Tranzophobia
1989 studio album by Mega City Four
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Tranzophobia is the debut album by the English band Mega City Four, released in 1989.[1][2] Its title was inspired by the band's Ford Transit van.[3] The album was produced by Iain Burgess and released by Decoy Records.[4][5]
| Tranzophobia | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 1989 | |||
| Genre | Pop, punk-pop | |||
| Label | Decoy | |||
| Producer | Iain Burgess | |||
| Mega City Four chronology | ||||
| ||||
Mega City Four supported the album with a British tour.[6] Tranzophobia was an independent album chart success.[7]
Critical reception
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Los Angeles Times | |
| MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide | |
The Los Angeles Times praised "the joyfully adolescent attitude," writing that "the tuneful rush of early Buzzcocks and Undertones lives on."[9] Trouser Press concluded that the production "is way too muddy, and the band's chunky sound is a little rag-tag sloppy in places, but the hooks are so ringing and the lyrics so first-rate, that, like the early Descendents, the record overcomes such troubles."[11] NME deemed the tracks "the most addictive pop songs created over the past year."[12] Best listed Tranzophobia as the fourth best album of 1989.[13]
AllMusic wrote that "the songs charge forth with fuzzy, rapidly chorded guitars; the upbeat vocals are buttressed by anthemic harmonies, and the lyrics are the thoughts of young men searching for ways to solidify their identity while maintaining integrity."[8] The Guardian called Tranzophobia a "classic first album."[14]
Track listing
All lyrics were written by Wiz, and all music was composed by M.C.4.
- "Start"
- "Pride and Prejudice"
- "Severe Attack of the Truth"
- "Paper Tiger"
- "January"
- "Twenty One Again"
- "On Another Planet"
- "Things I Never Said"
- "New Year's Day"
- "Occupation"
- "Alternative Arrangements"
- "Promise"
- "What You've Got"
- "Stupid Way to Die"