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10cc / Sheet Music – Their Brilliant Second Album

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Sheet Music is, in our opinion, the most consistently well-written and produced 10cc album, with every track performed with heart and recorded with exquisite attention to detail. Each song flows into the next and there is simply not a dull moment to be found. Sheet Music is arguably the best record they ever made, although I’m such a fan, I think they’re all great. (The first five albums anyway.)

Eric Stewart, Studio Wizard

Those of you who have gotten a kick out of our Deceptive Bends or The Original Soundtrack albums are obviously going to find a lot to like here. If you are not familiar with this recording, you will find few rock records as dynamic, immediate, punchy and as full of ambience and openness as this. Eric Stewart was and is a studio wizard and he worked his magic big time on this album.

This is the kind of recording where the sound really JUMPS out of the speakers. It reminds me of Crime Of The Century that way. It’s also one of the most DYNAMIC popular recordings I know of. If this album doesn’t wake up your system, it’s time to scrap it and get a new one.

One of the many elements that combine to push this album well beyond the bounds of most popular recordings is the thought and care that went into the soundstaging. Listen to the stereo separation on any track — the sound of each instrument has been carefully considered within the context of the arrangement and placed in a specific location within the sound field for a reason, usually for MAXIMUM EFFECT.

That’s why we LOVE 10cc. Their recordings from this era are an audiophile dream come true. Compare that to some of the stereo mixes for the Beatles albums, where an instrument or vocal seems to panned to one channel or another not because it SHOULD be, but because it COULD be. With 10cc those hard-left, hard-right effects make the songs JUMP. They call attention to themselves precisely because the band is having a blast in the studio, showing off all the tricks they have up their sleeves. They want you to get as big a kick out of hearing them as they did conjuring them up.

What The Best Sides Of Sheet Music Have To Offer Is Not Hard To Hear

No doubt there’s more but we hope that should do for now. Playing the record is the only way to hear all of the qualities we discuss above, and playing the best pressings against a pile of other copies under rigorously controlled conditions is the only way to find a pressing that sounds as good as this one does.

Pop Lunatics

This is no recreation of a live musical event, nor is it trying to be one. It’s a foursome of pop lunatics let loose in their own multi-track studio doing whatever the hell they damn well please with songs they wrote and on which they play all the instruments. That’s why this recording has such energy — it’s four guys in their very own candy store havin’ a ball, with no one around to tell them they can’t.

What We’re Listening For On Sheet Music

A Must Own Pop Record

We consider this album 10cc’s masterpiece. It’s a recording that belongs in any serious Popular Music Collection.

Others that belong in that category can be found here.

Side One

The Wall Street Shuffle
The Worst Band In The World
Hotel
Old Wild Men
Clockwork Creep

Side Two

Silly Love
Somewhere In Hollywood
Baron Samedi
The Sacro-Iliac
Oh Effendi

AMG Review

Three hit singles spun off the record, and most of the other tracks could have followed suit; it says much for Sheet Music’s staying power that, no matter how many times the album is reissued, it has never lost its power to delight, excite, and set alight a lousy day.

More Reviews

Charley Walters in his 1974 Rolling Stone review felt that the band had “concocted standard pop into their own inventive, even sophisticated, art”, and that while not typical pop music it would be popular with AM-oriented DJs and their listeners. Billboard felt the band had a “certain zany feeling”, but that “their songs are far from silly when carefully listened to” and they had “some of the most innovative vocal techniques and instrumental arrangements around”.

Dave Thompson in a summary of the album for Allmusic felt that it had staying power and that it was “perhaps the most widely adventurous album of what would become a wildly adventurous year”. George Durbalau in 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die felt it was “a piece of well-crafted, highly idiosyncratic pop” and was “in a word, inventive”.

Wikipedia


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