A SMALL SELECTION OF NEW ORDER REMIXES

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New Order‘s 4 x CD box set Retro was released in 2002.

Each of the CDs has a theme.  CD1 is Pop and was curated by the journalist Miranda Sawyer.   CD2 is Fan and its tracks were chosen by a friend of the band,  John McCready.   CD3 is Club with the responsibility for the selection falling to Mike Pickering of M People/Factory Records/Hacienda fame. CD4 is Live was put together by Bobby Gillespie of Primal Scream.

It’s a nicely packaged artefact, complete with a 72-page glossy booklet, packed with snippets of info/commentary and some tremendous photos from throughout the band’s career to that point in time.  It is all dedicated to Rob Gretton, the band’s manager whose initial idea it had been for the box set but who passed away some three years before it eventually saw the light of day.

The photo above provides details of the contents of CD3.  Here’s three of them for your enjoyment.

mp3:  New Order – Confusion (Koma & Bones Mix)

This is substantially different from the original version recorded and mixed by Arthur Baker back in 1983.  This one dates from 2002 and it enjoyed a vinyl and CD release via Whacked Records.  It’s got more of a classic New Order sound to it than the original.

mp3: New Order – Paradise (Robert Racic mix)

Robert Racic, who passed away from illness at the age of 32 in 1996, was an Australian DJ and record producer.   He gave the remix treatment to the opening track on the 1986 album Brotherhood where it was used the following year as a b-side on the Factory Records Australasia remix release of True Faith.

mp3:  New Order – Fine Time (Steve ‘Silk’ Hurley remix)

Steve Hurley is a Chicago based DJ/producer who came to prominence in the 80s thanks to his then unique mixing styles which went beyond the normal skill set of house DJs.  He also has the distinction of being at the helm of Jack Your Body, which was the UK’s first ever house music #1 single.   His remix of the first 45 to be lifted from Substance Technique in 1989 was originally available on the CD version of the single.

Happy to take requests for any of the others for a future posting if there’s any interest.

JC

SPINNING AND SCRATCHING

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It’s quite likely that there’s going to be a few posts over the coming weeks when the tracks will be sourced from various compilations. I’m not making it any sort of series…..it’ll be inane ramblings when I’ve a space needing filled.

I’ve got this absolute belter of a song from it being included on Rough Trade Indiepop 1, a 2xCD effort released and bought back in 2004.

mp3: Love Is All – Spinning and Scratching

Love Is All are from Gothenburg.  The single was originally released in very limited numbers on the Swedish label Philosophy Of The World before being up by the NYC-based label, What’s Your Rupture.  It was the band’s debut.

The bio over on allmusic reveals that Love Is All line-up is Josephine Olausson (vocals, keyboard), Johan Lindwall (bass), Markus Görsch (drums), Fredrik Eriksson (saxophone), and Nicholaus Sparding (guitar/vocals).

Olausson, Sparding, and Görsch had previously been members of Girlfriendo. The trio promptly regrouped after that band’s demise and added Lindwall, who had recorded in a side project with Olausson and Sparding called Cat Skills. They finally added the missing piece with saxophone player Fredrik Eriksson.

It goes on to state “While earning many rave reviews from the blogging community for its blend of art punk and indie rock, the band released several singles, one of which made single of the week in NME. The singles were collected on the debut LP Nine Times That Same Song, released by New York-based What’s Your Rupture? in late 2005. After much touring through 2006 and 2007, Eriksson left the band and Love Is All continued on as a quartet.

A Hundred Things That Keep Me Up at Night and the remix album Love Is All Mixed Up arrived in 2008, along with Eriksson’s replacement, Åke Strömer (saxophone, keyboards). The lineup stayed intact for the next record, Two Thousand and Ten Injuries, which was released on new label Polyvinyl in March of 2010.”

It would appear that the 2010 release was their last.

I’ve gone digging to find the other tracks from the debut EP.

mp3:  Love Is All – Make Out. Fall Out. Make Up.
mp3:  Love Is All – Ageing Had Never Been His Friend

I hope there will be much agreement that these are three damn fine, splendid cuts.   On this basis, Love Is All should have been massive.

JC

THE 7″ LUCKY DIP (1)

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It was back in January this year that plans were revealed for a new Sunday feature, in which I’d  pick out a 7″ single from the now dangerously overcrowded storage area here in Villain Towers.

The idea was quickly shelved and replaced by the weekly series on the Pet Shop Boys singles, but I reckon it’s a good time to bring it back, albeit with a new name.  Given there’s so many bits of vinyl to choose from, it’s a real possibility that you’ll be confronted with many a Lucky Dip over the coming weeks and months, especially as I’m really running out of ideas to try and keep you entertained.

Today’s offering was picked up in a second-hand shop a few years back for only a couple of pounds, turning out to be a wee bit of a bargain as it actually contained two pieces of vinyl.

Here’s wiki:-

April Skies is a song by Scottish alternative rock group the Jesus and Mary Chain and the first single from the group’s second studio album, Darklands (1987). The song was released by Blanco y Negro Records in April 1987, reaching No. 8 on the UK Single Chart, No. 6 in Ireland, and No. 16 in New Zealand, making it the band’s highest-charting single in all three countries.

mp3: The Jesus and Mary Chain – April Skies

It is certainly one of the most recognisable and accessible of all the Mary Chain records, and it’s plain to see that it had all the makings of a classic hit single as there is very much a pop side to it, albeit the dark and scuzzy side of pop.  If it was the first ever real exposure of the band to a number of folk who bought the 45, I wonder if they curled up and screamed when they played it’s b-side:-

mp3: The Jesus and Mary Chain – Kill Surf City

There was a very fine write-up of the song back in May 2017 on a now defunct blog, Sounds Of The Radio:-

The flipside of April Skies contained the track ‘Kill Surf City’, which was intended to be a parody of sorts of the track ‘Surf City‘, by Jan And Dean. Written by Jan Berry and Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys, the original track is, as you’d probably expect, a stereotypically ’60s track about surf culture.

The Jesus And Mary Chain, however, their track is completely removed from the original version. Musically and melodically, it’s relatively similar, however the original’s lyrics of “You know we’re goin’ to Surf City, gonna have some fun,” are replaced with “I’m gonna kill surf city with a loaded gun, got to hit surf city like a nuclear bomb.” Suddenly, the upbeat positive nature of the original is replaced by the dissonant droning of guitars and violent imagery.

Any ideas of romantic bliss are also completely removed, with the new track featuring lyrics such as “I hate honey and she hates me, but that’s the way it’s supposed to be. I’m gonna run, gonna run till I hit the sun, some evil cunt’s gonna get my gun.” If you were ever going to mix up two tracks on a mixtape you made for your crush, make sure it isn’t these two.

Indeed.

As I mentioned at the outset, the copy of April Skies that I have is the limited edition 2 x 7″ version.  Here’s what you’ll find on the bonus piece of plastic:-

mp3: The Jesus and Mary Chain – Mushroom (live)
mp3: The Jesus and Mary Chain – Bo Diddley Is Jesus

The former, recorded at a gig in Nuremberg, Germany in 1986, but I haven’t been able to track down the exact date or venue.  It’s a cover, with the original dating back to 1971 when Can recorded it for the album Tago Mago. The Mary Chain played it on most of their live shows in late 85 and early 86.

The latter, with its refrain of “Head To Toe, I’m Dressed In Black” is ostensibly about the Brothers Reid but with a nod to a musician who they long had been in awe of.

JC

IT REALLY WAS A CRACKING DEBUT SINGLE (73)

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I was tempted, for the second successive time in this series, to offer some question marks with the heading.

Last time round (which was away back in March) it was The Seahorses on the basis that I’m not the slightest bit enamoured by debut single Love Is The Law.  Today, it’s the turn of Happy Mondays.  I reckon not even their most diehard fan would want to claim that the three tracks which can be found The Forty Five EP, released as FAC 129 back in 1985, are their most enduring,  but I feel they all do have something about them which makes them worth a listen, albeit they give no indication of the sort of sounds that would later go on to sell in the millions.

Here’s the track which introduced them to an audience beyond the Greater Manchester fanbase:-

mp3: Happy Mondays – Delightful

And here’s the slightly lesser-known ‘filler’tracks:-

mp3: Happy Mondays – This Feeling
mp3: Happy Mondays – Oasis

You could be cruel and suggest that they are of their time and should be consigned along  other similar era indie-landfill, some of which was actually put out by other bands on the roster of Factory Records.  But I reckon that would be a very harsh judgement.   The songs certainly do show there is potential waiting to be tapped into.

JC

DON’T LOOK BACK IN ANGER (6)

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I was obviously too busy getting drunk in June 83 to fully appreciate that the singles chart were particularly shite.  Either that or being totally despondent from the results of the General Election that had taken place on 9 June 1983 – the first in which I had been of an age to cast a vote.  Thatcher won in a landslide.  It was fucking grim.

The chart of 19-26 June makes for equally grim reading.  The Police were hanging on at #1 but Rod Stewart, with the atrocious Baby Jane, was poised to take over.  The Top 20 was awash with mediocrity – Elton John, Wham!, Michael Jackson, Buck’s Fizz, George Benson, Kajagoogoo and Mike Oldfield among the better known names, while Flash In The Pan, Shalamar and Shakatak were also up there.  So too was David Bowie, with his piss-poor cover of an Iggy Pop number, one that had become infamous thanks to a ‘racy’ video in which his bare arse was on display, along with the pubic hair of his Far Eastern dance-partner.

mp3: David Bowie – China Girl (#3)

Further down, likes of ELO, Imagination, Paul Young and Toto all had tunes that were airing regularly across the airwaves and shifting enough units to get mentioned in the Top of The Pops rundown.   Thankfully, there was some respite via a hard-hitting anti-war song:-

mp3 : The Imposter – Pills And Soap (#27).

Elvis Costello‘s angry songwriting talents had previously taken Robert Wyatt back into the charts after many years (see last month’s piece).  This time round, he penned another rant about the Tories in the forlorn hope that folk might hold a mirror up to Thatcher in the election.  But at least he tried. (the song had actually been in the Top 20 a couple of weeks earlier).

Just outside the Top 40 were a couple of songs from much loved acts round these parts:-

mp3: Orange Juice – Flesh Of My Flesh (#41)
mp3: Altered Images – Bring Me Closer (#42)

Neither are among their best 45s.

Further down, just about dropping out of the Top 75 but having peaked at #64 a couple of weeks previously, was another local pop combo

mp3: Aztec Camera – Walk Out To Winter (#73)

A radically different mix than had been included on the album High Land Hard Rain.

And since I’m looking way down for crumbs of comfort in the lower ends of the charts in other weeks during June 1983:-

mp3 : Spear Of Destiny – The Wheel (peaked at #59)

And I’ll finish off with a song that was actually slowly climbing the charts in the last week of June 83, eventually making it to #41 in the middle of the following month.

mp3: Yello – I Love You

This was the first time the electronic group from Switzerland had come to any sort of recognition in the UK, having been on the go since the late 70s.

Come back next month.  Things do get a fair bit better.

JC

PET SHOP BOYS SINGLES (Part Twenty-two)

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Last time around, I mentioned the performance at the closing ceremony  of the 2012 Olympics in which Neil and Chris performed West End Girls as they were cycled around the running track on chariots.  The photo above is the proof………..

In September 2012, the duo’s 11th studio album, Elysium was unveiled.   Rather unusually, it was not accompanied by any new 45, although the Olympic-themed Winner, that had been released digitally back in July and physically in August,  is one of its twelve tracks.   The next single hit the shops on 12 October:-

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mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Leaving

A fine pop tune.   The PSB website offers this take on it:-

“It’s looking at the old cliché of ‘love doesn’t die’, so familiar in pop songs, and looking at the death aspect of it. It’s comparing the idea of love not dying with the fact that when a person dies there’s a sense that they don’t really die because although they’re not physically present their memory is still present and therefore in a way they have a presence in your life.”

Given that the boys were now both comfortably into their 50s,it’s no real surprise that the subject matters being covered in their songs were now quite different from the era when they sat atop of the single charts.

Leaving reached #44.   It remains the last time a PSB single cracked the Top 50 in the UK.

It was released in digital and physical formats (CD and vinyl), with a number of remix efforts made available.  CD1 contained two otherwise unavailable songs:-

mp3:  Pet Shop Boys – Hell
mp3:  Pet Shop Boys – In His Imagination

The former is a list song.   Possibly the PSB equivalent of REM‘s It’s The End Of The World…..or maybe not!!!   The named individuals are all folk who have their own place in hell (or in the instance of one person still alive will end up there – assuming you believe in Hell is an actual thing).  Most are political despots/dictators, but mention is also made of a few serial killers.  It’s an odd one…..but surprisingly catchy given the subject matter.

The latter is a short story of sorts in that it tells the tale of someone who is bored rigid with a dead-end job but dreams of better days.    It’s a mid-tempo number that doesn’t really go anywhere special and isn’t one of the more memorable b-sides.

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The third and final 45 from Elysium was released on 31 December 2012, which meant it was lost amidst all that was going on, with everyone looking back primarily on the previous 12 months.  It wasn’t a straight lift from the album as the track was given a different mix and its length was reduced by a minute or so.   

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Memory Of The Future (single mix)

It sunk without a trace, seemingly reaching #111 in the UK.   To be honest, that’s about all it deserved.  It’s not close to being a decent 45.

Again, there was a digital and physical release, with a number of remix efforts on offer alongside three two otherwise unavailable songs, all of which went to show that the duo were certainly still very prolific……or did it?

mp3: Pet Shop Boys -Listening
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – One Night
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Inside

Listening was not an entirely new song.  It had been written back in 2012 and offered to Morten Harket, best known as lead singer with A-Ha, the Danish Norwegian  group that had enjoyed international success in the mid-80s.   Harket had gone on to include the song on his solo album Out Of My Hands, with PSB offering their own take a couple of years on.  Not knowing the original, I can’t offer any opinion on whether it’s an improvement or not…and it’s not a good enough song to make me want to go and find out

One Night was another old song.  It seemingly dates from 2007 and was written with the intention of having it recorded by Kylie Minogue, but she (or her advisers) seemingly turned it down.   It’s a more than decent romantic sounding ballad, so maybe it just wasn’t right for her at that particular time.  It would, I reckon, have been interesting to hear her take on it.

Inside was an entirely new song, one that was considered for inclusion on Elysium but left off at a late stage.  It’s another ballad and rather lovely;  but ultimately, what you had to round off a busy and high-profile year in PSB world was a low-key release, sneaked out almost under the cover of darkness on the final day of 2012, with none of the energy and fun that had long been associated with the duo. 

It also turned out to be their final involvement with  Parlophone Records. As it turned out, there wasn’t too long to wait for the next instalment in the Pet Shop Boys story.

JC

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #360: THE VASELINES

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One of the best to ever come out of Scotland.  I could say loads more, and may well do so in a future posting.  But for now, here’s wiki:-

The Vaselines are a Scottish alternative rock band, formed in Glasgow in 1986. Originally a duo between its songwriters Eugene Kelly and Frances McKee, but later added James Seenan and Eugene’s brother Charlie Kelly on bass and drums respectively from the band Secession.

Originally intending to create a fanzine, Kelly and McKee decided to form a band instead. Stephen Pastel of The Pastels is credited with coming up with their name. After playing their first gigs, they signed to Pastel’s 53rd and 3rd label and recorded the Son of a Gun EP with him producing, released in summer 1987.

The EP featured a cover of Divine‘s “You Think You’re a Man” on its B-side. By late 1987, Eugene’s brother Charlie Kelly had joined on drums with James Seenan on bass. With this line-up and with Stephen Pastel producing again, they recorded the Dying for It EP, released in early 1988. It featured the songs “Molly’s Lips” and “Jesus Wants Me for a Sunbeam,” both of which Nirvana would later cover. In June 1989 they released their first album, Dum-Dum, again on 53rd and 3rd but distributed by Rough Trade. The band broke up shortly after its release, due jointly to the dissolution of 53rd & 3rd and the end of Kelly and McKee’s romantic relationship. They briefly reformed in October 1990 to open for Nirvana when they played in Edinburgh.

Kelly went on to found the band Captain America (later renamed Eugenius after legal threats from Marvel Comics), supporting Nirvana on their UK tour. Following solo performances Kelly released the album Man Alive in 2004. McKee founded the bands Painkillers in 1994 and Suckle in 1997 before releasing her first solo album, Sunny Moon, in 2006.

In 1992, Sub Pop released The Way of the Vaselines: A Complete History, a compilation that contained The Vaselines’ entire body of work at the time.

In the summer of 2006, McKee and Kelly took to the stage together for the first time since 1990 to perform a set of Vaselines songs, as part of a joint tour to promote their individual solo albums.

The Vaselines reformed (minus the old rhythm section) on 24 April 2008 for a charity show for the Malawi Orphan Support group at Glasgow’s MONO venue. Invitation was by word-of-mouth with no press announcements and the band played to a packed, enthusiastic audience.

The band then played their first-ever U.S. performance at Maxwell’s in Hoboken, NJ on 9 July. The band also performed at Sub Pop Records’ 20th Anniversary SP20 music festival on 12 July at Marymoor Park just outside Seattle WA.

On 27 March 2009 they played their first London date in 20 years at the London Forum.

On 5 May 2009, Sub Pop released Enter the Vaselines. A deluxe-edition reissue of the 1992 Sub Pop release, it includes remastered versions of the band’s two EPs , and a remixed version of their sole album, as well as demos and live recordings from 1986 and 1988. The band toured the U.S. in May 2009, playing six dates, starting in Los Angeles on 10 May, then heading up the west coast to San Francisco, Portland and Seattle. Dates for Chicago, IL and Brooklyn, NY would end the tour on 18 May. The band finished their May tour at the Primavera Sound festival in Barcelona.

The Vaselines second studio album, Sex With an X, was released in September 2010.

The Vaselines announced their third studio album, V for Vaselines, in June 2014 which was released on 29 September 2014 on Rosary Music.

JC adds……..

They’re still very much on the go, and later this year will be going out on tour along with a reformed Soup Dragons.  Can’t wait for that one.

mp3: The Vaselines – Teenage Superstars

From the Dying For It EP.

JC

SARAH 28

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While doing a bit of tidying up, I stumbled across a small number of what I had thought were totally lost posts from the old blog  that had been deleted back in 2013.   This one, posted in October 2011, was written by Comrade Colin as part of an occasional series on Sarah Records.

‘A hundred mile smiles to bannister and bouncer’

This is the rather brilliant jingle-jangle A-Side from Sarah #28, the first single that Action Painting! had out with Sarah Records back in 1990. They released another couple of singles later on for the label (#73 and #87) and a couple of the stronger tracks also appeared on some of the compilation LPs that Sarah put out (for example, ‘Mustard Gas’ featured on ‘There And Back Again Lane’, an album that had the great honour of being Sarah #100). Anyway, the song below is a nice wee slice of classic indie-pop and ‘very Sarah’ if you ask me… meaning trebly guitars, sad boy lyrics and Robert Smith vocals. It still sounds great to me. 🙂

mp3 : Action Painting! – These Things Happen

JC adds……

It really was quite a joy to stumble on this, and the Comrade’s review is, of course, bang on the money.  I’ve tracked down the other song on Sarah 28, as it does seem as if it was a Double-A single.

mp3 : Action Painting! – Boy Meets World

As our dear friend Dirk would say…..Enjoy!!!!!

JC

CURVE BALLS (1)

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I’ve previously featured, on more than one occasion, the Blindfold EP, the debut released by Curve in March 1991.  I was rummaging around the cupboard full of vinyl recently and pulled out the various other Curve EPs that I’ve picked up at various times, all of them thankfully before the second-hand vinyl market started to get really stupid. Over the next few weeks, I’m going to draw each of them to your attention.

The Frozen EP was issued on 13 May 1991.   The picture above is of the gatefold sleeve (which is the one I have a copy of).  It was also issued with a standard 12″ sleeve, as well as on CD format and on 7″ vinyl.  The 7″ had just two tracks on it, and was referred to as Coast Is Clear, after its A-side.

Here’s a review of the EP, lifted from Melody Maker, where it was made single of the week:-

YES, they really are that good. Oh, I had my doubts, believe me. I wasn’t convinced by their debut. In fact, I had a whole tirade worked out about age and beauty and opportunism and how people who once consorted with Eurythmics should on no account be allowed near our hallowed ground however good they sound, because pop is so much more than just noise and melody. But somehow I found myself swept away with the first rush of guitar, sucked under into this glorious whirlpool of sound.

I’m going to be tacky and blunt for one second. Forgive me. This is like Cocteau Twins, if they’d gone commercial, or Lush, if they’d ever made a record that lived up to their live promise. There’s a section on the second song, second side, where Toni sings “Why do you grow inside me?” and it’s either the sexiest or most disturbing thing I’ve ever heard. Both, probably.

It feels so dumb trying to explain Curve in green and blue and similes.

It reached #34, and took Curve into the higher end of the singles charts for the first time.

mp3: Curve – Coast Is Clear
mp3: Curve – The Colour Hurts
mp3: Curve – Frozen
mp3: Curve – Zoo

Four excellent pieces of music.   But kind of like the MM reviewer, the one that really hits home most, as far as I’m concerned, is The Colour Hurts.

Here’s the promo video for the lead track

JC

AN IMAGINARY COMPILATION ALBUM #343 – THE GOON SAX

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It was only during a discussion with my mate Aldo a few months back that I found out The Goon Sax had broken up last year.  We had been discussing Robert Forster‘s new album and I mentioned how his son Louis had appeared on a number of the tracks and wondered if his increasing involvement with his dad would mean a delay to his own band writing, recording and issuing their fourth studio album.  That’s when Aldo pointed me in the direction of this statement that had been issued in July 2022:-

To all friends of the Goon Sax we have some bittersweet news…after nine years of giving it our everything we’ve decided to draw the curtain on this band. It’s taken us places stranger, more beautiful, and far beyond anything we could have imagined, and brought us to meeting and working with so many special and incredibly inspiring people. Our gratitude to everyone who’s been with us and allowed the madness of the last 9 years to happen is far beyond anything we can palpably express. Although this means we won’t be doing our US tour anymore, including the Interpol & Spoon tour and the Pavement shows, we promise we will play one or two more shows in Australia before we finally say goodnight. For us it feels like a happy ending. We love each other and we love you! thank you for everything ♥️♥️♥️✨
Riley, Louis & Jim

I was disappointed to finally learn this.   While never a band who were going to change the face of indie pop’n’roll, they made some really great music in their time, getting better and more confident with each album, to the extent that they really did seem on the cusp of getting a substantial following well beyond their native Australia.

For those who don’t know the back story, Louis Foster and James Harrison formed a band back in 2013 when they were still in high school in Brisbane.  Around a year later Riley Jones brought her drumming talents to the table.

They were signed by Chapter Music, an Australian-based indie label and debut album Up To Anything came out in 2016. It’s fair to say that it was the sort of album only a group of teenagers could make – the playing doesn’t edge towards any sort of technical brilliance while the lyrics have a degree of naive charm and innocence across all the subject matters that were are crucial to all kids who are 16/17 years of age.  As the record company PR folk so accurately described it ‘….capturing the awkwardness, self-doubt and visceral excitement of teenage life, while in the thick of actually living it.’

I saw The Goon Sax in Glasgow when they toured the debut album in the UK.  At that age, and with next to no experience, they had no right to be so tight, confident and able in the live setting.  But they more than put on a show that had an audience, many of whom could have passed as their grandparents, nodding their heads in appreciation.

Their second album, We’re Not Talking, appeared in 2018.  It was a step forward from the previous album, particularly from the fact that Riley Jones was more involved in the vocal department and helping with the songwriting for the first time.  Again, the record company got it right.

“An album that shows how much can change between the ages of 17 and 19…..it takes the enthusiasms of youth and twists them into darker, more sophisticated shapes. Relationships are now laced with hesitation, remorse, misunderstanding and ultimately compassion.  Delivering brilliantly human and brutally honest vignettes of adolescent angst, The Goon Sax brim with personality, charm and heart-wrenching honesty. “

At this point, the trio were offered a deal by the American-based Matador Records. It came at a time when the trio, along with some other friends, were all living together under one roof, working incredibly hard to improve in every aspect of their musicianship.   The label teamed them up with John Parrish, best known for his many years working with PJ Harvey, and The Goon Sax would eventually head to Bristol in England to work on their third album.

Mirror II was released in July 2021 and proved to be the quantum leap that those of us who had followed the band were hoping for.  It was a bolder, more ambitious, richer sounding set of songs than before – far more instrumentation to the extent that it was almost gothic in nature in places.  It’s an album that I couldn’t wait to heat played live, but sadly the restrictions around touring in the wake of the pandemic meant that the proposed UK tour was shelved, and in the wake of the band’s decision to call it a day, cancelled altogether.

What they’ve left behind are three very different sounding albums, all of which have much to appreciate, as I hope to demonstrate with an ICA.  The only thing is, with all three albums having such differences, it doesn’t make any sense to leap back and forth in time, and so what follows are 15 songs, five lifted from each album, in chronological order. Consider it a double-vinyl ICA, with the final side left blank.

Having given you so much in the backstory. I’ll leave the songs to themselves.

Side One : Five Songs From Up To Anything

The Goon Sax – Up To Anything
The Goon Sax – Telephone
The Goon Sax – Sweaty Hands
The Goon Sax – Boyfriend
The Goon Sax – Maggie

Side Two : Five Songs From We’re Not Talking

The Goon Sax – Make Time For Love
The Goon Sax – Strange Light
The Goon Sax – Get Out
The Goon Sax – She Knows
The Goon Sax – We Can’t Win

Side Three : Five Songs From Mirror II

The Goon Sax – In The Stone
The Goon Sax – Temples
The Goon Sax – Psychic
The Goon Sax – Desire
The Goon Sax – Til Dawn

JC

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN SINGLES : #021

aka The Vinyl Villain incorporating Sexy Loser

#021– Drag Racing Underground – ‚Hellfire'(Snakeskin Records ’89)

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Dear friends,

now, let’s be honest: you had already thought of this, of course, but wasn’t it just a question of time until this series would feature a record which is, let’s say, only for those of you with “an appetite for the bizarre”?

Well, today is the day, folks! Me, I’ve visited The John Peel Music School from 1985 to 2004, and although I might not have learnt all too much there, there is one thing which stuck to my mind ever since: just because a tune might come in as a bit extreme at first sight, still you have to give it a chance. You can dislike it after you’ve heard it – but not before.

Which brings us to today’s choice: the mighty Drag Racing Underground. I’m willing to have a small bet you never heard of them, probably because in essence they are Big Stick, which solely consist of John Gill and Yanna Trance (pictured above in her natural environment), but Big Stick had to change their name for this record for legal reasons: JTFL can surely tell you more about the background and about US law altogether, should you be interested.

The thing is: I am willing to have another bet that you haven’t heard about Big Stick either, which is not your fault, of course: I mean, I do understand that you will most likely immediately skip song titles like “Do Not Rape My Sister At the Municipal Pool” or ones as nuanced as “Girls On The Toilet”, especially when they come from a combo by then completely unknown to you … well, NYC art-rock underground has never been everyone’s cup of tea, for sure! Nor John Gill’s statements, which might come in as a tad, uh, politically incorrect these days: “You go save the Rainforest and help the homeless, just stay the fuck away from my car.”

But that’s Big Stick, Drag Racing Underground are nothing like that, of course! No, they will not be seen leading the fanfare corps for the return of the rock opera, how could they when bands like Pussy Galore, Reverb Motherfuckers, White Zombie—or their high profile big mean daddies in Sonic Youth, the Swans, or Foetus come to mind when you try to pigeonhole them in one form or another?

And what do you get when subtle/fragile music is not to be expected? Right, lyrics which would entitle an inclusion in TVV’s ‘Some Songs Make Great Short Stories” – series any day of the week! And when Drag Racing Underground tell us a story, this story is bound to be based on cars and/or racing. Oh, and although I just drive a shitty Peugeot 208 myself, I still celebrate them all day long, simply and purely for this record alone … again, it is ‘just’ a B-Side:

drag1

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mp3: Drag Racing Underground – Hellfire

And, btw, If only I could decipher those two lines towards the end,

“And filling your mind with (?) her kind of thoughts” and “So just tell your ole’ sister (?) her mouth”,

I’d be a happy man for the rest of my life!! So, if anyone can help, please do: not understanding what he is saying there has been driving me mad for 34 years now!

Thanks …. and drive friendly,

Dirk

SIXTY PLUS

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The morning after the day before.

Thanks for sticking with me during the 60 albums @ 60 rundown.  Things will eventually return to normal, but I’m going off for a week-long break in Toronto as from tomorrow, so there will be a continuation of posts that have been prepared well in advance.  I thought I’d kick things off post-birthday with yet another 60 minute long compilation, only as it felt like a good and appropriate idea.

mp3: Various – Nothing Lasts With Age (So People Say)

The Style Council – Speak Like A Child
Gorillaz (feat. Thundercat) – Cracker Island

Pop Will Eat Itself  – Wise Up! Sucker
King Biscuit Time – I Walk The Earth
Pet Shop Boys – Sexy Northerner
The Fall – No Bulbs 3
Blondie – Dreaming
Dead Kennedys – Too Drunk To Fuck
Frightened Rabbit – Be Less Rude
Spare Snare – Have A Go
Go Home Productions – Making Plans For Vinyl
Sugarcubes  – Birthday
The Brilliant Corners – Delilah Sands
The Wedding Present – We All Came From The Sea
Basement Jaxx- Where’s Your Head At
Elastica– Connection
Blur – Got Yer!

The Go Home Productions tune is a mash-up involving a well-known XTC tune and the lyric from Oops (Oh My), a Top 5 hit back in 2002 by Tweet feat. Missy Elliot.

And, as if by magic, the whole thing comes in at exactly 60 minutes and 0 seconds.

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #1

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The Jam – All Mod Cons (1978)

It’s my 60th birthday today.  I’m gifting myself the words of Charles Shaar Murray from the NME of 22 October 1978.   I wish I was this talented.

—–

Third albums generally mean that it’s shut-up-or-get-cut-up time: when an act’s original momentum has drained away and they’ve got to cover the distance from a standing start, when you’ve got to cross “naive charm” off your list of assets.

For The Jam, it seemed as if the Third Album Syndrome hit with their second album. This Is The Modern World was dull and confused, lacking both the raging, one-dimensional attack of their first album and any kind of newly-won maturity. A couple of vaguely duff singles followed and, in the wake of a general disillusionment with the Brave New Wave World, it seemed as if Paul Weller and his team were about to be swept under the carpet.

Well, it just goes to show you never can tell. All Mod Cons is the third Jam album to be released (it’s actually the fourth Jam album to be recorded; the actual third Jam album was judged, found wanting and scrapped) and it’s not only several light years ahead of anything they’ve done before but also the album that’s going to catapult The Jam right into the front rank of international rock and roll; one of the handful of truly essential rock albums of the last few years.

The title is more than Grade B punning or a clever-clever linkup with the nostalgibuzz packaging (like the target design on the label, the Swinging London trinketry, the Lambretta diagram or the Immediate-style lettering); it’s a direct reference to both the broadening of musical idiom and Weller’s reaffirmation of a specific Mod consciousness.

Remember the Mod ideal: it was a lower-middle and working-class consciousness that stressed independence, fun and fashion without loss of integrity or descent into elitism or consumerism; unselfconscious solidarity and a dollop of non-sectarian concern for others. Weller has transcended his original naivety without becoming cynical about anything other than the music business.

Mod became hippies and we know that didn’t work; the more exploratory end of Mod rock became psychedelia. Just as Weller’s Mod ideal has abandoned the modern equivalent of beach-fighting and competitive posing, his Mod musical values have moved from ’65 to ’66: the intoxicating period between pilled-up guitar-strangling and Sergeant Pepper. Reference points: Rubber Soul and A Quick One rather than Small Faces and My Generation.

Still, though Weller’s blends of acoustic and electric 6 and 12-string guitars, sound effects, overdubs and more careful structuring and arranging of songs (not to mention a quantum leap in standard of composition) may cause frissons of delight over at the likes of Bomp, Trouser Press and other covens of aging Yankee Anglophiles, All Mod Cons is an album based firmly in 1978 and looking forward.

This is the modern world: ‘Down In The Tube Station At Midnight’ is a fair indication of what Weller’s up to on this album, as was ‘A-Bomb In Wardour Street’ (I can’t help thinking that he’s given more hard clear-eyed consideration to the implications of the Sham Army than Jimmy Pursey has), but they don’t remotely tell the whole story. For one thing, Weller has the almost unique ability to write love songs that convince the listener that the singer is really in love. Whether he’s describing an affair that’s going well or badly, he writes with a penetrating, committed insight that rings perfectly, utterly true.

Weller writes lovingly and (choke on it) sensitively, without ever descending to the patented sentimentality that is the stock-in-trade of the emotionally bankrupt. That sentimentality is but the reverse side of the macho coin, and both sides spell lovelessness. The inclusion of ‘English Rose’ (a one-man pick’n’croon acoustic number backed only by a tape of the sea) is both a musical and emotional finger in the eye for everyone who still clings to the old punk tough-guy stereotype and is prepared to call The Jam out for not doing likewise.

Weller is – like Bruce Springsteen – tough enough not to feel he needs to prove it any more, strong enough to break down his own defences, secure enough to make himself vulnerable. The consciousness of All Mod Cons is the most admirable in all of British rock and roll, and one that most of his one-time peers could do well to study.

Through the album, then: the brief, brusque title track and its immediate successor (‘To Be Someone’) examine the rock business first in a tart V-sign to some entrepreneurial type who wishes to squeeze the singer dry and then throw him away, and second in a cuttingly ironic track about a superstar who lost touch with the kids and blew his career. Weller is, by implication, assuring his listeners that no way is that going to happen to him: but the song is so well thought out and so convincing that it chokes back the instinctive “Oh yeah?” that a less honest song in the same vein would elicit from a less honest band.

From there we’re into ‘Mr Clean’, an attack on the complacent middle-aged “professional classes.” The extreme violence of its language (the nearest this album comes to an orthodox punk stance, in fact) is matched with music that combines delicacy and aggression with an astonishing command of dynamics. This is as good a place as any to point out that bassist Bruce Foxton and drummer Rick Buckler are more than equal to the new demands that Weller is making on them: the vitality, empathy and resourcefulness that they display throughout the album makes All Mod Cons a collective triumph for The Jam as well as a personal triumph for Weller.

‘David Watts’ follows (written by Ray Davies, sung by Foxton and a re-recorded improvement on the 45) with ‘English Rose’ in hot pursuit. The side ends with ‘In The Crowd’, which places Weller dazed and confused in the supermarket. It bears a superficial thematic resemblance to ‘The Combine’ (from the previous album) in that it places its protagonist in a crowd and examines his reactions to the situation, but its musical and lyrical sophistication smashes ‘The Combine’ straight back to the stone age. It ends with a lengthy, hallucinatory backward guitar solo which sounds as fresh and new as anything George Harrison or Pete Townshend did a dozen years ago, and a reference back to ‘Away From The Numbers’.

‘Billy Hunt’, whom we meet at the beginning of the second side, is not a visible envy-focus like Davies’ ‘David Watts’, but the protagonist’s faintly ludicrous all-powerful fantasy self: what he projects in the daydreams that see him through his crappy job. The deliberate naivety of this fantasy is caught and projected by Weller with a skill that is nothing short of marvellous.

A brace of love songs follow: ‘It’s Too Bad’ is a song of regret for a couple’s mutual inability to save a relationship which they both know is infinitely worth saving. Musically, it’s deliriously, wonderfully ’66 Beat Groupish in a way that represents exactly what all those tinpot powerpop bands were aiming for but couldn’t manage. Lyrically, even if this sort of song was Weller’s only lick, he’d still be giving Pete Shelley and all his New Romance fandangos a real run for his money.

‘Fly’ is an exquisite electric/acoustic construction, a real lovers’ song, but from there on in the mood changes for the “Doctor Marten’s Apocalypse” of ‘A-Bomb In Wardour Street’ and ‘Tube Station’. In both these songs, Weller depicts himself as the victim who doesn’t know why he’s getting trashed at the hands of people who don’t know why they feel they have to hand out the aggro.

We’ve heard a lot of stupid, destructive songs about the alleged joys of violence lately, and they all stink: if these songs are listened to in the spirit in which they were written then maybe we’ll see a few less pictures of kids getting carried off the terraces with darts in their skulls. And if these songs mean that one less meaningless street fight gets started, then we’ll all owe Paul Weller a favour.

The Jam brought us The Sound Of ’65 in 1976, and now in 1978 they bring us the sound of ’66. Again, they’ve done it such a way that even though you can still hear The Who here and there and a few distinct Beatleisms in those ornate decending 12-string chord sequences, it all sounds fresher and newer than anything else this year. All Mod Cons is the album that’ll make Bob Harris‘ ears bleed the next time he asks what has Britain produced lately; more important, it’ll be the album that makes The Jam real contenders for the crown.

Look out, all you rock and rollers: as of now, The Jam are the ones you have to beat.

—-

JC adds

Shaar Murray’s review just about captures everything I felt about this record back in the day, albeit I wasn’t fully up on his 60s era references, not being a fan of The Beatles or much that predated 1973.

I also remember reading this review thanks to the big brother of a friend who had heard me raving about ‘Tube Station’ and how it was by far the greatest song that anyone had ever written.  I didn’t buy the NME in 1978 – music was now an increasingly important part of my life, but it was still mainly football and my newly discovered hobby of golf, but being passed a copy of the paper specifically to read that review had a huge impact on the way I began to engage with and consume pop music.   I didn’t know it at the time, but I was just over six months away from seeing my first ever live gig, another seminal event in my development.

All Mod Cons is not the best album I have here in Villain Towers, but it is, and by some considerable distance, my all-time favourite.

And with that, the blog will return to the mundane and mediocre, beginning tomorrow. In the meantime, I’m off to find a bus driver to whom I can flash my newly acquired concessionary pass.

mp3:  The Jam – The Place I Love

Thanks for all your thoughts, views and opinions over the course of the rundown.

JC

The rundown in full:-

1. All Mod Cons – The Jam
2. After The Fact – Magazine

3. Sulk- Associates
4. The Midnight Organ Fight – Frightened Rabbit
5. Technique – New Order
6. The Orange Juice – Orange Juice
7. Closer – Joy Division
8. Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters – The Twilight Sad
9. Hatful of Hollow – The Smiths
10. Songs To Remember – Scritti Politti
11. Mezzanine – Massive Attack
12. New Adventures In Hi-Fi – R.E.M.
13. Standing On A Beach – The Cure
14. Singles Going Steady – Buzzcocks
15. Seamonsters – The Wedding Present
16. Let Love In – Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
17. Rattlesnakes – Lloyd Cole & The Commotions
18. London Calling – The Clash
19. Parallel Lines – Blondie
20. High Land, Hard Rain – Aztec Camera
21. Philophobia – Arab Strap
22. Death To The Pixies – Pixies
23. Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret – Soft Cell
24. Soul Mining – The The
25. Will I Ever Be Inside Of You? – Paul Quinn & The Independent Group
26. Different Class – Pulp
27. 30 Something – Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine
28. Hypocrisy Is The Greatest Luxury – The Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy
29. Heaven Up Here – Echo and The Bunnymen
30. Tindersticks (II) – Tindersticks
31. Steve McQueen – Prefab Sprout
32. Head Over Heels – Cocteau Twins
33. Pop Art – Pet Shop Boys
34. Boat To Bolivia – Martin Stephenson & The Daintees
35. Empires and Dance – Simple Minds
36. DAMN – Kendrick Lamar
37. Before Hollywood – The Go-Betweens
38. Surrender – The Chemical Brothers
39. The Great Eastern – The Delgados
40. You Had A Kind Face – Butcher Boy
41. Shag Times – The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu
42. Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not – Arctic Monkeys
43. Into The Woods – Malcom Middleton
44. Violent Femmes – Violent Femmes
45. Cafe Bleu – The Style Council
46. Trapped and Unwrapped – Friends Again
47. The Hurting – Tears For Fears
48. Debut – Bjork
49. Original Pirate Material – The Streets
50. Electronic – Electronic
51. Kilimanjiro – The Teardrop Explodes
52. A Certain Trigger – Maximo Park
53. Anthology : The Sounds of Science – Beastie Boys
54. Boxer – The National
55. Imaginary Walls Collapse – Adam Stafford
56. Beaucoup Fish – Underworld
57. Back In The D.H.S.S. – Half Man Half Biscuit
58. Love The Cup – Sons and Daughters
59. Talking With The Taxman About Poetry – Billy Bragg
60. A Secret Wish – Propaganda

(I’ve 51 of them on vinyl either as stand-alone LPs or as part of boxets.)

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #2

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Magazine – After The Fact (1982)

That’s the problem with setting hard and fast rules – they inevitably come back to bite you in the backside.

The #2 position in this rundown should be occupied by The Correct Use of Soap, the album I reckon is as close to perfection as any that has ever been released  – and yup, JTFL, I include the cover of ‘Thank You…..’ in that assessment.   (Click here to be let in on that private joke).

The problem is that I didn’t buy said album in 1980.  As I’ve said before, and it has long been a source of immense regret, I didn’t pick up on Magazine until the band had broken up.

After The Fact was my first purchase. It is therefore, along with some later Magazine material including other compilations, box sets and a much later reunion LP, eligible for inclusion in the rundown, and I’ve decided, after careful and due consideration, that it is just as worthy as slotting it at #2 as ‘Soap’.

Controversial?  For sure.   But it’s my party, and I can ‘cheat’ if I want to.

The ten tracks across the album offer an overview of the band’s career.  Four of them had been released as singles, but at the same time, four other songs selected as 45s here in the UK were left off.  Each album is represented – Real Life (1978) and Secondhand Daylight (1979) both have three songs, while The Correct Use of Soap (1980) and Magic, Murder and The Weather (1981) have two.   The fact that my favourite record is relatively under-represented only added to the utter joy and elation I experienced when I finally bought myself a copy, which would have been just a matter of weeks after the compilation.

The back of the sleeve comes with a wonderfully-written essay from Paul Morley in which he reflects, in his usual rambling but engaging style, as to why Magazine were such an important, essential and always likely to be unappreciated part of the post-punk era. As you can imagine, the essay contains a number of magnificently structured phrases and sentences, but one of the more readily understandable is what really gets to the heart, as far as I’m concerned, about what made the group so compelling at the time and why they remain so relevant more than 40 years later:-

“Magazine took pop music in the direction of a new simplicity: that is, they sought to prove nothing, they were subtle, frank and alluring and there was every chance you would be amazed.”

All of this and more for this very impressionable late-teen.   They became the second group, in very short times, to emerge out of Manchester and make me fleetingly yearn to live elsewhere other than Glasgow.  Joy Division/New Order had been the first, and The Smiths would later prove to be a third.  I had yet to fully discover the wonders of The Fall….and I suppose it’s at this juncture it is worth confessing that Mark E Smith is conspicuous by his absence from this rundown.  I make no apologies and I make no excuses…it just sometimes works out that way.

For decades, I sneered at the idea of bands getting back together and reuniting after years apart.  I never wanted to entertain the thought of going along and seeing old heroes in their dotage doing everything possible to ruin their legacy with a substandard and embarrassing performance in front of fans who really should have been, in the words of Lloyd Cole, old enough to know better.

I did a handbrake turn after the events of 14 February 2009.  A Magazine gig, at the Academy in Manchester, after an absence of 29 years.  My first time seeing and hearing the songs in a live setting.  Two nights later, and I was in the audience in Glasgow.  Later in the year, at the end of August, I’d see them in Edinburgh, on a night when they played two half-sets, with a break in-between.  The first half, and I had no idea this is how it was going to pan out until about the third song in, involve playing The Complete Use Of Soap in its entirety in the same order as the record.  Needless to say, I couldn’t stop smiling afterwards for weeks.

mp3:   Magazine – A Song From Under The Floorboards

I wasn’t aware, when I first got familiar with Magazine, that this particular song was based on the novella Notes From Underground, written by Fyodor Dostoevsky back in 1864. Around the time that Magazine were undertaking the decades-later comeback, which culminated with the album No Thyself (2011), a piece in The Guardian newspaper suggested that basing on a song on a novel by Dostoyevsky was not the action of the typical pop group, but then again Howard Devoto was not a typical pop star. It was a sentence that made me wonder if Robert Forster had been thinking specifically of Howie when he penned these words in the song Here Comes The City, on the album Oceans Apart (2005):-

“And why do people who read Dostoevsky always look like Dostoevsky?”

I do have a quiet smile to myself every time I hear that line.

One more album to go, and the rundown is over. I’d like to think many of you might have worked out who is going to be responsible for it, and most likely the actual LP.

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #3

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Associates – Sulk (1982)

Sulk was the third LP by Associates in as in as many years, albeit one of the previous LPs had simply brought together singles and b-sides.   It was, however, the first to bring them commercial success to match the critical acclaim of the earlier releases.

My first exposure to the band came via a friend passing me copies of their singles and earlier material on a cassette tape, and initally it was the pulsing weird electronica of the likes of Transport to Central, White Car In Germany and Tell Me Easter’s On Friday that grabbed my attention.  But gradually my ears attuned themselves to the strange vocals that accompanied the music and allowed me to fully ‘get’ what Associates were all about.

There was no way, however, that I thought they’d ever be a chart band which would attracted a teenybop following such as happened in 1981.  Sure, both boys were handsome and photogenic, particularly frontman Billy Mackenzie and thanks to them being on WEA Records they had a big promo/marketing arm there to push them along.  But these boys were just too weird to be pop stars weren’t they?

The stunning success of the singles Party Fears Two and Club Country changed everything.  Looking back there’s a big hint that this was an unexpected development all round – neither single had an advance promo made in an era when this was just about the first thing any record label, and not just a major like WEA, considered when planning the release of a 45.

It can often be the case that the inclusion of one or two truly stunning songs can overshadow the rest on an LP and make everything else seem tame or even mediocre in comparison.  But there’s no chance of Party Fears Two or Club Country having that impact or effect on Sulk, as all ten tracks really are something very special.

I know the LP was given a totally different tracklisting upon release in the USA – three of the tracks on the UK release were omitted and replaced with songs which had been singles, so what follows might not make sense to readers from that part of the world.

Rather unusually, Side A is devoid of the hit singles – indeed it is a side of an LP that goes out of its way to be often as far removed as possible from the jauntiness and joy of the music which had got the band radio airplay, appearances on Top of the Pops and those afore-mentioned Top 20 hits.

Having said that, it opens with an upbeat and incredibly catchy instrumental in Arrogance Gave Him Up that I can recall being a staple on the dancefloor of at least one alternative Glasgow nightclub.  After that, the trio of No, Bap De La Bap, Gloomy Sunday and Nude Spoons are as astonishing a run of music as you can ever hope to hear as Alan Rankine demonstrates that top-quality electronica back in 1982 could be made without it sounding rinky-dinky, light, inconsequential or disposable.

Thankfully Sulk came with a lyric sheet as there’s no way that you’d have worked out what the hell Billy was singing.  And it wasn’t that you couldn’t make out the words a la Elizabeth Fraser/Cocteau Twins, it was more like realising all the words on their own make sense, but in the order sung by Billy seem either nonsensical or inspired. Or both.

Oh, and the version of Gloomy Sunday, one of the most covered songs of all time, is surely among the best there is….

Side B opens with Skipping and It’s Better This Way – two of the best bits of music the band would ever lay down – and closes with firstly the hit singles and ultimately an instrumental that would later be extended and turned into a further hit single.

mp3:  Associates – Skipping

Sulk is a work of genius.  Actually, it’s the work of two geniuses.

It’s a work that veers all over the place and while it will often be labelled in with many other synth-led LPs of the era, it is nothing like those of Japan, Human League, Simple Minds, Ultravox or the rest of the bands who cracked the charts on a regular basis.  The vocals are often unworldly, going from a low and creepy moan to the high falsetto of a 10-year old choir boy in the space of seconds.

Sulk has songs that will have you leaping to the dance floor, and songs that will have you cowering behind the couch in fear. The production is outlandish and at times stretched to breaking point, but never ever snaps into overwrought pomp and pomposity.  It’s a record which hasn’t dated….indeed, if anything it has got better with age. It’s an album that could only have been made in the 80s, as only at that point in time could the music industry have really indulged the artistes to the extent they did.  And there’s no way that Billy and Alan would have become pop stars in the 21st Century, as their essential rough edges would have smoothed down to make them mundane and mediocre.

Sulk, dear readers, is an LP genuinely like no other.

And in deciding that it fits at #3 in this rundown, it has the honour of being my all-time favourite album by any singer or group to emerge out of Scotland.

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #4

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Frightened Rabbit – The Midnight Organ Fight (2008)

It was just a few days ago when I mentioned coming across a band who were just starting out when I first saw and heard them, after which I had the great fortune to watch them grow over the years during which time their sound evolved and developed.

As with The Twilight Sad, so too with Frightened Rabbit.  But to a greater extent.

My introduction came via Comrade Colin tipping me off thanks to him falling for the charms of debut single Be Less Rude.   Said single and debut album, Sing The Greys (2006), were duly purchased, but more importantly, I got into a habit of going along to see them play live at small venues all across Glasgow.   There were plenty of folk who would be more than happy to be my +1, including Rachel who wasn’t entirely convinced by the music (a bit on the quiet side for her complete liking) but who thought, rightly, they were a superb live act fronted by the most charming and self-effacing frontman imaginable.

It is impossible these days to try and write anything about Frightened Rabbit without thinking about Scott Hutchison.   A truly wonderful and gifted performer, but above all else one of the nicest and modest individuals around.  It’s still a hard one to realise that he’s no longer with us.  Five years on, and the timeline around his disappearance and eventual discovery of his body in the Firth of Forth, close to the bridges in Queensferry, remain painful memories.

Frightened Rabbit often featured over on the old blog, especially around the time that Midnight Organ Fight was released. I know that many musicians take personal circumstances, including the break-up of relationships, and turn them into songs.

This, however, felt different. Looking back, it was perhaps the shock of finding out that Scott had gone through such a traumatic break-up.  I had seen him perform on numerous occasions, most certainly at the same time as when he was writing these songs, but there was never any indication from his on-stage demeanour, or the very brief and very occasional chats with him post-shows, that he was grieving.

It wasn’t just in terms of the lyrics that Midnight Organ Fight was such a quantum leap from the debut.  Musically, it felt outstanding, the sort of record that you want to listen to over and over and over again until you know, inside-out, every single note, quaver and important periods of silence and reflection.

I fell heavily for this intense and passionate blend of indie-pop/folk, aided and abetted by being present at two launch gigs in small venues in Glasgow.  It was abundantly clear that Scott’s songs were bringing back all sorts of memories, including those where he was pointing the finger of blame solely in his own direction, and it was very moving to look on from such close quarters and realise how difficult and painful it was for him to be sharing so publicly sharing so many real-life episodes.

Back in 2018, just a few months prior to Scott ended his life, it was announced that Frightened Rabbit intended to mark the 10th Anniversary of The Midnight Organ Fight with a set of live shows.   I wrote at the time that I regarded the record as nothing short of a masterpiece, and an album that I would have no hesitation in placing very near the top of the best ever LPs by any Scottish singer or band… which I suppose is what I’m actually doing right now.  I also said that it was unlikely that I’d go along to any of the anniversary shows, as I was happy to make do with the memories of hearing the songs and the album in its entirety at those smaller venues back in the day.   Nobody knew that the shows would never take place…..

The work and songs of Scott Hutchison and Frightened Rabbit remain loved and celebrated.  Other singers and bands have incorporated cover versions into their live sets, drawing on the friendships they formed while touring together or socialising when they were part of the same Festival line-ups.    The Twilight Sad have included Keep Yourself Warm in their sets for a number of years, but earlier this year, on a short three-date acoustic tour, they aired one of the singles lifted from the album:-

mp3:  Frightened Rabbit – Fast Blood

Not every memory of a broken romance has to be painful.

And now I, I tremble,Because this fumble has become biblicalI feel like I just died twiceI was reborn again for all our dirty sinsAnd the fast blood, fast blood, fast bloodHurricanes through meAnd then it rips my roof away with her fire headsThis is the longest kiss good night

We’ve all been there, haven’t we?

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #5

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New Order – Technique (1989)

Again, I’m falling back on an old post.  It’s one that got a fair bit of positive reaction which pleased me no end, more to do with the fact that I’m not alone in considering Technique to be the high point, albums wise, from New Order. What now follows is adapted from something I posted in April 2015, but slightly amended to take out a reference as to how the album was promoted, based on a correction provided via the comments section.

AS OWNED ON VINYL, CD AND CASSETTE

There is someone I know who thinks New Order should have disbanded in around 1985 as the music they have made since then has betrayed everything that Joy Division stood for.  Despite holding such strident and unacceptable views, he remains a dear friend…and besides it gives us one more thing to argue over.

Me?  I’ve never hidden from the view that it took until 1989 for their masterpiece to emerge….and while there has been the occasional nugget of gold since then, I’d have been happy if this had been their last ever record.

It’s worth recalling that the release of Brotherhood in 1986 had disappointed many fans. It was, in the main, a lacklustre affair and indeed was shown up as such when the compilation LP Substance was issued the following year. The one hope was that the Greatest Hits package featured two amazing new songs – True Faith and 1963, the former a wonderful dance track driven largely by Steve & Hooky and the latter a gorgeous pop number with Barney at last penning lyrics which made sense and had a semblance of a story line.

But post-Substance, the band seemingly disappeared off the radar, and some folk (including your humble scribe) thought we’d seen the last of them.

In the days before t’internet, you had to rely on the music papers for news/info on your favourite bands. One week, I read a snippet that New Order had gone to Ibiza to record a new LP. Months passed. Nothing. More months passed. Still nothing, and I assumed that somehow I had missed the news that the band had broken up.

Then, out of the blue in late 1988, a single was released. It was called Fine Time, and it was really quite different from anything else they had ever previously released being, for the most part, an instrumental, and which was very clearly aimed at the dance market. And I loved it.

The album kind of sneaked out in January 1989, at a time when the UK was at its most cold, miserable and wet. But this album made you forget all that.

It was everything that fulfilled the promise of True Faith/1963. There were immense dance numbers, there were songs of love, joy and happiness, and there were songs about having your heart broken into many pieces. Every song could have been a single. No, that’s not true. Every song could have been a #1 single.

Thankfully, the album did sell in reasonable quantities, but not enough to arrest Factory’s eventual decline into receivership/administration. It did however lead to New Order being asked to take the sound of Technique into the football world when they penned the England Squad’s 1990 World Cup Anthem, World In Motion, which finally gave the band the #1 hit they had been chasing for a few years.

2023 addendum (1)

And yes, as with The Orange Juice, it is an album I have on cassette, CD and vinyl, albeit the vinyl is a 2015 reissue on London Records.   But in writing this piece, it hit me that I should treat myself to an early birthday present and so I’m going to hunt down a vinyl copy on Factory Records.  I’ll do a further addendum once I’ve completed that mission.

Addendum 2

Picked up a superbly clean copy on Factory for £18 on Discogs….one where the gradings proved to be conservative.  As ever, I ended up with a few other things to save on P&P, one of which was a vinyl copy of the debut Lloyd Cole solo album for £3 which feels like a real bargain with the current cost of second-hand vinyl.

Addendum 3

With apologies for failing to have a tune when the post was first published.  Poor technique on my part.

mp3: New Order – Vanishing Point

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #6

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Orange Juice – The Orange Juice (1984)

There’s a famous quote attributed to John Peel that, when he was asked by a listener which Fall record they should buy, he replied ‘You must get them all’. 

It was a similar train of thought that initially led me to consider, in terms of Orange Juice and this rundown, including Coals To Newcastle, the 6xCD box set issued by Domino Records in 2010.  After all, having been given a repress, it’s available for £45 direct from AED Records, the enterprise owned by Edwyn Collins, and in return you’ll have 130 pieces of music along with a DVD containing TV appearances, a couple of promo videos and a live gig that was originally released on VHS back in 1985.   Click here if you’re interested.

But to have included this box set and ignored others, such as Heart and Soul, the 4xCD  Joy Division boxset which dates from 1997, would have been unfair, and so I turned my attention to the rest of the OJ discography.

The final studio album, The Orange Juice, is the one I’ve selected for the rundown.  Again, it wasn’t an easy choice, especially as there were options from the Postcard-era together as well as a compilation encompassing the three studio albums and one mini-LP from the Polydor years.

It’s been said, by others, that this record isn’t really that last in the life of Orange Juice, but the first solo release by Edwyn Collins.  The group had whittled down to just two members, as indicated by the notes that accompany the album  – ‘Orange Juice are Edwyn Collins and Zeke Manyika’.   The  record was made thanks to major contributions on bass from Clare Kenny (on loan from Amazulu) and producer Denis Bovell on keyboards.

Despite all this, or maybe perhaps because of this, the album proved to the tightest and most consistent that Orange Juice ever released.  The history of the band had been littered with fall-outs and departures due to musical differences, but at long last, Edwyn had the final say on everything, ably assisted and advised by an experienced producer whom he liked and trusted. Another factor was that the major label contract signed back in 1981 was coming to an end, and with this almost certain to be the final set of recordings to be bankrolled by Polydor, Edwyn’s waspish sense of mischief meant he was determined to finally make the sort of record the bosses had been after since day one.   The bosses, on the other hand, just wanted it done and dusted and weren’t prepared to offer much in promotional support beyond what was stipulated in the contract.

All of which meant that The Orange Juice, and its two majestic singles – What Presence?! and Lean Period – more or less passed everyone by, other than those of us who were paying close attention.  Which was a crying shame, as its ten songs really demonstrated Edwyn’s talents as a writer and performer. There’s some jingly-jangly pop, there are soulful, crooning ballads, and there are guitar solos that his great friend Roddy Frame would have been proud of.

It didn’t sell all that well.  I’m not sure if it’s an urban myth or not, but seemingly the cassette version sold more than the vinyl.  I’m certainly someone who bought the tape, attracted by the fact that it came with seven additional 12″ mixes of singles from across the Polydor era, albeit a much-hoped for extended version of Love Sick, one of the Postcard-era single, turned out to be no more than the re-recorded version that had been made available with the 2 x 7″ release of Rip It Up a few years previously.

I’ve subsequently bought the album on CD and a few years back, as I was rediscovering the love for vinyl as a result of getting this blog up and running, I picked up a cheap second-hand copy of the original vinyl.

And yes, while I would tell anyone who has nothing more than a casual awareness of Orange Juice to buy the box set (and while you’re there, have a scan through the list of ‘thank-yous’ to spot my name!!), you should never miss out on the opportunity to own a copy of The Orange Juice, one of the best and most enjoyable LPs ever to come out of Scotland,

mp3: Orange Juice – The Artisans

At best all the rest are just also-rans………..

JC

60 ALBUMS @ 60 : #7

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Joy Division – Closer (1980)

The thing is, I prefer Unknown Pleasures to Closer, but as I didn’t buy the debut album until around the same time as its follow-up, it can’t be considered for inclusion in the rundown.

I’m also loath to actually say that Closer is actually a favourite album.  It is such a sad and tragic piece of art, especially all these years later with the knowledge of the circumstances under which it was written and recorded, that it is impossible for anyone to place it on a turntable and call it an enjoyable listen.

It is fair to say that my relationship with Closer has changed a great deal over the past 43 years.   The 17-year old me was certainly moved by the suicide of Ian Curtis, but I never really made the connection between his music and what had driven him to take his own life.  I clearly wasn’t alone, as can be evidenced from the many millions of words that have been written about it all ever since, with none of his three fellow musicians in Joy Division, or indeed almost anyone involved in Factory Records ever stopping to consider that his lyrics were, to all extent and purposes, a cry for help from a frightened and confused man.  Nobody gave a damn about mental well-being in those days, and while there is still something of a stigma about it, at least there is a growing recognition these days that illnesses of the mind require the same level of professional care and attention as those which affect the bones, joints and muscles.

It is impossible to play Closer without picturing some of the scenes from the film Control, or to recall some of the prose written after the fact by the likes of Tony Wilson (RIP), John Savage or Paul Morley.  There’s also been so many documentaries or TV shows in which Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook and Stephen Morris have had their say on things, and their words also are hanging in the air when listening to the music.  It’s an album that is difficult to listen to purely on its own musical merits.

And yet………………..

I couldn’t dream of leaving it out this Top 60 for the simple fact that Joy Division are among the most personally influential groups in my life – some of the others have already featured in the rundown and others are still to appear. If it wasn’t for Joy Division, then a huge amount of the music I have loved since my late teens would never have made sense.

mp3:  Joy Division – Isolation

Yup.  Despite devoting all these words to the fact that Closer is such a hard listen, I’m finishing off the piece with the one that’s most danceable. It does seem remarkable that Ian chose to put one of his darkest and most foreboding lyrics to such an upbeat number…but it’s even more remarkable that nobody in the studio stopped to think for a couple of minutes and ask what he was thinking about or what was the meaning behind the lyric.  If that had happened, who knows how things would have turned out?

JC

PET SHOP BOYS SINGLES (Part Twenty-one)

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2011.  

The most activity came through being the special guests of Take That as the fully-reformed five-piece boy band embarked on a tour lasting from 27 May to 1 August, and consisting of twenty-nine shows in outdoor sports stadia in the UK and Ireland, followed by six similar efforts in mainland Europe. The estimated audience across the entire tour was 1.8 million.  Pet Shop Boys played a 45-minute set each time, consisting mostly of the biggest and most popular hit singles.

2012. 

Format, a 2xCD collection of many of the b-sides issued between 1996 and 2009 is released in February. 

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3 July 2012. 

A new digital single is released. 

6 August 2012

The new single is issued in physical form.

It all comes in the middle of London preparing for and then hosting the 2012 Olympic Games (27 July – 12 August) during which Team GB bags itself a record number of medals and the country is engulfed by a feel-good factor.  The PSB single is very appropriately named, and its artwork resembles a medal ceremony podium.

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Winner

Neil and Chris are quick to say that the mid-tempo number has nothing to with sport and that it was written about being part of something like Eurovision or the X-Factor. Nevertheless, the promo video has a sports theme in that it features a real-life roller derby team from London and the introduction into the team of a new transgender rookie. 

It’s a real feel good number, and very appropriate for the times and the mood of the nation.  It stalled at #86…………..

Three songs were added to the physical release:-

mp3:  Pet Shop Boys – A Certain ‘Je ne sais quoi’
mp3:  Pet Shop Boys – The Way Through The Woods
mp3:  Pet Shop Boys – I Started A Joke

The first of these demonstrates that, even after all these years, Neil and Chris can come up with a b-side that carries a real punch.   It’s a million miles better than Winner, and it’s incredible to think, again, that the duo had quietly slipped out, without any fanfare, one of the best tunes they had written in years.

I’m indebted to Commentary, the ridiculously informative PSB fan site curated by Wayne Studer for otherwise hard-to-find information on the second track, the credits list of which on the back of the CD runs to three producers (including Neil and Chris), four engineers, a mixer, six individual backing vocalists and an unknown number from a backing vocal group who prove to act as a choir.   Oh, and a co-writing credit for Rudyard Kipling.

Wayne informs visitors to his site that it stems from a fresh idea that Neil and Chris hoped could develop, whereby they would set famous poems to music, specifically for schoolchildren to sing.  It really is among the strangest and most experimental tracks they have ever recorded – as far removed from any of the hit singles as can be imagined – with a lengthy, but very gentle near two-minutes worth of what feels entirely like incidental music to a film or TV programme before any the delivery of the poem begins. 

Given this, it would have been fair to anticipate the words/lyrics to be of the spoken variety, but it’s a singing effort which seriously tests Neil’s range, especially as he tries to match the singing from the choir. And then it gets incredibly weird and otherworldly.

The final track is a cover.  As you night imagine, a lot of studio time was required to complete The Way Through The Woods, and while they were recording, the news broke that Robin Gibb of the Bee Gees had passed away.  Neil and Chris decided to record one of his songs as a tribute and then chose to include it on Winner.

There’s one final postscript to all this.

Pet Shop Boys appeared at the closing ceremony of the London Olympics on 12th August, a short two-minute segment in which West End Girls was performed as the duo were cycled around the running track on chariots.

On 10th September, the day after the 2012 Paralympics were completed, the streets of London played host to a ‘Parade of Champions’ in which the host nation’s medallists were celebrated, an event which went out live across three different TV channels to even more millions of people watching at home.  The Pet Shop Boys were in among it all, performing Winner, West End Girls and Go West.

Kind of surreal eh?

This has been a long posting, and so I’ll return to later releases from 2012 next time around.  But you’ll need to show a little bit of patience, as next Sunday will be turned over to revealing the #1 entry in the 60 albums at 60 rundown.

JC