‘S’ IS FOR…….

avatars-000229166207-oqcfx8-t500x500

…….Stitched-Back Foot Airman.

I mentioned in last Saturday’s post about Stopstarts that I had found myself looking up unknown (to me) singers and bands whose names began with the letter ‘S’, which is how I came across today’s indie-combo, of whom I have just one song thanks to its inclusion on the C87 box set, comprising seventy-four tracks, issued a few years ago by Cherry Red Records.

Between bios posted on Last FM and Soundcloud, as well as the info on Discogs, I’ve been able to cobble this together:-

Stitched-Back Foot Airman started in the early eighties as a side project to the Southampton-based band Games to Avoid led by guitarist and singer Simon Vincent. “Stitched” was initially an “occasional” band Simon formed with his younger brother Robin Vincent and Mike Farmer and film maker/visual artist Crimp Beringer.

The name was taken from a headline in the Southern Evening Echo relating to a small plane pilot who had crashed and had his foot re-attached to his leg, the full headline was “Stitched-back Foot Airman on the mend”.

The three-piece toured regularly during the mid-eighties and dazzled audiences by swapping instruments for virtually every song. This was borne out of their songwriting process, with all three members writing and creating music, riffs and instrumentals through swapping instruments and improvisation.

Two EPs were released in 1986 on their own Very Mouth Records which led to airtime from John Peel and support slots for many of the key bands of the era such as Stump, A Witness, The Mekons, The Shop Assistants, and Primal Scream.

Manchester-based In Tape Records signed the band in 1987 and there would be two more 12″ singles before they seemingly called it a day, as it seems they never actually formally split up, and still get together on the odd occasion to record music.

This is the song on the C87 box set:-

mp3: Stitched-Back Foot Airman – Tears In The Gutter

This scratchy, psychedelic and occasionally inventive effort was actually one of the b-sides on the Shake Up single.  I’ve tracked the rest down:-

mp3: Stitched-Back Foot Airman – Shake Up
mp3: Stitched-Back Foot Airman – Tip The Wink
mp3: Stitched-Back Foot Airman – Keep Away

It’s fair to say that they had a sound which made it difficult to pigeon-hole them.

JC

FUN, FUN, FUN

ross

The above pictured man with the flag is, arguably, the most (in)famous Assistant Referee in world football.

His name is Douglas Ross.  He’s been doing the job in Scotland for around ten years.  Most folk who run the lines barely get a second glance, but it’s there is the fact that he is also a Member of Parliament at Westminster, having been elected in 2017 after previously being a local councillor and then member of the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh.

Oh, and since August 2020, he has been leader of the Scottish Conservative Party, a position in which he gets a media platform to pontificate on all sorts of issues.

The Tories are not popular in Scotland.  Indeed, in recent months, as the antics of ex-Prime Minister Boris Johnston and the policies of the new incumbent, Liz Truss have demonstrated, they are increasingly unpopular across the UK.

Now you might be wondering to yourself what all this has to do with a music blog.  I’m getting there….I just felt I had to set the scene for overseas readers.

Some of you may know that I have a Saturday job, which sometimes extends to Tuesday or Wednesday nights.  I am a volunteer at Raith Rovers FC and my role is to be in the Matchday Announcer’s Box, doing things like reading out the teams, mentioning match sponsors, shouting out goalscorers as the game progresses and so on.  It also involves me selecting and playing the music pre-match and at half-time.

My method involves choosing a set of tunes and preloading them as a playlist to an iPod which is then plugged into the system at the stadium.  There’s always about 50 minutes worth of music involved. For last Saturday’s match, I decided in advance to include a few tunes that contained subtle  digs at the way the Tories are running the country – You Don’t Care About Us by Placebo and Five Get Over Excited by The Housemartins, while also adding Papa’s Got A Brand New Pigbag by Pigbag as some football crowds elsewhere have taken to chanting ‘Fuck The Tories’ as part of its refrain (not that I was expecting our small band of supporters to do likewise, but I was hoping perhaps that a few might mumble along).

I got handed the team sheets at around 2.15pm, which is when I see that Douglas Ross is running the line.  We rarely get him at Stark’s Park as he tends to get higher profile games, but everyone, I suppose, has to do their turn.  The playlist has already got underway.  Prefab Sprout, Stereolab and Julian Cope have already been aired, and the players of both sides are going through their warm-ups oblivious to the fact that some of their moves make them look as if they are gyrating in sync to LCD Soundsystem.

Around ten minutes later, the referee and his assistants come out to do their warm-up.  The timing couldn’t have been better.  Douglas Ross is soon running around the pitch as Paul Heaton sings:-

Feigning concern, a Conservative pastime
Makes you feel doubtful right from the start
The expression she pulls is exactly like last time
You’ve got to conclude she just hasn’t a heart

Now, I know that Douglas Ross wasn’t paying the slightest bit of attention to the music and had no idea about what was going on.  I also doubt he even knows who The Housemartins are, never mind the sentiments in the song.  But it made me laugh out loud….thankfully I had my microphone switched off. Oh, and for the record, the Placebo song was next up, and he was still running around the pitch.

mp3: The Housemartins – Five Get Over Excited
mp3: Placebo – You Don’t Care About Us
mp3: Pigbag – Papa’s Got A Brand New Pigbag

At half-time, just behind the players who were heading up the tunnel just below where the matchday announcer’s box is, the referee and his assistants get together ready to do likewise.  I haven’t yet cued up any music for the half-time break, so there is a bit of silence as the applause for the first half performance dies down.  The voice of what sounds like a middle-aged man bellows out.

“Ross.  Just fuck off you fat Tory Bastard.  And take the rest of your greedy and useless Tory pals with you.”

There is a loud cheer from maybe 30 or so fans nearby.  Douglas Ross looks down at his feet and walks slowly up the tunnel.  I decide it’s time, again, for The Housemartins.

Oh, and for the record.  Raith Rovers won 3-0.  It was a good way to spend an autumnal Saturday afternoon.

JC

ICA WORLD CUP 2022 : ROUND ONE OF THE KNOCKOUT STAGE (vi)

icaworldcup

As usual, we will begin with the results from last week:-

Match 17 : Go-Betweens 25 It’s Immaterial 9

Match 18 : Human League 30 The Twilight Sad 9

Match 19 : Stereolab 14 Neil Young 21

Match 20: Bananarama 14 Beastie Boys 20

For a short time, the final match was competitive, but the NYC crew eventually proved too strong.   Neil Young held off something of a comeback from Stereolab, but as you can see from the final result, he scored a few late on.  Personally, I’m disappointed, having championed The Twilight Sad so many times on the blog over the years, that they picked up so few votes.  If VAR was part of the process, I might have found a way to remove most of the goals scored by the Human League.

This week’s intriguing(?) set of games…..

Suede (3rd in Group G) v Scritti Politti (6th in Group F)

mp3: Suede – Stay Together (long version) v mp3 : Scritti Politti – Tinseltown To The Boogiedown (Album Version ft. Mos Def & Lee Majors)

Manic Street Preachers (2nd in Group E) v The National (7th in Group H)

mp3: Manic Street Preachers – Patrick Bateman v mp3 : The National – Blank Slate

Siouxsie & The Banshees (4th in Group F) v Amelia Fletcher (5th in Group E)

mp3: Siouxsie & The Banshees – Helter Skelter v mp3: The Catenary Wires – Mirrorball

(Amelia Fletcher’s ICA was a compilation of songs by various bands she has been part of)

Lloyd Cole (1st in Group H) v The Delgados (8th in Group G)

mp3: Lloyd Cole – Like Lovers Do (Stephen Street Mix) v mp3: The Delgados – Pull The Wires From The Wall

As ever, thanks for taking part.  Voting closes at midnight (UK time) next Friday, which is the 14th of October.

JC

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #327: STOPSTARTS

R-2242039-1271851355

It was sometime back in the mid-noughties, in the era when myspace was king and queen of the musical world, that I stumbled across a CD sampler called Grace Records – The First Five Singles.

Five bands I’d never heard of – Fury of the Headteachers, Stopstarts, Orphan Boy, Linear, and The Homewreckers Club.  I took it home and found there was some merit to the music, but none of it was really groundbreaking.

I don’t really know anything much about the label or any of the bands, as there were no bios or the likes offered.  There may well have been all sorts of stuff put up on myspace, but that’s pretty much extinct nowadays. Discogs shows up that Grace Records was in existence between 2006-2007, with a total of thirteen singles as its complete output.

I had got round to checking out, on-line, a few of the unknown singers/bands on the hard drive that appear after Steve Mason, who was #325 in the series, when I stumbled across a couple of lines on Stopstarts advising they were from Glasgow and indeed one of our local papers had informed its readers of an upcoming gig in February 2007.  But of the names of the musicians, there’s nothing.

mp3 : Stopstarts – My Watch Is Digital

This was the second single released on Grace Records.  There’s mint copies going for sale on Discogs for £1 plus postage, so although each single had a limited run of just a few hundred, very few seemed to be sold to the general public and there’s been no increase in value whatsoever.*

mp3 : Stopstarts – Metronome

That’s your b-side.

*I hope I didn’t come across as sneering with that comment.  The fact is that those behind Grace Records enabled a number of groups to leave behind a physical legacy of the time they spent together, even if the music failed to make any headway critically or commercially…..and I’m always in awe of those who make such things happen.

JC

A LONG OVERDUE DEBUT APPEARANCE ON TVV

alvvays

Regular readers will know that I’m most often accompanied to gigs by Aldo, a great friend of many years standing whose relative youth (he’s not long into his 40s!) means he is far better at keeping up with new things in music than I am.

A long while back, he suggested that I’d enjoy Alvvays if I gave them a listen.

For those who aren’t aware, the band are from Canada, forming in 2011 on Prince Edward Island, one of the most eastern parts of that vast and beautiful country.  Molly Rankin (vocals, guitar), Kerri MacLellan (keyboards), Alec O’Hanley (lead guitar), Phil McIssac (drums) and Brian Murphy (bass) collectively moved the 1,000 miles (by road) to Toronto as this opened up more opportunities.  They came to the attention of the music business thanks to a series of support slots for different indie bands and positive on-line reactions to their demo material.

A self-titled debut album appeared in the summer of 2014, with the follow-up Antisocialites being issued three years later.  The band has long been compared to many that have come out of Scotland, most notably Camera Obscura, along with the likes of Magnetic Fields – and it’s no surprise that both of these acts are also among Aldo’s favourites.

I did heed what my friend had to say, and picked up digital copies of the two albums, thoroughly enjoying what I was hearing, particularly the debut album.

mp3: Alvvays – Adult Diversion (Alvvays 2014)
mp3: Alvvays – Party Police (Alvvays 2014)
mp3: Alvvays – In Undertow (Antisocialites, 2017)
mp3: Alvvays – Not My Baby (Antisocialites, 2017)

I had assumed that the period of inactivity since 2017, coinciding with the onset of the COVID pandemic, had resulted in the band calling it a day, but I was very wrong.

An email from the good people at Monorail Records not only advised that a new LP was imminent, but that the shop was helping to promote a Glasgow date on an upcoming UK tour.  The album and tickets were duly ordered, all of which led to myself and Aldo getting along to see Alvvays last Sunday, where we found ourselves among a few other old friends, not least Comrade Colin. It proved to be an excellent night out, albeit I thought the band was a bit more rock-orientated than I’d anticipated from the two albums, although perhaps that’s an indication of the direction the new record is taking.  I’ll soon find out, as Blue Rev comes out today.

The original rhythm section of the band are no longer involved.  Sheridan Riley came in on drums in 2017 while Abbey Blackwell arrived as the new bassist just last year. Having not seen any previous incarnation of Alvvays, I can’t say if the new line-up made for a better live experience than before, but I can say that they sounded note-perfect and deservedly got a huge ovation from the 500 fans who made up the capacity audience.

The band have a 24-date tour of the USA, starting in Chicago on 14 October and ending on 18 November in Boston.  They are well worth seeing.

JC

NOSTALGIA IN OCTOBER (1)

3084835270

This was one of three posts scheduled for last month that had to be held back.  Some extracts from ICA 7.

It’s What You Want That Matters

A song that had first been aired two years previously on the Peel show when it was known as What Becomes Of The Broken Hearted?

I’ve admitted before that I was late to The Wedding Present. I hadn’t given them much attention in the early days simply as the music papers were saying this was the band to fill the Smiths-sized void in your life and I just didn’t think at the time that anyone could do such a thing. George Best had been out for the best part of three years when I first got a hold of a copy. This was the initial stand out track for me. And I still love it all this time later.

Nobody’s Twisting Your Arm

There’s some wording on the back of the sleeve of this single.

‘Additional vocals by Amelia’

This little touch gave the band a different dynamic as they brought in the indie goddess who was Amelia Fletcher from Talulah Gosh to add backing vocals to some new songs after the release of the debut LP. It was a short-lived partnership of no more than a few months, and it didn’t make it beyond minor contributions to the sophomore classic that was Bizarro. But it planted a seed for male/female vocals that came to the fore in the Cinerama era and thereafter in the 21st Century Weddoes. This is a cracking 45 which took the band into the Top 50 of the singles chart for the first time.

Brassneck (single version)

The production from Steve Albini on Seamonsters really helped the band break out of the indie-shell and a hint of what he would do can be found on the remix of the opening track from the Bizarro LP. Thirty seconds are trimmed from the original while the arrangement is tightened and beefed up. I love how the electric guitar gives way to the acoustic strumming about two-thirds of the way through before the ‘beached whale wailing’ beckons David back to microphone.

JC

IT REALLY WAS A CRACKING DEBUT SINGLE (68)

R-1962564-1552219949-4299

I’m able to bring this to you today, thanks to it having been part of the latest series of re-releases by Optic Nerve Recordings, a label specialising in offering up vinyl copies of long-lost or difficult to find singles, of an indie-bent, from the 80s and 90s.

The Wake were formed in Glasgow in 1981 by Gerard McInulty (aka Caesar), on guitar and vocals, Steven Allen on drums and Joe Donnelly as bassist. Previously Caesar had played with Altered Images, and was responsible for the superb Dead Pop Stars, but he left prior to the band enjoying chart success with Happy Birthday.

To begin with, nobody paid much attention to The Wake which led to the trio deciding, in 1982, to record a self-financed debut single on their own label, Scan 45 for which they roped in a friend, Robert Gillespie, to play on keyboards.

mp3: The Wake – On Our Honeymoon

Shortly afterwards, Joe Donnelly decided to leave and the now Bobby Gillespie took on bass guitar duties, with Carolyn Allen (sister of Steven) joining as the keyboard player.

The debut single and a demo tape found it way to Rob Gretton, who got the band down to Strawberry Studios in Stockport to record some material for a possible release on Factory Records.

The result was a seven-track LP, Harmony, issued in October 1982 with the catalogue number of FAC 60. It was the following year when I first really became aware of The Wake, thanks to them supporting New Order on a short tour across Scotland, during which I got to three of the gigs.  Later in the year, Bobby Gillespie would take his leave of the band, turning up next as drummer with Jesus and Mary Chain, being replaced by Alex McPherson.

The Wake would depart from Factory in 1988 and later releases would be on Sarah Records through to 1995, although the band was primarily now just Caesar and the Allen siblings, augmented on record by guest musicians.

The end of Sarah Records meant the end of The Wake, but they reformed in 2009 with new material emerging in 2012.

Going back to the debut single, it has long been out of print and copies tend to fetch £40-£60 on the second-hand market.  The Optic Nerve version is on white vinyl, for less than a tenner (plus postage), and comes with a poster and postcard.

mp3: The Wake – Give Up

Two tracks of their time, but sort of timeless, if you know what I mean.

JC

ONE-OFF PIECES OF VINYL (1)

R-45031-1367900985-8348

Another new series, which will be of an occasional nature.

Some pieces of vinyl sitting now in various locations in the Towers are one-offs in that the single or album happens to be all I have by a particular singer or band.  Such as this, from 2000:-

mp3: Add N To (X) – Plug Me In

I didn’t actually buy this in 2000 – indeed, that was a period when any new music was almost exclusively on CD.  It was picked while I was browsing among the small selection of vinyl in a bric-a-brac shop on the south side of Glasgow just a few months ago.  It’s a song that I recall hearing back in the day, and I’m sure I saw the promo video on television at some point, although the fact that wiki states said promo consists of porn actresses playing with sex toys means I’m surely much mistaken!

Anyways, the song turned out to be everything I remembered, a funky piece of electronica, although listening more closely to the lyrics than I must have done in 2000 reveals it very much on the risqué side.

Add N To (X) first started making music in 1996 and had made two albums, as well as going through some line-up changes prior to signing to Mute Records in 1999.  The trio who made this single were Barry Smith, Ann Shenton and Steven Claydon, with Shenton the only one left from the original line-up.  After three albums for Mute, they called it a day in 2003.

The b-side has a cracking title:-

mp3: Add N To (X) – The Vic Hallam System

I thought that it was a tribute to a footballer from the 1970s who had played for many clubs but is best recalled for his contribution to Sunderland’s FA Cup winning run of 1973….but it turns out his name is spelled Vic Halom.

Turns out it is named after the owner of the construction company which produced prefabricated timber-based, flat-roofed classrooms for schools in the 1950s.  Known as the Derwent System, the method enabled authorities, at a time of shortages, to quickly and cheaply provide space for pupils.  The method was also deployed to construct office buildings.

Not surprisingly, the use of such materials and the style in which they were built led to severe problems within not more than a decade, and very few examples of the buildings remain in situ.

JC

PS : A Public Service Announcement

5.30pm on Monday evening. Just back from accompanying Rachel to an afternoon showing of Moonage Daydream, the recently released documentary on the life of David Bowie.

I’m no great fan, so my instant reaction that the two-and-a-quarter hours felt like four is perhaps understandable.  Rachel, on the other hand, is a lifelong fan (having seen the Ziggy Stardust tour as a 14-year old back in the day).  She was scathing of the film, thinking it was all over the place and that it ignored far too many periods of his career; but the biggest failure was the lack of acknowledgement for the roles certain people played in his life – she singled out Angie Bowie and Iggy Pop.

Neither of us understand why so many critics are fawning over it.

OKTOBERFEST ’22

Oktoberfest-2022

I believe that today is actually the last day of the festival over there in Munich.  First one in three years post-COVID breakout.

Saves me coming up with some sort of smart or smarmy name for the TVV  monthly mix which has a few lesser known and new(ish) tracks to make your way through.

mp3: Various – Oktoberfest ’22

Happy Ending – Hi Fi Sean and David McAlmont
The Truck Driver and His Mate – Pet Shop Boys
Youth Knows No Pain – Lykke Li
Ring Ring Ring (Ha Ha Hey) – De La Soul
Why Do You Only Call Me When You’re High? – Arctic Monkeys
Vanishing Point – New Order
Pure Shores  – All Saints
Loose Fit – Happy Mondays
I Am God – Spare Snare
Atomic – Blondie
18 Cigarettes – Ducks Ltd.
Waiting For The Winter – The Popguns
First Hand Arrogance – Brontes
Go Go Go – The Wedding Present
Theme From Sparta F.C. #2 – The Fall

It all lasts about eight seconds under an hour.

JC

ICA WORLD CUP 2022 : ROUND ONE OF THE KNOCKOUT STAGE (v)

icaworldcup

As usual, we will begin with a recap from last week.

The responses seemed to come in slower than usual, and by Wednesday it looked as if the total votes would be well down than on previous weeks.  I was thinking that some folk might have looked at what had already come in and decided that as at least three of the outcomes were foregone conclusions, there was no point in bothering.

Or maybe it’s a bit like many a live gig.  There’s excitement at the start of things and great anticipation for how it will all end, but there’s the stuff in the middle that doesn’t have your full attention.

Match 13 : Electronic 15 Ash 22

Match 14 : The Dream Syndicate 7 Cinerama 26

Match 15 : Cocteau Twins 34 Chris Isaak 3

Match 16: Echo and The Bunnymen 33 Fad Gadget 4

I’ve a feeling the next round for those that got through might bring closer results…….

The next four Sundays will see the return of those who came through from Groups E-H, with again the group winners up against a combo that finished 8th and so on…….

The Go-Betweens (1st in Group E) v It’s Immaterial (8th in Group F)

mp3: Go-Betweens – Don’t Let Him Come Back (new version) v mp3 : It’s Immaterial – How Can I Tell You? (album version)

Human League (4th in Group G) v The Twilight Sad (5th in Group H)

mp3: Human League – Mirror Man v mp3 : The Twilight Sad – I/m Not Here (missing face)

Sterelolab (2nd in Group F) v Neil Young (7th in Group G)

mp3: Stereolab – The Free Design v mp3: Neil Young – Too Far Gone

Bananarama (3rd in Group H) v Beastie Boys (6th in Group E)

mp3: Bananarama – I Heard A Rumour (Miami Remix) v mp3: Beastie Boys – Jimmy James

As ever, thanks for taking part.  Voting closes at midnight (UK time) next Friday, which is the 7th of October.

JC

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #326: STEVE MASON

ab6761610000e5eb96f2cd325816f8f8d93edc2d

From all music:

Scottish singer, songwriter, and producer Steve Mason rose to widespread critical acclaim in the late ’90s as a member of indie darlings the Beta Band. With their creative songscrap approach and maverick attitude, the Beta Band earned a somewhat notorious reputation among fans and the U.K. press during the post-Brit-pop era, thanks to releases like 1998’s The Three EP‘s and 2001’s Hot Shots II. During the Beta Band’s heyday and following their 2004 breakup, Mason also recorded as King Biscuit Time and later set out on a proper solo career with albums like 2013’s Monkey Minds in the Devil’s Time and 2019’s About the Light.

Mason initially formed the Beta Band as a duo in the mid-’90s with fellow Fife native Gordon Anderson (Lone Pigeon), although Anderson’s involvement proved to be short-lived. Following his departure, the group coalesced around Robin Jones on drums, John Maclean on keyboards, sampler, and turntables, and Richard Greentree on bass, with Mason serving as the group’s unofficial leader from that point onward. The Beta Band earned heaps of critical praise with an opening salvo of three EPs, all released on Regal and leading up to the release of their acclaimed debut album, 1999’s The Beta Band.  The follow-up, Hot Shots II, earned greater praise, although shortly after their third release, 2004’s Heroes to Zeros, the band announced their breakup.

Mason had already debuted a solo project, King Biscuit Time, late in 1998, and during the 18 months that followed the Beta Band’s breakup, he released a pair of King Biscuit singles — including “C I AM 15,” which reached number 67 on the British charts — and a full album, 2006’s Black Gold. One year later, he launched an electronica project called Black Affair, and a techno-influenced LP titled Pleasure Pressure Point appeared on V2 in 2008. He subsequently returned to a Beta Band format for his first album under his own name, a late 2009 single titled “All Come Down.” The expected full-length album, Boys Outside, with production help from Richard X, appeared in 2010 on Double Six, distributed by Domino. Provided with polished production, Steve Mason’s poignant songwriting and powerful vocals were brought to the fore. The album was then given a dub reworking by Mason and Dennis Bovell. Ghosts Outside displayed the singer/songwriter’s effortless ability to span genres successfully, while remixing the likes of Django Django showed Mason’s hunger for creativity was not slowing down.

In early 2013, his third album under his own name arrived. Among its sprawling 20 tracks, Monkey Minds in the Devil’s Time explored depression, politics, and human nature, bringing together many genres to create a mesmerizing experience. His next record focused purely on himself, wringing out personal emotions and experiences for 2016’s Meet the Humans, bringing aboard Craig Potter (Elbow) to produce the album. With a number of solo tours under his belt, Mason wished to re-create the same live energy on record; the resulting album, 2019’s About the Light, featured a live band throughout the recording process to capture the feeling of his shows.

mp3: Steve Mason – Alive!

One of the many excellent tracks to be found on Meet The Humans, which made the final shortlist of ten for the Scottish Album of The Year for 2016.

JC