Various Artists
The Enigma Variations 2

Enigma    CDEX-73247  (1987)

Rock/Pop
CD, 20   Tracks, 74:15  Length
01 Burn Down The Malls Mojo Nixon Mojo Nixon and Skid Roper 04:56
02 Colors (Take Me Away) TSOL TSOL 04:11
03 The Thing That Only Eats Hippies The Dead Milkmen The Dead Milkmen 02:47
04 Fire In The Rain Mike Palm Agent Orange 03:22
05 Man Bites Dog Eric Stumpo Plan 9 04:47
06 Ahead Bruce Gilbert; Robert Gotobed; Graham Lewis; Colin Newman Wire 05:02
07 Praying Mantis Don Dixon Don Dixon 04:08
08 Why Heidi Rodewald Wednesday Week 03:14
09 Erica's Word Scott Miller Game Theory 03:56
10 Too Many Of My Yesterdays Peter Hammill Peter Hammill,  guitar 04:41
11 Ship Of Fools Eric Stumpo Plan 9 02:59
12 Stupid Maryann The Dead Milkmen The Dead Milkmen 01:16
13 Amsterdam Dog Shit Blues Mojo Nixon Mojo Nixon and Skid Roper 02:11
14 Best Friends TSOL TSOL 03:24
15 Bite The Hand That Feeds (Part II) Remix Mike Palm Agent Orange 03:06
16 Drill Bruce Gilbert; Robert Gotobed; Graham Lewis; Colin Newman Wire 05:05
17 That Train Kristi Callan Wednesday Week 03:31
18 Shark Pretty Scott Miller Game Theory 04:01
19 Why Heidi Rodewald Don Dixon 03:14
20 Pleasure Dog SSQ SSQ 04:24
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Digipac
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Cover by Jackie King
Personal Details
Index # 3668
Owner Dave
Tags Alternative Rock
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
Although it came out only two years after 1985's The Enigma Variations, this follow-up shows how strikingly Enigma Records' stable of artists had changed in the preceding 24 months. 1985's little boomlet of goth bands has disappeared entirely, and only Plan 9 remained to keep the neo-psychedelia torch burning. Punk and power pop became the label's bread and butter, with tracks by Wire and ex-Van der Graaf Generator leader Peter Hammill evincing a newfound interest in progressive rock as well. And of course, synth dance producer Jon St. James, one of Enigma's early success stories (he brought Berlin to the label in 1982, making the imprint a tidy profit when Geffen Records bought out their contract less than a year later) weighs in with two tracks, one a rare effort under his own name, and one a previously unreleased track by an otherwise unrecorded post-Stacey Q lineup of SSQ. Actually, The Enigma Variations 2 is even more interesting than its predecessor in that way; although only 11 artists are represented (with the Smithereens, Poison, and the label's other commercial success stories notably absent), each delivers not only a key track from a recent album but a previously unreleased or rare nugget. So along with Game Theory's power pop classic "Erica's Word," there's the noisier "Shark Pretty," from their pre-Enigma Distortion EP. Besides Wednesday Week's excellent Don Dixon-produced single "Why," there's also Dixon's own version of the song, with his blue-eyed soul vocals in place of Heidi Rodewald's over Wednesday Week's original backing track. A couple of the tracks were previously unreleased for a reason, but this is the rare sequel that actually bests the original. A third volume covering the label's 1988-1989 output could have been more interesting still, but unfortunately, Enigma Records went bankrupt in 1990 before that could happen. -- Stewart Mason (allmusic.com)