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1979 was dope |
There was one song by XTC which had to have been teleported from the 21st century. "Making Plans For Nigel" reached no. 17 at its peak popularity, but maybe would have broken the charts with the Strokes and Interpol. A reserved but fiery drum intro and muted guitar crashes sounds like a prototypical "Obstacle 1." Lead singer Andy Partridge curls snarky ironies around distant wails like a deep track from Funeral, the guitar solos show a calmer fire, much like the anthemic "Reptilia." The only part of the song which exposes its age is a jangly bridge which fizzles with early punk reverberations. The overall product would survive much better if placed alongside Is This It rather than Highway to Hell.
Why has this impressively predictive song not lasted in pop culture as much as its other dated contemporaries? Well, it's hard to enter mainstream recognition when you sound so different. "Making Plans For Nigel" came out at a time where "My Sharona," Gary Numan's "Cars," and this gem dominated the charts. And XTC never really converted towards a mainstream sound for the remainder of their small period of relevance. "Making Plans for Nigel" slipped through the cracks.
Critics have looked back and championed XTC's 1979 Drums and Wires. Paste has it as the 21st best album of the year, and Pre-Conde Nast (*cough* sell out *cough*) Pitchfork has it as the 38th album of the entire decade. But the critical eye rarely translates into the public one. So the next time you make your moody National/Strokes/XX playlist, don't skip out on XTC's biggest hit.