THIS COULD HAVE MUSTERED AS AN ALBUM

A couple of weeks back, on a day recovering from the slight after effects of my second COVID vaccination, I decided to spend a few hours flicking through all sorts of music documentaries and shows that can be found via the TV, whether on channels or the likes of YouTube.  I couldn’t really settle on one thing, finding myself hopping from video to video, unable to get the sort of show or performance that would get my mind initially a bit more focussed and ultimately allowing me to feel more relaxed.

And then I saw a link to Radiohead‘s performance at Glastonbury in 1997 which came just a couple of weeks after the release of OK Computer.  I remembered seeing it live via the BBC coverage at the time, thinking that it had been one of the greatest things ever to hit the telly screen.  I wondered, however, how it would come across in 2021 given that the technology has moved on so much in the intervening years, and I reckoned it might well have sounded a bit thin and maybe tinny. I was also intrigued as a few years ago, on the 20th Anniversary of the performance, Thom Yorke had told the BBC that he had almost walked off mid-set as there were sound problems, something that I couldn’t recall being the case.

Turns out that time had not diminished the performance, nor could I really pick up where the sound issues had caused consternation, apart from a couple of occasions when there were slightly longer than usual delays in the next song starting up.

In a show packed with spine-tingling moments, the playing of this, as the second song of the night, was a real highlight:-

mp3: Radiohead – My Iron Lung

The My Iron Lung EP, in September 1994, bridged the gap between the albums Pablo Honey (1993) and The Bends (1995), albeit the title track would appear on the latter.  Here in the UK, it was released as a four-song EP on vinyl, with copies nowadays going for around £50 on the second hand market.  Like most other folk, I ended up instead with the CDs, with two of them being released, with the lead track on both occasions accompanied by three b-sides. Meanwhile, in Australia, it was released as a CD with eight songs, with the additional track being an acoustic version of Creep.

Many fans and critics have said, quite rightly, that the quality of the songs on the EP, all of which were recorded during the preparation or indeed the sessions for The Bends, would have made for a very decent album on its own. Judge for yourself:-

CD ONE

mp3: Radiohead – The Trickster
mp3: Radiohead – Punchdrunk Lovesong Singalong
mp3: Radiohead – Lozenge Of Love

CD TWO

mp3: Radiohead – Lewis (Mistreated)
mp3: Radiohead – Permanent Daylight
mp3: Radiohead – You Never Wash After Yourself

It’s quite scary that none of these songs were deemed good enough to be kept back for inclusion on the subsequent album. The Trickster and Permanent Daylight in particular have long been personal favourites, albeit the latter does come across as a tribute to Sonic Youth.

Radiohead were almost chosen as the subject of the forthcoming Sunday series replacement for R.E.M., but in the end, and after a great deal of soul-searching, they were put to one side. For the time being anyway.

Only 72 hours now till the big reveal.

JC

AN IMAGINARY COMPILATION ALBUM : #287 : DUM DUM GIRLS

A GUEST POSTING by MARTIN ELLIOT

(Our Swedish Correspondent)

Hi Jim,

For a reason I can’t really explain the new, now paused, Monday series of landfill indie got me inspired to do this Dum Dum Girls ICA. Not that I consider this landfill, on the contrary Dum Dum Girls are/were really great indie (is/was?, despite the plural indication it is just Dee Dee Penny, real name Kristin Gundred, that make up DDG). Probably because I believe DDG is great indie too few have heard, although the TVV crowd is if any likely an exception to that assumption.

As Dum Dum Girls,  Dee Dee released 3 albums and a handful of singles/EP’s before she changed her recording name to Kristin Kontrol and released the so far only album X-Communicate in 2016. A really excellent album, but not included here as I focus on the Dum Dum Girls moniker.

Me finding her was a true chance meeting; for some years around the 2000-teens I worked intensively with our NA branch travelling 5 – 6 times a year to North Carolina. Staying a week each time, sharing my time between Charlotte and a small town about an hours drive east of Raleigh I always made the time to roam some of the record stores of Charlotte and Raleigh. Once, browsing through the “just in” bins in one of the Raleigh stores I came a cross a sleeve that caught my attention. Matte pink and grey, sturdy and looking high quality, it stood out among the rest. Picking it up I saw it was released on Sub Pop, another reason for interest, so I took it over to the record player in the store, put the headphones on and dropped the needle. The rest is as you say, history.

This was what I later learned her 2nd album – Only In Dreams from 2011. About a year later me and the family were in Lisbon for a weekend, walking through FNAC to satisfy the kids I just so happened to make my way by their music corner and saw another Dum Dum Girls album – Too True (from 2014) – for some reason on display despite this now being fall 2015. Picked it up and now really hooked I ventured to the internet to get her debut album from 2010 and 2 EP’s plus a lonely 7″ as well.

Dum Dum Girls never made (to my knowledge) any charts, Pitchfork had an eye for her/them but the larger music buying public apparently not. A shame if you ask me.

So let me introduce Dee Dee Penny and her Dum Dum Girls;

She Gets Me High – A Dum Dum Girls ICA

A1. Jail La La – (I Will Be, 2010).

The first DDG album released in 2010 was very much a bedroom recording effort mostly by Dee Dee herself, with some added help. 10 songs rushed through in a rather frantic tempo with echoes of say The Mo-Dettes, or maybe even The Ramones. Most of the tracks clocks in just under 3 minutes, this being a prime example.

A2. Crystal Baby (single b-side, 2011).

Taken from the Coming Down single, another short track that after a gentle start builds in intensity.

A3. Heartbeat (Take It Away) (Only In Dreams, 2011)

The album that first caught my attention, and the first of the tracks I listened to that afternoon in Raleigh. Guitars and a bit of attitude. All you need.

A4. Too True To Be Good (Too True, 2014)

Title track of the third and last DDG album, a richer version of Dee Dee’s take on indie. She stated her influences for this album were darker than earlier, citing bands like The Cure and Siouxsie & The Banshees but also Stone Roses. To me a more mature, deeper, sound, and a needed step away from getting stuck in a too familiar mould.

A5. There Is A Light That Never Goes Out (He Gets Me High, EP, 2011).

A great version of a great song by what was a great band. (And equally not great is how he who we don’t name turned out to be in later years.)

B1. Lost Boys And Girls Club (Too True).

Released as a single preceding the Too True album, the intro has some rather obvious traces of the Cure-influences she mentioned. Heavier drums driving the track along a darker path. My favourite track from the LP.

B2. He Gets Me High (He Gets Me High, EP).

Apart from giving this ICA its name, it’s another great guitar lead track. The steps in sound taken from the debut album to the Only In Dreams follow-up were for the most part already taken by the release of this EP.

B3. In My Head (Only In Dreams)

Thematically dealing with the same lonely and longing state of loss as He Gets Me High. Longing for someone not there anymore rather than moving on. “I’d rather visit you in my head”.

B4. I Got Nothing (End Of Daze, EP, 2012)

Is it a break-up song? The lyrics are dubious, the chorus gives the impression but especially the first verse I (at least) find ambiguous. What will I see if you’re not with me / What can I do, not without you”. Lyrics are a bit of pop-version Cure-gloom maybe, musically rather catchy .

B5. Coming Down (Only In Dreams).

An edit was released as single but this is the full album version in all its glory. A true album closer, even if it wasn’t placed as such on the album. Moody, and this is doubtlessly a break-up song, so if she wasn’t sure in I Got Nothing, now it’s over. (The song was featured in season 2 & 3 of “Orange Is The New Black”, still never hit any charts despite the exposure.)

MARTIN

NICE TRY, SUNSHINE!

I’m on the mailing list for Mono, the record shop in Glasgow owned and run by Stephen McRobbie (née Stephen Pastel).  It’s my go-to place for most new music, although I do often buy direct from the singer/band/label if the opportunity is there – it’s all about trying to spread the wealth.

A short time ago, I was attracted by one of the albums highlighted in their weekly round-up of new releases.  I ordered it from Mono as to do attempt to do so from the label, Appetite, which is based in Gothenburg, Sweden, would likely have seen me incur all sorts of shipping and customs charges in this post-Brexit situation that we are trying to get accustomed to.  Let’s just say, based on some of the horror stories I’ve been reading online, I’m highly unlikely to be going direct to any European countries in the foreseeable future.

Here’s how Appetite described the album in question:-

Nice Try, Sunshine! is a compilation of 14 Swedish underground pop hits that should have conquered the heart of every pop fan around the globe, but somehow has fallen into obscurity. The bands on this record were mainly active during the 2000’s and early in the following decade, with some obvious exceptions.

From the very first tones of Days’ lovely “Downhill” (a song that should be the very blueprint for any indie pop song written since), this record takes us to that place that only really beautiful pop music can, whether it is the heart crushing nostalgia of Ring Snuten, the pure indie bliss of Free Loan Investments or Jens Lekman backed by his childhood self

This is our way of showing respects to these little gems of pure pop beauty.

There were only 250 copies of the album pressed up, and not surprisingly it sold out quickly, leading to a further pressing of 100 albums, to be issued later this month but which also, according to the label’s bandcamp page, has sold out already.

But is it any good?

As with nearly all compilations, some tracks stand out a great deal more than others, and there are maybe one or two that I could happily live without, although I’m slowly coming round to them. The whole things clocks-in at a shade over 35 minutes, with half of the tracks being less than 150 seconds in length. Just about all the acts were new to me, and I’ll be on the look-out for a few more releases by some of them, although many of them, certainly according to Discogs, didn’t actually release all that much.

Take Days, for example.  The blurb for the album states that their song, Downhill, is one that should be the very blueprint for any indie pop song written since. For once, the hype is real – it’s a piece of perfect dreamy pop in which a Swede who would, without question, win the worldwide Neil Tennant soundalike contest, delivers something quite magical.

mp3: Days – Downhill

As far as I can tell, Days enjoyed just one release – a combined CD and 7″ single containing seven tracks all told – back in 2008. All I’ve been able to find is that they were from Gothenburg and had four members – Fabian Sahlqvist (vocals and guitars), John Ludvigsson (guitars), Andréas Uppman Nilsson (bass) and Philip Gates (drums).

If Martin, our Swedish Correspondent, or indeed anyone else out there can flesh things out, I’d love to hear from you.

JC

THE MONDAY MORNING HI-QUALITY VINYL RIP : Part Eighteen : HEART OF GLASS

Yup.  The 12″ single which rotates at thirty-three and one-third revolutions per minute.  And which, as a sad teenager, I stared at with a magnifying glass trying to work out if Debbie Harry was braless beneath that slip of a white dress.

mp3: Blondie – Heart Of Glass

Debbie and Chris Stein, in 2013, provided The Guardian with an explanation of how the song came to be:-

DH: In 1974, we were living in a loft in New York’s then notorious Bowery area, rehearsing at night in rooms so cold we had to wear gloves. Heart of Glass was one of the first songs Blondie wrote, but it was years before we recorded it properly. We’d tried it as a ballad, as reggae, but it never quite worked. At that point, it had no title. We just called it “the disco song”.

Then, in 1978, we got this producer, Mike Chapman, who asked us to play all the songs we had. At the end, he said: “Have you got anything else?” We sheepishly said: “Well, there is this old one.” He liked it – he thought it was very pretty and started to pull it into focus. The boys in the band had got their hands on a new toy: this little Roland drum machine. One day, we were fiddling around with it and Chapman said: “That’s a great sound.” So we used it.

Back then, it was very unusual for a guitar band to be using computerised sound. People got nervous and angry about us bringing different influences into rock. Although we’d covered Lady Marmalade and I Feel Love at gigs, lots of people were mad at us for “going disco” with Heart of Glass. There was the Disco Sucks! movement, and there had even been a riot in Chicago, with people burning disco records. Clem Burke, our drummer, refused to play the song live at first. When it became a hit, he said: “I guess I’ll have to.”

The lyrics weren’t about anyone. They were just a plaintive moan about lost love. At first, the song kept saying: “Once I had a love, it was a gas. Soon turned out, it was a pain in the ass.” We couldn’t keep saying that, so we came up with: “Soon turned out, had a heart of glass.” We kept one “pain in the ass” in – and the BBC bleeped it out for radio.

For the video, I wanted to dance around but they told us to remain static, while the cameras moved around. God only knows why. Maybe we were too clumsy. I wore an asymmetrical dress designed by Steve Sprouse, made the boys’ T-shirts myself, and probably did my own hair. Everyone says I look iconic and in control, but I prefer our other videos. It was No 1 around the world. We’d had a lot of hits, but this was our first at home. Chapman was in Milan with us and said: “Join me in the bar.” I thought: “Oh God, I just wanna go to bed.” But we dragged our asses down and he told us it was No 1 in America. We drank a lot.

CS: Recording with Mike was fun, if a little painstaking – we had to do things over and over. But Jimmy [Destri, keyboards] had a lot to do with how the record sounds, too. Although the song eventually became its own thing, at first he wanted it to sound like a Kraftwerk number.

It was Jimmy who brought in the drum machine and a synthesiser. Synchronising them was a big deal at the time. It all had to be done manually, with every note and beat played in real time rather than looped over. And on old disco tracks, the bass drum was always recorded separately, so Clem had to pound away on a foot-pedal for three hours until they got a take they were happy with.

As far as I was concerned, disco was part of R&B, which I’d always liked. The Ramones went on about us “going disco”, but it was tongue-in-cheek. They were our friends. In the video, there’s a shot of the legendary Studio 54, so everyone thought we shot the video there, but it was actually in a short-lived club called the Copa or something.

I came up with the phrase “heart of glass” without knowing anything about Werner Herzog or his movie of the same name, which is a great, weird film. It’s nice people now use the song to identify the period in films and documentaries. I’ve heard a million versions. There are lots of great mash-ups. My favourite features the song being played at super-low speed, like odd industrial music.

I never had an inkling it would be such a big hit, or become the song we’d be most remembered for. It’s very gratifying.

And here’s your instrumental b-side

mp3: Blondie – Heart Of Glass (instrumental)

While I’m on, I can’t resist posting another couple of versions, but not ripped at 320kpbs:-

mp3: Associates – Heart of Glass (Auchterhouse Mix)
mp3: Blondie & Philip Glass – Heart of Glass (Crabtree Mix)

The former is one of the 12″ versions of a flop single released in 1988. The latter is a mashup by producer Jonas Crabtree;  it fuses parts of the Blondie song with parts of the Violin Concerto by Philip Glass and was used to great effect in one of the key scenes in the first series of the TV adaption of The Handmaid’s Tale.

JC

THE SINGULAR ADVENTURES OF R.E.M. (Part 58)

Only kidding!!!!!

The series did come to a halt last Sunday, but as The Robster promised, anybody needing their weekly fix of R.E.M. will be looked after over at his place, Is This The Life?

Click here to be magically transported.

This here blog you’re currently visiting will have a new Sunday series kicking off next week, one which it is hoped will provide just as much joy as provided by R.E.M. and fingers are crossed that there will also be a similar amount of interaction via the comments section.  It’s also going to be a series in which guest contributions will be made very welcome.

For now, I’ll just leave you with a cover:-

mp3: Editors – Orange Crush

After an unusual and quiet intro, it’s a fairly faithful interpretation.  Trust me, it’s worth a few minutes of your time.

JC

 

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #261: PRONTO MAMA

From the website of the Electric Honey record label:-

Describing themselves as a “past post-modern bug-eyed beatnik group”, the Glasgow-based alternative indie-rock group Pronto Mama were formed in 2011.

The band released their first two EPs, Lickety Split and Niche Market in 2014 in quick succession, with their energetic presence gaining support from the likes of BBC 1 Introducing’s Ally McCrae.

After playing numerous gigs and festivals over the years, such as T in The Park, Belladrum and even a few dates in Poland in 2015, the band signed to Electric Honey in 2017.

Their highly anticipated album, Any Joy, was released in May 2017 and has since received airplay from both BBC Radio 1 and BBC Radio 6, as well as a nomination for Scottish Album of the Year.

I can remember exactly where I was when I picked up my copy of Any Joy. It was just over four years ago, when a group of bloggers from Germany, USA, England and Scotland decided it was time to put faces to the names and to have a weekend of fun and frivolity here in Glasgow. We had been in a few city centre ale houses but with it being a gloriously hot and sunny day, we made our way to a pub with outdoor seating, located on the banks of the River Kelvin in the West End. After a short time, a Glaswegian pop star walked into the pub. It was Ken McCluskey of The Bluebells, and of course I took the opportunity to say hello, introduce everyone and explain how we all got to know one another and the reasons for us being in Glasgow.

Ken was delighted to be able to say hello – Brian from Linear Tracking Lives in particular got a huge kick out of chatting to him. Ken also took the opportunity to introduce us to a brand-new CD, which wasn’t yet in the shops, by a band called Pronto Mama. It was due to be released on Electric Honey, a label attached to a college in Glasgow, where students can undertake a course looking at all aspects of the music business, and where Ken enjoyed a role, alongside the likes of Alan Rankine (ex-Associates) as one of the lecturers at the college. Ken very kindly gave Brian a free copy of the CD in acknowledgement of the fact he had come all the way over from Seattle, and while I was offered similar, I insisted on paying for mine.

mp3: Pronto Mama – Cold Arab Spring

Over the coming months, Any Joy got a fair amount of critical acclaim, and deservedly so, culminating in it being nominated for a SAY Award.  The thing is, and what sadly seems to be too often the case when a band wonders what to do on the back of a debut album, (or indeed EP or single), Pronto Mama have disappeared off the radar, and I assume at some point decided to spilt up.

JC

IT REALLY WAS A CRACKING DEBUT SINGLE (57)

I can’t recall hearing the debut single from Ian Dury played on Radio 1 back in August 1977.  But then again, it had the words ‘Sex’ and ‘Drugs’ in the title, so it was most likely blacklisted.

Ian Dury was 35 years of age at the time of its release, so he wasn’t in his first flush of youth, nor was he an overnight sensation. He had, back in the late 60s, made a career out of visual art, as a college lecturer and as an occasional illustrator.  He turned increasingly to the performing arts in the 70s, as frontman for Kilburn & The High Roads, one of the mainstays of the London pub circuit and who released two albums before breaking up in 1975.

His big break came in early 1977 when he hooked up with Chas Jankel, another veteran of the pub circuit, with Jankel adding killer tunes to Dury’s highly poetic and witty lyrics.  A small, hungry and independent label, Stiff, liked what they were hearing and signed Ian Dury to a solo contract.  Keen to get moving quickly to take advantage of the way punk was opening doors for all types of musicians and characters, Dury and Jankel recruited Norman Watt-Roy and Charlie Charles, two well-regarded session musicians, to respectively play bass and drums on the debut 45.

mp3: Ian Dury – Sex & Drugs & Rock’n’Roll

The single didn’t chart, but it was well-received by many of the critics and writers employed by all the main music papers in the UK, and Ian Dury was soon being talked of as a serious talent in the emerging scene.  This four-piece band would record the debut album, New Boots and Panties, which was a huge success, eventually reaching #5 despite not having any hit singles with which to be further promoted.

It was shortly after the completion of the album that the backing band expanded to take three other musicians – Mickey Gallagher (keyboards), John Turnbull (guitar) and Davey Payne (saxophone) – and be formalised as Ian Dury and The Blockheads, going on to enjoy fame and fortune including the very first #1 single for any independent label with Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick in January 1979, having been stuck behind YMCA by The Village People for a couple of weeks.

I think it’s fair to say that while Sex & Drugs & Rock’n’Roll was a very good, if not indeed an excellent debut, the continued development of Dury and Jankell’s song-writing partnership, allied to the musicianship of the Blockheads, meant many of those which followed were superior efforts.

The b-side of the debut saw Dury sit behind the drum kit while Jankell played the guitars and bass for an ode to some shoplifting exploits around soft-core porn magazines

mp3: Ian Dury – Razzle In My Pocket

It’s just occurred to me that I really should have kept this b-side for the ‘Great Short Stories’ series.

JC

FROM THE VAULTS OF A GLASGOW BASED INDIE-LABEL (2)

There wasn’t too much reaction to the first part of the look back at the output of Bubblegum Records, a Glasgow-based label that was in existence between 2009 and 2011, during which there were just over twenty releases from an incredible range of bands and musicians from all over the world.  Part One looked at Hyperbubble from San Antonio, Texas and at Lean Tales from Glasgow.

Part two looks at the magnificently named Tesco Chainstore Mascara, a duo consisting of David (instruments and vocals) and Katie (vocals), and whose band name is a pun on the 1974 slasher movie.

What else can I tell you?  David writes the tunes while Katie writes the words. I think they are from Burntwood, a former mining town in Staffordshire in the West Midlands of England (and if I’m wrong on that, blame their old myspace page).

In October 2009, their debut album Good Foundations was released on CD by Bubblegum Records.  It has 11 tracks and takes under 33 minutes to listen to.  It’s an album that has much going for it, particularly if your favourite bands have female lead singers with pleasant but not particularly distinctive voices. There are times when it reminds me of Dubstar which isn’t a bad thing, and occasionally I find myself thinking of The Primitives, The Darling Buds, Tracey Ullman, Amelia Fletcher, and, whisper it, Sarah Cracknell. Of the bands who have come along after them, then fans of The Lovely Eggs are likely to enjoy things.

mp3: Tesco Chainstore Mascara – You Lost Me At Hello
mp3: Tesco Chainstore Mascara – Beautiful Life
mp3: Tesco Chainstore Mascara – M62

Oh, and there’s one song where David takes the lead vocal:-

mp3: Tesco Chainstore Mascara – Just The Weight You Are

It’s a CD that won’t change the world – indeed, the fact that it was their only physical release during the time the duo were together, kind of proves that to be the case. But there are far worse and less interesting ways to spend your time listening to music.

JC

ALL OUR YESTERDAYS : RIP IT UP

Album: Rip It Up – Orange Juice
Review: NME, 13 November 1982
Author: Richard Cook

I JUST played Buddy Holly‘s version of ‘Rip It Up’ to remind me, although Edwyn Collins gives the impression he is unfamiliar with such iconography, Orange Juice‘s Rip It Up is a development of an altogether more wistful deal on life: such is the cycle of youth music, so are our salad days enfeebled.

Orange Juice are a minor group trying hard to be bigger and more significant than they really ought to be. Their wan series of Postcard singles served them better than any fetchingly polished album ever will: their real dimension is best considered through the blurred viewfinder of those scratchy, bashful records. The difference between ‘Breakfast Time’ here and its Postcard prototype is that between nervous energy and familiar excitement.

Or, to nail it down, Collins’ interests and attitudes melt away in the glare of a clear focus. The fatuous ruminations on love in ‘Mud In Your Eye’ and ‘Louise Louise’ betray the indolence of his thinking, tepid variations on pop hackery long since consigned to public domain free-for-alls. The music they devise to accompany these musings is mostly old-fashioned, alarmingly reminiscent in places of the kind of genteel lace-making of the likes of Caravan. The clarity which has served the Banshees so well serves principally to highlight the clean digital momentum of a faceless pop music.

Sometimes it is a little more than that, because the arrival of drummer/vocalist Zeke Manyika does effect a bizarre revitalisation in places. Manyika’s presence seems so contrary to the spirit of Juice – which, despite Collins’ protestations, remains essentially lacking in red corpuscles – that the impossible works and something raised on a different spirit rises up. ‘A Million Pleading Faces’ and particularly ‘Hokoyo’, where Manyika lakes the lead vocals, have the infectious upswing that characterises the finer syntheses of white pop and black dance.

But those moments pass, and always we have to return to Collins’ spineless singing and naive critiques of romance. What is most clearly missing from Orange Juice is wit, a commodity they seemed to be circling around on their amusing retread of ‘L.O.V.E.’ There it appeared that Collins could end up as Green’s embarrassed and guileless cousin – except there is none of the resplendent style of Songs To Remember in Rip It Up. ‘I Can’t Help Myself‘, a fairly doltish melange of familiar pop hooks, shows they have no idea of what irony is.

Collins’ worst failing is his overweening sentimentality. Perhaps he and Buddy Holly aren’t so far apart at that.

JC adds…….

So…..having spent at least two years building up Orange Juice, the NME decides that it’s time for a hatchet job with this consideration of their second studio album.

It’s worth remembering that Orange Juice’s move to Polydor Records had caused great angst among the uber-hacks for whom all indie releases were great and no time should be given to those on majors.  A bit of slack had been cut for You Can’t Hide Your Love Forever which had come out just eight months earlier in that the debut album had many songs dating from the live shows played when they were very much in indie-land, but the fact that it hadn’t yielded the sort of success the paymasters at the label had anticipated meant that it was sort of open season on the band, and as you can see from the above, particularly on Edwyn.

Rip It Up isn’t that great an album, but the reviewer in this instance gets it spectacularly wrong with his take on things, as evidenced by him suggesting that I Can’t Help Myself shows they have no sense of irony when the entire song, and its delivery, is dripping with it.  It’s also interesting that he suggests that the two songs on which Zeke takes the lead as being the best, or at least the most interesting when most fans simply saw them as diversionary and helping to pad out a record which really should have been allowed more time to develop and finish, except that the label bosses were putting ridiculous demands on the band.

I’m pretty sure that Edwyn was, by now, regretting inking the deal with Polydor, certainly from the creative aspect.  I’m also thinking that there was every chance the band would have been dropped in early 1983 if the album had been a commercial flop, and perhaps the NME boys were hearing of such a possibility and so decided to land their blows as if to get ready to say, ‘we told you so.’  Edwyn & co, of course, had the last laugh thanks to the title track becoming a huge hit single.

Orange Juice would never make another album like Rip It Up, driving their bosses crazy but making their fans incredibly happy in the process, and hopefully pissing off those, like Richard Cook, who were looking in the wrong places for what made the band so special.

The fascinating thing is that the subsequent longevity of Edwyn’s career has, in part, led to a reassessment in many places of the album. For instance, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die, a reference book first published in 2005 which compiles the thoughts of music critics on what they think are the most important, influential, and best records since the 1950s and publication, included Rip It Up.

And the dear old NME, in 2014, had the title song at #216 in its list of the 500 greatest songs of all time.

mp3: Orange Juice – Rip It Up (album version)
mp3: Orange Juice – A Million Pleading Faces
mp3: Orange Juice – Mud In Your Eye
mp3: Orange Juice – Louise Louise

The third of these tracks has a backing vocal contribution from the mighty Paul Quinn, while the fourth is a re-tread of a song from the Postcard era.  ‘Fatuous ruminations on love’ ?  Ha, fucking ha.

JC

AN IMAGINARY COMPILATION ALBUM : #286 : HINDS

Hinds, from Madrid, have very much become a firm favourite in Villain Towers. Here’s a brief bio, courtesy of allmusic:-

“Spain in the 2010s was a hotbed for garage rock bands, mostly fronted and populated by men. The four women of Hinds broke the mold and in the process became the most successful of them all. Their debut album, 2016’s Leave Me Alone, brought their rambunctious, sometimes ramshackle, sound to the world. Further records refined it with slicker production and more-focused songcraft, and on the quartet’s third long-player, 2020’s The Prettiest Curse, they dipped their toes into the edge of the pop mainstream.

The band was originally formed in Madrid in 2011 by Carlotta Cosials and Ana García Perrote, two young women tired of hanging out while their friends made music. After learning the basics of guitar, the duo released a pair of lo-fi demos on their Bandcamp page under the name Deers. Released in the summer of 2014, those two noisy, melodic pop tunes, “Bamboo” and “Trippy Gum,” caught the attention of several U.K. publications like NME and The Guardian. Within months, Deers had expanded to a quartet with the addition of bassist Ade Martín and drummer Amber Grimbergen. A second single release, “Barn,” followed in November of that year, after which Deers were forced to change their name due to a legal threat by another band already using it. Under their new moniker, Hinds, they continued to expand their touring range across Europe and the U.K., releasing a split single with fellow Spaniards the Parrots in April 2015 and appearing on a compilation from garage-centric U.S. label Burger Records.

Hinds’ debut album, Leave Me Alone, arrived in January 2016 on Lucky Number in the U.K. and Mom + Pop in the U.S. The band toured the world to promote the record throughout the rest of the year, released a deluxe version of the album, and were named a winner of a 2017 European Border Breakers Award. The group continued to tour in 2017, though they also took time to record a song, “A Rodar,” for the Spanish release of the film Cars 3.

The quartet also began working on their second album, this time co-producing it themselves with the help of Gordon Raphael (the Strokes, Regina Spektor). 2018’s I Don’t Run was again released by the team of Lucky Number and Mom + Pop, and featured a slightly cleaned-up and punchier garage pop sound.

Recorded in New York City and produced by Jenn Decilveo (Bat for Lashes, the Wombats), The Prettiest Curse followed in 2020. On the album, Hinds moved another step away from their lo-fi garage roots while still retaining their joyous spirit and rambunctious vocals.”

All of which demonstrates why pulling together this ICA has been such a challenge.  Just the three albums in a five-year period, but each of them being quite different in the way that have been worked on, produced and delivered.

There are some days when I prefer the lo-fi and noisy approach of the debut when the duel vocals from Carlotta and Ana aren’t always in harmony, and indeed on occasions seem to be embarking on their own semi-private duel for supremacy.  Then, there are those days when the most recent album is given a spin as it never fails to put a smile on my face, thanks to its more pop-friendly and sunnier approach, with some of the lyrics being sung in their native Spanish.

And then there’s the middle album – I Don’t Run – which was, in effect, my introduction to the band.  While it doesn’t offer anything truly groundbreaking, it is a fabulous listen from start to end, packed with  jaunty upbeat sounding songs which provide cover for a set of lyrics dealing, for the most part, with the downside of falling in love – failed relationships, bitterness, misery, loneliness, revenge and relying on your friends to pull you through.

It was tempting to go with an ICA in chronological order, allowing those of you unfamiliar with the band to hear the journey from the rough’n’ready stuff through to the pop sophistication, but in the end I’ve mixed things up a bit.  It’s also 12 songs rather than the usual 10, partly as I just couldn’t narrow things down, but also for the fact that, even with the additional tracks, it still clocks in at less than 38 minutes.

SIDE A

1. Chili Town (from Leave Me Alone, 2015)
2. Just Like Kids (Miau) (from The Prettiest Curse, 2020)
3. The Club (from I Don’t Run, 2018)
4. Spanish Bombs (cover of The Clash song, download 2020)
5. New For You (from I Don’t Run, 2018)
6. I’ll Be Your Man (from Leave Me Alone, 2015)

SIDE B

1. Good Bad Times (from The Prettiest Curse, 2020)
2. Soberland (from I Don’t Run, 2018)
3. Warts (from Leave Me Alone, 2015)
4. Castigadas En El Granero (from Leave Me Alone, 2015)
5. Burn (from The Prettiest Curse, 2020)
6. Tester (from I Don’t Run, 2018)

If you like what you’re hearing, then please head over to the bandcamp site and spend some money!!

JC