
World of Echo
The Cat's Miaow - Songs '94-'98
Regular price £23.00 Save £-23.00Product Description
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Songs
’94-’98
is
a
smart
selection
of
material
from
The
Cat’s
Miaow,
an
Australian
indie-pop
group
that
gifted
their
decade
with
some
of
its
finest
songs.
Released
on
World
Of
Echo,
the
album
draws
from
the
group’s
string
of
excellent
seven-inch
singles,
a
small
clutch
of
compilation
contributions,
and
features
one
previously
unreleased
song,
“I
Take
It
That
We’re
Through”,
recorded
in
1998.
Part
of
the
burgeoning
international
pop
underground
of
the
nineties,
The
Cat’s
Miaow’s
legend
has
only
built
over
subsequent
decades,
as
more
people
discover
this
most
quixotic
and
curious
of
groups:
a
recent
appearance
on
A
Colourful
Storm’s
compilation
of
Australian
indie-pop,
I
Won’t
Have
To
Think
About
You,
is
testament
to
their
enduring
influence.
In
part
emulating
the
selection
of
tracks
on
the
1997
CD-only
compilation,
Songs
For
Girls
To
Sing,
Songs
’94-’98
is
also
the
group’s
first
ever
full-length
12”
vinyl
collection.
The
Cat’s
Miaow
started
out
in
1992
as
a
home-
recording
duo,
Bart
Cummings
(guitar,
bass,
vocals)
and
Andrew
Withycombe
(bass,
guitar)
taking
time
out
from
duties
with
Girl
Of
The
World
and
The
Ampersands
(respectively),
knocking
out
songs
on
Withycombe’s
four-track.
Soon
joined
by
Kerrie
Bolton
(vocals)
and
Cam
Smith
(drums),
the
quartet
spent
the
next
five
years
quietly,
slowly
working
away
in
the
suburbs
of
Melbourne,
recording
gem
after
gem
of
independent
pop.
Like
many
of
their
Australian
precursors
or
peers
–
The
Particles,
Even
As
We
Speak,
The
Cannanes
–
The
Cat’s
Miaow
were
more
successful
overseas,
a
sadly
typical
phenomenon
within
the
Australian
musical
landscape.
The
Cat’s
Miaow
were
always
worldly
and
stylish,
anyway,
each
seven-inch
single
a
refined
artifact,
each
song
a
peaceable
jewel.
You
could
hear
some
relationships
with
other
music
–
someone
(if
not
everyone)
in
The
Cat’s
Miaow
was
a
Galaxie
500
fan;
there’s
a
minimalism
to
the
playing
and
melodies
that
recalls
Young
Marble
Giants,
Marine
Girls,
Beat
Happening
–
but
the
spirit
in
these
songs
is
endearingly
individualised,
the
result
of
a
hermetic
vision,
an
ideal
of
what
a
simple,
unadorned
pop
song
could
be.
They
had
a
winning
way
with
simplicity,
songs
like
“Autumn”,
“Crying”
and
“I
Can’t
Sleep
Thinking
You
Hate
Me”
passing
by
in
the
blink
of
a
moistened
eye,
and
when
they
stretched
out,
as
on
“Firefly”,
you
can
hear
hints
of
the
drifting
ambience
they’d
perfect
in
their
other
band,
Hydroplane.
It’s
not
much
of
a
surprise
that
The
Cat’s
Miaow
found
a
receptive
audience,
and
no
small
amount
of
support,
from
the
networked
communities
of
indie-pop
labels
and
fanatics
that
developed
in
the
nineties
–
they
released
records
on
imprints
like
Drive-In,
Darla,
Bus
Stop
and
Quiddity,
shared
a
flexi-disc
with
Stereolab,
and
appeared
on
countless
compilations
over
the
years.
But
they
also
understood
the
importance
of
the
local:
their
first
few
cassettes
reached
the
world’s
mail
routes
via
Wayne
Davidson’s
legendary
Melbourne
tape
label,
Toytown;
they
turned
up
on
a
split
single
with
Davidson’s
group,
Stinky
Fire
Engine;
they
appeared
on
a
tribute
cassette
for
one
of
Australia’s
finest,
The
Sugargliders,
and
indeed
that’s
Josh
Meadows
of
said
group
playing
wah
guitar
on
“Stay”.
2
(Cargo
Collective
Title)
The
Cat’s
Miaow
also
rarely
played
live
–
one
launch
gig,
for
the
Munch
video
compilation,
and
a
few
parties
–
which
is
a
great
way
to
maintain
mystique.
Cosmopolitan
yet
homely,
dedicated
to
their
craft,
The
Cat’s
Miaow
always
felt
a
little
like
a
group
moving
in
slow
motion,
using
that
pace
and
focus
fully
to
embrace
the
art
of
the
perfectly
stated
pop
song
–
every
element
in
place,
no
flash
and
no
fuss,
no
excess,
just
the
core
of
the
thing.
Few
managed
to
tease
such
fierce
poetry
from
such
understated,
elegant
means.
From
Australia
or
anywhere.
1.
Hollow
Inside
2.
Light
the
Beacon
3.
Not
Like
I
Was
Doing
Anything
4.
Note
On
The
Table
5.
You
Know
It's
True
6.
What
Time
Is
It
There?
7.
I
Can't
Sleep
Thinking
You
Hate
Me
8.
Smitten
9.
Portland,
Oregon
10.
Let
Me
Brush
the
Hair
From
Your
Face
11.
Stay
12.
Shoot
The
Moon
13.
Barney
&
Me
14.
Firefly
15.
LA
International
Airport
16.
Crying
17.
If
Things
Had
Been
Different
18.
I
Take
It
That
We're
Through
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