Friday, May 28, 2010
Funky Friday - Hoeks van Holland
Have you ever gone Dutch and visited De Nederlandsh? Our first trip in '94 saw us rolling from the ferry (a Ceefax bargain) to theme of Eurotrash in our Renault 5 GTX for five days camping and nipping around and about Amsterdam, Edam and Volendam. Generally Holland was more micro-sized than expected with dinky, neat and tidy streets and suburbs. Clusters of flat-packed towns built from from Toytown blueprints. It may sound bizarre but Amsterdam aside, the lowlander lifestyle was so casually efficient, polite and polished that it felt like a nation populated, designed and governed by Toto fans.
A few weeks after our Dutch run I spotted a Toto live album - strangely, but not surprisingly, recorded at a gig in Holland. Perma-perms, soft rock and all-season sunglasses aren't on today's menu. Instead it’s a triple run of...
Bonnie St Claire (above) from her 69 soul-stomper era.
Brainbox (?)
A Shocking Blue tune that isn't Venus (Tom version here by the way)
Bonnie St Claire - I Surrender
Brainbox - Down Man
Shocking Blue - Hot Sand
Did you know George Baker and his total pop classic are as Dutch as Advocaat ? Smoke and pancake - the clues are all there..
Labels:
Funk,
Funky Friday,
mondo international,
northern soul,
psychedelia,
rock,
Soul
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
D'yer Mak'er Shakers
Nah pop no style, a strictly roots - is the theme of today's Jamaican stop-off. A handful of roots tunes (as in 'roots of' rather than 'roots reggae') that have inspired, influenced or been recycled for bigger hits.
I could have posted Alton Ellis's original I'm Still in Love With You, but Marcia Aitken's cover with the extended toasting section (starting at 4 mins in) is just a whisker away from the riffing lifted by Althia and Donna.
Marcia Aitken - I'm Still In Love/Three Piece Suit
Lloyd Charmers was later rescripted by The Specials for....well you'll see
Lloyd Charmers - Birth Control
Lord Kitchener's frisky calypso tune was given a going over by Judge Dread - lyrics here if you fancy some Sing-a-Long-a Kitch
Lord Kitchener - Dr. Kitch
Labels:
50s,
60s,
70s,
mondo international,
reggae,
you heard it here first
Friday, May 21, 2010
Funky Friday - Big Down Under
Amongst Australia's collection of evolutionary curiosities - black swans, the Duck-billed Platypus those extravagantly toxic spiders and snakes - came and went, within a single decade, another unique breed. Sharpies.
An Aussie-only sub-cult of the seventies, Sharpies were platform boot-boys mixing and matching mod, glam and skinhead styles creating a look that's a distant cousin to London's Jesse Hector. The movement first reared its feather cropped head in Melbourne, with new groups of Sharpie dressed men appearing in Perth and Sydney shortly after.
Lobby Loyde & The Coloured Balls became the mascot band of the Sharpie scene. Hammering out rough 'n' ready rockers built around stripped down riffing and bovver boy beats (not unlike Dr Feelgood's industrial rhythm and blues). The band's signature sound: close mic'd, hand-sanded attack is a template still replicated by ongoing generations of Australian and New Zealand guitar bands: Radio Birdman, Jet, The Datsuns, The D4 and The Powder Monkeys. Although for today's post I'm picking one of Lobby's poppier tunes from the album *gulps* 'Ball Power' .
The Sharpie sound is the thread connecting The Easybeats R 'n' B buzz and AC/DC's earliest stompers.
Lobby Loyde and the Coloured Balls - Love Me Girl
The Easybeats - Sorry
And while we're upside down how about some Kiwi pysch-pop
Human Instinct - Rich Man
The soundtrack to this clip is more typical of Lobby's mulleted mod-rock.
For more Sharpie history click on the pic ..
For a When Sharpie's Attack mix click here
Labels:
60s,
70s,
mod,
mondo international,
psychedelia
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Dear Diary - May
Chop, chop,chop. Phooey! There, there, there - ring any bells?
In other news - A lost PE bag on the 4th, while Sycos (8th) was our scheme for a Warriors inspired gang (and weren't those Baseball Furies terrifying?). An idea that ran out of puff after buying a Warriors poster magazine.
Beach by bike (13th) - was an icy highlight. Being a glorious, glowing summery Sunday, a mate (birthday on Feb 18th) and I jumped from a seafront jetty into a chilling, winter-temperature Thames. A short, sharp shock topped off with slow-onset cramp as we swam back to shore.
And it's My First Buys for lifelong favourites Bowie and The Damned (although I always wanted the Vanian edition cover really). As well as a vinyl rip, I'm also pitching in two Love Song rarities. The bass-intro free, demo versh and an unreleased alt.mix by Southender Ed Hollis - brother of Mark (Talk Talk) Hollis.
The Damned - Love Song
The Damned - Love Song (demo)
The Damned - Love Song (Ed Hollis Version)
The Skids - TV Stars
Don't cha think the Boys Keep guitar solo sounds a bit like this..
PS - Did you know Annie Nightingale was the micro-catalyst that brought down The Beatle's Apple empire - read how here.
Labels:
70s,
bowie,
dear diary,
outtakes and altakes,
Punk,
retromania,
singles,
southenders,
The Damned,
vinyl
Friday, May 14, 2010
Vunky Vendredi - French Lessons
It's a tricolore of treats for this week's Funky Friday, and almost a cyber-style student exchange, wherein Anglo-pop gets the Français translation treatment and a cult Kids TV star (from La Maison de Tu Tu) goes undubbed and au naturel .
You may not recognise the titles - but you'll know the tunes pop pickers..
Johnny Hallyday - Noir c'est noir
Eileen - Ces Bottes Sont Faites Pour Marcher
Marie Laforêt - D'Etre A Vous
Behold - Hector's actual speaking voice
Labels:
60s,
Cover Versions,
Funky Friday,
mondo international,
retromania,
tv,
Yé-yé
Thursday, May 13, 2010
A Day Trip to Wonderland
I couldn't let Sir Stevie's 60th birthday go unblogged, so in keeping with this month's theme of a worldwide eye (and ear) we have..
Stevie Wonder himself re-rendering one of his 60s hits in Italian!!
Solo Te, Solo Me, Solo Noi
An as yet unreleased and untitled rarity, which I believe, this vid (filmed in Brazil) captures the only recorded appearance of.
Finally, a two-way team up on The Real Thing. A Wonder tune performed by Sergio Mendes with Stevie on keys..
Sergio Mendes And The New Brazil 77 - The Real Thing
Stevie Wonder himself re-rendering one of his 60s hits in Italian!!
Solo Te, Solo Me, Solo Noi
An as yet unreleased and untitled rarity, which I believe, this vid (filmed in Brazil) captures the only recorded appearance of.
Finally, a two-way team up on The Real Thing. A Wonder tune performed by Sergio Mendes with Stevie on keys..
Sergio Mendes And The New Brazil 77 - The Real Thing
Labels:
60s,
70s,
Funk,
latin,
mondo international,
motown,
outtakes and altakes,
Soul
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Musique de Bibliothèque
Un grand merci is due to Will from the wonderful World of Kane for pitching this sprightly slice of French library music onto my wavelength. Two minutes of high-kicking, fast-fizzing riffing, perfect for some sort of explosive show-opener coreographed for that lot atop the page - or someone who lives in a house like this..
Jack Arel and Pierre Dutour - Following You
Jack Arel is one of France's most prolific library composers, with pieces occasionally making UK TV screens soundtracking The Sweeney and The Prisoner. On the 27th of this month, a double CD set of Arel originals and remixes finally ships to these shores, having been released in France last year - you can test de goût a few and read his full history at the Jack Arel Myspace site
For more sons français, you really must get your mitts on Blow Up's Exclusive Blend Volume 3. A rue-rocking comp of hits, highlights and secoueur de jambe trawled from the vaults of France's Telemusic library, that includes this free-wheeling pépite from Bernard Estardy.
Bernard Estardy - Road Number 9
Labels:
60s,
70s,
blow up,
easy listening,
Funk,
keyboard kings,
mondo international,
retromania,
soundtrack,
Yé-yé tv
Friday, May 7, 2010
Funky Friday - International Grill
I'm afraid I can't stretch to the belt-busting treat of a Wimpy International Grill (you've got love 'em for still hanging on in there with the 'Wimpy Bender' haven't you), but can serve you up a platter of refried favourites and vintage hits spiced with an international twist
From Bolivia...
Grupo 606 - Rompe,cruza O Ayúdame (Break On Through)
From Singapore
Sakura and The Quests - Stupid Cupid
And two tunes suggested by Sour Crout from The Word blogs, via a thread offering the original French lanuage version of Denis (Sylvie), Elbow reworked by The Big Ghana Band and Benny translating Ca Plane Pour Moi into Bin Wieder Frei (although I've a spark of an idea for a future Benny blog-bit)
From Mexico
Los Matematicos - Me Atrapaste (You Really Got Me)
From the Czech Republic
Kubišová Marta - Cervánky (It's Not Unusual)
Another from The Word blogs,where David Rothon uncovered this nugget 'Czech it out'
Now then, Brown Derby desert anyone?
From Bolivia...
Grupo 606 - Rompe,cruza O Ayúdame (Break On Through)
From Singapore
Sakura and The Quests - Stupid Cupid
And two tunes suggested by Sour Crout from The Word blogs, via a thread offering the original French lanuage version of Denis (Sylvie), Elbow reworked by The Big Ghana Band and Benny translating Ca Plane Pour Moi into Bin Wieder Frei (although I've a spark of an idea for a future Benny blog-bit)
From Mexico
Los Matematicos - Me Atrapaste (You Really Got Me)
From the Czech Republic
Kubišová Marta - Cervánky (It's Not Unusual)
Another from The Word blogs,where David Rothon uncovered this nugget 'Czech it out'
Now then, Brown Derby desert anyone?
Labels:
60s,
Cover Versions,
Funky Friday,
mondo bizzaro,
mondo international,
Soul
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Latin Quarter
As an antidote to the shoulder-slumping parade of puppets, poppets and gumps that is the Eurovision Song Contest, May is World Music Month on the PM blog. We start off on the road to Brazil with probably one of the finest tunes ever logged in my cyberspace scrapbook - Não Aguento Você
It may sound like a song reformed from Set Me Free and Sha-na-na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye - but bounces and breezes with the sort of tropical waft that the Brazilians do so well.
See also Menino
Trio Esperança - Não Aguento Você
Labels:
70s,
Brazil,
Funk,
latin,
mondo international,
perfect pop,
Pop Goes The Summer,
Soul,
Summer sounds
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