Although The Stone Roses debut is more retrospectively adored (astonishing as it still sounds like an album of Freddie and the Dreamers' B-sides), Pills'n'Thrills And Bellyaches at the time felt like nothing you'd ever heard before except it was absolutely everything you'd heard before exceptionally undemanding chord structures grinding beats shambolic monotony - but the dance nuances of producers Paul Oakenfold and Steve Osborne and the influence of E as well as Shaun Ryder's witty dystopian lyrics made the album a very serious work indeed. ![]() Every movement needs its high-water mark, and their third album, Pills'n'Thrills And Bellyaches was Madchester's Tewkesbury. In the two years since Bummed, the Happy Mondays had embraced dance culture.
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