giovedì 27 settembre 2007

Dalek I - Part 1

Dalek I Love You originated from one of the earliest Liverpool act to appear during the punk era, the Radio Blank (November 1976 - October 1977), deeply influence by R&B and by the Liverpudlian band the Deaf School. Radio Blank included Alan Gill on guitar and vocals, Dave Balfe on bass and vocals, Keith Hartley on vocals and Stephen Brick on drums. When the act disbanded, Balfe and Gill continued experimenting as a duo (plus a drum machine, apparently they were the first local group to use drum machine and synthesizers), abandoning the R&B standards for something completely new and original, starting form the name: Dalek I Love You - a combination of The Daleks (suggested by Balfe) and Darling I Love You (by Gill). In December 1977 the lie-up expanded to include Dave Hughes on keyboards and Chris Teepee, operating drum machines and tapes. Then, when in the summer of 1978 Balfe left the band to join Big In Japan, Gill, first tried to enlarge the band with the inclusion of Andy McCluskey on bass (fro The ID, later OMD), Martin Cooper on saxophone (later Moderates), Ken Peers on drums and Gordon Hon, and finally, in early 1979, he decided for a two-member line-up, consisting of himself and Dave Hughes.The first single, Freedom Fighters b/w Two Chameleons (to appear in the first lp), was released in July 1979 under the abbreviated band name of Dalek I (a decision of the record company, Phonogram). With the same name, in October 1979, the second single was released, The World b/w We Are All Actors (both on the next lp, if in slightly different versions), and in May 1980, the third single:

Dalek I Love You (Destiny)
1. Dalek I Love You (Destiny) [single edit]
2. Happy / This Is My Uniform
(the b-side is actually made of two different songs, appearing separated in the folder here)

The same month (May 1980), Dalek I’s first album was released:

Compass Kumpas
1. The World
2. 8 Track
3. Destiny (Dalek I Love You)
4. A Suicide
5. The Kiss
6. Trapped
7. Two Chameleons
8. Freedom Fighters
9. You Really Got Me
10. Mad
11. Good Times
12. We're All Actors
13. Heat
14. Missing 15 Minutes


Among the session player for this album there was Chris Hughes (later with Adam and the Ants), who also produced the record and designed the cover. When Dave Hughes decided to quit, Alan Gill, now the only Dalek I Love You member, joined Julian Cope’s Teardrop Explodes (where he was was reunited with his old band-mate Dave Balfe) and recorded with the band their debut album Kilimanjaro.

In February 1981 Dalek I Love You released another single: it was a solo release, but the full credits include the support of Chuca Russo and Hugh Jones on vocals and of Chris Hughes on drums:

Heartbeat (28 February 1981)
1. Heartbeat
2. Astronauts (Have Landed On The Moon)

In 1982, Dalek I Love You expanded to a full quartet, reuniting former members of the band in its various incarnations, namely Keith Hartley (vocalist for Radio Blank), Kenny Peers and Gordon Hon. This line-up released a couple of singles:

Holiday in Disneyland (15 July 1982)
1. Holiday in Disneyland [single version]
2. Masks & Licenses
3. Heaven Was Bought For Me (in the 12” release)



sabato 22 settembre 2007

Street to Street (1981) – A Liverpool Album. Vol. 2

Street to Street (1981) – A Liverpool Album. Vol. 2
01 Egypt For Now - Days On Edge
02 Cooling Towers - The Thesis
03 Systems - Total Recall
04 Chinese Religion - Eden
05 Games - Unrest in the Real World
06 Games - The Song
07 Systems - Glare of Lights
08 Cooling Towers - Make This Day End Soon
09 Egypt For Now - Soldiers
10 Chinese Religon - Chambers

The second volume of the compilation offers interesting insights of the musical experimentation of an already ‘second’ generation of Liverpool bands. Possibly less inventive and original than the bands featured on Volume 1 (but that’s purely personal), surely fewer (only five bands here) and more obscure, here are some pieces of information about them:

Egypt For Now: The band was formed in 1980 by former Dance Part members Yorkie (aka David Tracey Palmer, ex Teardrop Explodes’ roadie and friend, later Balcony, Space), and Mike Head (later Pale Fountains, Shack). Also member of the band was Paul Codman on drums. The music is deeply influenced by US psychedelia, and infatuation that Yorkie shared with friends Julian Cope (Teardrop Explodes) and Ian McCulloch (Echo & the Bunnymen). The only band releases are the two songs on this compilation. Yorkie features in the Teardrop Explodes’ video Reward together with other friends of Cope’s (left in the colour picture, with Paul Simpson and Ged Quinn of the Wild Swans). Among other curiosities, another temporary member of the pre-Egypt act, the Dance Party, was Jeremy Kelly, after his experiences in a post-punk industrial outfit called Psychamesh (aka Psycamesh), which folded in 1979. Kelly then joined the Systems (also featured on this album, before forming the Wild Swans).

Systems – The band formed in 1980 after the split of Activity Minimal (see Street to Street, Vol. 1) and comprised John 'Strange' Hawkins (voc, bass) (ex Activity Minimal later This Island Earth), Kevin Chapman (gtr), Tony Elson (drms) (later Visual Aids, Precautions, Young Lions, Islands of Dance). This line-up soon changed when Chapman was replaced by Andy Warren (gtr) (ex Change of Image, later Islands of Dance) and Mike Reed joined on keyboards. In August 1980, the group released the single ‘Scenery’ w/b ‘Privates Lives’ (credited to Hawkins, Elson, Chapman AND Tim Lever - former Hawkins’ bandmate in Activity Minimal and possibly a temporary member of Systems). By the year 1981, the line-up changed again, and the remaining original members Hawkins and Elson were joined by Mike Nelson on sax, Kevin Brown on keyboards, and Jeremy Kelly (ex Psycamesh, later of Wild Swans, Lotus Eaters) on guitar. In October 1981 this line-up released the single Total Recall (also featured in this compilation) b/w Still Outside and – with the addition of Bazz Hughes on bass – recorded a session with John Peel. Even though this was probably the first vinyl-oriented musical experience for Jem Kelly, his role in the band was not that active then: “I was playing the guitar, but still developing my own style. I only added to one record Systems did on which I turned a filter on an early synth.”
(http://www.pennyblackmusic.co.uk/MagSitePages/Article.aspx?id=2781 )

Very little information can be provided about the other acts:

Cooling Towers: The band features John Raftrey (guitar), Ged Gorman (on Ian Curtis + Jim Morrison sound-alike vocals, and clarinet), Rili Demo (drums), apparently – besides a few John Peel shows – only released the two tracks on this compilation.

Games: Besides the song on this compilation, the band also released the singles First Law of Games (1980), and Dance This Way b/w Love Canal in 1981.
Chinese Religion: Besides the songs featured here the band also released the single My Motive b/w Music Box in 1981.

giovedì 20 settembre 2007

Street to Street (1979) – A Liverpool Album. Vol 1.

The opening lines in OMD’s original website (see http://www.omd.uk.com/html/biography.html ) succinctly but effectively depicts the ferment of the post-punk era in Liverpool like this: “Liverpool's music scene in the late 1970's was an exciting and dynamic place to be. Everyone was either in a band, in-between bands or were forming a band.” The most sadly missed John Peel (RiP) defined such fertile and ever-changing quality characterising all sorts of activities related to music in post-punk Liverpool as “a study […] in impermanence and experimentation”.
The dynamics and the ever-changing … of the scene are
Such mix of naivety and ingenuity, serendipity and dedication, dreams, blisters and sweat, is best captured on anthologies like the Zoo compilations (posted a while ago, see below) and on the ‘Street to Street’ compilations posted here today.
The first Lp (1979) collected pieces released between May 1978 and May 1979. Here’s the track-listing:

Street to Street (1979) – A Liverpool Album. Vol 1.

1. Big In Japan "Match Of The Day"
2. The Id "Julia's Song"
3. Jaqui & Jeanette "194 Radio City"
4. Modern Eon "Benched Down / 70s Sixties"
5. Activity Minimal "Television Game"
6. Dead Trout "The Arab"
7. Tontrix "Clear On Radar"
8. The Accelerators "Radio Blues"
9. Malchix "Crisis"
10. Fun "I Heard You Call My Name"
11. The Moderates "I Don't Want To Go Bald"
12. Echo & The Bunnymen "Monkeys"

Beside Big in Japan, here are featured other interesting bands, namely:

The Id: This act, active between 1977 and the summer 1978, was a seven-piece band - three singers, two guitarists, bassist, drummer, and keyboard player. The line-up consisted of Paul Humphreys and Andy McCluskey, and Malcolm Holmes on drums, all of whom will end up in Orchestral Manoeuvers in the Dark (OMD). The song featured in the compilation was written by Julia Kneale (McCluskey's girlfriend) – hence the title – who also was a member of the band (on vocals). The Id, which had quite a following on the scene, split in 1978 due to musical differences, after which McCluskey started singing for Dalek I Love You, before joining up again with Humphreys, in a band call VCL-XI. The duo, heavily influenced by the emerging electronic music (Kraftwerk, Cabaret Voltaire, Human League, etc.), soon changed the name into Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark. The rest is history.

Jaqui & Jeanette: The only song by the band ‘194 Radio City’ was composed during a jam session over an original idea by Ian Broudie, who plays guitar (as on Match of the Day, by Big in Japan), together with Budgie (ex Big in Japan and currently with the Slits) on drums, Dave Balfe on keyboards, Ambrose (of Walkie Talkies and later Pink Industry) on bass. Former Deaf School Steve Lindsey sings with Gary Dwyer, (drummer with the Teardrop Explodes) behind the female duo. – (Curiously enough, in the same period – September 1978 – Broudie, Budgie and Lindsey formed the Secrets. Jaqui & Jeanette can thus be regarded as an early version of is this the Secrets.

Modern Eon (formerly Luglo Slugs/ Tank Time/ One Two) are here represented in their three piece formation, with ex Luglo Slugs’s members Alex Plain (aka Alex Johnston, guitar, vocals), Danny Hampson (bass), and Dave Hardbattle (drums). The tracks were rehearsed in a shed in Hasrdbattle's parents home prior to being recorded in the Open Eye Gallery Studios, then located on Whitechapel, Liverpool. Alex Plain/Johnston designed the album sleeve. Hardbattle would later be replaced by Joey McKechnie in the consolidated line-up, plus a yet non-permanent fourth member (probably Ged Allen on guitar). This was the first band release on vinyl (and not very representative of Modern Eon as we know it).

Activity Minimal: In this reggae/punk band (1978-80) met Joey McKechnie and Tim Lever – the former almost at the end of his experience with Modern Eon, the latter briefly before joining the same band. Among the other members of the band there was John 'Strange' Hawkins (later in Systems, featured in Street to Street, Vol. II). Drummer Joey was also instrumental in the establishment of the Merseyside Musicians Co-Op.

Tontrix: This was a very short-lived act (already split by the time the Lp got released) which is worth mention if only for the future career of the members: Hambi Haralambous (later of, Victims of Romance and Hambi and the Dance, with Wayne Hussey), Chris Hughes (later Hambi and the Dance and Adam and the Ants) – Hughes replaced former drummer Ian Johnston - Steve Lovell (later Hollycaust, Hambi and the Dance, and guitarist of Julian Cope), Mike Score (later Flock of Seagulls), Bobby Carr (former Those Naughty Lumps, and also with The Moderates). This is possibly one of the few ‘unknown’ band on the compilation (that is beside Big inJapan, and Echo & the Bunnymen) to have other vinyl releases (the single Shell Shocked, 1979) beside the ones on the compilation itself.

Very little info (and musical future for the other bands): Fun: (formed by future members of Berlin and Victims of Romance - Roy White, Johnny Reynolds, Jim Mealy, Gerry Garland and Brian Rawlins - some of which then became White & Torch and the Roy White Band; allegedly, they got the name from Iggy Pop’s number Fun House: the song featured here sounds like Iggy Pop singing over a Roxy Music tune); Accelerators (comprising members that will end up in the Adams Family and in Lawnmower); Malchix (collected former members of Hugo Dines Band, many of whom went on to form the act Cracked Actor and Poland in the late eighties); The Moderates and the Dead Trout (a mystery to my best knowledge).

The compilation ends with the then three-piece act Echo and the Bunnymen: here is one of the few traces on vinyl featuring the band original drummer: Echo, a drum-machine. According to some Bunnymen's biographers, Julian Cope plays the keyboards on this song .

Finally, the legend goes that The Teardrop Explodes had also recorded a track for this album, but an engineer inadvertently taped over it! (http://www.omd.uk.com/discography/id/html/street.html )

lunedì 17 settembre 2007

Modern Eon - Part 2


Before the release of their much acclaimed Fiction Tales (June 1981, find the version plus bonus here), in February 1981 Modern Eon released the single:




Child’s Play
- Child’s Play (different mix from the album version)
- Visionary


In August 1981 the band released what would be their last single to date:

Mechanic:
- Mechanic (different from the album version)
- Splash!


In 1981 Modern Eon released a Peel Session, and a BBC FM Broadcast.
The tracklisting for that session is the following:

- Child’s Play
- Choreography
- High Noon
- Playwrite
- Real Hymn
- After the Play

domenica 16 settembre 2007

Modern Eon - Part 1

The Modern Eon was a part of the "New Liverpool Scene" that sprang up in 1979-1980 around 'Eric's Club'. But, unlike all other bands gravitating around the club (Echo & the Bunnymen, The Teardrop Explodes, Dead or Alive, Pink Military, etc.) Modern Eon “always stayed clear of the typical Liverpool connection”. The founding members Alix Plain (Alex Johnson) and Danny Hampson started the group in the late '70s, originally under the name of Luglo Slugs, then Tank Time, One Two and finally Modern Eon.
Their first release appeared on a compilation (Steet to Street: A Liverpool Album, vol I) in November 1978:

Benched Down/ 70s Sixties
The band was:
Alex Plain (aka Alex Johnson): vox, guitars
Danny Hampson: bass, b-vox
Ged Allen: guitar, b-vox

In 1979 the lineup expanded:
Alix Plain: vox
Danny Hampson: bass, b-vox
Ged Allen: guitar, b-vox
Joey McKechnie: drums

The band released the self-released EP:

Pieces:
- Second Still (different from the album version)
- Waiting for the Cavalry
- Choreography (different from the album version)
- The Look a Smack

In 1981 the band was again restructured:
Alix Plain: vox
Danny Hampson: bass, b-vox
Bob Wakelin: synth, and
Tim Lever – future Dead or Alive member: on guitar and sax,
The new lineup reshapes the band’s sound into something more original, updated and distinctive, releasing the single

Euthenics:
- Euthenics (different from the album version)
- Waiting for the Calvary (different from the album version)
(the single was then re-released the same year, backed by Cardinal Sign instead of Calvary)


In the same year the 17 year old Cliff Hewitt joined the band on drums, and this line up released two more singles (Child’s Play and Mechanic) the LP Fiction Tales, and toured the country, before the new recruit got injuried his wrists, and his drumming was sampled for the rest of the tour (supporting The Stranglers).


Fiction Tales
1. Second Still
2. The Grass Still Grows
3. Playwrite
4. Watching The Dancers
5. Real Hymn
6. Waiting For The Cavalry
7. High Noon8. Child's Play
9. Choreography
10. Euthenics
11. In A Strange Way
12. Mechanic

The end of 1981 found Modern Eon at work on demos for a second album but sadly the banded folded before releasing a follow up album.

(see: http://www.soulsaw.com/modern-eon/bio1.htm )

venerdì 14 settembre 2007

Pink Industry - Part 3

Over the years 82-84 Pink Industry released 4 Peel sessions.
Here you find the last one, recorded on 4-25-84 (broadcast 5-8-84), and performed by the original trio: Jayne Casey (Vocals); Ambrose (Bass, Keyboards, Cello); Tadzio Jodlowski (Guitar).


1984 Peel Session
- Pain Of Pride
- No Defence
- Piano Ping
- Don't Let Go

In 1995, more than a decade after their split, the band released the retrospective collection

New Naked Technology

1. Pain Of Pride
2. Cowboy Track
3. State Of Grace
4. Two Cultures
5. Walk Away
6. The Corpse
7. No Defense
8. New Beginnings
9. Savage
10. Enjoy the Pain
11. Stand Alone
12. Time For Change
13. Elevator Operator
14. Empty Beach
15. What I Wouldn't Give
16. Anyone's Fashion
17. Is This the End?
18. Cruel Garden
19. Don't Let Go
20. Bound By Silence
21. Time Is A Thief
22. Extreme
23. The Raft
24. I Wish

previously unreleased : tracks 2,13 and 21
'New Beginnings' LP : tracks 1,3,6,7,8,11,15 and 20
'Who Told You, You Were Naked?' LP : tracks 4,5,12,16,22 and 23
'Low Technology' LP : tracks 9,10 and 24
'What I Wouldn't Give' EP : track 14
'Forty-Five' EP : tracks 17 and 19
'Cruel Garden' EP (unreleased EP) : track 18

sabato 8 settembre 2007

Pink Industry - Part 2


After the release of ‘Low Technology’ the duo added to their line-up Tadzio Jodlowski. The creative dynamic within the band did not change, as Casey points out: “Ambrose and I used to write the basis of the song, then Tadzio would put in his bit”, yet, as can be heard in the recordings “Tadzio's guitar was really important”. Casey's vocals on the later records sound as big improvement whereas the music turned more towards “textured layers of electronics”. Neither of the two LP which saw the light (“Who Told you You were Naked?” and “New Beginnings”) received the public recognition that they deserved, and within a couple of year the group folded, with Casey, bored with the what became of the whole post-punk music scence, moving towards the then budding house scene.

Here’s story in Casey’s own words

-Pink Industry sounded quite ahead of their time.

JC: Yeh, I liked Pink Industry because it got a bit closer to the mark, but again the technology wasn't there. So you'd spend days doing a sample which now would take two minutes to do. Pink Industry was nearer because we'd got rid of all the rock elements by then.
[…]

- Why do you think Pink Industry never got the recognition it deserved? Were you too ahead of your time?

JC: I think it wasn't developed enough. People used to compare us to the Cocteaus or New Order, those were the bands who were playing with electronic music at that time, and with different voice sounds, but they were far more developed than we were. We never really got past the experimental stage. There were some nice songs in there, but they were sort of basic, very experimental.
[…]
- The indie scene at that time was quite stale.

JC: The indie scene was rock bottom at that stage. It was horrible, the bands had been around for ages, it was going nowhere. It only started to happen again when dance music happened. And then it took on a new life. But up until that point, it was just so boring. I'd done it, I'd done it to death.

(see http://ilx.wh3rd.net/thread.php?msgid=1544102 )

Who Told You, You Were Naked? (1983)
A1 Walk Away
A2 Not Moving
A3 Urban Jazz
A4 Fear Of Failure
A5 Anyone's Fashion
A6 Situation
B1 Two Culture's
B2 Extreme
B3 The Raft
B4 This Is The Place
B5 The Only One
B6 Time For Change

New Beginnings (1985)
A1 New Beginnings
A2 Pain Of Pride
A3 Bound By Silence
A4 State Of Grace
A5 Piano Ping
B1 Empty Beech
B2 The Corpse
B3 Fifty Five
B4 What I Wouldn't Give
B5 No Defence
B6 Stand Alone

Peter Coyle - Lambs To The Slaughter (a.k.a. Selfish, 1985)

In Peter Coyle’s words:
“At the end of The Lotus Eaters the pressure had taken its toll. The very thing I worked hard to avoid had happened. The idea of building something up to just fall down felt like such a waste. I was very demoralised and down. I was totally devastated and in no state for anything. If it wasnt for Pete Davies I would have probably stayed in that state. Pete Davies was the manager for The Lotus Eaters. I didnt really feel able to be involved in planet earth never mind the music business.In 1985 after The Lotus Eaters I started working with David Hughes who later formed a band with Thomas Lang. We recorded a whole new album of songs called First Days and started gigging. But it kind of fell apart after a year or so. This was my first music that was released under my name. I released an EP called Selfish. Unfortunately the record was banned by most of the shops because there was a pencil drawing of a woman masturbating on the cover. Maybe if the drawing was of a woman killing or being violent there would have probably been no problem. Anyway I wrote Yours The Spirit That Soared with Gerald Quinn. I was finding new ways of writing songs. I was becoming more confident writing music as well as the words.”(http://www.petercoyle.com/bio.html )

Lambs To The Slaughter (a.k.a. Selfish)
1. Yours, The Spirit That Soared
2. Everyone Knows
3. Closer
4. Shattered

venerdì 7 settembre 2007

Pink Industry - Part 1

By the end of the year 1980, after the release of ‘Do animals Believe in God?’, Jayne Casey’s discontent/unease with Pink Military started to come to the surface: after experimenting whatever was possible at the time, the traditional band structure guitar-bass-drums (despite the mobility of the members) was perceived as an obstacle to Casey’s creativity, forcing all possible inspiration to have to comply with rock’n’roll standards. Casey was more keen on technology and experimentation.
In the same period, Ambrose Reynolds was looking for something different. After the split of the school band the O’Boogie Brothers (1976-77), where he played together with Ian Broudie, Ambrose and ex-members of that same band (Nathan McGough on vocals, and Jon Moss on drums) teamed up with Wayne Hussey to form the short-lived act Walkie Talkies (June 1978- Nov. 79). After that, for a short period of time he played bass with Nightmares in Wax, before joining forces with Holly Johnson, Phil Hurst (ex co-member in NIW), and later Steve Lovell recording demos under the name of Hollycaust. The band changed the name to Frankie Goes to Hollywood, and changed line-up as well, when Johnson recruited Brian Nash on guitar and Peter Gill on drums - with whom he had briefly played in 1981 under the name of Dancing Girls – to form the Sons of Egypt, the nucleus of what would become a year later Frankie Goes to Hollywood as we know it.
Casey and Ambrose teamed at the end of 1981. The duo combined the "anything goes" ethics of post-punk with experimental electronics, they produced a very laid-back, spacious, liquid music, combining textured layers of electronics, simple bass-lines and drum machine, ages before Massive Attack. In the beginning other contributors came and left with some frequency (especially when needed to record their first BBC Peel session), but soon the group established their line-up as a duo, exploiting Ambrose ability as multi-instrumentalist.
And as a duo they produced (on their own Zulu Records):

Forty-five EP (Feb 1982)

- Is This The End
- 47
- Don't Let Go
- Final Cry


New Technology (1983)

- I Wish
- New Aims
- Don't Let Go
- Creaking Doors
- Enjoy The Pain
- Savage
- Send Them Away
- Remove The Stain
- Heavenly
- Is This The End

martedì 4 settembre 2007

Dead or Alive – Early singles, EPs, Peel Sessions


After releasing the first single in 1980 I’m Falling (b/w Flowers, see previous posts), the same line-up - Joe Musker (Drums), Sue Bagton-James (Bass), Marty / Mandingo Healy (Keyboards), Adrian Mitchley (Guitar), Pete Burns (Vocals) – recorded their first BBC ONE Peel Session (recorded 04/02/1981, broadcast 17/02/1981). The tracklist for that session was:





- Nowhere To Nowhere
- Running Wild
- Flowers
- Number 11


The last song of those sessions would be their next single, released only a few months later, in May 1981:



- Number Eleven
- Namegame (b/w)



Here information is a little blurred. DOA biographers state that this 1981 single was the first to feature the new line-up, including Wayne Hussey (later Sisters of Mercy and Mission) on guitar, Mike Percy on bass and Steve Coy on drums, whereas according to the man’s biographers, Hussey joined the band only for their EP It’s Been Hours Now, released in February 1982. In fact, despite the guitar sound slightly reminiscent of the early Sisters of Mercy, the song was already there before Hussey joined, see the 1981 BBC sessions. The new EP is instead characterised by a distinctively different sound: Hussey’s typical guitar soundscapes, tribal rhythms (overwhelming at the time –Adam and the Ants, Bow Wow Wow, Slits, etc.).


- It's Been Hours Now
- Whirlpool
- Nowhere to Nowhere
- It’s Been Hours Now 2



A couple of weeks later, the same line-up – Pete Burns (Vocals), Joe Musker (Drums), Mike Percy (Bass), Wayne Hussey (Guitar), Mandingo Healy (Keyboards) – recoded their second BBC ONE Peel Session (recorded 01/03/1982, broadcast 18/03/1982):

- Misty Circles (Part 1)
- Misty Circles (Part 2)
- Number 12
- Untitled

After the recording of the sessions, drummer Steve Coy joined the band, which, according to what seems to have become a standard (!), released the last tack recorded during the Peel sessions: Untitled, in fact, is the provisional (no) title of the next single, released in May 1982 (which features the same guitar pattern that will surface some years later in the Mission’s Tower of Strength single):


- The Stranger
- Some of That (b/w)



Two months later Dead Or Alive were signing to the Epic label. The rest is history. A series of singles appeared over the course of 1983, including "Misty Circles" and "What I Want” all of which then collected in DOA’s first album Sophisticated Boom Boom (1983). Hussey soon exited, and it was a line-up comprising Burns, Percy, new member Tim Lever on keyboards and drummer Steve Coy which scored Dead or Alive's first major hit, a 1984 cover of KC and the Sunshine Band's disco classic "That's the Way (I Like It)" which fell just shy of reaching the British Top 20.

Part 1
Part 2

sabato 1 settembre 2007

Big in Japan - Vinyl, demos & live

Before getting to The Pink Industry, here’s something more about Big in Japan. Some vinyl rips of already known/published material followed by some demos and live versions of the songs. The bonus track is not a Big in Japan’s cut but the b-side to their 1977 split single ‘Brutality, Religion and a dance Beat’ (side A: Big in Japan’s ‘big in japan’ – side B: the Chuddy Nuddies’ (pseudonym for the Yachts) ‘do the chud’).

Big in Japan - Vinyl, demos & live
Tracklist:

1. Big In Japan (Vinyl)
2. Nothing Special (Vinyl)
3. Cindy And The Barbi Dolls (Vinyl)
4. Suicide A Go Go (Vinyl)
5. Taxi (Vinyl)
6. Match Of The Day (Vinyl)
7. Society For Cutting Up Men (Vinyl)
8. Society For Cutting Up Men (Demo)
9. Boys Cry (Demo)
10. Big In Japan (Demo)
11. Space Walk (Demo)
12. Match Of The Day (Demo)
13. Taxi (Demo)
14. Suicide A Go Go (Granada TV 23.3.78)
15. (Bonus): Do The Chud: The Chuddy Nuddies