When
the Jam moved up from punk upstarts to mod statesmen in 1979, the British kids turned to other mod outfits to satisfy their craving for everything well-dressed and retro. While
the Chords followed in
the Jam's footsteps, the three other main contenders for the mod followed different musical paths:
Secret Affair were a magical blend of punk, soul and pop with a mild dose of prog;
the Lambrettas were straightforward power pop; and
Squire were a mix of all of the above and more. In fact, if the mod scene hadn't existed,
Squire would have still made brilliant, timeless records, no matter what was going on around them. While only releasing one full-fledged album (
Get Smart!), singer/songwriter Anthony Meynell would embrace the '60s wholeheartedly while releasing a batch of singles that still managed to sound contemporary while exposing the many influences he wore on his sleeve. While briefly retiring the
Squire name, Meynell issued this album of unreleased tracks under his own name in 1981. Not surprisingly, it sounds just like
Squire (in fact, this album boasts an alternate version of the
Squire favorite "My Mind Goes Round in Circles"). Once again, the songs are top-notch odes to his '60s influences. While
The Singles Album is a varied collection of songs,
Hits from 3000 Years Ago is a far more cohesive album. The songs are filled with an excitement and wild-eyed innocence that may not get punk enthusiasts excited, but mod fans and power pop fans will eat this up with gusto and passion. It's sugar sweet and ballsy enough to crank up loud while cruising down Main Street on a Saturday night and not be embarrassed about. The music is timeless and more melodic than most albums released in the last 25 years (one tune here has probably more hooks than a modern power pop album). ""I Don't Get Satisfaction"," "B-A-B-Y Baby Love," and "To Keep Me Satisfied" are pure magic with power chords! While not Anthony Meynell's finest work (that honor goes to the
Get Smart!), this is solid from beginning to end and actually out-pop's the excellent
Singles Album! (The CD version uses the artwork from the second issue of the album, when it was re-re-released in 1983 after the success of
Get Smart!). ~ Steve Schnee