Showing posts with label Dexys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dexys. Show all posts

Thursday, September 03, 2020

The Greatest Living Englishman by Martin Newell (Autumn Girl Books 2020)




Young Jobless

I sat with a two-litre bottle of cider in one hand and a roll-up in the other, watching the video screen in my landlord Steve's living room. Roger Maynard, then a news presenter at BBC East in Norwich, was interviewing a young man. The young man, in his 20s, was dressed almost entirely in black, his thin face appearing more gaunt for a surfeit of smeared mascara. He lurched uneasily in his seat as he fielded the interviewer's questions. Did he think, asked Roger Maynard, that a record whose subject matter mentioned unemployment and drugs was relevant as an educational aid for youngsters? The young man stared vacantly at the camera: “Well it’s gotta be better than rock-climbing and Duke of Edinburgh Awards... annit?” he slurred. Then he laughed, lurching almost out of his seat.

Even I, by this time well-numbed with cider, was slightly shocked as I watched the video recording of my first live TV appearance.

Everyone, apparently, had seen it. The pub, so Steve said, had been a-buzz with it earlier. Even an uncle of mine in distant Buckinghamshire had witnessed it. Shortly afterwards, during the course of a telephone conversation, he told me quietly that he thought I’d let myself down. It hadn’t been the plan. I’d put a sharp black outfit together. A little bit rock’n’roll maybe, but smart-ish It was on the train to the Norwich studio that I noticed my throat was swollen, my head ached and I felt slightly other-worldly. The meet and greet person at the BBC showed me into the Green Room (which they still had in those days) pointed to a large drinks cabinet and gave me one of those, you-know-what-to-do gestures. No sooner had the door closed than I’d sprung briskly up and mixed myself a whisky mac. Then, quickly, another. Still no one came to collect me. So I had a third. I now felt confident, witty and erudite.

Thus began My So-Called Fucking TV Career. A few days earlier, my mum had telephoned me at 7.30am and said, “You’re in the Daily Mail. They say that a 'dole and drugs record’ written by a part-time washer-up has been sent out to hundreds of schools as an educational aid. And a Tory MP Nick Budgen, has condemned you publicly." She sounded rather more excited than alarmed about it. On Radio 1, the DJ Dave Lee Travis was playing ‘Young Jobless' at lunchtimes. The record company informed me that my disc had been C-listed, which meant ‘sporadic’ airplay. The drive-time DJ, Peter Powell, had played it too. For the next fortnight or so, I’d be washing up at the restaurant on a busy lunchtime session, and I’d suddenly hear Max Volume’s guitar riff chugging in, as my record came on. 

“Hey, that’s my record again!” I’d squeal. The whole shift would come to a halt until it was finished. I was getting Radio 1 airplay. One evening they played it on Radio 4’s PM news show. I never heard it of course. In those days I only ever listened to pop music stations. Because of that particular news item, some high-up at EMI Records had also heard it.

The next thing you know, along with Kris and Stuart from Offstreet Records, I’m sitting upstairs at EMI’s Manchester Square HQ, negotiating a one-off, piss-poor, four per cent record and distribution deal. The record was hurriedly re- released on EMI's Liberty label. Now we were motoring.

We sealed it with a lukewarm bottle of Chablis, which I'd found while nosing around in their broken fridge, when instead I should have been listening to what was being said. In the bogs later, just along the corridor, I met Mensi, cheerfully ebullient singer of the Angelic Upstarts. “Do some fookin work, yer lazy bastids!” he yelled in broad Geordie, as we passed back through the typing pool together. On the way back up to the meeting room, finding myself on the wrong staircase, I met a few glamorous- looking New Romantic types: tablecloths over shoulders, leather trousers and big ’80s hair. They all had flutes of cold fizzy in their hands. I was informed that it was some kind of reception for Dexys Midnight Runners. And there's me, Kris and Stuart, crammed upstairs in an office with a paper cup of warm Chablis each and a song about the plight of Our Unemployed Yoof. Every expense spared, then.

Saturday, May 23, 2020

30 Day Song Challenge - Day 23



A song you think everyone should listen to.

Dexys Midnight Runners were so much than Come On Eileen . . . (please bear in mind that I originally posted this song choice on an American person's timeline on Facebook.)


Dexys Midnight Runners - Let's Make This Precious (Live Shaftesbury Theatre 1982)

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

The Next 30 Day Song Challenge - day 27

Day 27 - A song where the title isn't mentioned in the lyrics


I was going to cheat on this challenge, and a quick google search threw up such great songs as Blur's 'Song 2' and Nirvana's 'Smells Like Teen Spirit' but at the last moment I suddenly remembered this everything and the kitchen sink classic from Dexys:



I never knew it was their debut single, and I've no idea why the video suddenly cuts off just as Kev's is about to go into full overdrive rant mode but I do know that the next time I'm drunk I'll use it as a perfect excuse to recreate that dance of his. The kids will love it.


Saturday, April 23, 2011

30 Day Song Challenge - day 23

day 23 - a song that you want to play at your wedding

Already been married for a few years now, but for obvious reasons - obvious to us, anyway - it should have been this song:

Sunday, April 03, 2011

30 Day Song Challenge - day 03

day 03 - a song that makes you happy

Kevin Rowland looks pissed off as usual but the music in itself has an exuberance which can't help but make you smile:

Honorable mentions go to . . . no, I can't mention them. They might come up later in the month.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Sid Waddell says 180

The start of what I hope will be an ongoing series.

For about six months back in 1982, Jocky Wilson was my sporting hero. And, yes, Darts is a sport. They've been known to wear sweatbands, and darts players discovered the necessity of regular re-hydrating during the course of a match when the likes of Jim Blyth and Mick Coop were still sucking on a slice of orange at half time.

If you're so inclined you can check out this interview with Jocky that dates from 2001. I must warn you that it is rather sad.

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Friday, June 15, 2007

Friday's Playlist #11

For that cheeky bastard, Reidski. A resumption of an ongoing series:

  • The Jam, 'Absolute Beginners' (Snap)
  • Human League, 'Seconds' (Dare)
  • Billy Idol, 'Dancing With Myself'
  • The Pretenders, 'Message of Love' (Pretenders II)
  • The Associates, 'Message Oblique Speech' (Fourth Drawer Down)
  • The Passions, '(I'm in love with a) German Film Star'
  • Dexys Midnight Runners, 'Plan B' (Too-Rye-Ay)
  • Siouxsie and the Banshees, 'Love in a Void' (Once Upon A Time)
  • Japan, 'Visions of China' (Tin Drum)
  • Soft Cell, 'Entertain Me' (Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret)
  • Why 1981? Why not.

    Update 11/11/ 22
    I wish I'd picked a better Associates song. And what's the deal with picking that song by Billy Idol? Did I lose a bet?

    Friday, December 29, 2006

    Friday's Playlist #4

    An ongoing series:

  • The Rakes, 'Auslandmission' (Demos)
  • Robert Wyatt, 'At Last I Am Free' (Nothing Can Stop Us Now)
  • Morrissey, 'Come Back to Camden' (You Are The Quarry)
  • Duran Duran, '(Reach Up For The) Sunrise' (Astronaut)
  • Dexys Midnight Runners, 'Dance Stance' (Geno - Best of)
  • Dexys Midnight Runners, 'Geno' (Searching for the Young Soul Rebels)
  • XTC, 'One of the Millions' (Oranges & Lemons)
  • The Organ, 'Memorize The City' (Grab That Gun)
  • Diesel Park West, 'All The Myths On Sunday' (Shakespeare, Alabama)
  • The Boo Radleys, 'Lazarus' (Giant Steps)
  • Update 11/11/ 22
    The Rakes track is missing from the Spotify playlist. Click on the links above to find track on YouTube. Of its time . . . which sounds a bit snotty. I don't mind to be.