GATHER AROUND ME, WHILE I BLOW MY OWN TRUMPET

Two weeks have passed since the bloke who yesterday brought you the Mogwai ICA launched his latest venture.

Mixtape at The Admiral, as I said at the time, is designed as a sound track in the bar with the option for some late night dancing or clubbing for people who don’t like clubs. 🎧

The playlist covers Indie, Electro, Disco, Post Rock , New Wave , House, Soul, New Romantic, Mod, Pop, Punk, C86 and anything else that sounds good.

The first night went reasonably well. A few of Robert’s friends dropped in to wish the venture well while Aldo and Micky of my mob came by later on, absolutely hammered following a long day at the Paisley Beer Festival, to add their support and make requests for songs.

All in all, it was a really enjoyable night; I’d like to think that with this set-list, the music lived up to the pre-event hype:-

Amor – Paradise
Can – One More Night
LCD Soundsystem – Call The Police
Yazoo – Don’t Go
Charlotte Gainsbourg – Dons Vos Airs
Saint Etienne – Dive
Hot Chip – Ready For The Floor
The Just Brothers – Sliced Tomatoes
Stevie Wonder – Uptight
The Avalanches – Subways
Soul to Soul – Keep On Moving
The Elgins – Heaven Must Have Sent You
Shirley Ellis – Soul Time
Cornershop – Good Shit
Pixies – Gigantic
Soft Cell – What?
The Fall – No Bulbs
Arab Strap – The Shy Retirer
Visage – Fade To Grey
Talk Talk – Today
The Divine Comedy – Something For The Weekend
King Biscuit Time -I Walk The Earth
Curtis Mayfield – Move On Up
Supremes – Stoned Love
Camellia Hartman – Return The Favour
N.F. Porter – Keep On Keeping On
Primal Scream – Revenge of the Hammond Connection
Rolling Stones – Paint It Black
Echo & the Bunnymen – Never Stop
Dan Le Sac & Scroobius Pip – Thou Shalt Always Kill
Iggy Pop – The Passenger
Ladytron – Ghosts
LCD Soundsystem – Daft Punk Is Playing At My House
Daft Punk – Get Lucky
Ce’ceil – Rude Boy Thug Life
Four Tet – As Serious As Life
TC 95 – Funky Guitar
Evelyn King – I’m In love
Xander Harris – We Smoke The Northern Lights
Mogwai – Party In The Dark
James – What’s The World
Tom Vek – I Ain’t Saying My Goodbyes
Dead Kennedys – California Uber Alles
Franz Ferdinand – Michael
The Divine Comedy – Gin Soaked Boy
The Ronettes – Be My Baby
The Velvet Underground – Rock and Roll
Pet Shop Boys – Left To My Own Devices
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Red Right Hand
Stereolab – French Disko
The Popguns – Waiting for the Winter
The Brilliant Corners – Delilah Sands
The B52s – Roam
The Divine Comedy – How Can You Leave Me On My Own?
Roxy Music – Do The Strand
Sacred Paws – Strike A Match
Super Furry Animals – Juxtaposed With U
Teenage Fanclub – Sparky’s Dream
Beastie Boys – Start!
The Specials – Friday Night Saturday Morning

Neither of us had any idea of what song would come on after the last one…we really did wing it the whole time, but the proliferation of Divine Comedy songs will indicate there was a big fan of theirs in the house (hi Lesley!!!) and we were delighted to take her requests.

For a first night, it went well enough, although I know Robert is already turning his mind as to how things can be made better next time around which is in two weeks time on Friday 25 May.

Here’s three of the tunes I aired…just to demonstrate that I’m hopefully not a one-trick pony:-

mp3 : Rolling Stones – Paint It Black
mp3 : The Ronettes – Be My Baby
mp3 : Beastie Boys – Start!

JC

AN IMAGINARY COMPILATION ALBUM : #166 : MOGWAI

A GUEST POSTING by ROBERT STRANGEWAYS

There’s a whole bundle of great ICAs in the pipeline, courtesy of guest postings.  A huge thanks to everyone for their submissions and apologies if you’ve been waiting a while to see your handiwork come to life.  I want to keep the ICAs to one per week just now, so please continue to be patient….and again my thanks.

I’ve plucked this one out as it is a very first guest contribution from someone who I’ve been very fortunate to get to know in recent years and who has, very kindly, allowed me to scratch the itch of the DJing bug by offering me the opportunity to be part of the various nights that he organises in Glasgow.  I will get round to posting up my thoughts on the first ever Mixtape from a few weeks ago, along with the incredibly eclectic setlist, but for now will bring you Robert’s thoughts on one of his all-time top bands……

For me, Mogwai have been one of those bands who get better with every release, one of those bands that you think can’t possibly build on their last release, then they do.

They have been described as many things; “Post-Rock, Math-Rock, Ambient, Rock Alternative, Shoe-Gaze” but the truth is I don’t think they can be pigeon holed. They have created their own place in music, judging by the audience size and rapturous reaction to their show in the Hydro at the end of last year it’s a good place to be.

This compilation is designed to showcase the range of sound they create and not just the loud-a-bit, quiet-a-bit, loud again some people associate then with. From their first album “Young Team” through numerous albums and sound-tracks to their most recent “Every Countries Sun” they have evolved and become something special.

Helicon 1 (from Ten Rapid, 1997)

Second single and still a live favourite, collected on the recently re-released “Ten Rapid” compilation. Originally Called “New Paths to Helicon pt1” it often gets shortened to Helicon 1.

The Sun Smells Too Loud (from The Hawk is Howling, 2008)

The Hawk is Howling was the first Mogwai album to have no lyrics on any of the songs consisting only of instrumental tracks.

Eternal Panther (Party in the Dark Single – B-side, 2017)

An amazing song from the “Every Countries Sun” sessions and B-Side to their most “pop” single to date “Party in the Dark”. It was included in a recent compilation “Glasgow Nights” for Money Advice Scotland which is available on band-camp and features a host of current Scottish artists.

It reminds me a little of Swervedriver and Arab Strap live (maybe just me)

Remurdered (from Rave Tapes, 2014)

By their eighth studio album “Rave Tapes” it saw the band really extend on the electronic sounds of previous albums but draw on an altogether darker sounding album. “Repelish” on the same album is also worth checking out, it heavily samples someone talking about hidden messages in rock records.

2 Rights Make 1 Wrong (from Rock Action, 2001)

“Rock Action” game the name to both an album and their excellent record label, home to Outlines, Remember, Remember and Sacred Paws among many others.

This song features on a Blueprint Skateboard video called “First Broadcast” and Soundtracks Ali Cairns part as he flies through the air beautifully.

I Know You Are But What Am I (from Happy Songs for Happy People, 2003)

Last year as part of the Edinburgh International Festival, Edinburgh Castle was lit up with a projection showing the development of the rock over time. The images and show were sound tracked by Mogwai. I never really got the album “Happy Songs for Happy People” or this song when it came out but that night brought it alive and matched the work perfectly.

Jaguar (from Les Revenants Soundtrack, 2013)

Soundtracks have been good for Mogwai, from following a French footballer round the pitch for 90 minutes (Zidane) or sound tracking an Atomic Apocalypse (Atomic). This track is from the French supernatural series “Les Revenants” renamed The Returned for the UK

Crossing the Road Material (from Every Countries Sun, 2017)

One of the stand out tracks from the afore-mentioned “Every Countries Sun”, definitely one of the best sounding tracks when played live from the new album. At the time of release the band recorded a session for 6 Music with Cat Myers from Honeyblood drumming, it’s on you-tube and is well worth your time.

Cody (from Come on Die Young, 1999)

A beautiful romantic sad song and title track for their second album “Come on Die Young”

Old songs stay ’til the end
Sad songs remind me of friends

I can’t tell you how many times this song has struck me when driving on the way how from a club or gig late at night

When I drive alone at night, I see the streetlights as fairgrounds
And I tried a hundred times to see the road signs as Day-Glo

Friend of the Night (from Mr Beast, 2006)

Friend of the Night comes from their shortest album (clocking just 45 minutes ) as they side stepped the building of crescendos instead opting for straight on assault. There is a live version of this track on their live Album/DVD (Special Moves/ Burning) which showcases their live experience well.

Mogwai Fear Satan – (from Young Team, 1997)

The final song is from the debut album “Young Team” 16 minutes of musical terror highs and lows. Always a live favourite and LOUD so very LOUD. The track has been extensively remixed and reworked even at one point used as walk on music for the Manic Street Preachers.

ROBERT

HALF TIMES SCORES

It’s been very interesting thus far that the vast majority of folk have cast their votes early doors and very few of the half-time leads have been overturned. I wonder if anything will change now that we are down to two matches per weel.

The match-ups from now on have the potential to put folk in a dilemma, as typified by this from Swiss Adam:-

“how the fuck am I supposed to pick between my beloved New Order and one of their greatest moments and my equally beloved Clash, the greatest band to walk the face of planet Earth?”

In the end, he did make a pick….which is more than some have been able to do!!!….and went for Janie Jones.

Half time scores

OMD 5 v The Housemartins 22
Forever Live and Die v Build

New Order 13 v The Clash 17
True Faith v Janie Jones

Still all to play for in the second half??

Here’s your half-time entertainment courtesy of the fans of Motherwell FC:-

No mp3 today….well not of the above song anyway. Instead, here’s one that I aired every week as the teams took to the field during the past season in my role of matchday DJ/announcer at Raith Rovers….

mp3 : Bowie/Jagger – Dancing In The Streets

It’s a tradition……..although next season I’m intending to revert to the original version of the song.

Remember….if you haven’t vote yet, you have until 10pm this coming Friday.

JC

 

SEX HORROR SEX BAT SEX HORROR SEX VAMPIRE SEX BAT HORROR VAMPIRE SEX

Nick Cave has come a very long way since this July 1981 single took him into the UK indie charts for the first time:-

mp3 : The Birthday Party – Release The Bats

Wouldn’t it be great if, during his outdoor shows this coming summer, he threw this little hand grenade into his live set….possibly after Into My Arms or The Ship Song, just to give his audience a real wake-up call.

The band wrote and recorded this as a bit of a piss-take of themselves and the lazy way they were being portrayed in the music press at the time, hamming up the whole goth thing which was gaining a head of steam. The actual recording sessions only added to things as the band went into a studio during the cheap down time – i.e. – after midnight – when the daytime singer/band packed up for the day. Legend has it that the daytime was taken up by Phil Collins, and I wonder if their paths did ever happen to cross.

There’s an equally frantic and wonderful sounding b-side to enjoy….it was written by the late Roland S Howard and is one that I feel laid the foundations for later Bad Seeds songs such as Tupelo.

mp3 : The Birthday Party – Blast Off

Incidentally, the first recording of Release The Bats predates the actual 45 by a few months thanks to a John Peel session in April 1981.

mp3 : The Birthday Party – Release The Bats (Peel Session)

I really regret that I never understood this band until long after they had broken up. I’d love to have gone along to see them in their heyday…..although I know I would just have stood at the back out of harm’s way.

JC

TRAIN IN VAIN

From the BBC news website yesterday….

ScotRail has apologised for major disruption after severe damage to overhead wires just outside Glasgow Central station.

Services to and from the station’s high level were affected.

Ten trains travelling on high level routes lost power at about 21:15 on Saturday and passengers had to wait to be led to safety by ScotRail staff.

The train company said it was now almost back to running a full service, after knock-on disruption on Sunday.

Some passengers, commenting on social media, said that they had been stuck on trains for several hours on Saturday night and had to be helped off by engineers with ladders.

ScotRail said all passengers were removed from the affected trains by 00:45.

They were then advised to find alternative transport home, with some offered taxis.

Glasgow Central high level was closed completely at 22:45 with no services running for the remainder of Saturday evening.

I was on one of the ten trains that were stuck outside the station when the power went down.  It ground to a halt at around 21:30 and about 30 minutes later, after the on-train back of power had been drained, it plunged into complete darkness which is how it stayed for almost three hours…on the most basic of trains without a toilet or washroom. And yes. the evacuation method was by ladder down from the stricken train and then up another ladder to a diesel-powered set of carriages for onward transfer to a station in the opposite direction of Glasgow Central and into a taxi.

The annoying thing was that I was only on the train as a last-minute decision to head into town for no more than an hour or so to head to the final ever Strangeways night where a few friends were hanging around – all in an effort to cheer myself up after watching Raith Rovers blow their season in the most miserable manner imaginable.

As Aldo said to me, there are some days it just isn’t worth getting out of bed.

mp3 : The Clash – Train In Vain

JC

A RE-POST TO BUY MORE TIME (4)

I was kind of astonished that this lot haven’t ever featured in any of my own posts on this blog.  They did appear over at the old place as this, from 7 July 2011, testifies:-

I liked this a lot when it was released back in 2009. I still do:-

mp3 : The Horrors – Who Can Say

OK. So they don’t do anything us 40-somethings havent heard before, but they do it so well.

And if I was 30 years younger I wouldn’t be ashamed to think The Horrors were the saviours of rock’n’roll. And I’d be angry that they are another who don’t get the chart success they deserve.

The single was released in May 2009 just a week after the LP Primary Colours. The single was a flop and the album peaked at #25. Their new LP is out next week……Comrade Colin has said it’s a belter and he’s always a great judge when it comes to these things.

Here’s the b-side:-

mp3 : The Horrors – You Could Never Tell

** the mp3s with the original post back in 2011 were lifted from the CD album.  This time round, thanks to Drew gifting me this particular single when we hooked up last year, they’re from the vinyl.

JC

BONUS SERIES : THE ICA WORLD CUP : ROUND 4 (Part 1)

The incompetency of the bureaucrats (i.e me!!) meant five ties had to be decided before we knew the make-up of the final 16.

Orange Juice 10  The Wedding Present 22
The Smiths 25 Ride 14
The Jam 35 Daft Punk 6
Billy Bragg 26 Prefab Sprout 15
Edwyn Collins 16 Lloyd Cole & The Commotions 25

Gedge & co really made the most of their reprieve and it was double heartbreak for Edwyn as he was well beaten in the end in the final match of Round 3.

The draw has taken place for Round 4. It’s known only to myself and jimdoes and now that we are at the nitty-gritty part of the competition with just two matches per week being featured, we have rescheduled some of the ties away from the order they were drawn in so that each week features at least one potential mind-blowing blockbuster. TV companies the world over pick and choose their games, so why should we be different??

Match 1

OMD v The Housemartins

A tie which provides the opportunity for one of the perhaps less-fancied sides to progress to the quarter finals.

Here’s the facts thus far.

OMD have seen off Super Furry Animals, The Stone Roses and The Charlatans, but in doing so have already fielded two their best-known and popular tracks in Enola Gay and Messages.

The Housemartins have beaten Gene, Julian Cope and Talking Heads…they’ve fielded quality songs but some of their biggest and best-known hits are sitting in reserve,

Forever Live and Die (from The Pacific Age, 1986) v Build (from The People Who Grinned Themselves To Death, 1987)

rhetor was the composer of ICA #33 on OMD. He had this to say about the song appearing this time round…

One of my favourite OMD tracks, in fact, as for some reason I can’t get enough of the soaring vocals of the line in the chorus, with its sudden descent into the title, “I never know, I never know, I never know, I never know why…Forever Live and Die”. Maybe it’s just me…

I was responsible for OCA #111 on The Housemartins. I said this at the time:-

Some of the social messages could get lost amidst the jaunty upbeat tunes for which the band were most famed. Not so when they slowed things right down. New homes, new roads, new infrastructure right across green countryside at a time when traditional communities in poorer parts of the country were crying out for support and investment to recover. Environmental and economic madness.

Match 2

New Order v The Clash

A tie which will eliminate one of the favourites.

Here’s the facts thus far.

New Order have had a crazy run of matches against LCD Soundsystem, The Go-Betweens and The Fall. They have three ICAs to choose from which does offer an extensive number of songs but there are also a few unusual remixes capable of turning up. They may regret (pun intended) having already used up Age of Consent and Blue Monday….

The Clash have also had a tough set of match-ups in recent rounds; MGMT was reasonably straight-forward enough and didn’t really need White Man (In Hammersmith Palais) to overcome the opposition; R.E.M. and The Velvet Underground were tougher asks but the use of both sides of the London Calling single may have left them weak…

True Faith (single, 1987) v Janie Jones (from The Clash, 1977)

I’m responsible for both ICAs. Here’s the double-skinny:-

The sheer brilliance and crossover appeal of this record can be seen from the fact that it reached #4 in the UK when, other than Blue Monday and Confusion (both of which sold well with dance fans), the band had struggled to make much of impact sales wise in the single market. True Faith is an extraordinary record that admittedly benefits from the input of uber-producer Stephen Hague who had previously helped to refine the sounds of Pet Shop Boys in a way that maintained their credibility while making them huge pop stars. But there is evidence that the song itself is a belter as seen by the fact that it was given an extensive indie dance remix by Paul Oakenfold and Steve Osbourne in 1994 and that version of True Faith also went Top 10 in the UK.

There are so many great songs that are incredibly worthy of inclusion on this particular ten-track effort. I’ve changed my mind more than a few times about things but I’ve never dreamt of leaving off Janie Jones. It’s a two-minute burst of high-tempo energy which just never lets up and, in what is now approaching 40 years, has never once failed to get me singing along. I also love how the band didn’t try to hide the fact that, at this stage, Paul Simonon wasn’t the greatest of bass guitarists but somehow his one-note contribution helps make the chorus so memorable.

Happy deliberating.  Votes must be in by Friday 11 May at 10pm.

JC

AN IMAGINARY COMPILATION ALBUM : #165 : BELLE & SEBASTIAN

Belle and Sebastian. I’m surprised that nobody has thrown in a guest ICA by now….and with one eye on the next again World Cup (to be held in 2020 and featuring ICAs #151 onwards), I thought I’d have a stab. I’m assuming most readers will be vaguely familiar with the back story of a band which has released nine studio albums, six EPs and 12 singles over the past 22 years. The mainstays throughout time have been Stuart Murdoch, Stevie Jackson, Chris Geddes, Richard Colburn and Sarah Martin, all of whom have been present since the very earliest of days, while Bobby Kildea has been with them since 2000. There are also three past members – Stuart David, Isobel Campbell and Mick Cooke – whose contributions were immense in establishing the band critically and commercially.

It was only when looking at the bigger picture did it hit me that in terms of quantity, and indeed quality, the golden era of the band was a relatively short spell from 1996-2003. There’s only been three albums over the past 15 years, all of which can be described as patchy, certainly in comparison to the early years. If you’re ever for an example of a band coasting somewhat and relying on past achievements, then this could be your landing point. It led me to put together a fully chronological ICA, based on the order in which the albums/EPs were released with one track per record. (It was also put together without me listening to any of the new material released across three EPs in recent months). Despite such a self-imposed restriction, it still hangs together really well…..

Side A

1. The State I Am In (from Tigermilk, released June 1996)

Things have changed a great deal in the music industry over the past 20-odd years and so it is unlikely given the growth of social media as a platform for a band to emerge in a similar way to Belle & Sebastian via a music course at a further education college in Glasgow. A demo recording of four songs, which itself would be released later on as the band’s fame grew, had led to the college record label, Electric Honey, funding 1000 copies of an album. It sold out almost instantly and the band signed to Jeepster Records who re-released Tigermilk in 1999. If you’re desperate to get your hands on one of the Electric Honey pressings of this outstanding record, expect to have to fork out somewhere in the range of £450, and even then, you won’t get a mint copy!

2. Get Me Away From Here, I’m Dying (from If You’re Feeling Sinister, released November 1996)

If You’re Feeling Sinister was most people’s introduction to B&S, certainly outside of a few hundred folk in Glasgow. The formula adopted wasn’t much different from Tigermilk – back into the same small-scale studio with an approach to production which involved minimum overdubs. Jeepster Records were obviously delighted to get a facsimile of the debut, albeit this collection of songs was a notch-up on the debut given that Murdoch as a song-writer was growing in confidence and all of the band were improving as musicians and players. Without any imposed restrictions, there is no question that at least four, maybe even five of the songs on this album would make any ICA, but I’ve gone for the one which seemed to be the calling card….and which has an upbeat tune at odds with its title.

3. Dog On Wheels (from EP of the same name, released May 1997)

4. Lazy Line Painter Jane (from EP of same name, released July 1997)

The four-tracks that made up the demo had been released as Dog On Wheels EP in May 1997 and had sold enough copies to reach #59 in the UK singles chart, which was a remarkable outcome for a lo-fi recording by a relatively unknown band on a genuinely small and independent label with all the issues that were naturally present around pressing and distribution. The songs date from 1995 but the lead number somehow manages to convey more oomph than anything on the two albums thanks to Cooke’s trumpet playing being put front-centre.

The band was insistent that no singles should be lifted from the first Jeepster LP and instead agreed that they would work-up new songs for release as four-track EPs. Lazy Line Painter Jane utilises a guest vocalist in the shape of Monica Queen whose powerful and forceful delivery, recorded in a church hall, offers a tremendous contrast to the quiet and frail vocal of Murdoch. The result is an amazing duet that, vocally in style, brings to mind some of the great Country efforts involving Johnny Cash/June Carter and George Jones/Tammy Wynette while the swirling organ brings something new to the band’s sound, with the near six minutes being as far removed from ‘twee’ as can be imagined.

5. La Pastie de la Bourgeosie (from 3.. 6.. 9.. Seconds of Light, released October 1997)

Lazy Line Painter Jane had continued the upward projectory with a tantalising placement of #41 on the charts. It was just three months later, on 25 October 1997, the latest EP entered at #32….not bad for a band whose debut album just 15 months earlier had come out on a college label and whose follow-up, while selling in gradually increasing numbers, hadn’t shifted enough in any given week to scrape into the Top 100.

B&S were the new kids on the indie block and every magazine and broadsheet newspaper wanted a piece of them, and in particular their enigmatic frontman. The four songs on the EP typified the band at this stage of their career, with a folk-like number the lead track, a ballad and a spoken word effort sitting alongside a song that was a guaranteed floor-filler at your indie disco. With a lyric which references children’s author Judy Blume early on, namechecks a work by JD Salinger that is of most appeal to adolescents before ending with a mention of Jack Kerouac, the name most likely to be dropped casually into conversation by college/university students, La Pastie de la Bourgeosie is essentially an escapist number from the perspective of someone who has a romantic and unrealistic view of America…which is why so many journalists were desperate to land an interview with the frontman to probe him on where his ideas and inspirations came from me. Me? I’d have asked why do you write so many slow songs when you’ve killer tunes like this to unleash on the public.

Side B

6. The Boy With The Arab Strap (from album of the same name, September 1998)

I’m sure this will always be my favourite B&S song. Great tune and a great backstory in which Stuart Murdoch has a bit of fun at Aidan Moffat’s expense around the latter’s infatuation with a friend of Isobel Campbell – which Aidan himself had previously referred to in I Saw You (see yesterday’s song as short story entry).

7. This Is Just A Modern Rock Song (from EP of the same name, released December 1998)

This was the song that really made me think B&S were on the verge of real and sustainable greatness.  It deserves to be called epic, and not solely for the fact it is seven-plus minutes in length, but for the fact that  grows and develops from a softly-sung number by one man and his acoustic guitar into something which soars into the perfect anthem for this brand of indie-pop with its refrain of:-

This is just a modern rock song
This is just a sorry lament
We’re four boys in our corduroys
We’re not terrific but we’re competent

Four lines which seemed to capture everything I had loved about music since my teenage years.  Sadly, the EP marked the end of what I now regard as the golden and prolific era for the band in which forty-six pieces of music had been released across three albums and four EPs in less than two and half years. If they had called it a day there and then, they would still be recalled very fondly for the quality and bravado of their work.

8. Legal Man (from single of the same name, released May 2000)

Little did we know that the band would go into a bit of a hiatus after This Is Just A Modern Rock Song and that their return would be marked by the release of their first ever 45, with a lead song that was nothing like they had ever recorded before.  It also was the first release after the band had come to the attention of a wider public in a way that, all these years later, still seems surreal.

The Brit Awards 1999.  Belle and Sebastian are on the shortlist for ‘Best British Newcomer; despite the fact they were not a new act and that they disn’t have a major label lobbying on their behalf.  The ceremony, on 16 February, is broadcast live to a TV audience numbering more than 10million.  The category they were up for was one of the few not at the behest of a panel of judges, instead being given to the winner of a public vote via BBC Radio 1 that had been heavily promoted through tabloid newspapers, all of whom gave much space to a number of emerging pop acts who had enjoyed huge success in the singles charts with our Glasgwegian heroes getting just the merest of passing mentions. It was bizarre that were even on the shortlist given that, outside of evening shows, B&S would never have been played by the station…

Nobody had actually taken much notice that the award utilised a then largely untried method of electronic voting. The B&S fanbase mobilised as one, many of them making multiple votes through personal accounts, along with work/learning based e-mail addresses, leading to them winning the award to the astonishment of everyone concerned, including themselves.  It led a hilarious and rather childish reaction on the night from folk associated with the losing acts followed by the inevitable ‘Bell & Who?’ in the press the next day.

It took a long while for the band to release anything new – it was almost as if they wanted the fuss to die down and for them to get back out of the spotlight. The comeback 45 was a dramatic shift in sound and the upbeat nature led to a reasonable amount of daytime play. It also sold enough to hit the charts and give the band a debut appearance on Top of the Pops!

Legal Man was probably the first ever B&S purchase for many folk. If they liked what they heard and went out the following month to but the new LP, Fold Your Hands Child, You Walk Like A Peasant, then they were bound to be left scratching their heads given it was more whimsical and introspective than all of their previous work – indeed it was a record that many long-term fans felt was a backwards step that lacked the ambition and freshness of much that had come before and the first ever step backwards.

9. I’m Waking Up To Us (from single of the same name, released November 2001)

The 18 months between Legal Man and this single was a period where the band didn’t do much for me. Fold Your Hands… was a disappointment and the next again single Jonathan David was rescued only by decent b-sides. What came next was jaw-dropping, not so much for the music (although the heavy use of strings and woodwind took the pastoral feel to a whole new level) but the subject matter.

There’s break-up songs and then there’s this. The singer’s well-publicised romantic relationship with a fellow band member had run its course and he in all likelihood expected she would make things easy for everyone by taking her leave. It doesn’t happen and so he pens a really nasty lyric for the next single and insists on her performing on the record and taking part in all the accompanying promotional work, including TV appearances which must have been excruciating for her.

Cruel and humiliating for Isobel Campbell, she would gain a partial revenge the following year by quitting the band in the middle of a ground-breaking tour of the USA, and putting Stuart Murdoch on the edge of a nervous breakdown. It’s a song where the listener is best advised to put to one side the personal circumstances that gave rise to the work and enjoy it for what it is, and that’s an outstanding piece of music.

10. Stay Loose (from Dear Catastrophe Waitress, released October 2003)

The departures of Stuart David and Isobel Campbell, together with the lukewarm response to Fold Your Hands…, left the band at something of a crossroads. There were further faltering steps with Storytelling, an album released in June 2002 as the underwhelming soundtrack to an equally underwhelming movie. Looking back now, what happened next was quite drastic and almost a make-or-break period for the band with the decision to leave Jeepster and sign to Rough Trade and to agree to the label’s suggestion of bringing on board an experienced producer to help mould and shape the diverse sounds that everyone was bringing to the party.

There are some fans who were bitterly disappointed with the impact Trevor Horn had on the band but I’m someone who thinks Dear Catastrophe Waitress is among their strongest pieces of work. It was certainly a huge return to form, albeit with a sound that was more pop-orientated than before, and I don’t think any of the subsequent albums have over the past 15 years have been consistently as enjoyable a listen and it was a no-brainer to include something from the LP on the ICA.

There were a number of strong candidates but at the same time I was conscious that what had come before meant that the track from DCW would have to close the ICA and so the decision was, in a sense, made for me. Stay Loose, in the words of one reviewer at the time is ‘innovative, funky, and twinkling with subtle electronica that thrums with a newly found confidence’. It made a perfect ending to a wonderfully unpredictable album.

So that’s my stab at a B&S ICA…..anyone inspired to offer up a second volme with ten completely different songs?

JC

SOME SONGS ARE GREAT SHORT STORIES (Chapter Twelve)

It is the second appearance by Arab Strap in this series. It won’t be the last.

Oh and there’s a reason why this had to be posted today. But you’ll need to come back tomorrow to find the reason why.

It must have been at least three years ago. I had a crush on this girl I didn’t know. I thought it was a good idea at the time but I was pissed. I tried to find her by sending an ad into ‘The List’. It was free ’cause they’d just started this brand new section. First I passed it on to my old friend Denise for her inspection. It said: “I saw you twice and both times you were wearing orange. And she told you I fancied you in the toilets at The Garage.” There was never a reply, perhaps it didn’t astound her. That’s assuming she ever saw it but I think I’ve found her. I thought it could’ve been her in a club on Saturday night. She was a couple of tables away and I thought it might be. But I was far too drunk, so an approach was out of the question. But this guy Stuart had sent us tickets to see his band Belle & Sebastian. We went along thoroughly drunk, stopped for a post-gig “Hello.” And I think the girl I was looking for is friends with the girl who plays the cello. I think she’s coming to see us when we play. And every time we meet I’ve got nothing to say. She probably thinks I’m cute, she maybe thinks I’m gay. She’s probably got a boyfriend anyway. I remember the first time that I saw her, I was completely in awe. I thought, well that’s the kind of girl that I would like to be my squaw. And if I could ever be the kind of brave that she would choose, we’d travel plains with our little baby turned in its little papoose. She sat beside me in a public bar, my bird was in the bog. When she returned she said that she would like to give that girl a snog. And two weeks later we split up and a new lover I was seeking. And when I see that girl again I’m just never up for speaking. I think she’s coming to see us when we play. And every time we meet I’ve got nothing to say. She probably thinks I’m cute, she maybe thinks I’m gay. She’s probably got a boyfriend anyway.

mp3 : Arab Strap – I Saw You (Peel Session)

This was regularly aired in early livs shows but it was never pit out on an album or single. It was, however, recorded for a Peel Session in March 1997 and finally made available to the public on the Ten Years Of Tears! compilation released in 2006.

JC

HALF TIMES SCORES

As ever, some tremendous contributions via the comments section….delighted so many of you are still giving it 110% this far into the competition and I’m over the moon about it.

Micky has done his usual e-mail vote, and I thought I’d share it with everyone:-

First up, the re-match; I pretty much knew which way this would go before playing the tracks. But even then, more one sided than I expected. Of course I like Falling and Laughing but MFD had it at the first chord!

Hadn’t heard it for a while and was straining not to do air guitar in the office. Now to this week…

1. This is probably as big a surprise to me as it is to you, but yet again I am voting for ‘The Smiths’. Good tunes, horrible/terrible singer.

2. This is probably as big a surprise to me as it is to you, but I’ve always liked this Daft Punk track. It always reminds me of the golf because those opening bars remind me of the theme tune to BBC’s Open coverage. Sitting watching the Open as a wee boy is a very happy memory. Afterwards I’d run out and invent an 18 hole golf course on our back garden using all sorts of shrubs and bushes as natural impediments, and the different parts of the lawn would represent different greens. Whereas this Jam track is a wee bit run of the mill for them.

3. Very, very tricky. Billy by the width of the paint on the goalposts

4. Remember when I said this was fun? I suppose torture is fun for some people. OK Lloyd gets it by a bawhair. Strange one really as I own Girl Like You, but somehow not ‘Heartbroken!

Micky’s five votes have helped create this situation:-

Orange Juice 9 v The Wedding Present 19

The Smiths 20 v Ride 11
The Jam 29 v Daft Punk 4
Billy Bragg 21 v Prefab Sprout 12
Edwyn Collins 15 v Lloyd Cole & The Commotions 18

In case any of you are wondering why, having seemingly been eliminated last Saturday, The Wedding Present are being given a second chance….please read this.

Here’s your half-time entertainment….courtesy of the fans of Crystal Palace FC.

mp3 : The Dave Clark Five – Glad All Over

Remember….if you haven’t voted yet, you have until 10pm this coming Friday.

JC

 

30, 20, 10 (Part 13)

Two months ago, I mentioned that Bomb The Bass, the name adopted by producer Tim Simenon, had gotten to #1 in the indie charts with a track consisting solely of samples.  This month sees the top spot occupied by probably the best-known and most enduring examples of the genre:-

1 May 1988 : S’Express – Theme from S’Express

Still sounds amazing thirty years on.

1 May 1998 : Run D.M.C vs Jason Nevins – It’s Like That

Still there….this was the last of its six week stay at the top.

1 May 2008 : mp3 : The Last Shadow Puppets – The Age of the Understatement

As wiki states, The Last Shadow Puppets are an English supergroup consisting of Alex Turner (Arctic Monkeys), Miles Kane (The Rascals), James Ford (Simian Mobile Disco), and Zach Dawes (Mini Mansions).

It was a fairly radical departure from what the four were best known for, with much of the debut album, from which this was the first single, being reminiscent of the 60s and in particular early Scott Walker. Indeed, the firest few seconds of this single reminds me of Marc Almond‘s cover versions of songs from that era. It will divide opinions. I like it.

JC