SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #406: ALISON EALES

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Alison Eales has featured a few times on the blog over the past year, but she’s never been part of this series.

This is another one entry where the musician qualifies under the residency rules.  Alison is from north-east England, but she has lived, studied and worked for decades in Glasgow.

A quick reminder that she’s long been more than just the keyboard player with Butcher Boy, having been immersed in music her entire life, to the extent that she achieved a PhD a few years back, with her thesis offering a critical history of the Glasgow Jazz Festival from its inception in 1987 through to 2015. She sings with the Glasgow Madrigirls, a 40-strong choir closely associated with Glasgow University and whose work has featured on a number of film and television soundtracks. And of course, over the past 18 months, has released an album and an EP via the London-based label, Fika Recordings.

mp3: Alison Eales – Rain Song

One of the four tracks to be found on Four For A Boy, the EP which was released back in March.  Click here to make a physical purchase (with added bookmark and badge) direct from Alison.

Or if digital is more your thing….click here.

JC

ONE SONG ON THE HARD DRIVE (10)

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Tribute albums can often be hit-and-miss affairs.  I’d love to be able to bring you my thoughts on Right Here – A Go-Betweens Tribute, released back in 1996 on the Australian label, Hippy Knight Records, but as I only have one track from it, picked up from some other blog or website at some point in history, I’m unable to do so.

The track I do have is from a duo called Sunglass.  Info is quite sparse, and here’s what I’ve gleaned from wiki:-

Sea Stories were an Indie pop / folk rock band from Melbourne, Australia. They existed from 1986 until their break-up in 1993. They released 2 full length albums and a number of EPs and singles. Two of their members, Simon Honisett and Penny Hewson, re-emerged in 1994 as acoustic duo Sunglass.

An eponymous album was issued in April 1994, followed by the EP When Stars Collide in June, and then just over a year later in July 1995, there was the single How Long Can You Stay Angry?.

Hewson released her debut solo album Me in 1998 on her own label Wasabi Records before relocating to Los Angeles where she played in a short-lived band called My Zuko. After living there for a decade, Hewson returned to Melbourne and released her second solo album It’s an Endless Desire on Popboomerang Records in August 2012″

So what about the song I downloaded such a long time ago?

mp3: Sunglass – Bye Bye Pride

It’s upbeat Aussie pop as re-imagined by a Velvet Underground tribute band……and I quite like it, mainly as it’s such a different take on the original. Feel free to disagree.

My thanks to whoever it was that once posted this elsewhere.  I’m annoyed I never took note of things at the time.

JC

THE EVOLUTION OF SOUND

A guest posting by Fraser Pettigrew

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For me, one of the most wonderful things about vinyl records is that they constitute a current technology that in essence hasn’t changed in nearly 150 years. Apart from the migration from a wax cylinder onto a flat disc and advances in electronic amplification, the reproduction of sound by means of a needle transmitting vibrations from the physical rotation of an etched groove is the same technology that Thomas Edison patented in 1877. That’s pretty remarkable when you consider how radical our technological evolution has been in most other respects over the same period.

I had never really thought much about the development of different record formats until relatively recently when I spent a year and a half working at New Zealand’s film, TV and radio archive. Ngā Taonga Sound & Vision doesn’t really cover music records in its collection, but I was interested to discover that the origins of the 33 1/3 rpm vinyl LP – as distinct from the 78 rpm disc – actually lie in the development of sound in the movies, and in radio, not in the music industry.

But first, some early history.

It was about ten years after Edison’s patent that the lateral disc first emerged, and a few more years until the end of the century before it evolved as a viable commercial sound format. The 78 rpm disc did not become standard until around the start of WW1 – early discs varied in diameter and rotation speed, from 7 to 12 ½ inches and from 60 to 130 rpm. The Gramophone Company settled on 78 rpm in 1912 simply because it was the average speed of most of the records it had been releasing up to then. It wasn’t until the mid-1920s that 78 rpm became the industry standard.

Even then, electrically powered gramophone players would vary according to the rating of the local power supply. So, in a city with a 50hz AC supply your 78rpm disc would play slower than in a city with a 60hz supply. If you were still using a hand-cranked spring driven gramophone you were at the mercy of all sorts of mechanical malfunction.

Electricity didn’t play a part in the recording process until the mid-1920s. Louis Armstrong’s second wife famously recalled a recording session in 1923 where the young Armstrong and band leader King Oliver played side by side into the large horn that acoustically channelled the sound to the lathe cutting the master disc. King Oliver couldn’t be heard at all in the resultant recording, so Satchmo was made to stand about fifteen feet away for the next take.

mp3: King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band – Dippermouth Blues (1923)

When electricity began to play a part in both recording and amplifying the contents of discs, it was the film industry that took the technology and initiated a development that was the first step towards the vinyl LP that we know and love.

Films had long been accompanied by live musicians, sometimes a single pianist or organist, but also whole ensembles. Filmmakers began commissioning arrangers and composers to create suites of music, scored to complement the action on screen, including sound effects. Clever-clogs Charlie Chaplin composed his own musical accompaniments. Where musicians were too difficult or costly to provide at screenings, the obvious alternative was recorded discs, but the 78rpm disc has one significant drawback here – each 10-inch side can hold barely three minutes of music. The sound man would need to do more flipping than a McDonald’s burger chef.

mp3: Charlie Chaplin (composer) – Afternoon (from ‘City Lights, 1931)

Some short films had used synchronised 78rpm discs to provide sound as early as 1902, but it wasn’t until the development of the Vitaphone system in 1926 that the technique matured to provide sound for full-length features. Vitaphone used 16-inch discs that ran at the slower speed of 331/3 rpm, enabling the sound man to relax and enjoy a fag or two between side changes. Vitaphone was used for numerous films up until 1931, by which time the use of optical soundtrack technology had been perfected.

This proto-talkie history helps to explain how the art of sound mixing and soundtrack direction seemed to emerge almost fully-formed in the earliest years of sound cinema. The way, for example, that Hitchcock was able to use sound in ‘Blackmail’, a film that began production as a silent feature, seems miraculously advanced, but then you can see how filmmakers had been thinking about, if not actually using sound for several years already.

Despite its obvious advantages, it’s strange that the 33 1/3 rpm disc did not immediately find favour in the music industry even as it fell out of favour in the cinema. It continued in use for radio transcription, still often using 16-inch discs, right through until after WW2 when magnetic tape began to displace the large and fragile lacquer discs. Meanwhile the 78 still reigned in the world of music, and was still in use at the beginning of the rock’n’roll era. Early Elvis Presley and Bill Haley 78s will fetch a pretty sum these days.

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mp3: Elvis Presley – Heartbreak Hotel (78rpm)

In part, the slow advent of the vinyl 33 can be attributed to the simple barrier of having to replace one universal standard format with another. The 78 rpm gramophone players to be found in consumers’ homes couldn’t play any other sort of record. It’s akin to the change from vinyl to CD that occurred in the late 1980s and 1990s. To play the new format disc you needed to buy an entirely new hi-fi component.

This explains why most of the first CD releases were classical rather than pop. Classical enthusiasts tended to belong to a wealthier stratum of society who were in a position to invest in the new technology. A large chunk of my own classical vinyl collection was picked up for buttons in the late 1980s at Edinburgh’s Record Shak boutique on Clerk Street, where some well-heeled collector had deposited all his unwanted records after replacing the whole lot at a stroke with new CDs!

Throughout the 1930s and 40s the development of the 33 crept forwards in relative obscurity. As mentioned, radio continued to make recordings for broadcast (or from broadcasts) onto the long-playing format, on 10, 12, 14 or 16-inch discs. These were mostly on incredibly fragile ‘acetate’ discs – aluminium platters covered in a lacquer onto which the sound lathe could cut directly, prone to cracking with age or if temperature changes caused the metal base to expand and contract.

Typically these discs were one-off recordings and did not need to be reproduced, but increasingly they would be pressed in multiple copies so that they could be sent to numerous radio stations simultaneously. Advertisers for radio exploited this possibility too. Polyvinyl chloride (‘vinyl’) as a medium for reproducing these discs was developed and proliferated during the late 1930s and 40s owing to its ability to be transported and even posted without risking breakage like acetates or heavy, brittle shellac.

RCA Victor had attempted to launch vinyl 33s as early as 1931. Their timing was off, however. The Great Depression ensured that there were not enough buyers prepared to invest in new equipment for many years. It wasn’t until after the war that the record companies came back to the idea for another try. This time the conditions were right as the legacy of the New Deal and post-war recovery put money in ordinary people’s pockets.

Interestingly, Columbia’s first 12-inch 33 1/3 RPM ‘long-players’ released in 1948 were classical, perhaps prefiguring the same economic dynamic of the CD era. The following year, RCA Victor re-entered the vinyl market with the first 45 RPM 7-inch discs, in seven different colours of vinyl according to music genre! Green (country), yellow (children’s), red (classical), orange (R&B and gospel), blue vinyl/blue label (semi-classical instrumental) and blue vinyl/black label (international).

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mp3: Eddy Arnold – Texakarna  Baby (RCA Victor Green Vinyl & Label, 1949)

At first the 33 and the 45 were seen by the two companies as competing formats, but within two years each had also adopted the other’s innovation, and the familiar ‘single’ and ‘LP’ distinction quickly formed across the whole industry.

That then, in a very large nutshell, is the story of the vinyl record. Before I finish, here’s a couple of further random bits of record info:

It might be thought that the music album is a commodity born from the emergence of the 33 1/3 long-player in the 1950s. However, the first so-called ‘albums’ of music date back to the first decade of the 20th century. While a single 78 only held three or four minutes of sound per side, longer pieces of music (such as classical compositions) were recorded onto several discs and then packaged together into a book-like format, where the pages were the individual record sleeves. Because of their resemblance to large format photographic albums, already common to many families, the name was borrowed for the collection of discs. The first such music albums were classical collections (funnily enough) produced in 1908 and 1909. You could soon buy empty albums in which to store your own collection of 78s, rather like those portable CD cases you can possibly still get. When the 33 1/3 LP format became established with the ability to hold a dozen or more songs on one disc it became the natural inheritor of the ‘album’ label.

Finally, there is another iconic technology invented at almost the same time as Edison’s phonograph that has similarly survived almost unchanged into the current era – the bicycle. Aside from the advancement in materials and adaptations for different terrain, the bike that Bradley Wiggins toured France on or Danny MacAskill rides down mountains is in its fundamentals identical to the ‘safety bicycle’ of the late 1870s that quickly consigned the penny farthing to history.

All of which must make my vinyl copy of Kraftwerk’s Tour de France Soundtracks the ultimate retro-modernist artefact, most especially when it’s played on this: https://peewee.com/2015/10/16/tgif-a-bicycle-that-plays-vinyl-records-on-its-wheels/

mp3: Kraftwerk – Tour de France

Fraser

THE 12″ LUCKY DIP (10): Associates – Poperetta EP

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I’ve a dozen or so Associates singles on 12″ as well as a handful released by Billy Mackenzie under his own name.   There’s only one that I really don’t enjoy listening to and when any of its four tracks happen to come up on the i-pod or i-phone, then the FF button is reached for as quickly as possible.

It’s all down to the tracks being remixes of songs whose original versions I’m very fond of. They can be found on the Poperetta EP, released in 1990 on EastWest Records as part of the promotional activities around Popera,  a then newly compiled singles collection (10 on vinyl, 17 on CD).

The EP took two songs and handed them to Thomas Fehlmann and Marathon, two German-based producers whose expertise centred around creating music and sounds for the club scene in which they were heavily involved.  I can sort of get the thinking behind the idea of trying to expand the market/audience for Associates.  But it doesn’t seem to me that it worked.

Now it might well be that, given I’m not easily disposed to music which is made purely for the club scene, I’m not the best person to judge their takes on the songs.  It does feel, however, that the remixes have sucked out all that made the originals feel special/unique (especially Club Country) and replaced them with sounds that could be attributed to almost any act making a particular kind of dance music in 1990.

mp3: Associates – Waiting For The Loveboat (extended voyage)
mp3: Associates – Club Country Club
mp3: Associates – Club Country Club (time unlimited)
mp3: Associates – Waiting For The Loveboat (slight return)

Feel free to disagree.

JC

AN IMAGINARY COMPILATION ALBUM : #367: THE STOOL PIGEONS

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This one has been inspired by an event that took place back in June 2015, one that I wrote about at some length at the time.

To summarise.

The premiere of the documentary film, Big Gold Dream, took place in Edinburgh.  The film tells the story of the post-punk scene in Scotland, with a particular focus on what happened in Edinburgh with the formation of the label Fast Product, and onwards to Postcard Records and the Glasgow story. It was a hot ticket, one that I hadn’t thought I’d land, but Jacques the Kipper came up trumps, and the two of us headed along.

The film was every bit as good as hoped for, and was the screening was followed by a Q&A session featuring Jo Callis (Rezillos and Human League), Ken McCluskey (Bluebells) , Malcolm Ross (Josef K, Orange Juice and Aztec Camera) and Vic Godard (Subway Sect) who, despite being a Londoner, has always spoken highly of how things developed in Scotland, and who to this day is close friends with many who were part of the scene.

The Q&A was followed by a truly special and unique event, namely a gig by The Stool Pigeons, a band put together for the occasion and comprising the afore-mentioned Messrs Goddard and Ross together with Russell Burn (Fire Engines and Win) on drums, all under the direction of Mick Slaven and Douglas Macintyre, two musicians who have long been at the heart of decent indie music in Scotland for decades.

The band, named after a Subway Sect song, played ten songs, all of which were relevant to the era covered by the film or were seen as being a huge influence.  I thought the set list, in the order it was played, would make for a very fine ICA.

1. Holiday Hymn – Orange Juice

This is a Vic Godard composition, dating from 1981.  Subway Sect had played it live, but never released it.  Edwyn Collins thought it would make for a perfect Orange Juice song, and so having recorded it one night direct from the mixing desk, he and his bandmates set about learning it.   The first time anyone heard would have ever hear it, was when it was part of a John Peel session, broadcast in August 1981.  Eleven years later, a studio version was belatedly released on Ostrich Churchyard which was the Orange Juice album intended for release on Postcard Records but shelved when the band signed to Polydor.

Vic Godard finally got round to recording it in 1985, as part of his swing album In T.R.O.U.B.L.E. Again.  Oh, and the The Chesterf!elds also did a cover of it, with it appearing on their 1987 debut album, Kettle.

2. Falling and Laughing – Orange Juice

The first ever single to be released on Postcard Records.  Nothing else need to be said.

3. Stool Pigeon – Vic Godard & Subway Sect
4. Ambition -Subway Sect

Two tracks from Vic’s own releases.

The latter was their second single, released on Rough Trade in 1978.   The documentary film highlights the White Riot Tour of 1977 as playing a huge part in the formation of the post-punk scene in Scotland, especially the gig at the Edinburgh Playhouse on 7 May.  The Clash The show was opened up by The Slits, who were followed on stage by Subway Sect, then Buzzcocks and finally The Clash as headliners.  By all accounts, the Slits and Subway Sect mingled freely with the crowd, many of whom would later form their ow bands and/or set up labels, and the friendships formed that day remain in place almost 50 years on.

It was the 1977 version of Subway Sect who played on Ambition, but manager Bernie Rhodes then sacked everyone, with the exception of Vic Godard.  It took two years for things to get back to some sort of normality, and the new line-up took the name of Vic Godard & The Subway Sect, recording the debut album What’s The Matter Boy? in 1980.  Stool Pigeon is taken from that record.

5. It’s Kinda Funny -Josef K

One of the first post-punk bands to emerge out of Edinburgh, the debut double-A side single Chance Meeting/Romance was issued on Absolute Records, a label newly formed by Orange Juice drummer, Steven Daly.   One thing led to another, and Josef K ended up being the second band to sign to Postcard Records.   This was their second single for the label, released at the end of 1980.

6. Be My Wife – David Bowie

Low was Bowie‘s first album of 1977, and is widely regarded as one of the biggest influences in the development of a post-punk movement.  It can be no real surprise that Stool Pigeons aired their take on one of the album’s high points.

7. Nobody’s Scared -Subway Sect

The debut single from 1977, the only piece of vinyl ever released on Braik Records, a label founded by the afore-mentioned Bernie Rhodes.

8. Born To Lose -The Heartbreakers

Another one that was included to acknowledge the influences on the development of post-punk, with a nod to what had been happening States-side.  I’ll hold my hands up and say that I never quite understood what all the fuss was about Johnny Thunder and his cohorts.

9. Candyskin – Fire Engines

Davey Henderson of Fire Engines was one of the stars of the documentary, thanks to his many funny and larger than life anecdotes. Candyskin is just one of those songs adored by everyone in Scotland who is of an age is a fan of the post-punk music.  I believe it’s also increasingly appreciated and acknowledged as an influence by the newer generations of musicians.

Fay Fife, from the Rezillos, joined the band for the second half of Candyskin and also was part of the final song of the night.

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10. Sweet Jane – The Velvet Underground

The unwritten rule of post-punk music in Scotland.   Tribute must always be paid to The Velvet Underground.  And it was the perfect ending to a night that I’ll never forget.

JC

PS………

Grant McPhee, the director of Big Gold Dream, filmed the gig, and many years later added it to his rather splendid YouTube channel.

Myself and Jacques the Kipper can occasionally be spotted in the audience for the eagle-eyed among you.

THE 7″ LUCKY DIP (17) : Psychedelic Furs – Sister Europe

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This one is a bit crackly, but hopefully it won’t distract too much from your enjoyment.

Sister Europe dates back to February 1980.  It was the second 45 to be released by The Psychedelic Furs, and it came out just a few weeks in advance of the eponymous debut album.  As it turned out, the 45 was an edited take on the version that would appear on the album, coming in almost a full minute-and-a-half shorter.

It’s a strange, eerie number – a contemporary review in the UK music paper Record Mirror highlights that it was a hard one to think of as haviing any sort of crossover commerial appeal:-

“Unpromising start is saved by some “Man Who Sold The World” vocals. In fact, the vocals are the only interesting bit of this, which sets a heavy atmosphere that I find really listenable.”

Pretty In Pink, it most certainly is not.

mp3: The Psychedelic Furs – Sister Europe

The story goes that singer Richard Butler was having difficulties getting it just right, which led to producer Steve Lillywhite telling him to go to the pub and have a couple of beers, after which Butler should come back to the sing it it’s three in the morning, and he was talking on the telephone to someone. It certainly seems to have done the trick.

I didn’t buy this at the time – I’d get to know the song when a friend put the debut album on one side of a C90 cassette for me.  In due course, I’d end buying the album a few years later. Parts of the song remind very much of Secondhand Daylight-era Magazine.

I found the single a few years back in a second-hand shop and from recollection paid £1 for it.  It sounds like the original owner had little regard for keeping his vinyl in good nick.

Here’s the strangely named b-side:-

mp3: The Psychedelic Furs – ****

An Instrumental that’s every bit as strange as the title, the fact there’s very little cracking/popping/hissing on it makes me think the original owner probably played it once and thought ‘never again’.

JC

CLOSE-UP : THE CINERAMA SINGLES (Part 4)

A GUEST SERIES by STRANGEWAYS

Close Up: The Cinerama Singles #4 :  Disco Volante singles (1)

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September 2000 would see the release of second Cinerama LP Disco Volante (yet another Bond reference, this time named for the luxurious yacht used by the villain Emilio Largo in the 1965 film Thunderball).

Two singles warmed us up for the new LP – we’ll cover those in this post – and a further two went out post-release. It was an unusually high number, but one that would provide space for some high-quality B-sides.

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mp3: Cinerama – Wow

Wow indeed. An absolute must-listen, Wow hit the racks in June 2000. Theme-wise we were on hardly new ground here, but musically this was ferocious and graced by a really robust sing-along chorus. Wow was possibly the first Cinerama-song-that-could-have-passed-as-a-Wedding-Present-song. It also featured the greatest use of flute in a pop tune since My Bloody Valentine stuck one on When You Sleep.

Not to be deliberately a nuisance, but it’s well worth noting that an extended mix of Wow is found on Disco Volante. Thanks to a thrilling must-hear instrumental coda, it’s almost three minutes longer than this single cut and in my view is the finer of the two tracks.

B-sides here contributed to a terrific single release. Whereas for me Wow leaned towards The Wedding Present, 10 Denier went the other way and possibly perfected the Cinerama sound. Piano-led and elevated by harmonies and strings a-go-go, was 10 Denier the greatest Eurovision song there never was?

mp3: Cinerama – 10 Denier

Gigolo, the final track on the Wow single, was a harder counterpoint. Fragmented and angular, it was closer in tone to the material that would present itself a couple of years later on Cinerama’s next LP.

mp3: Cinerama – Gigolo

Wow also marks the point at which bass guitarist Terry de Castro would join Cinerama. Formerly of the Nude Records band Goya Dress, de Castro is well worth a mention as she would become a long-time creative collaborator, make the switch to guitar, and contribute backing vocals (and one lead) across -spoiler alert – subsequent Wedding Present output.

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From Wikipedia:

Luigia “Gina” Lollobrigida (4 July 1927 – 16 January 2023), known professionally as Gina Lollobrigida, was an Italian actress and photojournalist. She was one of the highest-profile European actresses of the 1950s and early 1960s, a period in which she was an international sex symbol.

If we count the admittedly different version of Wow as a Disco Volante single, the second track taken from the LP would be Lollobrigida. It emerged in late August 2000, just a few weeks prior to the album’s release. Like all eleven Disco Volante tracks, Lollobrigida was recorded by Steve Albini, the producer and sound engineer hardly noted for the gauzy, accordion and keyboard-accented confections that characterise this song.

mp3: Cinerama – Lollobrigida

Beginning with a trademark intake of breath, this is one of Cinerama’s most delicate compositions. Sleeve-wise, Lollobrigida was wrapped in a rosy, harshly cropped image of the eponymous actress. A version, sung in French, featured on a Peel session broadcast on 17 September 2000, just a day prior to the release of Disco Volante.

mp3: Cinerama – Lollobrigida (French Version – Peel Session)

B-sides? See Thru is another of Gedge’s quietly bawdy Cinerama titles (see also 10 Denier, Unzip, Quick, Before It Melts, Tie Me Up and Sparkle Lipstick). It’s antsy, restless and concerned with the perennial topic of deception. Here the offender does his best to make lemonade with lemons by asserting that You say I never tell the truth, at least you know when I am lying. It’s an admirable comeback, but one unlikely to prevail.

mp3: Cinerama – See Thru

On the Second flip, Sly Curl is a finer fit to its A-side. Here the pace drops, a dependable pop trope – ‘why do you have to go out with him/her when you could go out with me?’ – is expressed before the late comedian, actor, writer and Weddoes nut Sean Hughes’ affectingly delivered spoken words close a gentle, very Cinerama number.

mp3: Cinerama – Sly Curl

It’s tracks like Sly Curl, and several on Disco Volante (the chorus-monster Heels, plus Après Ski and Let’s Pretend) that make me think this was the point at which Cinerama perfected its sound and hit the sweet spot: far enough from The Wedding Present, familiar enough to connect. Hey, it’s just my take on it, but it strikes me that this was a band with, broadly speaking, three distinct eras, each one defined by its LP and by extension those records’ associated singles and B-sides.

Purely for trivia: it’s been edited out, but once upon a time Wikipedia’s Gina Lollobrigida entry, under the In popular culture section, referenced a group that’s been featured right here on the (New) Vinyl Villain. Here’s what Wikipedia noted: English rock band Cardiacs included a song titled “Gina Lollobrigida” on their 1984 album The Seaside.

With customary thanks for making it this far, our next post will focus on the remaining two singles of Cinerama’s Disco Volante era.

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SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #405: ALEX FERGUSSON

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From the booklet accompanying the Big Gold Dream box set (Cherry Red Records 2019)

“If Glasgow auteur Alex Fergusson‘s snappy piece of dancefloor synth-pop sounds like it was paving the way for Depeche Mode and Co., bear in mind that producer Larry Least was actually Daniel Miller, aka, The Normal and founder of Mute Records.

Fergusson had played with Sounds journalist Sandy Robertson as The Nobodies before forming Alternative TV with Sniffin’ Glue fanzine writer Mark Perry. As a producer, Fergusson also worked with Postcard-era Orange Juice and The Go-Betweens. He then joined Cash Pussies, the conceptual brainchild of journo provocateurs Fred and Judy Vormel, who released the Sid Vicious-sampling ‘99% Is Shit’.

For five years, he played with Genesis P. Orridge‘s cult collective, Psychic TV. Since his departure. Fergusson has released several albums, including 2001’s The Essence, which featured a guest vocal from former Strawberry Switchblade co-vocalist Rose McDowall.”

mp3: Alex Fergusson – Stay With Me Tonight

This single was released in November 1980 on the London based Red Records, a label in existence between 1978 and 1982.

JC

THE CD SINGLE LUCKY DIP (8) : Snow Patrol – Velocity Girl/Absolute Gravity

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The origins of Snow Patrol date back to 1994 when Gary Lightbody (vocals and guitar), Mark McLelland (bass) and Michael Morrison (drums), three students from Northern Ireland who were studying at the University of Dundee, formed a band whom they named Shrug.  By 1996, the name had changed to Polarbear, and they had signed to Electric Honey Records, the in-house label at Stow College, Glasgow. It was around this time that Michael Morrison suffered a breakdown, quit the band and returned home.  The debut EP for Electric Honey, entitled  Starfighter Pilot, saw Richard Colburn of Belle & Sebastian lend a hand on drums, while lead singer Stuart Murdoch played keyboards and added some vocals.

Another name change came in 1997 – this time to Snow Patrol – and an offer was accepted to sign up with Jeepster Records (the label that a year previously had signed Belle & Sebastian via the Electric Honey route).  By this time, Jonny Quinn, another drummer from Northern Ireland, had joined.   There would be a number of releases in 1998, beginning with two singles Little Hide (February 1998) and One Hundred Things You Should Have Done In Bed (May 1998), with debut album Songs For Polarbears hitting the shops on 31 August.

None of the releases sold in any great numbers.  I was aware of the band’s name but knew nothing of their actual music.  It would have been later in the same year that I picked up second-hand CD copies of some of their releases, including what turned out to be a third single from the debut LP:-

mp3 : Snow Patrol – Velocity Girl (Sell Out edit)
mp3 : Snow Patrol – Absolute Gravity
mp3 : Snow Patrol – When You’re Right, You’re Right (Darth Vadar Bringing In His Washing Mix)

The first two songs can be found on the debut album, albeit this version of Velocity Girl (NOT a cover of the Primal Scream song) is slightly shorter.

These songs sound nothing at all like the material with which Snow Patrol would hit payola between 2004 and 2006 with the albums Final Straw and Eyes Open, along with the numerous hit singles they spawned.  The first few notes of Velocity Girl, and indeed the way Gary Lightbody delivers his vocal, is very reminiscent of Pavement, while Absolute Gravity has the sort of turntable action associated with Beck.  The additional track on the CD is a strange, improvised sounding number.

Very few people were interested in Jeepster-era Snow Patrol. Plenty of material ended up in bargain bins and even today, it can all be picked up for very modest sums on the likes of Discogs.

JC

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN SINGLES : #057

aka The Vinyl Villain incorporating Sexy Loser

#057: The Marabar Caves– ‘Seeds That Never Grew’ (Tiki Records ’84)

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The Marabar Caves are fictional caves which appear in E. M. Forster‘s 1924 novel ‘A Passage to India’ and the film of the same name. The caves are based on the real life Barabar Caves, as pictured above, especially the Lomas Rishi Cave, located in the Jehanabad District of Bihar, India which Forster visited during a trip to India.

The caves serve as an important plot location and motif in the story. Key features of the caves are the glass-smooth walls and a peculiar resonant echo, amplifying any sound made in the caves. The echo makes the sound “ou-boum” and that sound haunts the characters afterwards. Forster chose the caves to set a turning point in the novel, not just for the character Adela, but also for Mrs Moore, Cyril Fielding and Dr. Aziz: the caves mark a turning point in the novel and their lives. The caves are significant because they mark the hollowness in the lives of the four main characters. None of them are getting what they want and are trying to find a balance in life amid expanding chaos.

But, as so often, you knew that all along, didn’t you? What you did not know though is that, as ace and important for Indian tourism the above Marabar/Barabar Caves might possibly be, sunny Northampton has its own Marabar Caves! And you know what? If you made me choose which ones I should go and see, it wouldn’t be the Indian ones, even if you paid for the trip!

Nah, I would rather go and see one of the finest psychedelic rock bands ever to come from Northampton, only to witness their performance of what was a B-Side of a single, ‘Sally’s Place’, on Tiki records back in 1984 (that golden year):

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mp3:  The Marabar Caves – Seeds That Never Grew

Now, apparently The Marabar Caves are still going strong these days … new records, touring: just as you do some 42 years after your formation. I haven’t gone through all their stuff, so there might be some surprises which I haven’t found yet, but up until now nothing is nearly as good as the above, an absolute favourite of mine. If you listened closely, I bet you’ll have heard a slight “ou-boum” therein as well … just like in the bloody caves!

Hope you enjoyed it as much as me,

 

Dirk

SHAKEDOWN, 1979 (May, part two)

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So, what about those marvellous singles released in May 1979 that didn’t bother the charts.  There’s a couple of personal favourites in here….

mp3: The Cure – Boys Don’t Cry

Seven years after its initial release, this wonderful 45 got to #22 when it was reissued in support of a Greatest Hits package.  It’s not that The Cure had few fans in the UK, but they had shown they were more likely to buy the debut album, Three Imaginary Boys (#44) than they were for any singles, with this failing to chart in much the same way as the debut Killing An Arab.

mp3: Japan – Life In Tokyo

Another 45 whose time would eventually come.  The 1979 release on Hansa Records sunk without trace, a rare misfire for anything associated with Giorgio Moroder.  By 1982, Japan had become popular thanks to the album Tin Drum and its associated singles, all of which came out on Virgin Records.  Those involved over a Hansa weren’t slow to miss a trick, and three singles from the 79 era – I Second That Emotion, Life In Tokyo and European Son – together with a compilation album, Assemblage, were put into the shops, with all of them subsequently charting.

mp3: Essential Logic- Wake Up

Lara Logic had been the saxophonist with X-Ray Spex, but chose to leave the band after the debut single Oh Bondage Up Yours.  She then formed Essential Logic, for whom she also provided lead vocals.  Virgin Records signed the band and an eponymous EP was released in May 1979 to no fanfare at all.  Wake Up was the lead track. The band would move to Rough Trade before the year was out.

Talking of Rough Trade….

mp3: Stiff Little Fingers – Gotta Getaway

A great largely forgotten post-punk 45 that was later polished up and re-recorded for inclusion on the 1980 album Nobody’s Heroes by which time Stiff Little Fingers had moved to the bosom of a major label in the shape of Chrysalis.

JC

ONE SONG ON THE HARD DRIVE (9)

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This atypical effort of its time comes courtesy of its inclusion on the Scared To Get Happy: A Story Of Indie-Pop 1980-1989 box set.  Here’s the blurb from the booklet.

Founded in 1986 in Basingstoke, Hampshire by singer/guitarist Chris Stubbings, bassist Tony Duckworth and drummer Chris Morrell, The Rain contributed to the ‘Imminent 4’ compilation before funding their own single ‘Once’/’Tom Paine’ on Jive Alive. It caught the ear of Medium Cool, which led them to contribute ‘Dry The Rain’ and ‘Seven Red Apples’ to sampler LP ‘Edge of The Road’ in 1988.

Unfortunately, The Rain’s first Medium Cool single, ‘First of May’ was scotched when Red Rhino Distribution went bust. They returned in 1990 with the Byrds/R.E.M.-flavoured album ‘To The Citadel’ (“glorious, honed to cut-glass perfection” according to Melody Maker) and EP ‘The Watercress Girl.’ Having changed their name to Clark Springs, to avoid confusion with Liam Gallagher’s pre-Oasis band, they released a single ‘Taking Kent State’ (Summershine) in 1992 and ‘My World Revolves Around Her’ (Orangewood) in 1993.

mp3: The Rain – Dry The Rain

It may share the same song title as a later release from The Beta Band, but they are rather different sounding.  I’ve heard a lot worse.

JC

THE 12″ LUCKY DIP (9) : The Popguns – Landslide

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The Popguns provided one of the real live delights in 2023, with an excellent show at the  Hug and Pint in Glasgow, an evening when I was in the rather wonderful company of strangeways.

The Popguns first recording, in 1988, took the form of one side of a flexidisc that was released on La-Di-Da Productions, a DIY label that was based in Hove, just outside their home town of Brighton.  The other half of the flexidisc was courtesy of the strangely-named How Many Beans Make Five?

The actual debut single appeared the following year on the London-based Medium Cool, a label that was home to a number of excellent indie-bands of the era such as The Corn Dollies, The Raw Herbs, The Waltones and The Siddeleys.    It proved to be an excellent way to introduce yourselves to the wider world

mp3: The Popguns – Landslide

A song that was voted in at #46 in John Peel’s Festive Fifty of 1989.

Five musicians were involved in the making of the proper debut single –  Wendy Morgan (vocals), Simon Pickles (guitar), Greg Dixon (guitar), Pat Walkington (bass) and Shaun Charman (drums) – the last named being the one you should recognise as being  the original drummer with The Wedding Present prior to him leaving in 1988.  The current line-up of the Popguns is almost identical to that from the debut single, with Ken Brotherston now on drums.

Here’s the two other songs you’ll find on the 12″ of Landslide.

mp3 : The Popguns – Down On Your Knees
mp3 : The Popguns – Leave It Alone

There was also a different mix of the single offered up:-

mp3: The Popguns – Landslide (alt mix)

Their newest 45, Caesar, was one of my favourite songs of last year.  One of its b-sides, Indie Rock Goddess, has inspired the band to produce a new t-shirt, and I’m proud to say that Mrs TVV (aka Rachel) has been sporting hers at various gigs in recent months.

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If you fancy owning one of these, then here’s a link to where you can make an order.

JC

CLOSE-UP : THE CINERAMA SINGLES (Part 3)

A GUEST SERIES by STRANGEWAYS

Close Up: The Cinerama Singles #3 : The pre-Disco Volante singles

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After the singles around Cinerama’s 1998 debut LP Va Va Voom, 1999 saw just one release, the double A-sided seven-inch Pacific/King’s Cross.

Released on the mighty Spanish indie Elefant, this was pressed up on beautiful pink vinyl. Its sleeve, also in tones of pink and lilac, complemented the disc, whilst its cropped image of a woman filing her fingernails against a large pink emery board might have been one for Freudian scholars.

mp3: Cinerama – Pacific

Pacific had Cinerama further establishing a sound several fathoms from The Wedding Present. This track saw Sally Murrell taking the lead, her ultra-soft – sometimes sung, sometimes spoken – vocal was a terrific match for an equally languid musical bed of keyboard, strings and flute. In summation: Brassneck it wasn’t.

mp3: Cinerama – King’s Cross

Preferable, to me, was the flip. King’s Cross moves the dial a bit closer to David Gedge’s previous band. Here, strings are high in the mix too, but where Pacific’s lyrics are quite slight – describing in very few lines a couple’s lazy day by the eponymous ocean – at King’s Cross the setting is urban, the situation more familiar.

Here, there’s talk of phone boxes and betrayal, and of a fleeting entrance and exit summed up in the line I crashed into your life without asking, then suddenly I was gone… As comforting as that was to WP traditionalists, King’s Cross was 100% Cinerama though: carried by those shimmering strings, and ending on a last-minute harmony. I’ve always had a soft spot for this song, and it’s well recommended if you don’t know of it.

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With previous label Cooking Vinyl out of the picture, Cinerama’s records would now be self-released on the band’s newly founded own label, Scopitones, named for, and I’ll just quote from Wikipedia …a type of jukebox featuring a 16 mm film component. Scopitone films were a forerunner of music videos.

This was a move that emulated early Wedding Present days, when that band’s formative releases began going out on the Weddoes’ own Reception Records. Its Middleton – Bramley – Gateshead – Hassocks line poked fun at the dazzling geographies trumpeted by the likes of high-fashion houses and big-name publishers.

First out of the traps, and given the catalogue number TONE001, came in February 2000:-

mp3: Cinerama – Manhattan

This seemed then, and still does now, a big production with lots going on in it, including a novel spoken-word section. There, we were ostensibly listening in on a bar conversation in which a group of female friends discuss one of their latest – and most perplexing – romantic entanglements. That makes the device sound creepy, but it’s innocent enough, slots effortlessly into the song and gives Manhattan a bigger, more interesting story.  In conclusion, it was a very fine A-side with which to launch the new label.

mp3: Cinerama – Film

Flips here were Film – a speedy, organy number that cleverly likens a real-life obsession with an imagined film incessantly playing in the protagonist’s head.

mp3: Cinerama – London

London is a cover of the Smiths B-side and was a real curveball. It’s murderously slow and at just over four minutes long is almost twice the length of the original.

The song’s duration is due not only to the overall pace and delivery, but also to some odd-sounding effects/soundscapes that close the cover. By way of explanation, liner notes state that The short wave radio transmissions on “London” were recorded for The Conet Project and are included here with the kind consent of Irdial Discs.

I looked this Conet Project up and it’s quite intriguing: thought to be concerned with spies – and specifically with communicating with these agents via short wave radio stations. London’s fine – and it would of course have been a snap for David Gedge, a person intimately acquainted with a fast guitar – to go the other way and accelerate the already thrashy original.

While we’re here, this take of London appeared also on the 2011 American Laundromat Records LP Please Please Please: a Tribute to The Smiths, alongside The Wedding Present’s cover of Hand in Glove. The single’s sleeve notes speak of London’s inclusion on a tribute LP named I Know It’s Over on The First Time Records of Michigan. But I draw a blank on any further evidence of this record.

At this juncture, anyone looking to acquire the full set of singles and B-sides up to this point will find them on the This Is Cinerama compilation. The Wedding Present is one of the most anthologised bands I know of, and Cinerama would carry this on.

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Next up, the singles connected with the band’s second LP, Disco Volante. Would this be the point at which the Cinerama sound reached perfection?

Thanks, as ever, for the space, go to JC, and to those reading.

strangeways

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #404: ALBUM CLUB

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I may be wrong, but this could be the first time I’ve featured an Album Club song on the blog, but it’s not the first time the name has appeared.   21 December 2022, I highlighted my favourite 5 albums from that particular year, and then gave honourable mentions to a further 10 records, one of which was the eponymous debut from Album Club that had come out on Last Night From Glasgow.

(Oh, as I’m typing this, I’ve just remembered that one of their songs was featured on a monthly mix a while back).

Album Club – the band and the record – features the talents of MJ McCarthy (Zoey Van Goey) Paul Savage (The Delgados) Adam Scott (Starry Skies) Rhona Dougall and a whole feast of other singers and contributors including the likes of Emma Pollock, Douglas Maxwell and Peter Geoghegan.

Lewis Wade, writing for Is This Music?, offers a near-perfect summary.

Album Club are a loose collective of creatives assembled from other bands (primarily Zoey Van Goey, but also The Delgados), novelists, actors, journalists and various artsy Glasgow types. The organic, ad hoc genesis and the fact that many contributors are not musicians makes sense when listening to the album, with its lovably ramshackle style and tonal shifts.

The first couple of songs speak to the indie-pop pedigree of those involved with twee harmonies, lilting duets and even a lonely accordion line punctuating the gentle, catchy tunes. ‘Transmissions’ is where the first signs of experimentalism appear, with spoken-word vocals forming the basis of the song. It’s a jarring use of the form that feels a bit jumbled in this instance, but gets better throughout the album, culminating in the penultimate song, ‘Never Sleep Alone’, which beautifully surrounds the spoken-word story with a duetted chorus.

‘Fragile & Frail’ may as well be the motto of the group and it provides the gentlest of palette cleansers in the middle of the album, breaking up a few more eccentric (relatively) tracks, and providing a through-line from the opener to the spritely birdsong that closes the album on ‘When You’re Ready’. The fragmentary approach generally works well across the piece, though the mellow indie-folk style is never far from centre, even with the synths of Walls or twee-country woodblock of ‘Night Owls’.

‘Album Club’ is a low-key affair that feels rooted in a grounded localism, that feels as intimate as chatting to your mates at the pub, which is exactly how it started. Graciously, they’ve shared these snapshots with the world at large, and we’re all the better for it.

mp3: Album Club – The Hard Part

I should mention that The Laurieston, the pub outside which the above photo is taken and which forms the basis of the album’s cover, is one that myself and Aldo can occasionally be found in.  It’s one of the best in Glasgow.

JC

THE 7″ LUCKY DIP (16) : Tindersticks – Unwired EP

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Long and complicated post alert!!!

The story of the earliest Tindersticks singles is a fascinating one, not least for the variety of labels on which they were issued.

November 1992 saw the debut, Milky Teeth/Patchwork, a double-A sided 7″ single on their own Tippy Toe label.  There were two pressings, with each run providing 500 copies, both of which sold out very quickly.

March 1993 saw the release of Marbles, on 10″ vinyl via a joint venture between Tippy Toe and the London-based indie, ché .  Later in the year, in September 1993,  it was given an American release, this time on 7″, courtesy of the New York-based, No. 6 Records.

March 1993 was also the month when they made a contribution to the Rough Trade Singles Club, with the 7″ release of A Marriage Made In Heaven, on which Niki Sin of Huggy Bear provided a co-vocals.   I wasn’t aware until doing the bit of research for this post that Stuart Staples, the band’s singer and chief songwriter, was working in the Rough Trade shop at this point in time and that the label was keen to finance the debut album.

The band went into a London-based studio in May 1993 to record the debut album, which was going to come out on This Way Up Records, an indie-imprint label that was part of the much larger Universal stable, but before the ink had dried on the contract, a further single had been recorded for release, in June 1993, on Domino, and it’s that particular 7″ which is the subject of today’s posting.

The Unwired EP contains four tracks, one on the A-side and three on the b-side.  There was supposed to only be 1500 copies pressed up, all of which were hand-numbered with a stamp, but there are claims on Discogs of people owning numbers that are stamped higher than 1500.  My copy just comes in under the threshold at 1401.

mp3: Tindersticks – Feeling Relatively Good
mp3: Tindersticks – Rottweilers and Mace
mp3: Tindersticks – Kooks
mp3 : Tindersticks – She

Three of the songs are Tindersticks originals, with the exception being their take on Kooks, a song originally written and recorded by David Bowie for the 1971 album, Hunky Dory.  It’s a one in which Bowie tries to capture his feelings of excitement and nervousness about becoming a new dad.  I’ve said before when writing about Kooks that it might not be one of his greatest compositions in the grand scheme of things, but there’s just something very touching about the lyric that, over the year, must have put smiles on the faces of many new sets of parents.

It has to be said that the four songs on Unwired are a less polished than the songs that would appear on the debut album.

A lot less polished.  And that’s me being kind.

I’m not sure if there were plans to revisit all three of the original songs again in the studio under the guidance of producer Ian Caple and develop them further.  In the end, it was only She that was re-recorded and in its new form, it was given the title of Her.

If, for nothing else, the EP is an artefact worth having for this very early version of what quickly became one of the most popular songs recorded by Tindersticks, one that would find itself the subject of two separate takes in BBC Radio sessions a well as being part of most live shows.

Before the year was out, Tindersticks would appear on yet another label – Clawfist – with one side of a 7″ single featuring their take on We Have All The Time In The World, the Louis Armstrong song from 1969 that had featured in the James Bond film On Her Majesty’s Secret Service.   The other side of the single was taken up by Gallon Drunk, whose brass player, Terry Edwards, would make a very significant contribution to the Tindersticks debut album.

The Clawfist single came out in October 1983, a month after the single City Sickness became the first Tindersticks release for This Way Up.

By my reckoning, that was five singles across 1993, all of them on different labels.  It’s worth mentioning in passing that while future singles for the rest of the decade would be on This Way Up, or Island Records, which was another part of the Universal empire, Tindersticks somehow found a way to issue a 45, with the title of The Smooth Sound Of Tindersticks,  on the Sub Pop label in 1995.

JC

AROUND THE WORLD : DUBLIN

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The largest city in Ireland, with a population of 592,713 which more than doubles to 1.26 million when you take in the surrounding suburbs.  Sitting on the River Liffey, and bounded by mountains on its south side, the city officially celebrated its millennium in 1988, although there were earlier Viking settlements while archaeological digs have unearthed of human habitation going back 6,000 years.  Dublin has a very significant literary history, so much so that it has been named a UNESCO City of Literature.  It also has a rich musical heritage – visitors will experience live music from buskers on every busy street corner, while bands/singers such as U2, The Dubliners, Thin Lizzy, Sinéad O’Connor and Fontaines D.C (to name but five) are famed the world over. Oh, and in SPRINTS, the city is home to one of the most exciting new bands to have emerged in recent times.

Oh, and it currently has some sort of art installation/portal with New York City, which is proving to be a bit chaotic.

mp3: Prefab Sprout – Dublin

From the album Protest Songs, the intended third album that was held over to become the fourth album. It’s a bit of a complicated story, which is covered in some detail over at this wiki page.  I think it’s fair to say that Dublin isn’t up there as one of Prefab Sprout’s best or most memorable songs…..but at least it doesn’t quite plumb the depths of Galway Girl by Ed Sheeran.

JC

THE CD SINGLE LUCKY DIP (7) : Lightning Seeds – Ready or Not

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Another single that was only ever issued on CD.

1996 was a strange and life-changing year for Ian Broudie.   He had long been part of the music scene, as a member of a number of bands in his native Liverpool, as a sought-after producer and, since 1989, as a pop star in his own right thanks to The Lightning Seeds, which was the name taken to launch his solo career.

He’d enjoyed seven Top 40 singles, but nothing had done better than #13 in the charts.   He was due to release a new album, the fourth by The Lightning Seeds in early 1996, with the advance single, Ready or Not, coming out in February.

mp3: The Lightning Seeds – Ready or Not

It kind of was Lightning Seeds by numbers.  A radio-friendly pop song which had a touch of the indie about it, but very much had an appeal to a wider audience.  The fact that Ian Broudie was an old punk at heart could be seen from the fact that he chose to record cover versions on the 2xCDs which made up the release of Ready or Not.  I’m sure he would never claim that he had bettered the originals, but at least he was bringing them to the attention of a wider audience, as well as delivering some royalties to the songwriters.

mp3 : Lightning Seeds – Another Girl, Another Planet (The Only Ones)
mp3 : Lightning Seeds – Whole Wide World (Wreckless Eric)
mp3 : Lightning Seeds – Outdoor Miner (Wire)

Ready or Not reached #20, which was about the average for most Lightning Seeds singles.  In normal circumstances, a second single would be readied for April/May just a few days or weeks ahead of the next album/

The thing is, that album, (which was eventually called Dizzy Heights), didn’t see the light of day until November 1996, a full nine months after the advance single.  That’s all down to the fact that Ian Broudie’s life was turned upside-down from him being asked by the English FA to write a song to mark the England football team’s participation in that year’s UEFA European Championship, which England was hosting.

He came up with Three Lions, with the lyrics being provided by Frank Skinner and David Baddiel, who at the time were hosts of a football-related comedy programme on BBC TV.   Three Lions went on to sell 1.2 million copies, while a later re-recorded version for the 1998 World Cup sold 600,000.   It has since undergone further recordings in 2010 and 2022, so I think it wouldn’t be inaccurate to say that Ian Broudie would probably never have had to work again after 1996….but he’s still going strong, making and producing records as well as being a mainstay of the live nostalgia circuit that appears in parks and large outdoor venues across the UK every summer.

JC

THE 12″ LUCKY DIP (8): The Sisters of Mercy – This Corrosion

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One of the problems when a blog like this has been going so long is the inevitability of umpteen repeats coming along and readers beginning to feel short-changed or cheated.  It’s certainly proving to be the case with a great deal of the CD/7″/12″ singles that are coming out via the lucky dip…….

mp3: The Sisters of Mercy – This Corrosion

This Corrosion featured as recently as July 2021.  It kind of acted like a free bit of therapy for a number of readers who went on, via the comments section, to share their own memories of enjoying listening/dancing to what is, without any shadow of a doubt, one of the great goth-rock anthems of them all – I reckon it’s the greatest, but others with much more knowledge of the genre made great cases for a few other songs via a number of gothic-themed ICAs, all of which added so much to the blog in the weeks and months which followed.

There are a couple of differences between the 2021 post and the one on offer today.   It was previously part of a series in which the mp3 rips were of as high a quality as I can offer, whereas today’s link is the more usual sort of thing.  It also comes with the b-sides, described last time out in the comments section by Khayem as ‘excellent’.

mp3 : The Sisters of Mercy – Torch
mp3 : The Sisters of Mercy – Colours

The biggest difference between the A-side and these two songs on the b-side can be found in the production.   The involvement of the late Jim Steinman, best known for his work with Meat Loaf, leads to a real OTT sound on This Corrosion, not least the contributions from 40 members of the New York Choral Society.  The b-sides are self-produced by Andrew Eldritch and are far more restrained.  Indeed, Torch is almost akin to hearing a goth busker outside a train station strumming away on his acoustic guitar, backed by a cheap drum machine, hoping you’ll drop enough coins in an empty paper cup that will allow him to buy his next pint of Snakebite.

The Sisters of Mercy enjoyed ten chart singles between 1984 and 1993 – This Corrosion was one of their most successful, reaching #7 in October 1987, which means it was, rather appropriately, all over the radio stations at Halloween.

But I can’t let today go without offering up a genius cover, as far removed from the original as possible

mp3: Lambchop – This Corrosion

As made available on the bonus CD with the initial copies of the 2002 album, Is A Woman.

JC

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN SINGLES : #056

aka The Vinyl Villain incorporating Sexy Loser

#056: Malako– ‘In The Midnight Hour’ (London Records ’89)

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Hello friends,

before you all start jumping up and down in sheer joy just because you think I am for once not presenting another boring old punk song which was already outdated in the Eighties, but something more contemporary instead: calm down, because if you read the headline a bit more closely, you’ll see that it’s not Moloko, the Electronic/House/Trip Hop band of ‘Sing It Back’ and ‘The Time Is Now’ – fame, no, it’s Maloko!

But fear not – Maloko, like Moloko, are neither punk nor indie as well, so perhaps you should continue reading – you might well miss a treat if you would not, believe me.

Now, in the history of recorded music there have been quite a lot of so called “supergroups”, usually people use this term when either a) Phil Collins or b) Eric Clapton or c) the twat with the hat or d) any surviving Beatle is being involved in said group.

One supergroup though which will most surely have stayed under your radar was Les Quatre Étoiles. And this is because Soukous – that’s the music style they performed, originally from Zaire, but made more popular in Paris in the early 80s – has never received the attention it should have received. You see, people always say ‘boy, listen to this guitar, isn’t it just awesome?!’ when they talk about the aforementioned ‘supergroups’. But no-one mentions – or indeed will ever mention – the African guitar heroes of our era, one of them being Syran Mbenza, not only one of the greatest African guitarists, but one of the best worldwide.

It’s him pictured above, mainly because I couldn’t find a picture of Maloko, but also because he is the most important figure within the band, let’s be honest. Andy Kershaw certainly was not entirely wrong when he once said that “Eric Clapton isn’t fit to tune Mbenza’s guitar strings” …

Syran Mbenza was the lead guitarist in Les Quatre Étoiles in Paris together with three other Congolese expats there: Bopol Mansiami (bass + rhtythm guitar) and Wuta Mayi and Nyboma on vocals, all of the four were widely known for their solo outputs and their work in other combos. So, combined, Les Quatre Étoiles were quite successful back then (and rightly so) and consequently they were touring internationally quite a bit. And on a US tour Mbenza met Ibrahim Kanja Bah in Washington, originally Kanja Bah was from Sierra Leone. He ran an African music radio show, a record store, and a record label there in D.C. Now, Kanja Bah took the opportunity and ‘created’ Maloko in 1988. Depending on where you look, the group sometimes is being referred to “Vincent Nguini & Maloko”, because Vincent Nguini, from Cameroon, turned out to be Kanja Bah’s group leader of choice. Other members were Fredo Ndoumbe-Ngando, Komba Bellow and Dasante, to name just a few.

They issued only one album, ‘Soul On Fire’, for which they basically chose a handful of American soul classics and “soukousized” them. The outcome is unbelievable, as today’s single will surely proof:

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mp3:  Malako – In The Midnight Hour

The definitive reading of the Wilson Pickett classic, I’m sure you agree. And you know what: it’s miles better than anything Moloko ever did, plus it’s more danceable anyway …
 So enjoy,

So enjoy,

Dirk