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# Disc length: 1745 seconds
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# Revision: 3
# Processed by: cddbd v1.5.2PL0 Copyright (c) Steve Scherf et al.
# Submitted via: dBpowerAMP V4.0
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DISCID=5e06cf0a
DTITLE=Mission of Burma / Mission of Burma
DYEAR=1987
DGENRE=Rock
TTITLE0=This is Not a Photograph
TTITLE1=Peking Spring
TTITLE2=Dumbells
TTITLE3=Dirt
TTITLE4=Sing-a-long
TTITLE5=He Is / She Is
TTITLE6=Blackboard
TTITLE7=Go Fun, Burn Man
TTITLE8=Nu Disco
TTITLE9=Foreign Country
EXTD=Originally released only on cassette in 1985 and then reissued on CD in 1993, Peking Spring is an odds-and-sods collection of previously unreleased material from all of Mission of Burma's 1979-1982 career. The ten tracks are in non-chronological or
EXTD=der, but the heart of the disc is six 1982 recordings intended for what was going to be Burma's third album. (The group split before the album could be completed, due to guitarist Roger Miller's tinnitus.) These are largely unadorned recordings -- 
EXTD=tape manipulator Martin Swope is less in evidence than usual -- and it's possible that they're only demos. However, they show that Mission of Burma split up at the height of their powers, with Clint Conley's "Dirt" and "Go Fun, Burn Man" and Peter 
EXTD=Prescott's "Blackboard" among their best songs. Special note must also be made of "Dumbells," which sounds like it's about half-written but contains the single coolest guitar sound in the entire Burma oeuvre. The other four tracks include two from 
EXTD=1979, Miller's "This Is Not a Photograph" and Conley's "Peking Spring," which are easily the equal of better-known Burma favorites like "Academy Fight Song," and one track each from 1980 and 1981 that sound more like experiments that didn't quite c
EXTD=ome off. Overall, Peking Spring is no match for either of Mission of Burma's official releases, but it's worlds better than its follow-up, Forget Mission of Burma, a collection of dispirited live in the studio demos that's the bottom of the outtake
EXTD=s barrel. (NOTE: This is the original Taang! Records CD from 1987 and not the rereleased "Peking Spring" version of 1993).
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