

The Wayward Bus | Distant Plastic Trees (CD)
The Magnetic Fields' first two albums, available on one CD, differ from the band's later work in that it is not songwriter Stephin Merritt who is singing his tales of wounded hope, starry-eyed romance, and quiet desperation. 1990's less-is-more DISTANT PLASTIC TREES is directly indebted to early-'80s minimalist-pop geniuses the Young Marble Giants, especially on the hypnotic "You Love To Fail" and the tremendously affecting "100,000 Fireflies," perhaps Merritt's most heartbreakingly beautiful song. By comparison, 1991's THE WAYWARD BUS is downright lush, combining Merritt's avowed love for Phil Spector, ABBA, and '60s French pop into keyboard-based two-minute pop classics like the Ronettes homage "When You Were My Baby" and the swinging "Suddenly There Is A Tidal Wave." Taken together, both albums are the perfect introduction to Stephin Merritt's magical pop world.
| Tracklisting | |
| Disk | 1 | |
| 1 | When You Were My Baby |
| 2 | The Saddest Story Ever Told |
| 3 | Lovers From The Moon |
| 4 | Candy |
| 5 | Tokyo A Go-Go |
| 6 | Summer Lies |
| 7 | Old Orchard Beach |
| 8 | Jeremy |
| 9 | Dancing In Your Eyes |
| 10 | Suddenly There Is A Tidal Wave |
| 11 | (Untitled) |
| 12 | Railroad Boy |
| 13 | Smoke Signals |
| 14 | You Love To Fail |
| 15 | Kings |
| 16 | Babies Falling |
| 17 | Living In An Abandoned Firehouse With You |
| 18 | Tar-Heel Boy |
| 19 | Falling In Love With The Wolfboy |
| 20 | Josephine |
| 21 | 100,000 Fireflies |