Showing posts with label The Bangles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Bangles. Show all posts

Saturday, June 16, 2012

The Next 30 Day Song Challenge - day 16

Day 16 - A song that reminds you of first discovering the opposite sex

I'm sure that there's other earlier moments but this song - or rather video - sticks in the mind. It's '83 or '84 and for some reason I'm watching Richard Skinner presenting Whistle Test (the title had been shortened at this point) and he cues up this video by The Bangles video: 



'nuff said.

Friday, November 23, 2007

Friday's Playlist #23

An ongoing series:

  • Diesel Park West, 'Opportunity Crazy' (Shakespeare Alabama)
  • The Outnumbered, 'Accidental Color' (Why Are All The Good People Going Crazy)
  • Au Pairs, 'Inconvenience' (Stepping Out of Line: The Anthology)
  • The Bangles 'Getting Out of Hand'
  • Martha and the Muffins, 'Saigon' mp3 (Far Away In Time)
  • The Redskins, 'Go Get Organised' mp3 (Neither Washington nor Moscow)
  • Pony Pony Run Run, 'First Date Mullet'
  • Duran Duran, 'Anyone Out There' (Duran Duran)
  • The Nips, 'Gabrielle'
  • Nervus Rex, 'Don't Look' (Nervus Rex)
  • Spotify Playlist Link. 

    Tuesday, November 20, 2007

    The Hoffs Estates

    What a find. They were always so much more than that bloody awful 'Walk Like An Egyptian' dance and video (equally awful song as well, btw).

    A really early clip of The Bangles - maybe they were even still known as The Bangs at the time - from a local Los Angeles tv show. The song is 'Real World', which was off their self-titled EP, so the clip could be dated from '82 or '83. Notice that it's also the original line up of the band, with Annette Zilinskas on bass. (She left the band to become lead singer of Blood on the Saddle.)

    I remember first becoming aware of The Bangles when the video for their first single to be released in the UK, 'Hero Takes A Fall', was played on The Whistle Test way back in '84. Cue nostalgia trip: The wonders of a world before YouTube and the t'internet when a music video was taped off the telly and played to death until the betamax recorder was the traded in for the vastly inferior vhs. Those were the days.

    Hat tip - and for more info on the clip - to the music blog, The Subversive Sounds . . .