From the mid-'90s through the mid-2010s,
A Certain Ratio's 1979-1986 output for
Factory was reissued to varying and sometimes confusing extents by
Rev-Ola/
Creation,
Soul Jazz,
LTM, and
Factory Benelux. In 2017,
ACR connected with
Mute for their widest-scoped archival series yet, beginning with straightforward reissues of all their studio albums through 2008's
Mind Made Up. Next was the similarly career-spanning
ACR: Set, a fine introduction viewed by the band as a best-of, and also a representation of what they've continued to play live. Two-thirds of the previously released selections rightfully date from the
Factory era, when the band was at its creative peak and most productive. "Waterline" perversely is missing, but the essential majority of
ACR's six other Top Ten U.K. indie hits are here. Crucially, there's the superior 12" version of the sensational "Flight," along with other 7" and 12" edits and versions, choice album cuts, and the B-side percussion workout "Si Firmir O Grido." The other one-third judiciously covers 1989-1992, highlighted by "Good Together" (with
Bernard Sumner and
Shaun Ryder in the background) and the
Denise Johnson showcase "Be What You Wanna Be" (released before
Primal Scream, powered by
Johnson and
Andrew Weatherall, scored with the stylistically similar "Don't Fight It, Feel It"). Also featured are the band's first studio recordings in a decade. "Dirty Boy," fronted by fellow Manchester post-punk veteran
Barry Adamson, sounds like it could have been written around the same time as the included "Wild Party" (1985) but craftily incorporates elements from across the band's history -- a tough, funk-derived rhythm, a battery of hand percussion, whistle, acid squiggle, even a pre-gig pep talk from manager
Anthony H. Wilson -- without being overloaded. The comparatively smooth and fluid "Make It Happen," with
Jez Kerr providing an optimistic lead, similarly draws from the band's history and translates to the present. ~ Andy Kellman