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Howard Salmon's avatar

There’s something genuinely moving about this two-part deep dive. Wax always felt like one of those acts where you can hear the quality—every hook, every melodic turn, every bit of craft sparkles—and yet the commercial story never quite aligned. What this piece lays out so well is that the music itself never faltered. It was the system around them that did.

The Spanish breakthrough, the near-misses in the UK and US, the absence of proper remixes, and the limitations caused by travel, timing, and label priorities—it all paints the picture of a duo who gave far more than they ever got back. And somehow, that makes the music even easier to admire today.

It’s also a reminder of how many artists lived in that space between brilliance and the industry’s blind spots. Wax just happens to be one of the best examples of how those gaps swallow potential whole.

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Ellen from Endwell's avatar

Really interesting history of the 12-inch format.

Listening to Right Between the Eyes, I wonder if it did so well in the Spanish market (and Brazil, noted in another comment) because it's got a great beat for couples dancing. That struck me as soon as I started listening to it, that when I did ballroom and Latin dancing with partners I would have loved dancing to that.

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