A best-of compilation from
the Bolshoi appeared in 1999, but
Friends is the real deal.
Friends is the group's 1986 debut album, and it summarizes all of the band's strengths. Although not as goth-inflected as
the Bolshoi's
Giant EP,
Friends is still very dark.
Trevor Tanner's lyrics unflinchingly relate tales of hypocrisy in "Away" and "Sunday Morning." In "Away," a family tries to hide that they once forced their daughter to work as a prostitute: "Money's scarce/But family honor/Brings it home, brings it home/And down the shop, the tongues they snicker,"
Tanner sings with empathy. "Sunday Morning," like
XTC's "Dear God," is a scathing attack on organized religion. However,
Tanner's target isn't God; it's going to church. "I remember when I was young/Feeling sick on Sunday morning,"
Tanner reminisces. While it may seem blasphemous to some, "Sunday Morning" offers a realistic perspective;
Tanner sounds like a bitter former altar boy, disillusioned by the facade of innocence of the people around him.
Paul Clark's moody, nostalgic piano paints the images described by
Tanner's words. "Romeo in Clover" and "Books on the Bonfire" revisit the glum, whirling guitars of
the Bolshoi's past, echoing
the Psychedelic Furs and
Bauhaus. While
Friends is far from a perfect record --
the Bolshoi were too derivative to make anything that was flawless -- it's certainly much sharper than 1987's uneven
Lindy's Party or
Away...Best of the Bolshoi, the latter featuring an emasculated version of "Sunday Morning." If
Friends/Giant, the CD combining
Friends with the
Giant EP, isn't within reach, this is the
Bolshoi LP to get. ~ Michael Sutton