martedì 30 aprile 2013

Mr. Amir - Dawning (1984)



Toxteth born reggaeman, Graham Amir (former Cross Section) started his solo career after the split of Cross Section in 1983, under the pseudonym of Mr. Amir (later Amir). He “plasys (nearlu) every position himself all the time achieving some impressive results; sensitive lyrics and Spartan melodies” (Jamming Magazine, June 1983).

About his new solo career he conceded:
‘Going solo was like starting again. With Cross Section a vast amount of energy was generated and we did some good gigs but my head wasn’t very well together then − you have to know, not guess where you are going. I need to be able to work be myself before I can work with other people, and even then, I can’t see myself being part of a band again. My music isn’t as complex as it used to b: I like to exploit the chemical suitability of a basic rhythm, catchy melody and simple verse and refrain. Reggae is essentially a folk medium and I want to put some of my environment into it.’ (Next 14 Mag. May 1985).

After a single released in late 1983 (Reasons to Live b/w Oh No Oppressor), Mr. Amir licensed his first long player in mid-1984, playing all the instruments himself:

Dawning (1984)
- Love with Ease
- Deep Inside
- Deep in Music
- Will We Ever Know
- Love with Music
- Mystery Overture
- Mystery of Mine
- Reasons to Live
- Dawning
- Running out of Time

About the album Next 14 Magazine wrote:
‘If this had come out of Jamaica, everyone from Sting to Keith Richards would be clamouring to play on his next album, Eric Clapton would record Love with Ease and have a number one hit with ti in America and the Melody Maker would put him on the front cover and call him the new Bob Marley.’

In 1985 Mr. Amir released a mini-LP (No Place to Go) and in 1987, as Amir the single Lines of Love (with Lee Marles on guitars and Steve Brown on drums).




sabato 27 aprile 2013

Cross Section (1978-83)



Liverpool’s first reggae band, Cross Section was formed in late 1978 by Graham Amir (later Mr. Amir): ‘[Since then] his single-minded devotion to the idea [and the band] has been the one continuity even through periods when equipment was sparse, rehearsals were uncertain or when simply nothing was happening. Around Graham has accumulated a group of musicians and as the story unfolds it’s clear how many others didn’t stay the course often for the very obvious reasons that they couldn’t put in the time and effort to make it work or because they weren’t committed to that special quality of local reggae which had been the driving force of the band more commercial sounds, some to toy with harder-line Jamaican reggae sounds.’ The line-up consisted of Graham Amir (Graham Amir (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Julie Reid (keyboards, vocals, saxophone), Jr. Spence (drums), Neil Innes (percussion, backing vocals, former Pink Military) − who all joined in 1980 − Steve Welsby (percussion, backing vocals), Llyod Masset (a.k.a. Dickie Rude, bass), Roddie Gillard (lead guitar, who joined in 1982), and the band became the house band at the Wharehouse. They released two tapes in 1981, the first issued in April and the second in August (featuring ‘Psychic Hitmen’, ‘New Day’, ‘Stealin’ My Feelings’), and in March 1982 the band also recorded a Radio One Session for John Peel (‘Wounds Are Too Deep’, ‘The Dole’, ‘Too Many Hills’, ‘Where Is The Love’).  In July 1982 cros Section released their first and only single:

Wake up in the Morning (1982)
- Wake up in the Morning
- Psychic Hitmen

In 1983 Cross Section disbanded and Graham Amir went solo as Mr. Amir


Clive Langer - Even Though (1987)

Former Deaf School (1974-78), Big in Japan (1977), producer of Madness, Clive Langer released his first solo single seven years after the split of Clive Langer and the Boxes, a 'wonderful slowrocker with a catching melody'. On these tracks, Langer is on vocals and guitar duties, Steve Naive plays keyboards, and Tom Morley synthesizers.

Even Though (1987)
- Even Though
- Even Though (Instrumental)

even though

Clive Langer & the Boxes - I Want the Whole World (1979) [Re-Up]


Clive Langer full-member of the Deaf School since 1974, also collaborated with the early Big in Japan in 1978. In 1979, after both acts disbanded he started working with some friends as Clive Langer and the Boxes. The first-line up of the Boxes included, besides Langer himself (vocals and guitars), Deaf School friends Bette Bright and Steve Allen (backing vocals), Budgie (drums, former Spitfire Boys, Big in Japan) and Ben Barson (keyboards, brother of and main influence for Mike Barson, keyboard player with Madness). In March 1979 the group released their first 12”:


I Want the Whole World (1979)
a1. I Want the Whole World
a2. Lovely Evening
a3. I Know I
b1. Those Days
b2. Simple Life



clive langer boxes (1979)