Turn That Noise Down - INXS





So many well-known albums turn 30 this year and Steve Taylor-Bryant and Susan Omand travel back to 1987 to revisit some of the sounds of their youth that made parents shout "Turn that noise down!" This week Steve gets a Kick out of INXS...



Hate baby hate

When there's nothing left for you

You're only human

What can you do?

It'll soon be over

Don't let your pain take over you



You couldn't avoid INXS over here in the UK during the late 1980's and early 90's. The band were everywhere, topping the charts, filling the stadiums on tour, and the charismatic frontman, Michael Hutchence, who had made the celebrity gossip rags due to his relationship with Kylie Minogue was back on the front pages again during a steamy and often fraught coming together with TV presenter and 'IT' girl Paula Yates (can anyone explain what an IT girl is? In fact don't bother, I'm sure I don't really care) who was still married to our national treasure Bob Geldof at the time. Hutchence more than the band was constantly in the press and it's easy to look back now and see that that all the celebrity nonsense tainted the band during that period, not their legacy that's in the records and memories of anyone who attended an INXS gig, but with the press saturated in Hutchence/Yates greasy tales of debauchery it was hard to remember that INXS was a quality band.



They were musically inventive, very tight live, full of energy and enthusiasm for their craft, and Hutchence (when not off his head on celebrity) was a true rock showman. He exuded cool and sexuality, he moved like no one else on stage at the time, and boy could he sing. It's taken the 20 odd years since his passing for me to regain my love of INXS, a chance to listen to the songs for music's sake not because of some tabloid story, and they are timeless. An INXS tune released now would fit as well as it did 30 years ago, and that is testament to the song writing, the musical structure, and the obvious love of creating that flows through the songs. Kick is one of the best examples of a great album, song after song of pure pop perfection.



For these thirty year articles I am tasked usually with picking the one song that stands out. I can’t though, not with Kick and its flawless running order. Instead have a top 5 from Kick, and a reminder, if you need one, to go watch Dogs in Space.



5 - Mystify









4 - New Sensation









3 - Devil Inside









2 - Never Tear Us Apart









1 - Guns in the Sky.








Image - Amazon







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