Adam and the Ants — Prince Charming

Author: tracysigler | Posted: April 21st, 2008 | | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments »

Adam and the Ants -- Prince Charming

Yes! Let us celebrate these fancy pirates. I am certain if more people would run this look on the street today that the world would be a better place. But it takes real men to wear makeup, puffy shirts, and curtains for pants. And there just aren’t that many left.

Calling all available backup! Jeff? Kilwag? I know you’re out there. Cover me. I’m going in. This is a great record. That’s despite the frequently self-referential lyrics. The music on Prince Charming (1981) is as fresh and weird as the costumes worn by Adam and the Ants. The album opens with the giant-sounding “Scorpios,” complete with brass horns and a house-shaking drum fill near the end that makes me want to yell “Ant Power!” It sounds like the Hawaii 5-0 theme meets salsa music meets pirate rock. Other favorites include “Picasso Visita el Planeta de los Simios” and of course the super hit “Stand and Deliver.” There is also a “hidden” track, after a long pause at the end of the album, called “The Lost Hawaiians.”

I don’t know where I got this one, but you can see from the wear on the cover that back in the day it was in heavy rotation. Ant music for ant people!

Etched in the run off margins (can’t etch an MP3):
Side 1: HAVE YOU FOUND
Side 2: THE LOST HAWAIIANS

Wikipedia article


Adam and the Ants — Kings of the Wild Frontier

Author: tracysigler | Posted: September 29th, 2007 | | Tags: , , , , | 1 Comment »
  • Artist: Adam and the Ants
  • Title: Kings of the Wild Frontier
  • Year: 1980
  • Format: Vinyl 12 in.
  • Rating (1-10): 8
  • Owner: Tracy / Mary – two copies
  • Acquired: 1980? After I met Jeff Arthur.
  • Keeper: Yes

I know some folks like to make fun of Adam and the Ants. Considering that their popularity was relatively short-lived, their use of not-of-this-time-appearing costumes, and the annoying frequency with which they sing about themselves or their Ant nation, that is understandable. But this is still interesting music. Most, maybe all, of these songs are just too strange to sound dated. The double drummer set up, tribal chanting vocals, and spaghetti western guitar riffs all make for something that is as original as it is pop. My favorite song is “Killer in the Home”, about the plight of Native Americans. I blame Jeff Arthur for getting me into this.

More info about Adam and the Ants’ Kings of the Wild Frontier.