Stepping Out of Line: The Anthology

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Stepping Out of Line: The Anthology
Compilation album by
Released6 June 2006
Genrerock, post-punk
LabelCastle
Au Pairs chronology
Shocks to the System: Very Best of the Au Pairs
(1999)
Stepping Out of Line: The Anthology
(2006)

Stepping Out of Line: The Anthology is a 2006 compilation CD containing every available track recorded by the brief-lived 1980s British post-punk band Au Pairs, described by AllMusic's reviewer as "one of the smartest, sharpest bands of the post-punk era."[1]

Themes[edit]

The Au Pairs were frequently jarring and dissonant, closely related musically and thematically to other post-punk bands like Mekons or the Gang of Four,[2] but the Au Pairs are unusual in the even division of the band between male and female members and their deep exploration of sexual politics.[3] Sexual roles and conflicts are a recurrent theme through the album. Allegations of rape and torture of Irish women imprisoned in the city of Armagh in Northern Ireland are the subject of the song "Armagh."[4] "Diet" is a strident ode to the repetitive role of the housewife.[5] Social pressures on men, too, are examined: "Come Again" refers to the polite requirement for equal orgasm in a modern, civilised couple.[6]

Reception[edit]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[7]
Blender Magazine[8]
Stylus Magazine(A)[9]

The compilation, like the band, was not universally well received. Though describing its dissonance as "coldly thrill friction," Blender Magazine reviewer Simon Reynolds found the anthology excessive and noted that the "power of dour wears thin,"[6] but other reviewers treated the album more generously. Stylus Magazine's Mallory O'Donnell "[s]trongly recommended" the anthology "for all who seek to temper well-grounded ire with emotional fires,"[10] and AllMusic's Andy Kellman asserted that "[n]o one could possibly give this band's output too much attention."[1]

Track listing[edit]

Unless otherwise noted, all songs composed by Paul Foad, Peter Hammond, Jane Munro and Lesley Woods.

  1. "We're So Cool" – 3:28
  2. "Love Song" – 2:59
  3. "Set-Up" – 3:20
  4. "Repetition" (David Bowie) – 3:48
  5. "Headache for Michelle" – 6:54
  6. "Come Again" – 3:54
  7. "Armagh" – 3:37
  8. "Unfinished Business" – 3:29
  9. "Dear John" – 2:57
  10. "It's Obvious" – 6:19
  11. "Pretty Boys" – 4:00
  12. "Monogamy" – 2:55
  13. "Ideal Woman" – 3:55
  14. "You" – 2:51
  15. "Domestic Departure" – 2:21
  16. "Kerb Crawler" – 2:46
  17. "Diet" – 4:18
  18. "It's Obvious (Single Version)" – 5:45
  19. "Inconvenience (12" Version)" – 2:55
  20. "Pretty Boys" (Alt) – 3:38
  21. "Stepping Out of Line" – 6:02
  22. "Sex Without Stress" – 4:31
  23. "Instant Touch" – 3:00
  24. "That's When It's Worth It" – 4:06
  25. "Shakedown" – 4:22
  26. "Tongue in Cheek" – 3:01
  27. "Intact" – 3:16
  28. "Don't Lie Back" – 4:49
  29. "America" – 5:20
  30. "Fiasco" – 3:51
  31. "No More Secret Lives" (demo) – 5:16
  32. "Runs with Honey" (demo) – 6:19
  33. "Hokka He Ha" (demo) – 5:32
  34. "Taking Care of Him" (demo) – 5:12
  35. "What Kind of Girl" – 3:36
  36. "Piece of My Heart" (live) (Jerry Ragovoy, Bert Berns) – 3:49
  37. "Headache for Michelle (Remix)" – 6:38

Personnel[edit]

Performance[edit]

  • Jane Munro – bass
  • Lesley Woods – guitar, vocals
  • Paul Foad – guitar, vocals
  • Peter Hammond – drums
  • Nick O'Connor – keyboards on tracks 31, 32, 33, 34 and bass on 33 & 34
  • Jayne Morris – percussion and backing vocals on tracks 31, 32, 33, 34
  • Graeme Hamilton – trumpet

Production[edit]

  • Anton Corbijn – photography
  • Steve Hammonds – project coordinator
  • Will Nicol – project coordinator
  • Becky Stewart – design
  • Kieron Tyler – liner notes

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Stepping Out of Line: The Anthology at AllMusic
  2. ^ Au Pairs at AllMusic
  3. ^ Gaar, Gillian G. (2002). She's a Rebel: The History of Women in Rock and Roll. Seal Press. pp. 203–204. ISBN 1-58005-078-6.
  4. ^ For context of allegations of abuse against women in Armagh Prison in the late 1970s and early 1980s, see Murray, Raymond (1998). Hard Times, Armagh Ghaol 1971–1986. Dublin: Mercier Press. ISBN 1-85635-223-4.
  5. ^ Au Pairs Fact Magazine. Accessed 29 August 2007.
  6. ^ a b Reynolds, Simon. 6 June 2006. Stepping Out of Line The Anthology Blender. Accessed 29 August 2007.
  7. ^ Allmusic review
  8. ^ Blender Magazine review
  9. ^ Stylus Magazine review
  10. ^ O'Donnell, Mallory. The Au Pairs: Stepping Out of Line The Anthology Stylus Magazine. 9 June 2006. Accessed 29 August 2007.

External links[edit]