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The Cat's Miaow Skipping Stones: The Cassette Years '92-'93

World Of Echo | Item No: 1109450
Vinyl 2LP | 2024 / UK – Original | New
27,99 €
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Item Description
The Cat’s Miaow return to World Of Echo with Skipping Stones: The Cassette Years ’92-’93, their second compilation for the imprint, and the fourth in a loosely defined series of reissues associated with the group (also including The Shapiros’ Gone By Fall: The Collected Works of The Shapiros and Hydroplane’s Selected Songs 1997-2003). It’s a smart selection of songs by one of Australia’s finest independent pop music groups, whose initial run, across the nineties, was as mysterious as it was bewitching. A generous double album featuring thirty-five songs drawn from The Cat’s Miaow’s history, Skipping Stones lets listeners in on a bunch more secrets.

An even deeper pass through the archives of The Cat’s Miaow, Skipping Stones is a welcome follow-up to 2022’s Songs ’94-’98, which pulled together material from seven-inch singles and compilations. Diving into the four cassettes that the group released over a two-year period, Skipping Stones is full of surprises, rich with unexpected and inspired detours, while reminding everyone just how clear and distinct The Cat’s Miaow’s music was from the very start. Looking in from the outside, they always felt like a group that knew just what they were doing, but intuitive as they are, they weren’t forcing anything: these songs always sound exactly what they need to be, rough edges, playful moments and all.

It's also a fascinating snapshot of one arm of the ‘international pop underground’. While they were clearly listening to music from the US, UK and elsewhere – there are glimpses of Galaxie 500, Spacemen 3, Beat Happening, and The Pastels in some of the songs here – The Cat’s Miaow also feel, consciously or not, part of a continuum of Australian underground pop that takes in The Particles, The Lighthouse Keepers, The Cannanes, The Honeys, Even As We Speak, and The Sugargliders (who they would cover several times). Like those before them, The Cat’s Miaow balanced opposing forces in their music: naivete and knowingness; fragility and strength; worldliness and world-weariness; play and seriousness; heartache and pleasure.

The four cassettes that Skipping Stones draws from – Little Baby Sour Puss, Pet Sounds (both 1992), From My Window, and How Did Everything Get So Fucked Up (both 1993) – were released or assisted by Toytown, a Melbourne cassette label of rare taste, savvy and intelligence, run by Wayne Davidson. Toytown felt like the perfect early home for The Cat’s Miaow, their cassettes rubbing shoulders in the label’s catalogue with brilliant groups like Sukpatch, The Ah Club, Kitty Craft, and Land Of The Loops. The local context is just as important, too, with The Cat’s Miaow sharing their time and creative vision with friends in The Ampersands, Stinky Fire Engine, Girl Of The World, Super Falling Star, Pencil Tin and The Sugargliders. And cassettes were an important form of exchange – cheap, easy to reproduce, not too expensive to send interstate or overseas, they were the most accessible DIY format for any group starting to spread the word about their noise.

All of this is to say, the thirty-five songs here landed in several different contexts, national and international, which goes part-way to explaining the group’s curious cosmopolitanism, the style and spirit in their sound. The Cat’s Miaow may have been bedroom dreamers, but their songs were richly informed, with the sweetest of girl-pop moves sashaying into walls of tremolo-d and distorted guitar, jangling six strings tangling with melodic bass that’s pure Peter Hook/Naomi Yang, while the gentle trickle of a drum machine or the earthy twitch of brushes on drum skins provided the spine for Kerrie’s and Bart’s lovely, unforced singing.

There are a clutch of gorgeous songs here that would reappear in a different form on later releases, classics like “The Phoebe I Know”, “Third Floor Fire Escape View”, “Not Like I Was Doing Anything” and “You Left A Note On The Table”, but plenty of other magic too, all of it finding its way to vinyl for the first time (some tracks appeared on compact disc via the compilations A Kiss and A Cuddle [Bus Stop, 1996] and Songs For Girls to Sing [Drive-In, 1997]). Remarkably, The Cat’s Miaow have also recently released a split single with Rocketship featuring newly recorded material and returned to the stage for their second-ever gig.

But this double LP on World Of Echo feels like the very core of the thing – some of the most heartbreakingly beautiful, effortlessly lush and deeply moving pop music you’re likely to hear.
Item Details
Item No: 1109450
Artist: The Cat's Miaow
Title: Skipping Stones: The Cassette Years '92-'93
Label: World Of Echo
Catalog No: WOE012LP
Format: Vinyl 2LP, Vinyl, LP
Pressing: UK – Original
Release Date: 2024
Genre: Rock & Indie
Style: Indierock | Alternative
Condition: New
Price: 27,99 €
Weight: 500g (plus 250g Packaging)
Tracklist
A1 Make A Wish
A2 Hollow Inside (Original Cassette Version)
A3 Faded (Original Cassette Version)
A4 Not Like I Was Doing Anything (Original Cassette Version)
A5 Disappointed
A6 I Wanted None Of This
A7 Fire Damage
A8 Halo
A9 From My Window
B1 Aurora
B2 It Might Never Happen
B3 Nothing's Ever Quite That Simple
B4 Brighter Star
B5 The Phoebe I Know (Original Cassette Version)
B6 Little And Small
B7 Sleepyhead
B8 Dust From A Memory
B9 A 50s Ballad
C1 A Few Words
C2 From My Window
C3 Pet Sounds
C4 Third Floor Fire Escape View (Original Cassette Version)
C5 You Left A Note On The Table (Original Cassette Version)
C6 Short Sighted (Original Cassette Version)
C7 I Hate Myself More Than You Do
C8 Talking To Trees
C9 Ice Cream
C10 Saviour For The Hurrying Man
D1 Ferry No. 6
D2 Little Baby Sour Puss
D3 Nothing New (Original Cassette Version)
D4 Climb My Stairs (Original Cassette Version)
D5 Autumn (Original Cassette Version)
D6 I Really Don’t Know (Original Cassette Version)
D7 Sunday
D8 Memphis ‘54
D9 Walk On By
D10 Georgie
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