60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #47

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The Hurting – Tears For Fears (1983)

This is an album that wouldn’t have been considered for the shortlist until more recent times.

As I mentioned in September 2021, which was the previous occasion that I wrote about The Hurting, I hadn’t given much thought to Tears For Fears since the mid-80s, such was my dislike for the album Songs From The Big Chair (1985) and the awful singles that were lifted from it.

The abrupt change came courtesy of me spotting, and deciding to buy, a reasonably second-hand vinyl copy of the 1983 debut album.  It had been a record I had bought and enjoyed back in the day, but that had been missing from the collection for as long as I can remember – most likely loaned out and not returned.

It proved to be a very interesting, intriguing and ultimately enjoyable experience to listen to The Hurting in its entirety after a considerable period of time.  I certainly had forgotten that it was an album in which very serious, difficult and often uncomfortably personal subject matters were covered.  As I wrote in that piece in September 2021, given that so many debut albums often feature material drawn from personal circumstances, you have to wonder what sort of fucked up life had been endured by songwriter Roland Orzabal, who was just 21 years old when these songs were recorded.

The Hurting went to #1 in the UK, with its success driven in the main by the three singles lifted from it, all of which went Top 5 and led to Tears For Fears becoming mainstays on Top of The Pops and pin-ups within the pages of Smash Hits.

mp3: Tears For Fears – Mad World

Mad World is a deceptively brilliant song.   A tune that demands you get up and dance, but with a lyric that is all about depression, isolation and helplessness. It’s a single that, on reflection, I should have found space for in the 45 45s at 45 rundown in 2008 – the problem was that I had completely dismissed the group as near-worthless on the basis of the second album.

I’d like to think that having The Hurting take its deserved place in the 60 @ 60 rundown goes some way to making up for that oversight.

JC

PET SHOP BOYS SINGLES (Part Thirteen)

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The first sighting of the Pet Shop Boys in 1996 came on 19 February at the Brit Awards.   Not that they had been nominated for anything after a quiet year, but they were on stage performing, more or less as backing group, for David Bowie as he collected the ‘Outstanding Contribution Award’ for his lifetime of work.  It was the same day as his new single Hello Spaceboy had been released, itself a Pet Shop Boys remix of a song from the album Outside.

It would be another two months before any of their own new music was available in the shops.

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Before was released on 22nd April 1996.   Maybe it was the fact that after a more than a decade of being part of the fabric of the UK music scene, during which time they had, in my opinion, hardly put a foot wrong, but I found myself thoroughly underwhelmed by the new single.  It was a mid-tempo, soulful sort of tune in which Neil sang in something akin to a falsetto, relying on female backing vocals to guide us through the chorus.

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Before

It was available on 2 x CDs, cassette and a limited edition set of 12″ vinyls.  Most of the releases, as had increasingly been in the case in recent times, came packed with different mixes of the single, but CD1 did offer two further new songs plus a new mix of an old favourite.

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – The Truck Driver And His Mate
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Hit And Miss
mp3: Pet Shop Boys –  In The Night 1995

The single did get to #7, but I didn’t buy it at the time, and so it took me a number of years before discovering the other tracks.  ‘Truck Driver..’ is an absolute joy,  driven along by a rocky and raucous beat, with a lyric that is packed with innuendo and humour.   I incorporated it into one of my monthly mixes a wee while back.

Hit and Miss is another fine song, but again is something of a curveball given there’s a lot of acoustic guitar on it. It’s a mid-tempo and melancholy number that wouldn’t have sounded out of place if it had been released by one or other of the many Britpop bands hanging around the UK music scene at the time.

Maybe it was the fact that the three new songs might have seen long time fans wondering where exactly the ’96 version of PSB were heading that a bit of a comfort blanket was provided on the single with the new Hi-NRG/house instrumental take on the old classic that had originally found its way into our hearts as the b-side to Opportunities in 1985.

One thing you could accurately predict about Pet Shop Boys was they were unpredictable, as evidenced by the next single.

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Se a vida é (That’s the way life is) hit the shops on 12 August 1996.  Four months had been an unusually long time between singles in advance of a new album, certainly in comparison to previous years.  Anyone expecting a retread of the pedestrian nature of Before would have got a bit of a shock

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Se a vida é (That’s the way life is)

The writing credits on this one give mention to three Brazilian musicians and that because its is based on Estrada Da Paixã, a song written by Olodum, an African-Brazilian band who had supported PSB on the Discovery tour in late 1994.  Packed with brass, guitar and, above all else, the noise made by 20 female drummers, it was memorable in a way that probably stunned many of the club-going fans of the group.  There was probably a hope this was different sounding enough, in the same way that Go West had taken hold of the listening public, to reach #1, but it peaked at #8.

Again, it was available on 2 xCDs, cassette and 12″ vinyls, all packed with remixes.  Two additional songs were on CD1:-

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Betrayed
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – How I Learned To Hate Rock’n’Roll

The first is a strange one.   I’ve read that it was written originally as a country song, before being given a makeover along the lines of drum’n’bass, with Walking Wounded by Everything But The Girl seemingly being an influence.  Maybe so, and while it might have its fans, I think it’s a bit of a mess.

The latter?   On the face of it, it seems to be a pointed and direct dig at guitar music which was going through another revival in the mid-90s.  But the duo had, on the previous single offered up two b-sides as ‘rock and roll’ as anything they had ever released while Neil was more than happy to be associated with Johnny Marr through his work with Electronic.  And then there’s the fact that, just a few months after the release of this song, he would take to the stage and duet with Brett Anderson at a Suede live show, an event that would later be immortalised as a Suede b-side?   Irony?  From the Pet Shop Boys?   Surely not……

A month after Se a vida é (That’s the way life is),  the duo’s sixth studio album, Bilingual, was released.  And that’s where we will pick up things next time around.

JC

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #351: TUFF LOVE

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From the Lost Map Records website:-

“Tuff Love are Julie Eisenstein (guitar, vocals) and Suse Bear (bass, vocals) plus live drummer Iain Stewart (also a member of The Phantom Band). They come from Glasgow and they write dazzling, sun-streaked guitar pop songs with mesmerising lyrics, heart-wrenching vocals and dreamy melodies like the sound of pure summer. They make all their music in Suse’s flat, self-engineering and self-producing everything.

Following the release of their debut, Junk E.P., in May 2014 – on dazzling 10” white vinyl, via Scottish independent label Lost Map Records – the band embarked on tours of the UK and mainland-Europe, as well as enjoying an endless summer of festivals.

A packed spring and summer of 2015 saw Tuff Love personally invited to support first reformed shoegaze legends Ride on their first UK tour in 20 years and then later their most famous fan, Scottish soul-pop singer Paolo Nutini, at a special one-off outdoor show at Glasgow’s Bellahouston Park (also featuring legendary disco queen Grace Jones).

Adored by radio – and championed by the likes of Lauren Laverne, Steve Lamacq, Rob Da Bank, Huw Stephens, Gideon Coe, Vic Galloway, among many others – Tuff Love were filmed in session for BBC Introducing, and also performed as part of the BBC Academy series.  The press have been equally smitten; with two separate features with The Guardian (“a band to fall in love with”), a 2 page interview in DIVA (“our new favourite indie band”), profiles in NME Radar (“great college rock”), Metro and Daily Record, amongst other national publications, and with the Junk E.P. receiving glowing praise across the board – both online and in print.

Tuff Love have played festivals including Glastonbury, T in the Park, Latitude, Wickerman, Indietracks, Long Division and many more.  In November 2014 ‘Slammer’ – the lead single from the sophomore release, Dross EP – won the Rebel Playlist on Steve Lamacq’s show on BBC 6 Music by a landslide. That track and each of their new tracks released since, ‘That’s Right’ and ‘Groucho’, have subsequently been B-listed by BBC 6 Music.

The Dregs EP is the latest, most confident-sounding and most compelling product of their increasingly sophisticated homespun craft – lo-fi in ethic but not in sound. From the distorted jangle of ‘Duke’, through the snapping ‘Crocodile’ with its wonderfully wonky outro organ solo and on to the woozily waltzing ‘Carbon’Dregs is solid gold irresistible listening from first to last.”

JC adds…….

Tuff Love were equally as good live as they were on record.   You’ll notice me using the past tense…….

There’s been no further releases since the Dregs EP which was away back in 2015.   The links to the band’s website page are broken, while the band’s Facebook page concentrates on solo material that Julie and Suse have released in more recent times.

mp3: Tuff Love – Duke

Each of the EPs contained five songs, which means there is enough for an ICA.  I might turn my hand to that at some point.

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #48

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Debut – Björk (1993)

I’ve written a few times before about this album, but I’ve never bettered what I said over on the old blog in October 2009, which I was later able to salvage and re-post on T(n)VV in October 2016.  As it’s almost another seven years on, I’m going to re-post with just an occasional edit to cut down the number of words.

Debut is something that I first heard snippets of in a record shop while browsing. Being familiar with Sugarcubes, I recognised that Björk was singing, but my first assumption was that she was doing guest vocals for someone else. It was only after the third or fourth track in a row to feature her talents that I thought there was more to it, and this was confirmed by the ever-friendly indie-store sales assistant. He also told me that in the week or so since the CD had arrived in the shop it had been on very heavy rotation as it was that rare beast – i.e. an album that found favour with all four folk who worked in the shop.

I told him I was a fan of her former band – he replied that it was nothing at all like any of the old stuff. And he also offered me, as a well-known face in the shop who spent something in the region of £40 a week on CDs, a free copy over the weekend that I could bring back on Monday morning if I didn’t like it. And if I did…..well it would be added to my next bill.

I don’t know how many times the CD was played over the course of that Friday night, the Saturday and the Sunday, suffice to say that not many other things got a look in.

Debut is a record that shifts from one music genre to another with the greatest of ease, class and style  As such, it is impossible to get bored with it. It’s a combination of the songwriting genius of Ms Gudmunsdottir and magical production from Nellee Hooper (and no I haven’t forgotten that he also co-wrote at least half of the songs).

Thirty years on and it has not dated one bit whatsoever. It still makes me smile, makes me dance, and every now and again stops me in my tracks and makes me think about loved ones present and past.

It’s a truly remarkable piece of work.

It was an album that was a slow-burner, spending ages in the UK charts, but never getting any higher than #3. Four singles were taken from it, and, in a strange reversal from the norm, they reached progressively higher chart positions.   Human Behaviour got to #36 in June 1993. Venus As A Boy reached #29 in August, while Big Time Sensuality climbed to #17 on its release in November. However, in March 1994, Violently Happy launched its way to #13.

If you don’t own this record, do something about it.

mp3: Björk – Come To Me

JC

IF I MAY INTERJECT………..

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I really want to say thank you to everyone who rallied round after the unwelcome visit of GK Hand a couple of days back.

It was by pure chance that I was using my laptop for some of the voluntary work I do for Raith Rovers when the offensive comment was posted, and so I was able keeping an eye on what sort of responses that were coming in to Fraser‘s incredibly well-written and thought-provoking piece on Morrissey.  I was actually trying to pull together some thoughts of my own to add to what was proving to be one of the very best debates and discussions over the almost 17 years of this and the old blog, but found myself totally thrown by what I was now reading.   I was actually shaking with rage and shouting loudly at the screen.  I wasn’t just angry, but I was, I’m willing to admit, a bit scared that such a safe haven had been violated.

The album that happened to be playing in the background at the time was The Overload, as I was refamiliarising myself with it as a result of soon going to see Yard Act at Glasgow Barrowlands.  It’s an album that one sub-editor in The Guardian summarised perfectly as being full of waspish portraits of the country’s worst people.

This one’s for our racist commentator.

The last bastion of hope
This once great nation has left is its humour
So be it, through continued mockery
This crackpot country half full of cunts
Will finally have the last laugh
When dragged underwater
By the weight of the tumour it formed
When it fell for the fearmongering
Of the national front’s new hairdo

So then what becomes of the inhabitants
Of this once unstoppable isle
When all of its exports are no longer in style?
Are you seriously still tryna kid me
That our culture will be just finе
When all that’s left is nob heads morris dancing
To Sham 69?

Gob on thе ragman and rally ’round the maypole
Hijack the sound and stake your claim to it
Every card played is a statement made
And there’s always a new a scapegoat to blame for it

England, my heart bleeds
Why’d you abandon me?
Yes, I abandoned you too, but we both know
I wasn’t the one lied to
And I’m not scared of people who don’t look like me
Unlike you

So bold it is in its idiocy
So bound by its own stupidity
It does not realise it has already sentenced
Itself completely to death

The last bastion of hope
This once great nation had left was good music
But we didn’t nurture it, instead choosing to ignore it
Yes, we’ve been trapped by the same crowd that don’t like it
Unless they’ve heard it before
Leaving me stuck flogging my progressive dead horse south of the border
To the so-so and so’s and through and throughs and this and that’s
I’m buttered breads and proud of it
Who’s values flit whenever it fucking suits them
And we’re supposed to let it slide
Because the press have normalised
The idea that racism is something we should humour

Yeah, the last bastion of hope this once great nation has left is
To converse in a manner that will pacify, divide, and unite the room
But no one’s talking and rational thought has been forced into submission
By the medium through which all our information is now consumed
Yes, fake news
“It’s fake news, mate”

So bold it is in its idiocy
So bound by its own stupidity
It does not realise it has already sentenced
Itself completely to death

So bold it is in its idiocy
So bound by its own stupidity
It does not realise it has already sentenced
Itself completely to death

So bold it is in its idiocy
So bound by its own stupidity
It does not realise it has already sentenced
Itself completely to death

So bold

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #49

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Original Pirate Material – The Streets (2002)

I’ve always been someone who has placed more emphasis than is really necessary on the importance of a good lyric.  Maybe that’s why, despite really having no connection with garage music, that I fell so heavily for the debut album by The Streets.

I was stupidly busy at work in the early years of the noughties and there wasn’t much time to devote to reading about or discovering new music.  Anything I was picking up, mostly from the times I was using lunch breaks to browse around record shops, or catching up with videos on MTV2, tended to be guitar-orientated.  The likes of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Doves, Interpol, The Libertines and The White Stripes all released records that I bought, listened to intently and enjoyed.  Spoiler Alert – none of them have made this rundown, although some were on the longlist.

It was my dear friend Jacques the Kipper who put me onto The Streets.  One day we met up at the football, and he handed me a new compilation CD that he’d burned. More than any other, it was this that stood out:-

mp3: The Streets – Let’s Push Things Forward

A tune that, with its use of old-fashioned organ and trombone, harked back to the ska era, but with a vocal delivery that was modern and edgy.  The sort of thing that if I’d been twenty years younger, I’d have tried to learn by heart to sing along to.

I told Jacques how much I’d enjoyed it, and he replied that there were plenty other great tunes on the album. I took his advice and bought it.  I’d be a liar if I said I got all the references in the songs, both in terms of youth culture and the fact it often reflected life in a city that I lived many hundreds of miles from.  I never thought it to be a perfect album, as some of the lyrics cross into sexism/misogyny, but I’ve always put this down to the competing vocalists/lyricists involved on some of the songs – Mike Skinner certainly seemed to try and rise above such things.

It was a close call on whether the debut or the follow-up A Grand Don’t Come For Free (2004) would make the longlist for this rundown.  In the end, it came down to me thinking that Let’s Push Things Forward is their best song.  I reckon if I had leaned the other way, the second Streets album would also have made the Top 60.

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #50

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Electronic – Electronic (1991)

Collaborations don’t work.

The sentiments of a tongue-in-cheek song by FFS in 2015….FFS, of course, being the ‘supergroup’ formed by Franz Ferdinand and Sparks.

Musically, such coming togethers should be a disaster, with too many egos likely to get in the way.  It wasn’t the case in December 1989, when Bernard Sumner, Johnny Marr and Neil Tennant came together to record and released the sublime single Getting Away With It.  

The music press would provide the occasional snippet of information that plans were in hand for further collaborations under the Electronic banner, but the longer the time passed the more it felt, to those on the outside, that the egos were probably getting in the way. It wasn’t until April 1991 that we next heard from Electronic, with a single which blended the most wonderful things about New Order and The Smiths:-

mp3: Electronic – Get The Message

One month later, the debut album, which included Get The Message, but not Getting Away With It, hit the stores.  As someone who thought the world of Barney and Johnny, I rushed out to pick up a copy.

It hardly left the CD player for about a month.  I also made a copy onto cassette so that the album could accompany me on the daily commute to and from Edinburgh.  And later in the year, shortly before Christmas, when they played a very rare live show at the Glasgow Barrowlands, I made sure I got there early to be right at the front, worshipping literally at their feet (Johnny’s in particular).

I know I came to this album pre-judging that it would be nothing short of a triumph.  There were even occasions as I played it so often in 1991 when I thought it was better than anything else either of the two main protagonists had been involved in.  I really did consider it to be a perfect record.

Time has passed, and my initial giddy excitement has dissipated slightly.  I still love and adore the debut Electronic album, but I do fully accept and acknowledge that the protagonists have made better, more influential and more enduring records. Spoiler alert – this isn’t the last time Barney or Johnny or Neil appear in this rundown.

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #51

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Kilimanjaro(reissue)-The Teardrop Explodes (1981)

Yup.  I’m happy to admit that the record label got it right when it decided that the debut album from The Teardrop Explodes should be reissued with the inclusion of the big hit single, even if they did choose to house it in an appalling sleeve.

Kilimanjaro was originally released in October 1980.  It entered the chart at #35 in its first week, before it tumbled out of the Top 75 over the next three weeks.  This wasn’t too difficult to understand as the band were very much a cult act, known primarily for their time with Liverpool-based Zoo Records prior to signing with Mercury.  Their first single for the major label, When I Dream, had been released just prior to the album but failed to make the Top 40.

In January 1981, the band released a new single, Reward, which, unusually at the time, wasn’t on the album.   Reward proved to be a smash hit, going all the way to #6.  Its success did have a positive impact on the sales of Kilimanjaro, as the album re-entered the charts at #36 in the same week that Reward peaked as a single.  But the fact it wasn’t to be found on the album was likely a factor in it again quickly dropping out of the Top 75.

The record label returned to the debut for the follow-up single, with the re-release of the remixed version of Treason (It’s Just A Story), the earlier version of which had been the final single ever released on Zoo Records.  It was also a Top 20 hit.

It was around this time that Mercury hit upon the idea of doing a different pressing of Kilimanjaro.   Reward was added to Side A in between what had been the fourth and fifth tracks.  Some tracks were remixed, while a further two minutes were added to the album’s final track, When I Dream, taking it all the way to a psychedelically fantastic seven minutes plus.

*Big thanks to Fraser for correcting things in the comments section.   The extra two minutes were only added years later with a CD reissue….that’s the version I have on the hard drive, and so made the schoolboy error!! 

The biggest change, of course, came with the sleeve. The picture of the band being replaced by a photo of a herd of zebras in front of Mount Kilimanjaro.   It certainly had enough people picking it up and thinking it was a brand-new album, as the next thing was that it was back in the charts, and all the way up to #24.

Thinking back on it, the success of Treason probably coincided with a period when the album was a bit more difficult to find in the shops, with no further pressings being made available to replace any sold stock, with everything on hold till the re-release had been pressed up and distributed.

No matter the reasons and the timing, it’s fair to say that the addition of Reward alone made the re-release a more rounded and essential purchase.  The purists might not like it, but so what?

mp3: The Teardrop Explodes – Reward

Kilimanjaro is an excellent album, and that’s why I’ve found a place for in this rundown.  It’s worth remembering that this was the work of a very young group of musicians – Julian Cope was coming up for his 23rd birthday when it was first released – and there’s a lot more pop and melody on show than you might come to expect if your point of entry was the modern day Cope.

All told, there were six tracks on it released as singles, whether by Zoo or Mercury.  The ones that had flopped could easily have been hits a second time around, but given that the band had already recorded another album’s worth of material in 1981, it was easy enough to move on.

It really did seem that the Teardrop Explodes had the pop world at their feet when the new single Passionate Friend was released in August 1981. Little did most fans know that things were unravelling at a scary pace, thanks to Julian’s ever-increasing devotion to LSD.

JC

(BONUS POST) THIS COULD SPARK A DISCUSSION…..

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Intro from JC.

I’m very proud that a wonderful TVV community has built up over the years, and as I’ve said on numerous occasions, there is every possibility that I’d have given up the ghost by now if it wasn’t for the feedback/contributions from so many people.

I’ve never once turned down an offer of a guest posting, and I’m not going to start now.

Incidentally, it was my choice of music today.

Cancel-Culture Club

A GUEST POST by FRASER PETTIGREW

The composer Richard Wagner was an unashamed anti-semite, committing the most repugnant prejudice to print in both published and private writings. Decades after his death in 1883, his music was championed by the Nazis and used to glorify the horrors of German fascism. For many people, both Wagner’s own bigotry and his posthumous association with Nazism render his works unlistenable. Despite all this, he is almost universally recognised as one of the most important and influential figures in the history of music, without whose innovations the sound of our world might have developed very differently. His operas are a central part of the canon of western classical music, and he is revered today almost as much as he was over a century ago.

Risking a clang of bathos here, it could be said that Morrissey stands in a similar relation to modern pop music. His influence and innovations are not of comparable stature, but his now undeniable racism places fans of his music in an invidious and depressing position. How can people listen to songs that once defined and enriched their lives without conferring respectability on a man whose every utterance now disgusts them?

Neither Morrissey nor Wagner produced music that is explicitly racist, even though there is much post-hoc reappraisal of songs such as Bengali in Platforms, Asian Rut and National Front Disco. It was possible at the time for Asian fans to read those songs as sympathetic laments, and as I will argue below it is still possible for us all to do so, despite Morrissey’s more recent and unequivocal pronouncements.

All the same, it feels much easier to listen to Parsifal or the Siegfried Idyll than ‘How Soon Is Now’ or ‘Hold On To Your Friends’. The distance of time is undoubtedly significant. Wagner is long dead and not earning royalties from any of my purchases.

But musical genre has a lot to do with it too. It is much easier to divorce Wagner the anti-semite from his operas than it is to separate Morrissey the racist from any of his music because persona and performance are so much more important in rock and pop than in classical. It’s Morrissey himself who is singing to us when we listen to The Smiths and a huge part of the appeal of pop music is our admiration of and identification with the performers. When you become a fan of a group or a singer you buy in to the look, the personality, the sense of who these people might be and how you can make yourself more like them. Every star is a personalised dream of who we might like to be ourselves. Cool, talented, creative, adored by thousands… Nobody feels like that about Harrison Birtwistle or Michael Tippett because they were foosty old nerds. Consider the tragic uncool of Nigel Kennedy. I rest my case.

I am a firm believer in appreciating art without need of biographical details about the artist, or even knowledge of what they intended by their work. If the work enables you to arrive at an interpretation that illuminates, entertains or moves you, then that’s all that matters. But it’s hard to keep that up in the realm of pop music for the reasons above. It’s hard to be completely ignorant and not at all curious about who made this music and it’s natural to want to admire the person who made something you like.

Having said that, I reiterate that instinctively I want to be able to listen to the great creations of these people without guilt, and with a full focus on what the songs themselves make me feel. What we need to realise is that our responses to these songs are personal to us, not actually dependent on the people who made them or what they are really like, despite that impulse to identify. In the same way that young children will request specific stories for bedtime reading because they articulate feelings, anxieties, or aspirations that they harbour subliminally, we reach for particular songs and music because they capture something in our own lives or thoughts and give them expression more perfectly than we could manage ourselves, even though it may not be what the artist meant by it.

Once a work of art is out there in the world it takes on a life of its own. The artist can no longer fully control what the work means, even if they had a very specific meaning in their own minds when they made it.

An example of this for me is the Velvet Underground‘s ‘I’m Waiting For The Man’. This song was on rotation for me as a 15 year old, not because I aspired to be a New York junkie, which is what the song is about, but because I interpreted ‘waiting for the man’ in the sense of waiting to become a man, an independent adult with the freedom of personal responsibility. The song’s agitated, insistent rhythm was my impatience to be grown up and flown from the nest, not Lou Reed‘s strung-out desperation for another fix. It doesn’t matter to me what Lou Reed meant, the song will always be my coming-of-age anthem.

Listening to Morrissey won’t make anyone a racist. Nobody who grew up in love with The Smiths became racist because of anything Morrissey sang, nor will revisiting that music make you racist just because the mask has now fallen from Morrissey’s face. If you focus on the music and the memory of what those songs meant to you then you will continue to experience the humane, humourous, sensitive exposure of adolescent self-pity, the poignant loneliness, the yearning, the farce, the comic arrogance, the ironic love of life’s great disappointments. You will also continue to understand that Morrissey is a racist fuckwit. In fact, you owe it to yourself and to the rest of the world to prevent Morrissey taking those songs away from you.

That position may well be possible for you to achieve, but will you be able to resist the wrath of others who take a different view? One of the strong distinctions between our time and Wagner’s is the power of ‘cancel-culture’. Wagner wasn’t cancelled because when he was alive, anti-semitism was as socially acceptable as holding a door open for the ladies. Nowadays, if you transgress, you will be tried by a judge and jury of Twitterati and no argument will be brooked. I dislike using the epithet ‘woke’ in a negative sense, but sadly its proponents have made it all too easy for reactionary bigots to turn it against them through their rabid absolutism. To the woke, all is black and white, to coin a phrase, and nuance, subtlety and ambivalence are seen as tools of the fascists to undermine their comforting moral certainty.

So if the forces of the woke decree that Morrissey is to be erased, then good luck with arguing for the need to reclaim his creations of beauty and humanity. You may well end up cast out along with him. Your insistence on the value of anything Morrissey brought into the world will be like Winston Smith‘s happy memory of playing snakes and ladders with his mother, recalled at the end of Orwell‘s 1984. It will be punished out of you, it will be a false memory, a lie.

We should all question ourselves about where our own personal red lines are. What are the things that we find intolerable and inexcusable, and how should we react to them? We need to be able to explain and justify, to ourselves and to others, what our views are, because we have to understand our morality, not simply adopt it wholesale from another’s insistence. Not to do our own thinking is to submit to another sort of tyranny and it leaves us incapable of making sound judgements when confronted by new instances of social or moral transgression.

How else can you deal with the fact that Wagner had many Jewish friends, supporters and colleagues, including a long term friendship and professional association with the conductor Hermann Levi. It was Levi who conducted the first performance of Wagner’s final opera Parsifal in 1882, although in a demonstration of how obnoxious Wagner could be, he tried to insist that Levi be baptised before the performance. More recently, the Jewish pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim attempted several times to perform Wagner’s music in Israel, and did so to a private audience in 1991 and again to a public concert audience in 2001. I doubt that Wagner will be high up the playlists of many woke warriors, because those kind of moral complexities are too hard for them to compute.

Similarly, poor old Morrissey – no, I take that back, Morrissey doesn’t deserve any of our pity – stupid Morrissey. For someone who once seemed able to encapsulate Englishness in a couple of lines he seems incapable of understanding the country’s moral burden born out of its history of colonial exploitation, slavery and cultural oppression. As V.S. Naipul used to say every time someone suggested that immigrants should ‘go back where they came from’, “we are here because you were there.” Who now has more right to declare that “England is mine and it owes me a living” than the children of Indian or Caribbean immigrants whose ancestors were screwed out of their birthrights by English imperialists?

In conclusion, I am against banishing Morrissey’s works to the same dark and soundproof cupboard that holds everything ever recorded by Gary Glitter and R. Kelly because the works themselves still have the same positive humane values for me that they always did. I am against giving any more indulgence to Morrissey himself, and against doing anything that will enable him to profit greatly from his work any more. So, making some of them audible here on this blog seems a perfect way of achieving both of those things.

mp3:  Morrissey – Hold On To Your Friends

mp3 : Richard Wagner – Ride Of The Valkyries

FRASER PETTIGREW

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #52

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A Certain Trigger – Maxïmo Park (2005)

For the best part of a decade, beginning just before the turn of the century, a great deal of the music that I was enjoying came through the airing of videos on various satellite TV music stations.  There must have been maybe 20 or so stations to choose from, albeit the majority continually aired promos I had little time for.

MTV2 Europe was really the channel of choice given that it heavily focussed on indie music, occasionally airing promos from years gone by but primarily concentrating on the music being released by new and emerging bands.

Maxïmo Park were probably the best example of a band who found their way into my heart courtesy of the television.  They had released a number of singles that were on heavy rotation, all of which seemed to be better than the last.  They did some interviews for the channel and came across as hard-working decent, level-headed individuals with no hints of arrogance or delusions of grandeur.   But then again, that seems to be typical of most people who come from Newcastle in the north-east of England.

I bought the debut album a couple of weeks after its release in May 2005. I already knew three of its tracks through the airing of the promos, and was delighted to discover that the quality was very much maintained across the other ten songs.  It was the sort of guitar-led indie-pop that had always appealed to my tastes, going all the way back to the late 70s.

Almost every song was written and recorded as if it could be a fast-paced and energetic single, and yet no two songs sounded the same. My first thoughts were along the lines of them being the 21st century equivalent of Buzzcocks given that many of the song themes were about love and relationships not going quite as smoothly as planned.

The other really charming factor was the way that Paul Smith sang in his strong, local accent and so offered something different in the world of the new indie-pop/rock where even the best UK bands seemed intent on mimicking their American counterparts.

mp3: Maxïmo Park – Apply Some Pressure

One of the reasons that I’ve maintained a long-love for A Certain Trigger over many of the similar type album released in the mid-noughties is that Maxïmo Park turned out to be a great live band, offering up no less than two great experiences in a very short space of time. I first saw them in December 2005 when, such was the demand for tickets, that the show was moved late on from the planned venue of the Queen Margaret Union at Glasgow University to the Barrowlands.  It was probably the biggest show the group had played, but if they had any nerves, they didn’t show.  A barnstorming run through the album, with a few b-sides and unreleased songs thrown in for good measure, made for a great night.

They were next in the city in February 2006 as the headliners of the NME Awards Tour, a four-band tour of the UK, with the Glasgow venue being the Carling Academy.  Proceedings were opened by Mystery Jets, who were followed by We Are Scientists.  Next on were Arctic Monkeys, who had taken the indie-world by storm in the period since the tour had been announced.  Indeed, the Glasgow show came very shortly after their album had become the fastest-selling debut album in British history, with more than 350,000 copies sold in the first week.

Most ticket-holders were there for the support act and the audience had thinned out by the time Maxïmo Park took to the stage.  It would have been easy for them to take the money and go through the motions – but they really upped the ante and showed that while Arctic Monkeys were more than decent on stage, they still had a lot to learn in terms of putting on what would be called a show. Anger really did prove to be an energy that night.

I’ve not maintained the same level of interest in Maxïmo Park over the subsequent years beyond their third album, which is probably to my detriment. If anyone out there has a knowledge of everything the band has released, then a guest ICA would be really appreciated.

JC

PET SHOP BOYS SINGLES (Part Twelve)

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Comic Relief is a British charity that aims to raise money and awareness for good causes all around the world. In support of the charity, a Red Nose Day event is held every two years. This involves a live television broadcast featuring a host of comedians and celebrities.  Since 1986, the event has also been supported by the release of a charity single, often with a comedy element included. 

In May 1994, the Pet Shop Boys accepted the approach to get involved.

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The song was called Absolutely Fabulous, and it was released under the artist name of Absolutely Fabulous, based on a sitcom which starred Jennifer Saunders and Joanna Lumley. It is set to a tune written by PSB  and features snippets of dialogue taken from the show as well as some additional lines recorded in the studio.   Neil and Chris were huge fans of the sitcom and were delighted to be involved, and in response to some criticism which was thrown their way, Neil said:-

“I know some people are horrified that we did a charity record, but it just seemed a way of dealing with it. It made it simple, because we did the record for fun, not as a major artistic statement”.

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mp3: Absolutely Fabulous – Absolutely Fabulous
mp3: Absolutely Fabulous – Dull Soulless Dance Remix

It reached #6 in the singles chart. The b-side extends to eight minutes in length…..

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On 29 August 1994, a fifth and final single was taken from Very, eleven months after the album had been released.

As with ‘I Wouldn’t Normally…..’, the version issued as a 45 was a substantially different mix from that found on the album, with production input from Julian Mendelsohn who had previously worked with PSB as far back as 1987, and Jam & Spoon, a German electronic duo who were enjoying chart success as musicians and on the production side of things.

This is one of the singles that I can take or leave.   It comes across as PSB by numbers, but I suppose it sounded great in a club setting.

mp3 : Pet Shop Boys – Yesterday, When I Was Mad

It was the first PSB single not to be released on 7″vinyl, albeit a 12″ version was made available alongside 2 x CD singles and a cassette single, across which three new songs could be found alongside various remixes of ‘Yesterday…..’and a swing version of Can You Forgive Her.  

CD1

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – If Love Were All

In which Neil and Chris go all west end theatre on us.  It’s a cover of a song written by Noel Coward in 1929, first appearing in the operetta Bitter Sweet.  It’s rather a lovely song about loneliness, but it had to be said that Neil’s vocal limitations don’t do him any favours.  You’ll find better cover versions out there…..

CD2

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Some Speculation

I’m not sure if this was a song held over from the Very sessions or had been worked up in the intervening period.  It’s a long song, some six-and-a-half minutes long, and the folk assisting with the production and engineering side of things had not been involved with the album, which makes me lean towards it being a more recent work.   It’s a more than decent b-side, albeit without any of the catchiness and hooks that make it an essential PSB song, but a worthy reward for fans happy to spend money on yet another single, the sixth all told in a 12-month period.

Cassette

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Euroboy

Also made available as a track on the European version of the CD single

One on which both Neil and Chris’s vocals can be heard, with the latter using a vocoder.   It’s a track that, if Neil’s vocal hadn’t been so recognisable, could have been attributed to any number of club acts who were enjoying chart success in the mid 90s (none of whom I can name off the top of my head!!)

Yesterday, When I Was Mad got to #13 in the UK singles charts, but maybe the best indication of where the PSB sounds had been increasingly heading was that it reached #4 in the Billboard Chart for US Club and Dance.

1994 ended with PSB undertaking a six-week ‘Discovery’ tour in which they played shows in Singapore, Australia, Puerto Rico, Mexico, Columbia, Chile, Argentina and Brazil.

1995 proved to be very quiet with just the one single released, on 31 July, and even then, it wasn’t new material.

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Paninaro ’95 was, a new version of the song they had first recorded in 1986, and was based upon the new arrangement  Chris performed on the ‘Discovery’ tour, along with his new updated lyrics.

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Paninaro ’95

It was also part of the promotion for a new compilation album, Alternative, a 2xCD set featuring 30 b-sides

Paninaro ’95 was issued on 2 x CDs, the first of which had five different mixes of the single, while CD2 had one new track:-

CD2

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Girls and Boys (live in Rio)

PSB had previously produced a remix of Girls and Boys for Blur, and so enjoyed the process that they played a cover version during the Discovery tour that had been undertaken in late 1994. 

The single, despite being such an old tune, reached #15 in the UK singles charts, and was another to peak at #4 in the Billboard Chart for US Club and Dance.

PSB proved to be much more active and more prominent in 1996.

JC

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #350: TRAVIS

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Isn’t it amazing how young they all looked when they were doing the promotional rounds for the  debut album?

Some of the members of what eventually became Travis actually started playing music together as far back as 1990 when they were at school.  The first name they played and recorded under was Glass Onion.   Theirs is a story of finding success the hard way, a number of years grafting away to refine and improve their playing and songwriting abilities, taking a lot of flak and criticism along the way.

Things began to change dramatically in 1996 when the decision was taken to reduce the size of the band by asking two of its founding members to leave, and at the same time, recruit a new bass player.  The same four musicians – Fran Healy (vocals/guitar/piano), Andy Dunlop (guitar), Neil Primrose (drums) and Dougie Payne (bass) have been together ever since.

Having attracted the attention of Andy MacDonald, formerly of Go! Discs and now the founder of Independiente Records (a minor label backed by the resources of the multinational Sony Records), they signed a deal that led to the release of the album Good Feeling in 1997.

It was an indie-rock record, one that wasn’t out of fashion with the times – Noel Gallagher declared himself a fan and Travis went on tour as support to Oasis – but it had very little to make it really stand out from the crowd and sales weren’t huge.

The Man Who was the next album, released in 1999.  It was a different beast altogether from the debut, with many of its songs being more downbeat, almost acoustic in nature.  But still, there was no real audience for their music.

Glastonbury 1999.  After two years of the festival being played in monsoon like conditions, the sun shone for the most part in 1999.  Except when Travis took the stage, which made it really ironic when they played the opening notes of their minor hit single Why Does It Always Rain On Me?.  The sort of moment which is loved by the media and the BBC , the broadcaster of choice at the festival, were all over it, turning the performance into a news story. And, in those pre social media days, where TV led, the newspapers followed.

Travis were now a household name.

The Man Who started to sell in greater numbers, eventually reaching #1.  The Brit Awards of 2000 declared it album of the year, while Travis took the best band trophy home, handing immediately to the landlord of the Glasgow city centre pub above whose premises Glass Onion and the early incantation of Travis had been allowed to graft away.  The trophy remained on display for many years.

It’s for reasons like this that it’s almost impossible to have any dislike for the band.  Their music might not be inspiring, but they are all really good people who, over the years, have put much back into the music scene in Glasgow and done some quietly effective work to bring positivity into poor and deprived communities.

They are now nine albums into their career, and while they don’t get anything like the audiences or attention they did at their peak, which was unarguably with the release of The Invisible Band (2003) which went on to sell 1.2 million copies in the UK alone, they still sell out decent sized venues, especially round these parts

mp3 : Travis – All I Want To Do Is Rock

The debut single on Independiente in June 1997.

It entered at #39 and dropped the following week to #73.   Success was still two years away.

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #53

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Anthology : The Sounds Of Science – Beastie Boys (1999)

Here’s the thing.  I came into this exercise with the intention of the rundown to consist only of 60 original studio albums.  Next to Beastie Boys, I typed up ‘Paul’s Boutique’ and thought whereabouts in the Top 20 it might eventually place.

The problem was that I didn’t buy Paul’s Boutique at the time of release in 1989. Indeed, it wasn’t until Hello Nasty (1998) that I ever made any timely purchase of a Beastie Boys album.

I was already weighing up whether any  ‘best-of’ collections or indeed box sets should qualify for consideration when the Beastie Boys created this dilemma.   In the end, I decided that if any compilation was listened to on a regular basis from start to end, then it was permissible. Which is any Anthology : The Sounds Of Science is in the rundown at #53, a position far lower than Paul’s Boutique would have obtained.

This particular release contains 42 tracks, of which around one-third were what could be described as hits.  The rest consists of album tracks, b-sides and some material that had previously been unreleased.  It’s not offered up in any chronological fashion, and the best-known songs are scattered liberally throughout.

It came out a year after their fifth studio album, the aforementioned Hello Nasty.  It would have been an easy cash-in to shove out a single disc of all the popular songs with minimum attention paid to the artwork and packaging. Indeed, such a release would likely have generated more sales, as some would be-purchasers would have been put off by some reviews that concentrated on the unreleased material on the basis that quality control was the reason a lot of the songs hadn’t previously seen the light of day.

Instead, the two discs came beautifully packaged, complete with a lovingly written 80-page booklet offering up the backstories of each track, in the words of one or other of Adam Yauch, Michael Diamond or Adam Horowitz, along with many previously unseen photographs.  Sure, there were bits on both discs that seemed a tad superfluous, but not at any time should they be regarded as self-indulgent.  No Beastie Boys album had ever been a straightforward listen, so why should this collection be any different?

mp3: Beastie Boys – Shadrach

Beastie Boys are a rare example of a group winning me over after early scepticism.  I wasn’t enamoured by the debut album, Licensed To Ill (1986) nor its early singles.  It was for this reason, as much as any other, that I paid no attention to Paul’s Boutique when it hit the shops.  I wasn’t alone in this, certainly in the UK, as the album didn’t sell all that well.  Their next album, Check Your Head (1992) didn’t even make the Top 100 over here and to all intent and purposes, the trio had been dismissed and forgotten.

It was the release of Ill Communication (1994) and the relative success of the singles Sabotage and Sure Shot that transformed their fortunes over here.  The end of year write-ups were full of praise, and so I made sure I got Santa to deliver me a copy.  Things being what they are at such busy times (I had just got myself a new job in Glasgow) that it took me a few months to actually sit down and give it a proper listen.  It proved to be the album that had me reassessing things and eventually going back to listen to what I had missed.

JC

(BONUS POST) : ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN SINGLES : #013

aka The Vinyl Villain incorporating Sexy Loser

#013– Chumbawamba – ‚This Girl’ (One Little Indian Records, ’95)

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Hello friends,

my anarchistic career solely consists of listening to ‘The Feeding Of The 5.000’ by Crass. I should admit I didn’t listen to it when it came out in 1979, I only listened to it some five years later. But I listened to it very closely indeed (if I exerted myself, I would still be able to recite most of ‘So What’, I reckon), which probably doesn’t turn me into being the next Federico Garcia Lorca, but hey, I experienced more anarchy than most of you lot ever did, right?!

And because I was so hardcore and in the thick of the scene, I never cared a great deal for the only other anarchistic band on the planet: Chumbawamba. They started out in 1983 and always pretended to be the most anarchistic thing on earth. At least much more anarchistic than Crass ever were … so they said. They had their own little label, Agit Prop, until the early 90’s. Then they switched to One Little Indian Records, home of The Sugarcubes, and probably this move made them a little better known. This and Peel playing a few tunes from their 1992 ‘Shhh’ – LP, which I bought myself because I thought what I heard (‘Behave!’ and ‘Look! No Strings!’) was ace. But the album disappointed me, if I remember correctly, and I sold it pretty quickly to some poor soul.

Two years later, in 1994, Chumbawamba, still being as anarchistic as possible, teamed up with hip-hop labelmates Credit To The Nation. There was ‘Enough Is Enough’ (which was good throughout) and perhaps some other song, I forgot about the details. Then, one year later, they released their album ‘Swingin’ With Raymond’. I would never have known about its existence, hadn’t a young lady (Petra) I was briefly together with at that time, made up a tape for me which included two songs from this album. First ‘Not The Girl I Used To Be’ (absolutely fantastic, should you never have heard it) and, secondly, today’s choice:

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mp3:  Chumbawamba – This Girl

And, as you can tell, if you look at the sleeve above, it only was the B-Side of another song from the album. Quite why they didn’t release this the other way round will always remain a mystery to me. Then again, who cares … I got it as a 7”, that’s all that counts!

The rest is, as they say, history: after ‘Swingin’ With Raymond’ Chumbawamba hid under the wings of EMI Records (not necessarily the most anarchistic move on earth, it must be said), where they released ‘Tubthumping’ in 1997. And at this point even younger readers of these pages (if such creatures exist at all), at least if they’re male and go to the football grounds every once in a while, should realize who Chumbawamba are: “I get knocked down, but I get up again /You are never gonna keep me down” … oh come on, I’m sure you know it by heart, don’t you?!

And this tune, ‘Tubthumping’, after nearly 15 years of anarchy, chaos and destruction (to quote The Damned), finally made Chumbawamba a one hit wonder – band. You can argue for hours about whether this success is deserved or not and/or whether having a multi-million dollar hit complies with the international rules of anarchy.

My personal position is very clear: a combo which issues a tune as awesome as ‘This Girl’ deserves everyone’s love, applause and homage …

Take good care,

Dirk

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #54

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Boxer – The National(2007)

2007 turned out to be an unexpectedly important year in my life.

It was a year that had begun appallingly, workwise, in that I had not long been passed over for a promotion in what could be seen as controversial circumstances thanks to some politicians interfering where they had no right to.   My role in the local authority was nigh on untenable, but given I had done nothing wrong, I had to be found another position within the organisation.

The sideways shift I undertook actually turned out to be the best thing that ever happened, certainly in the long term.  Through an incredible set of circumstances, and really being in the right place at the right time, I was able to later take up a temporary position in Toronto, beginning in June 2007, carrying out a study and analysis of the procedures and processes in place for the Ontario Provincial Elections that were taking place on 10 October 2007

I made the move to Toronto, not taking too much in the way of personal belongings beyond clothes, golf clubs and maybe around 50 CDs. It was a five-month secondment and Rachel stayed back in Glasgow, albeit, along she came for a visit that lasted a couple of weeks.

I soon grew bored with what little music I had brought with me, and so started to browse the record shops of my temporary home city. I found loads of great second-hand stores selling vinyl for what seemed like bargain prices, and so Rachel was instructed to bring over an empty case when she visited that she would then take back with some booty.  This exercise was repeated with a couple more friends who also came over for a visit.

But it wasn’t all second-hand stuff that I ended-up buying.  I was vaguely aware of The National before I went to Canada, in that a few bloggers had been talking them up.  My interest rose substantially when I caught them performing a song on one of the late-night TV chat shows in America (all the US networks broadcast north of their border – I’ve just done a bit of research, and it seem it was the David Letterman show on 24 July). I was transfixed.

I bought all four of their albums on my next visit to a favourite record store.  It  also doubled up as a place to buy tickets for upcoming gigs, and so I grabbed one for the show The National were playing at the downtown Phoenix Concert Theatre on 8 October.

All the albums were on heavy rotation for a while, but it was the newest release, Boxer, that I kept returning to.  It was a riveting listen, one that seemed to offer something different with each fresh listen.  The band, and the many other additional guest musicians, were a joy to listen to, but the greatest pleasure came via Matt Berninger‘s sublime baritone.

mp3: The National – Brainy

I’ve remained a big fan of the National ever since, always buying the new albums at the earliest opportunity.  They all have something wonderful to offer, but none have quite been at the consistent and effortless magnificence of Boxer.

Oh…and the reason for such a lengthy and detailed backstory?

I didn’t get to the concert on 8 October.

It became the evening when I, along with someone who has become a very close friend, had to do what turned into an 24-hour overnight shift to ensure that the polling stations in one particular locality would actually open as scheduled on the morning of 10 October, as the staff in charge on the ground had made an almighty mess of things, and indeed were now nowhere to be seen.

Nobody, other than the CEO  back at Elections HQ thought we could pull it off, but we repaid his faith in us by busting our asses and every other part of our anatomy, fuelled only by adrenaline, caffeine drinks and Tim Horton doughnuts.  I don’t think I’ve ever been more proud of myself, workwise, than when the auditor declared that everything was good to go, just a few hours short of the scheduled opening.

Incidentally, the someone who worked that shift with me is coming to Scotland in June to help me celebrate turning 60.  We will no doubt, as we always do, talk long and drunkenly about it all.  I’ll again curse the fact that it caused me to miss what would have been a memorable gig.

JC

(BONUS POST) AN IMAGINARY COMPILATION ALBUM : #338: ABC

A GUEST POSTING by KHAYEM

https://dubhed.blogspot.com/

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Something To Believe In: An ABC ICA

I posted an ABC selection over at my blog back in November 2022, which was well received. JC had the following to say:

Here’s the thing……

The Lexicon of Love was such a perfect album that I reckoned ABC would never be able to come close to matching it. As a result, I more or less ignored everything that followed and had no idea so much material had been released since. I’ll need to give this mix a good listen over the coming days/weeks/months – I’ve so much to catch up with just now.

PS : Do you fancy adapting this piece to turn it into an ICA?

How could I refuse an offer like that? However, I was clear from the start that, rather than a rehash of my original post, I wanted to come up with something new. Over four months later…

I confessed then, and I’ll admit now, that I must have been one of the few people on the planet who didn’t buy The Lexicon Of Love in 1982. In my defence, I was 11 years old and didn’t get enough pocket money to spend it all on records. However, I belatedly caught up with ABC’s albums up to and including The Lexicon Of Love II in 2016. I admire that Martin Fry resisted attempts to do the latter until then – there must have been an incredible pressure to go there with each ABC album in the past three decades. When he eventually revisited that world, it was with the benefit of all that lived experience and an older, wider perspective.

Not that any ABC album is bad. The musical styles and genre-hopping may have been frequent between 1982 and 2016 (rest easy, there’s not an experimental drum ’n’ bass ABC album hiding in there) but the characteristic ABC sound and lyrical themes remain intact throughout.

I played around the 10-song selection here a fair bit but I’m happy that the final ICA gives ABC a fair shout, from their debut single to their last (to date) album.

Side One

1) The Very First Time (Traffic, 2008)

Traffic was ABC’s first album of the 21st Century and over a decade since their previous release. This is the second song but was an immediate choice for an opener here, a modern take on classic ABC.

2) The Greatest Love Of All (Album Version)  (Up, 1989)

ABC go clubbing. There was a whiff of bandwagon-jumping with this one, but their choice of collaborators was impeccable: Graeme Park and Mike Pickering on this track, Frankie Knuckles, David Morales and Derrick May on the single remixes. Up is not my favourite album, but Martin Fry and Mark White had definitely not ‘sold out’.

3) Tears Are Not Enough (Extended Version) (Tears Are Not Enough EP, 1981)

What a statement of intent for your debut single. If anything, the song is even better in it’s extended 12” version, a format that ABC immediately embraced with some stunning results throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Would I lie? Could I lie?

4) Bad Blood (Alphabet City, 1987)

I wasn’t a fan of When Smokey Sings when it was released as a single, though I’ve come to appreciate it much more since, particularly when I paid more attention to the lyrics. The record buying public clearly disagreed. Whilst the single narrowly missed the Top 10 in the UK, fourth album Alphabet City scored ABC their first Top 10 hit since The Lexicon Of Love. It’s chock full of poptastic tunes, as Bad Blood attests.

5) Who Can I Turn To? (Skyscraping, 1997)

ABC released two albums in the 1990s, Abracadabra in 1991 and Skyscraping six years later. By the time of the latter, ABC was essentially a solo vehicle for Martin Fry, writing with collaborators including Heaven 17’s Glenn Gregory on this song. This ‘comeback’ album wasn’t a commercial success and it was more than 10 years before a new album emerged. A shame as Skyscraping deserved more.

Side Two

1) Vanity Kills (U.S.A. Remix)  (Vanity Kills EP, 1986)

Third album How To Be A… Zillionaire! delivered a new ABC line-up and diminishing chart success, again which is a shame as there are some great pop songs within. Vanity Kills made #70 in the UK singles chart and #91 in the US Billboard Hot 100. This rather good remix by Mark ‘Spike’ Stent didn’t get a UK release until the 2005 expanded issue of … Zillionaire!, as far as I can tell.

2) What’s Good About Goodbye? (Love Conquers All EP, 1991)

I’ve opted for a B-side rather than an album track from Abracadabra, not because the album is poor but I just really like this song. What’s Good About Goodbye? features earlier as a line in Bad Blood. Clearly it stuck in Martin Fry’s brain as he returned to it a few years later, pairing it with the equally great line, ‘What’s fair about farewell?’

3) Valentine’s Day (Album Version)  (The Lexicon Of Love, 1982)

I briefly toyed with the idea of not including anything at all from The Lexicon Of Love. I mean, everyone knows it surely and for many, it raised the bar so high that ABC couldn’t hope to match it for brilliance. Then again, how could I ignore it? Valentine’s Day is so familiar, it’s easy to forget that it wasn’t actually a single (apart from in Japan, who knew their onions). A classic Trevor Horn and Gary Langan production, eminently quotable lyrics from Martin Fry and a band who were really at the top of their game.

4) I Believe In Love (The Lexicon Of Love II, 2016)

For the sequel, the only returnee from the 1982 crew apart from Martin Fry was Anne Dudley. She co-wrote a few songs, though not this one, which Fry wrote with Matt Rowe, who I only knew from his time as one half of remix/DJ duo Biff & Memphis. It’s a slow-building song, starting off with acoustic guitar and ending as a bit of a banger. Great stuff.

5) United Kingdom (Beauty Stab, 1983)

Beauty Stab suffered at the time from not being The Lexicon Of Love II, keeping some of the lush, string-laden sound of it’s predecessor for a rawer, guitar-based sound. United Kingdom is a simple, piano-led piece, Fry duetting with himself on a sadly still-relevant song about life on the dole. A perfect closer to both Beauty Stab and this iCA.

Khayem

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #55

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Imaginary Walls Collapse – Adam Stafford (2013)

I’ll never tire of shouting out very loudly that Adam Stafford is a musical genius.  It’s his misfortune (as such) to have been born in Sunderland and to spend most of his life in Falkirk, instead of one of the great and innovative cities of the world where his talents would have been more readily acknowledged.

I first came across him as the frontman of indie band Y’All Is Fantasy Island.  I later read that the band had broken up and Adam had decided to pursue a solo career. It was around the same time as I was making my first foray into gig promotion in 2011 by putting on a home town show by Butcher Boy, partly to mark the 5th anniversary of the old blog and to showcase the band’s new album, Helping Hands.

I made contact with Adam, and he agreed to come along as the support act.  He wasn’t everyone’s cup of tea, but I thought he was magical.  I started going to as many of his live performances as I could and mentioned his name to a few folk, including Matthew Young, the entrepreneur behind Edinburgh-based Song, By Toad Records.  The next thing I knew, Adam had a deal to release his music on the label.

It was the start of a partnership that saw five albums between 2013 and 2021.  The first of these was Imaginary Walls Collapse, an astonishing LP that was longlisted for the Scottish Album of the Year, which was quite some feat for a label that was not much more than a cottage industry.

I previously described it as being something that defied conventional description, with a thin white duke playing his guitar, beat-boxing, crooning and using effect pedals to make sounds unlike any other of my records.  I’ll stand by that description, but quickly add that the live experience always outshines what comes across on vinyl:-

mp3: Adam Stafford – Cold Seas

I know that Adam’s currently working on new material, and fingers crossed it will see the light of day over the next year or so.

Feel free to come back later on for a bonus post ICA……

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #56

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Beaucoup Fish – Underworld (1999)

There won’t be a huge amount of dance music in this rundown.  It’s not anything to do with my taste in music, but more down to most of the vinyl/CDs associated with the genre and sitting in Villain Towers are singles rather than albums.

One exception is Beacoup Fish, the mighty opus released by Underworld in 1999.  Eleven tracks that take almost 75 minutes to get through, and not at any point do I ever feel like reaching for the remote and pressing the FF button to the next tune.

I wasn’t all that familiar with Underworld prior to the heights scaled by Born Slippy following its use in the film Trainspotting.  I know I wasn’t alone in that regard, and I found it entertaining to read the views of many long-time fans and critics, who were often quite sneering to the millions of us who were so late to the party.  It kind of felt inevitable that there would be some sort of backlash when Karl Hyde, Rick Smith and Darren Emerson got round to writing and recording the new material, and so it proved as Beaucoup Fish was greeted, not quite with cat-calls, but certainly plenty of choruses of it not being as great as the previous four albums.

Not having any of these in my possession meant that I wasn’t in place to make any sort of judgement.  I took this CD entirely on its merits and found it to be a thing of great joy.

It’s another record that lulls listeners into a false sense of security, as album opener Cups meanders along fairly gently for the best part of its opening seven minutes before taking an abrupt turn with a techno beat that seems to build gradually for its remaining five minutes before bouncing straight into the joyous Push Upstairs, a track that must surely never fail to fill any dance floor.  The pop/dance nature of Jumbo merely keeps things going.  All of a sudden, almost 23 minutes have passed in a flash and there’s still eight tracks for your senses to absorb.

mp3 : Underworld – Jumbo

Things do veer a bit for much of the rest of the album between high-tempo dance stuff and more ambient or chilled numbers, before it all signs off with the magnificence of Moaner, a track I have previously waxed lyrically about on this blog, and one that I believe to be the greatest club number of them all.

The thing is, I never went back to Underworld in the years immediately after this album.  It was more a reflection of my limited interest in their type of music than anything else, but if I can jump ahead to 2016, I picked up a copy of their ninth studio album, Barbara Barbara, We Face A Shining Future on the recommendation of a few bloggers I admire, and found it a very enjoyable listen, albeit it was far less frantic and manic than their album from seventeen years earlier.  I suppose even the ravers get old and have to slow down.

JC

(BONUS POST) : JUST FOOLING AROUND

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This month’s offering is sort of over the place.  A few risks have been taken, not least an eight-minute version of a song early on and the later inclusion of Sting.

All tunes included in this month’s mix comes from a bygone era.

mp3: Various – Just Fooling Around

Roxy Music – Love Is The Drug
Echo and The Bunnymen – Nocturnal Me
This Poison – Poised Over The Pause Button
Curve – Fait Accompli (12″)
Cabaret Voltaire – Sensoria (12″)
Prefab Sprout – Bonny
Jens Lekman – The Opposite Of Hallelujah
Allvays – Adult Diversion
The Police – Message In A Bottle (7″)
Fun Boy Three – Our Lips Are Sealed (single version)
The Rakes – Retreat
The Drums  – Let’s Go Surfing
The Clash – Rudie Can’t Fail
Bodega  – Jack In Titanic
Hi Fi Sean and David McAlmont – All In The World
The Goon Sax – Till The End

Comes in at 13 seconds under the hour.

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #57

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Back In The D.H.S.S. – Half Man Half Biscuit (1985)

I had two folk sharing the first flat I lived in over in Edinburgh, one male and one female.  He, like me, had an office based job with regular hours, but the woman worked in the hotel/hospitality industry as a trainee manager and get the strangest hours.  It meant we had to be careful not to make too much noise when she was catching up with her sleep, and inevitably, there were days on end when there was no loud music played in the flat.

Which is why I associate the debut album by Half Man Half Biscuit with headphones.  It was one that I had on vinyl but in order to be able to listen to it as and when I wanted, it had been transferred to a cassette and played on the Walkman.

It was already a lo-fi recording with plenty of hisses throughout, which were only magnified by the rubbish way I’d done the recording on what was likely one side of a Memorex C90, with some sort of compilation, possibly full of slow songs/ballads in the hope that maybe one night I’d meet someone who was willing to come back to the flat.

HMHB made me laugh.  I’d picked up on them via John Peel and I particularly enjoyed the cultural references within the lyrics, not all of which were topical. The reverse of the record sleeve also amused me. I knew most of the celebrities name-checked in the songs, and so was well aware that none of the descriptions of who they were and what they did were close to being accurate.  This is the opening number:-

mp3: Half Man Half Biscuit – God Gave Us Life

The count-in of ‘1234, John the Baptist knows the score’ never fails to make me smile.

The gentle start to the song lulls the listener into a false sense of security….a trick that the band have made use of on a few occasions over many years.  Just as you think it’s a ditty about all the nice things in life for which we should be thanking the lord above, there’s a mention of strange men trying to lure kids into cars, before an explosive tirade of celebrities who the singer seems to have no time for.

It’s not the best song on the album, but it captures perfectly everything that made HMHB in 1985 such an essential listen.

The thing is, I don’t think anyone ever imagined they would still be going in 2023, releasing consistently enjoyable albums every few years, and in the process, having frontman and main songwriter Nigel Blackwell become an unofficial national treasure.  I genuinely don’t know any fan of ‘indie’ or ‘alternative’ music in the UK who hasn’t at one time or other expressed admiration for HMHB.  The Voltarol Years was their 15th studio album, and was one of my favourite releases of 2022.

It, like many of their records for a long time now, is nowhere near as rough’n’ready as the early offerings.  Indeed, with almost 40 years experience behind them, it’s probably fair to say that the band are as competent and professional in the studio or on stage as any.  I did consider a few of the other HMHB albums for the longlist, but the memories of listening so intently to the debut in circumstances I’ve never experienced since, became the overall deciding factor.

PS : Come back later today for a bonus posting.  It’s first non-weekend day of a new month.

JC