][28][25]Notable tracks
"Echo Beach," the album's lead single and standout hit, was written by guitarist Mark Gane during the band's early days in Toronto, drawing from his experiences in mundane jobs like sorting wallpaper at a factory, where he daydreamed of escape. The song's lyrics depict a protagonist yearning to flee the drudgery of office life—"From nine to five I have to spend my time at work/My job is very boring, I'm an office clerk"—to the metaphorical serenity of "Echo Beach," a fictional place symbolizing an idealized refuge from alienation and routine.[5][14] Recorded at The Manor Studios in Oxford with producer Mike Howlett, the track features an improvised saxophone solo by Andy Haas and Martha Johnson's raspy vocals, captured while she was battling a head cold, contributing to its raw, nostalgic edge that propelled it to UK Top 10 success and a Juno Award for Single of the Year in 1981.[5] "Paint by Number Heart," penned by vocalist Martha Johnson as one of her earliest compositions during her time at York University and Centennial College, explores themes of artistic temperament and resistance to conformity through its direct, minimalist lyrics. The song conveys emotional independence, rejecting the idea of a predictable "paint-by-number heart" that adheres to societal expectations of femininity and routine—"I could tell it from the start/That you wanted me to be/A certain kind of girl"—instead embracing a lively, unpredictable spirit amid personal dislocation.[29][14] As the album's second track and a potential follow-up single favored by the band over others, it highlights Johnson's punk-inflected songwriting, with its energetic performance evoking chaotic freedom during live renditions.[29] "Saigon," co-written by Johnson and guitarist David Millar, delves into geopolitical and colonial undertones, portraying a wanderer's ambivalent haze in the fading French Indochine of old Saigon—limping through the Hilton hotel, strolling pagoda gardens, and drinking absinthe—evoking a sense of obscure identity and longing for elsewhere in a post-war Eastern landscape.[30] The melody incorporates Eastern-inflected elements through its evocative soundscape, blending new wave with subtle exoticism to underscore themes of displacement and historical shadow.[30] Released as a single by label insistence despite the band's preference for alternatives like "Paint by Number Heart," it captures the album's experimental geographic visions without achieving the commercial breakthrough of "Echo Beach."[14] "Indecision," written by Mark Gane, showcases Johnson's personable yet awkward vocal delivery over taut rhythms and minimal guitar figures, contributing to the album's witty, dispassionate lyrical style.[6] "Sinking Land," also by Gane, foreshadows the band's later ambient experiments with its hypnotic jangle and subtle jazz elements from Andy Haas's saxophone.[2]Release and promotion
Album release
Metro Music was released in February 1980 (catalogue number DID.1) on Dindisc, a subsidiary of Virgin Records, marking the label's inaugural album release.[19] The album represented the band's first full-length project under this partnership, following their signing with Virgin Records UK after initial independent efforts.[7] Initially available in vinyl LP and cassette formats, the album catered to the dominant physical media of the era, with the LP featuring the standard 10-track configuration.[1] Later reissues expanded accessibility; a 1987 CD compilation titled Far Away in Time incorporated the full Metro Music tracklist alongside bonus material, while a 2003 remastered CD edition reissued the original 10 tracks. The cover art, designed by renowned graphic artist Peter Saville, depicted abstract urban imagery stylized as a map of Toronto, reflecting the band's Canadian roots and evoking themes of metropolitan life central to the album's title.[31] The launch prioritized markets in the UK and Canada, where it received primary distribution through Dindisc and Virgin affiliates, while US availability was limited to select Virgin Records channels.[19] Promotional efforts included tie-ins with lead single "Echo Beach," though the core release focused on these territorial rollouts.[7]Singles and marketing
The lead single from Metro Music, "Echo Beach", was released on February 8, 1980, by Dindisc Records.[5] The track achieved significant commercial success, peaking at number 5 on the RPM 100 Singles chart in Canada and number 10 on the UK Singles Chart.[32][4] The follow-up single, "Paint by Number Heart", was released later in 1980 but did not achieve similar commercial success.[33][17] Promotion for Metro Music and its singles emphasized live performances and media exposure to build international momentum. The band headlined a UK tour in April 1980, capitalizing on the growing new wave popularity in Europe.[34] "Echo Beach" received airplay on BBC Radio, including features on programs like Pick of the Pops, which helped amplify its reach.[35] A music video for "Echo Beach" was produced in 1980, showcasing the band's quirky aesthetic and aiding visual promotion on emerging music television outlets.[36] Dindisc, as a Virgin Records subsidiary focused on innovative acts, targeted new wave enthusiasts through strategic distribution to clubs and independent radio stations, positioning Martha and the Muffins alongside contemporaries like The Human League.[5] This approach fostered grassroots buzz in urban music scenes, contributing to the album's breakthrough.[22]Reception and legacy
Critical response
Upon its release in 1980, Metro Music received praise for the catchiness of its lead single "Echo Beach," with critic Robert Christgau highlighting the track's endearing gawkiness and effective subhook in the lyric "My job is very boring / I'm an office clerk," which added a confessional charm to the new wave sound.[37] Christgau awarded the album a B- grade, appreciating elements like the indecisive lyricism in "Indecision" but implying an overall uneven execution amid the band's skinny-tie aesthetic.[37] The album's reception in the United States was mixed, partly due to limited promotional exposure beyond the single's club success, though it was noted for contributing to new wave innovation through its taut rhythms and witty detachment.[37] In the UK, where the album marked the debut release on the Dindisc label, contemporary views aligned with broader post-punk sentiments but did not achieve widespread acclaim at the time. Retrospective reviews in the 2000s, coinciding with reissues, elevated Metro Music's status, with AllMusic assigning it an 8.1 out of 10 rating for its enduring influence on indie pop through crisp, minimal arrangements and viral hooks like those in "Paint by Number Heart" and "Indecision."[7] The BBC's 2003 assessment lauded it as one of the era's best post-punk pop records, emphasizing its pure pop sensibility, Roxy Music-inspired saxophone, and avoidance of pretension compared to contemporaries.[2] Criticisms often centered on the production's dated quality, with Uncut's 2003 review describing it as "plinky-plonky pose-by-numbers art-pop" that evoked Space Invaders for British audiences, appealing in its commitment but less raw than punk peers across the Atlantic.[38] Later analyses, such as Sputnikmusic's 2015 piece, acknowledged this stylistic quirkiness as a strength, rating the album 3.5 out of 5 for its witty collage of corny and enigmatic elements without excessive gravity.[39]Commercial performance and impact
Metro Music achieved moderate commercial success primarily in Canada and the United Kingdom upon its 1980 release. In Canada, the album peaked in the top twenty on the RPM albums chart, reflecting strong domestic support driven by the hit single "Echo Beach."[17] In the UK, it reached number 34 on the Official Albums Chart, spending six weeks in the top 100.[40] The album achieved limited chart placement in the United States, peaking at number 186 on the Billboard 200 for three weeks.[41] By September 1, 1980, Metro Music was certified gold in Canada by Music Canada for sales exceeding 50,000 units, a milestone reached shortly after its release and bolstered by the popularity of "Echo Beach," which itself went gold. This certification underscored the band's breakthrough in their home market, where new wave acts were gaining traction amid the post-punk scene. The album's impact extended beyond initial sales, influencing the 1980s new wave genre through its eclectic sound and the enduring appeal of tracks like "Echo Beach." The song has been covered by various artists, including Robert Forster of The Go-Betweens in 1995 and The Surfrajettes in 2020, highlighting its status as a genre staple.[42] Reissues and compilations further amplified its visibility; the 1987 collection Far Away in Time, which incorporated the full Metro Music album alongside other early material, introduced the work to new audiences via CD format during the digital transition.[19]Track listing and credits
Track listing
All tracks on Metro Music are written by members of Martha and the Muffins, with durations taken from the original 1980 vinyl release on Dindisc.[19] The track listing is as follows: Side A- "Echo Beach" (written by Mark Gane) – 3:38[5]
- "Paint by Number Heart" – 4:23
- "Saigon" – 4:23
- "Indecision" – 4:25
- "Terminal Twilight" – 4:42
6. "Hide and Seek" – 3:57
7. "Monotone" – 2:46
8. "Sinking Land" – 5:27
9. "Revenge (Against the World)" – 3:31
10. "Cheesies and Gum" – 3:05 Later reissues, such as the 2003 remastered edition, feature the same core tracks without additional bonus material.[43]

