

HUBBLE BUBBLE were ALIAN "ALAN VON BUR" BUREAU(Guitar/Vo), ROGER "JUNIOR" JOURET(Drums), DANIEL "DEE" MASSART(Bass). they released 2 singles and 2 albums in '78 and '79 from SINUS records. ROGER "JUNIOR" JOURET is New wave pop musician, a.k.a. PLATIC BERTRAND("Ca plane pour moi" = "Jet boy, Jet girl" covered by SONIC YOUTH, CHRON GEN, DAMNED, ELTON MOTELLO, HEADCOATS etc etc....!) . their 1st LP is one of the best European Punk records ever! inc, "Sweet rot", "Look around", "New promotion", "Born a woman", "Pogo pogo" etc! but their 2nd LP are a lot of people who do not know so much. inc, "Long cigarette", "Diana Diana", like 1st LP number "Faking", etc! many songs include many Punk rock comp like Killed by death/Bloodstains etc!
This is our Nat records official release! original artwork,
w/obi, Hubble Bubble history by SINUS label owner(Belgium), very
rare photo! re-mastered recordings from their master tape. these
are 1st time on CD! official release.
from: HUBBLE BUBBLE lyner notes....!
The resulting production is bizarre aurally imperfect, but matchless
in its kind, perfectly illustrating the versatility of the band.
The album features a few straightforward Punk hymns like Look
Around, as well as the controversial anti-fascist anthem New promotion,
which is more mid-tempo, and already indicates the future sound
of New Wave. On Little Jeanie Hubble Bubble rub elbows with the
then yet to be invented Synth-Punk, while Born A Woman is their
bastardization of a Country music classic, transforming it into
a Punkhomage to womanhood. There are two more covers on the album.
The Ray Davis song I'm Not Like Everybody Else is treated with
the obligatory reverence due one of the spiritual fathers of Punk
music, while the jerk-off hippie anthem If you're Going To San
Francisco is shown no mercy, and suitably slaughtered. Alan's
creative approach to guitar playing is perhaps best illustrated
on Freaks...Out! for which he insisted I make the solo sound like
not other solo ever recorded....
In the end Hubble Bubble achieved what they had set out to do: revolutionize the revolution; shake up the Punk music scene, which already had become staid and musically conservative during its brief existence.