Emerging in 1997 as part of Cleopatra's reissue/release series of nearly everything
Damned it could get its hands on,
Fiendish Shadows documents a show or shows (recording dates aren't provided) from its 1985/1986 tour in support of
Phantasmagoria. At this point, the
Scabies/
Vanian/Jugg/Merrick lineup had a fair couple of years experience under its belt, first with
Captain Sensible and then without; the relative stability of this arrangement likely helped the band put on a crackerjack show. Sound quality is quite good, though the mix is off; for instance, on the fantastic opening cut, a run through the first part of the epic "Curtain Call,"
Vanian's voice suddenly plunges in volume once the drumming kicks in and only recovers from that a few songs in. About half of
Phantasmagoria shows up, with an explosive take on "Is It a Dream" and a bravura "Street of Dreams." A couple of cuts from the not far gone
Strawberries make the grade as well, including a great take on "Stranger on the Town" and a sprightly version of "Gun Fury." Faves of yore that turn up unsurprisingly include "New Rose" and "Smash It Up," while "Love Song" makes a brief, fun appearance and the disc as a whole concludes with the always hilarious kiss-off "Disco Man," initially delivered in the '
Val Doonican way, as
Vanian puts it. Even more intriguing are the two covers that take a bow; one,
the Electric Prunes' "I Had Too Much to Dream Last Night," had originally surfaced via the band's Naz Nomad and the Nightmares incarnation. The other was never formally recorded:
Iggy Pop's "Lust for Life" given the energetic blast you'd expect any punk rockers worth their salt would. On a technical note, while a ticket from an American gig is part of the cover art, the recording itself seems to have taken place in London based on
Vanian's between-song comments. Go figure! ~ Ned Raggett