SHAKEDOWN, 1979 (July)

79

My summer of ’79 saw me enter the big bad world of paid employment.  I actually told a few lies to land the job, the vacancy for which had been advertised in the local job centre.

I was legally able to leave school, but I was always planning to return after the summer holidays to go into 5th year to sit the exams that would count towards university admission.  But I wanted to earn a bit of money, and so I applied for, and landed, a job in the city centre branch of Halford’s, the UK’s biggest retailer of cycling and motor products.  I told the store bosses that I had no intention of returning to school, no matter how good the results of my O-Grades, and, yes, I did see myself as being very interested if the chance arose to train as a store manager once I turned 18 in a couple of years time.

I started the job a couple of days after my 16th birthday, and so the month of July was when I really settled into it.  It was a shop where the radio played in the background all day long, and with most of the staff being lads aged in their late teens/early 20s, the station of choice was BBC Radio 1, which means my ears were exposed to a lot of what was in the charts.

As you’d expect, there was a fair bit of rubbish regularly aired, but then again Tubeway Army, Squeeze, Blondie, The Ruts and The Skids were all still in the Top 40, while some cracking disco/soul classics from Earth Wind & Fire/The Emotions, McFadden & Whitehead, and Chic were also capable of putting a smile on my face.  The highest new entry in the chart in the first week of July is not one I can recall hearing on Radio 1:-

mp3: Public Image Limited – Death Disco (#34)

Jaysus, this was really weird sounding.  The 16-year-old me had a difficulty with it.  I bought it, but I can’t say I particularly liked listening to it.  So much so, that I gave it away to someone who handed me two of the early Jam singles in exchange (Eddie didn’t like that they were a pop band nowadays). It took me a few years to really appreciate Death Disco… till 1990 in fact, when I bought a CD copy of a Public Image Limited singles compilation.  As I wrote on this blog previously, by this point in my life I knew that great songs didn’t need hooks or memorable, hummable tunes, and that a cauldron of noise in which a screaming vocal fights for your attention alongside screeching guitars over a bass/drum delivery that on its own would have you dancing like a madman under the flashing lights could be a work of genius.  This spent seven weeks in the Top 75, peaking at #20.

While researching this piece, I discovered, to my shock/delight, that Death Disco had appeared on a Top of The Pops budget compilation – these albums featured uncredited session musicians/singers replicating the sound of current chart hits. I think there were about 100 or so of them released between 1968 and 1982, and they were stupidly cheap in comparison to a proper studio album, and from memory weren’t all that more expensive than a couple of singles.  This is really strange:-

mp3: Top Of The Pops – Death Disco

I’m thinking that John Lydon pissed himself laughing at the very idea of this, and as such was more than happy to give his blessing to it.

The next one of interest in the chart of 1-7 July is another I can’t recall hearing in Halford’s

mp3: Siouxsie & The Banshees – Playground Twist (#47)

The third of the S&TB singles wasn’t a commercial offering by any stretch of the imagination, but it did sell enough copies to reach #28 in a six-week stay.

Coming in a bit further down the chart was one that I recall hearing loads of times in the shop:-

mp3: The Police – Can’t Stand Losing You (#60)

This had been a near smash-hit in late 1978, spending five weeks in the charts and reaching #42.  The Police had gone massive in the first half of ’79, and it was easy enough for A&M Records to press up more copies of the old singles to meet the new demand.  Where Roxanne had taken the band into the Top 20, this was the one that sealed the deal, getting all the way to #2 in mid-August.

The second singles chart of July ’79 was a strange one.  No ‘big’ entries, with the highest coming in at at #48, courtesy of Abba.  Many of other newbies are names I am struggling to recall – Chantal Curtis, Stonebridge McGuiness, Judie Tzuke, Vladimir Cosma, and Light of The World.  There was, however, one truly outstanding song which came in at #62:-

mp3: The Pretenders – Kid

It remains my favourite 45 of all that Chrissie & co ever put down on vinyl. Indeed, it is one of THE great records in what was, as this series is demonstrating, a great year for music; it spent seven weeks on the chart in July and August 1979, peaking at #33. Should have got to #1….but that feat for The Pretenders was just around the corner.

The third week of July saw an unusual song as its highest new entry at #15:-

mp3: The Boomtown Rats – I Don’t Like Mondays

Here’s the thing.  I more than liked the Boomtown Rats and owned copies of their first two albums.  I wasn’t at prepared for the new single…..it was all over the radio before it was actually released, and looking back at things now, it must be one of the first examples of a viral marketing campaign based on artificially creating a reaction to something that some folk declared to be ‘shocking’.  I can’t say that I cared much for the song, and it was conspicuous by its absence when I pulled together a Rats ICA back in October 2022.  The week after entering at #15, I Don’t Like Mondays went to #1, where it stayed for four weeks, and then another two weeks at #2. All told, it sold over 500,000 copies and was the 4th biggest selling single of 1979.

mp3: David Bowie – D.J.

Bowie followed up the success of Boys Keep Swinging with a second single from the album Lodger. This would have been heard in Halford’s but not all that often given that it came in at #29 in the third week of July but immediately dropped down the following week, and Radio 1 daytime DJs usually only gave spins to records that were on the up.

mp3: Sparks – Beat The Clock

This was very much all over the workplace radio….the sort of song that sounded great over the airwaves and made the individual DJs feel as if they were being a bit edgy.  A fantastic piece of disco-pop, thanks to the efforts of the brothers Mael and Giorgio Moroder.  A nine-week stay in the charts was the reward, with a best placing of #10.

mp3: The Undertones – Here Comes The Summer

Yup….July ’79 was the release date for this one.  Really doesn’t seem like 45 years ago, but there you have the facts presented before you, so there’s no denying it.  The other thing I’d have said about this was that it must have been a Top 20 hit, given how often I recall hearing it and that it lodged so easily into my brain.  But nope, in at #63 and peaking a couple of weeks later at #34, which was kind of a similar trajectory to this one:-

mp3: Buzzcocks – Harmony In My Head

The first 45 not to feature a lead vocal from Pete Shelley, the delivery from Steve Diggle made this just a little bit rougher round the edges than previous Buzzcocks singles.  But it was, and still is, a great listen.  In at #67 and peaking at #32…..and I’d have lost any bet offered on whether this or Here Comes The Summer had peaked highest.

And so, to the final singles chart of July 1979.

As with a couple of weeks previous, nothing came in fresh at any high position. #50 was the best on offer, and it was from Showaddyfuckingwaddy.  So no chance of it featuring here.

I was scrolling all the way through the Top 75 of 22-27 July, and just as I was concluding there wouldn’t be anything worth featuring, i noticed this was a new entry at #74:-

mp3: The Specials – Gangsters

One that I don’t so much associate with July 1979 and more about a period after I had finished at Halford’s and returned to school where I would take my first ever foray into DJ’ing.  It’s a tale I told when I wrote about Gangsters in the Great Debut Singles series:-

“1979/80 marked my first forays into DJing, if playing records on a single deck at a youth night in the school could be regarded as DJing. The senior pupils were encouraged to help the teachers at these nights, which were basically an effort to provide bored 12-15 year olds with something to do instead of hanging around street corners and picking up bad habits. There were three of us who brought along our own 45s to play while everyone ran around making lots of noise burning up all that excess energy. Very gradually over a matter of weeks, our little corner of the hall began to get a dedicated audience, and it was all driven by the fact they loved to do the Madness dance(s). In two hours of music, you could bet that more than half came through records on the 2-Tone label or its offshoots. And these kids were of an age when playing the same song two or three times in a night didn’t matter.”

Happy days indeed. Gangsters went on to spend 12 weeks in the charts, peaking at #6.

JC

THE 12″ LUCKY DIP (12): The Cramps – Can Your Pussy Do The Dog

R-503198-1136898486

The Cramps.   One of Dirk’s favourite bands.  He came up with this ICA away back in December 2017, and one of their songs featured in his ongoing alphabetical rundown of his favourite One Hundred and Eleven 7″ singles….more of the latter to come in a few paragraphs.

The Cramps, according to wiki:

An American rock band formed in 1976 and active until 2009. Their line-up rotated frequently during their existence, with the husband-and-wife duo of singer Lux Interior and guitarist Poison Ivy the only ever-present members. The band are credited as progenitors of the psychobilly subgenre, uniting elements of punk rock with rockabilly.

The addition of guitarist Bryan Gregory and drummer Pam Balam resulted in the first complete line-up in April 1976. They released their debut album Songs the Lord Taught Us in 1980. The band split after the death of lead singer Interior in 2009.

That’s just the intro….there’s loads more to read over there if you want.

Strangely enough, I have way more digital material from The Cramps than I have physical copies of vinyl, and that’s based on my villainous ways of downloading stuff posted on other blogs.  I do, however, have a wonderful second-hand copy of 12″ single that I picked up a few years ago, back in the days when there were bargains still to be found

mp3: The Cramps – Can Your Pussy Do The Dog?

It’s from the album A Date With Elvis (1985), the band’s third studio release.  By this time, they were a trio, with Lux and Poison Ivy joined on drums by Nick Knox who had actually joined as far back as 1977, being the third drummer engaged by the band. It was the lead-off single, and in reaching #68, it gave them a first ever chart single in the UK.  The album reached #34, easily their most commercially successful release ever.

This most wonderful of a-sides also contains a b-side that Dirk is very fond of, as he shared with us just over a year ago.

Within their career The Cramps released numerous brilliant records and amongst those were quite a lot of equally brilliant 7” singles. It would in fact be a hard task indeed to number those down to one and decide for this one to be the best of the lot. But I have one advantage: from their beginnings, The Cramps occasionally covered their favourite songs from the 50’s, perhaps most notably The Trashmen’s “Surfin’ Bird”, put out as a 7” in 1978. And somehow I have always been very fond indeed of these old tunes, at least when having been modified to impact strength by Lux and Ivy!

But “Surfin’ Bird” wasn’t the only cover the Cramps released. They also put their own spin on “The Way I Walk” by Jack Scott, punctuating the verses with shrieks to give it some B-movie flavor. Other songs they covered include Jimmy Stewart‘s “Rock on the Moon,” Dwight Pullen‘s “Sunglasses After Dark,” Elvis Presley‘s “Jailhouse Rock,” the Sonics‘ “Strychnine,” and Little Willie John‘s “Fever.” None of which I chose though today.

No, my favourite is this, friends, originally  written and performed by David Fatalsky, or, as you and I know him better, Dave “Diddle” Day, in April 1957 :

mp3: The Cramps – Blue Moon Baby

As it turns out, the additional track on the 12″ is another rockin’ cover

mp3: The Cramps – Georgia Lee Brown

Written in the 50s by Phil Zinn and Robert Hafner, it was first released in 1959 by Philadelphia-based rockabilly artist, Jackie Lee Cochrane, often referred to as Jack The Cat.

JC

THE 7″ LUCKY DIP (19) : Prefab Sprout – Faron Young (edit)

r-1349714-1211822684-jpeg

Steve McQueen, the 1985 album by Prefab Sprout, has long been an all-time favourite, and I placed at #31 in the 60 albums at 60 series last year.

Four singles were lifted from it, of which just one made it into the higher echelons of the charts, and even then it took a reissue of When Love Breaks Down to achieve that.  The opening track of the album was issued on 7″ and 12″ in July 1985 and limped its way to #74.  The 12″version was remixed and extended and given the title of Faron Young (Truckin’ Mix), and while I do have a digital copy of it, it’s the 7″ single that sits in the big cupboard full of vinyl and which is on offer today:-

mp3: Prefab Sprout – Faron Young (edit)

it’s about 30 seconds shorter than the album version, mainly from an early fade-out.

The b-side was an otherwise unavailable track:-

mp3: Prefab Sprout – Silhouettes (edit)

A rare lead vocal from Wendy Smith makes for a pleasant enough number, kind of typical of the band.  The reason for the edit in the title is that the 12″ release contained what was described as the ‘Full Version’, one that, according to Discogs, is a full 15 seconds longer!

I think I might look to fit the Truckin Mix of the a-side on a future mixtape.

JC

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN SINGLES : #061

aka The Vinyl Villain incorporating Sexy Loser

#061: The Mighty Wah! – ‘Come Back’ (Beggars Banquet Records ’84)

wah

Dear friends,

1984 was a golden year for music, as far as I’m concerned. Obviously these definitions are somewhat a question of age (I was 16 then), but if you think back about the enormous number of bands who came up with brilliant tunes in this year, it certainly was special.

Some of those bands’ aims were easy to understand, ‘Rattlesnakes’ for example blew me away – and it was pretty clear that Lloyd Cole wanted to be seen as a fragile and thoughtful wordsmith with a Dylanesque attitude. Nothing wrong with that, of course – if that was how he wanted to come over to the public: I bought it, alright with me. Other bands’ presentations had a bit more complex approach, especially when they were so “English” that it was hard for me, as a non-Englishman, to understand what they wanted to tell the world. Pete Wylie, with all his big gestures and grand emotions was – and probably still is – one fine example.

The point I’m trying to make is: I am convinced that as someone from Liverpool you would have found easier access to Wylie (and Wah’s lyrics in particular) back then compared to me, coming from the middle of rural nowhere in Germany. It took me years (and the internet and the information it provided) to figure out that he is a man who always was incredibly proud of his home city, plus someone who always firmly followed his inner route and his targets.

‘Come Back’ was my intro to Pete Wylie in 1984, and somehow it made my summer: I just wasn’t able to take it off the turntable. Even though I didn’t know anything about Wylie and/or Wah! at the time (or indeed of any of the various incarnations, Wah! Heat, Shambeko Say! Wah!, Wah! The Mongrel, JF Wah! etc. pp – all of this came later, also all of the great tunes like ‘7 Minutes to Midnight’, ‘Somesay’, ‘Better Scream’, ‘Otherboys’ and especially the fantastic Peel Session on Strange Fruit), I knew immediately that this song is something very very special. Today pretty much every sound on it may be outdated, horrible even, from the plinky-plinky piano and reedy keyboard, through the female backing singers, to the huge, clumpy drums. But hey, it’s 40 years old, that’s the way things were done then!

Still, when the second verse kicks in, all of the above is forgiven in my books (and I’m no Liverpool FC follower) – and although this masterpiece is 40 years old, I still sing along to it each and every time:

“Well did you ever hear of hope?

‘Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!’

A small belief can mean you’ll never walk alone

And did you ever hear of faith?

Encouragement! Development!

And it’s all up to you! Yes, it’s all up to you!

R-217436-1139254160

R-217436-1491284756-3642

mp3:  The Mighty Wah! – Come Back

It was, Peel said, the kind of record that “knocks your socks off”, even it only made it to No. 20 in the proper chart. The very same chart that bloody ‚Careless Whisper‘ topped.

Isn’t life unfair?

Enjoy,

Dirk

CLOSE-UP : THE CINERAMA SINGLES (Part 10) aka A CINERAMA ICA (#371)

A GUEST SERIES by STRANGEWAYS

Close-Up: The Cinerama Singles #10 – LP Tracks Imaginary Compilation Album Takeover

Almost there.

This Cinerama ICA complements and completes the singles/B-sides posts. Perversely, only LP tracks were permitted entry. Why? Because it takes the singles series up to an even ten entries and also provides an excuse to air a broader scope of Cinerama songs.

The banning of numbers previously covered across the singles series made this ICA significantly easier to compile, albeit 16 tracks had still to be whittled down to the ten that follow. They’re all drawn from the three LPs of original Cinerama material: Va Va Voom, Disco Volante, and Torino.

Here goes – and I promise, I’ll try not to sound like ChatGPT.

Cinerama - Usherette

Side 1

And When She Was Bad (Torino 2004, Scopitones)

This opens the Torino album with an intake of breath that called way back to George Best’s first song Everyone Thinks He Looks Daft. And for Cinerama fans this may have been the track that most directly announced a shift to a more familiar, more guitar-led era. It’s a quiet/loud/quiet mini-epic, and a terrific statement-song with which to begin the 2004 album.

As an addendum, just missing this ICA’s cut was Two Girls, the rampant belter that, with barely a pause, follows And When She Was Bad. That song would further confirm Cinerama heading in a predominantly faster, darker and noisier direction.

Après Ski (Disco Volante, 2000, Scopitones)

Looking for an elegant song about awkward, blink-and-you’ll-miss-it age-gap sex? Well, you’re in luck. Here it is, complete with that adventure’s consequent complications, frustrations and disappointments. These are perhaps most pointedly referenced in the line She thought she’d turn a boy into a man, but in real life some things don’t go to plan.
Musically, chopping strings and warm brass sections contribute to making Après Ski, like a lot of the songs on Disco Volante, quite the defining Cinerama number.

Ears (Va Va Voom, 1998, Cooking Vinyl)

An oddity for this ICA given that this Va Va Voom track appeared, in an acoustic version over at the singles series. That was via its B-side status on the 2002 Quick, Before It Melts single. This is the proper, organ-heavy LP version though. As pondered earlier in these posts, Ears is arguably the finest cut on that first record and recounts the almost-comical Jarvis-style situation of listening, through the wall, to an ex-partner enjoying a new adventure. The addition of Emma Pollock’s opposing vocals – placed intentionally across David Gedge’s own delivery – lift this song high among the band’s ten best.

Close Up (Torino, 2004, Scopitones)

A kind of masochism and self-flagellation takes the lead in the diminutive Close Up. Here, a wronged lover demands to be told, in detail, of his partner’s infidelities. Though not precisely X-rated, the language in which these various requests are made doesn’t pull its punches either: Again, oh please just tell me again, and this time don’t fail to give me every last detail. I’m sincere, I really do wanna hear what was in your head when you had a stranger in our bed.

From the same LP, Tie Me Up is maybe one of Gedge’s most lyrically direct love songs, and it’s equally frank in its language and imagery. Both songs somehow manage to reference such matters in a mature way though – one that I reckon avoids being salacious or creepy.

Heels (Disco Volante, 2000, Scopitones)

On this Disco Volante track a slow build across strings and piano arrives at a zappy chorus – one led by the sing-along line I don’t really care that you’ve found another lover. (Translation: I do really care that you’ve found another lover).

For me, this song, which stars a magnetic but cruel femme-fatale casually crushing lovers beneath those eponymous heels, distils and defines Cinerama perfectly. Lyrically, it’s all here: glamour and sex. Obsession and rejection. Musically too, amid the strings and keys there’s even room to sneak in a smidgen of distorted guitar. Plus there’s that terrace stomp of a chorus. And all on the LP in which it’s arguable that the band, and the band’s ideal, became fully formed and perfectly presented.

Side 2

Maniac (Va Va Voom, 1998, Cooking Vinyl)

Rejection via ansaphone. Murderous introspection. And a kind of lyrical riddle: you’ll only see how much I’ve changed if you come back.

Maniac, the first track on Va Va Voom, might have opened the Cinerama LP account with a familiar theme, but gone were the Wedding Present’s overt guitars. Instead keyboards and orchestrated strings took the lion’s share.  Well, this was a different band after all.

A slower-paced, rather more world-weary version is found on the group’s first John Peel Sessions collection (1998, Scopitones).

Hard, Fast and Beautiful (Va Va Voom, 1998)

Aired in the singles series in its Spanish-language B-side version (Dura, Rapida y Hermosa) this English original provides Va Va Voom’s huge, soaring heart. That’s thanks mainly to its consciously dramatic piano-led opening and lofty, kick-the-air chorus about that reliable pop trope: locating, then losing, The One.

Get Up And Go (Torino, 2004, Scopitones)

One of the finest Torino tracks, Get Up And Go begins, perhaps appropriately for the film-influenced Cinerama, with a tentative intro reminiscent of a Danny Elfman number. Lyrics then recount the irresistible and inconvenient trappings of infidelity: instant, unstoppable attraction. A swiftly deleted text. The emergency change of bedclothes the message instigates. Then the coldness of post-coital post-rationalisation.

Of particular note also is the song’s absolutely massive chorus. It combines, to great effect, strings of both the orchestral and distorted guitar variety.

Get Smart (Torino, 2004, Scopitones)

A corking Torino track. Its lyrics speak from the point of view of a cheated-on partner. But it refuses to offer a traditional pop response of broken-heartedness or even hatred. Instead, the wronged partner is imploring the song’s subject to conduct his/her clumsy and regular affairs with more care. That way, the adored relationship can at least continue via a sort of don’t ask/don’t tell arrangement.

Interestingly, this plea for subtlety is in direct opposition to Close Up’s demand for the unvarnished truth. No wonder people tell me all this love stuff is way too complicated to be bothering with.

146 Degrees (Disco Volante, 2000, Scopitones)

Of interest to, well no one really, this was the last track chosen for this ICA. It had come down to a car-park fight between Torino song Cat Girl Tights and this one: 146 Degrees, the Disco Volante opener.

The mundane truth is that going with Cat Girl Tights would have made the ICA too Torino-heavy. Also, 146 Degrees – so-named after the composite angle view of the Cinerama projection system that gave the band its name – is actually, production-wise, a pretty big, high-concept track. So its last-to-hop-on-the-bus status shouldn’t be seen as a comment on its quality.

Here, the lyrics pay homage to the song’s title, and concern themselves with a woman whose presence beguiles and bewitches onlookers by demanding, albeit unintentionally, that every eye in the house be trained upon her.

This idea of an effortlessly attractive female, around whom events revolve, occasions disrupt and arguments begin, is visited also in lyrics present in the fellow Disco Volante tracks Your Charms: So I’m always amused whenever you are left confused at being centre of attention and the playful Because I’m Beautiful: Everybody wants to know how every party seems to become my show.

Carried by a shimmering soundscape of flute, keys and what might be bongos – and with some fine Sally Murrell backing vocals – 146 Degrees was a grand way to kick off the second LP.

It’s also an appropriate track to accompany the flipping-up of seats and the sweeping-up of popcorn on this Cinerama journey. Next time, Jim returns to take us through the post-hiatus Wedding Present singles – an adventure that commenced in 2005.

So, for the final time, thank so much to JC for the space, and to anyone who’s taken the time to read all or some of this series and/or post a comment.

strangeways

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #411: ANNIE LENNOX

annie-lennox

Annie Lennox has been making music since what feels like time began.  Her first hits were with The Tourists (as seen in the ongoing 1979 series), while her biggest successes came with Eurythmics in the 80s and 90s.

She’s also released six solo albums over the years, but from that particular body of work, all I have in the collection is an (ahem) digitally sourced copy of a cover version:-

mp3: Annie Lennox – (I’m Always Touched By Your) Presence, Dear

This dates back to 1995, the year that Annie released Medusa, an album of cover versions.  The album wasn’t well received by many critics, but proved to be a hit with the public, as it went on to sell six million copies world-wide.  The cover of the Blondie song wasn’t included on the album, but instead used as a b-side to its second single, A Whiter Shade of Pale.

IMHO, it’s really bland. Nay, make that awful.  The sort of take on a song that you’d expect to hear from a budding contestant on a TV talent show who doesn’t get past the initial audition stage.

JC

IF THE POLLS HAVE BEEN ACCURATE…..

R-566731-1457348931-9161

…..then the voters across the UK will have given the Tories a right good and long-overdue kicking.  Being something of a life-long political nerd, anorak or any other derogatory term you may wish to throw at me, I cn guarantee I’ve been sitting up through the night watching the results come in, and it’s probably around the time this post gets published that I’ll have finally crawled into bed for a bit of sleep.

This is the tune I might well be humming when I finally wake up for a Friday feeling that’ll hopefully last for a wee while yet.

mp3: The Cure – Friday I’m In Love

Another sign of the ageing process is my refusal to accept that this song is now 32 years of age, first showing up on the album Wish and then coming to the wider attention of the public when it was released as a single on 15 May 1992.

It reached #6 in the UK, and while nobody would have known it at the time, proved to be the last time The Cure would enjoy a Top 10 hit single.

Here’s the extra tracks as made available on the 7″, 12″ and CD releases.  And if you happen top have any of the vinyl, then you could put it on the second-hand market and make a nice profit.

mp3: The Cure – Halo
mp3: The Cure – Scared As You
mp3: The Cure – Friday I’m In Love (Strangelove Mix)

Halo is yet another example of Robert Smith‘s uncanny ability to write the most wonderful of love songs celebrating his relationship with his wife, Mary.    Scared As You didn’t make the cut for the album, which simply illustrates just how rich a vein of form he was going through in terms of songwriting, while the remix of Friday simply takes the song to another level of loveliness.

As my great friend from Germany would say, enjoy!!!!!!

JC

IT’S A NEW DAWN, IT’S A NEW DAY

General-election-guide-header-745x420

mp3: Nina Simone – Feeling Good

As the late and great Sam Cooke so famously sang, ‘it’s been a long time coming’……and today is the day the UK will finally be able to vote out the Tories who have done so much damage these past 14 years.

I know that the incoming government hasn’t promised nearly enough in terms of policies and proposals to really tackle all the social and economic injustices faced by so many millions of people across the country, but it will be an improvement.  Baby steps and all the rest of it.

Like many others, I expect to be up all night watching the results roll in.  I expect to be a smiling a lot.

JC

THE WAIT IS ALMOST OVER

Rishi Sunak Election Announcement Rain Wet Suit 10 Downing Stree

JC writes…….

I’ve something lined up for tomorrow.  A short and succinct post that I put together last Sunday.  An e-mail from Middle Aged Man, which dropped in on Monday evening, really provides the perfect appetizer, as he reflects on the lyrics of a single released on Factory Records back in 1987.

————

Six weeks ago I was feeling positive and upbeat, listening to a man standing in the rain can have that effect-it appears. A chance for a change, a chance for a brighter future where the majority benefited, not a tiny minority.

And for the first week I was engaged and beaming from ear to ear, but then the endless repetition set in. Clearly the PR/marketing profession was having an impact  – if you tell the people the same thing time and time again it has impact and the message is heard ( I have worked in consumer marketing for far too many decades).

I won’t bother repeating  what we have all heard every day for the last few weeks, but we didn’t need 6 weeks of the same with no variation. I am bored with it and just want it to be over.

And then this morning ‘Partyline’ by Stockholm Monsters came on shuffle. And whilst a lot of the lyrics struck home, it was the slow pace and the sheer weariness of the vocals that reflected how I feel.

Can you hear them
Pleading to you
Yes, I know, you’ve heard it all
Before they say it
All familiar
Waiting for the partylineOh, it is
I know it is
That’s the way its meant to beAnd do you
Do you think they work for you
I just can’t now make my mind up
Waiting for your promises

Just sit down and listen to me
Why is it you do these things
I just can’t now make my mind up
Waiting for your promises
Today

And  for the politicians
You always have smiling faces
Did you see them
Can you hear them
Working for the partylineDo you trust them
Don’t you think thеy
Look like you
Or think like me?
That’s it
I know
That’s thе way they talk to me
Today
mp3: Stockholm Monsters – Party Line

Still come Thursday ‘things can only get better’

Middle Aged Man

ONE SONG ON THE HARD DRIVE (11)

french

This is one where information is quite hard to pull together for any sort of decent posting but I’ll do my best.

First up, the source of the songs is one of the Indietracks Compilation 2013, the official compilation of artists who played the Indietracks Festival on 26-28th July 2013.  Like all the Indietrack compilations, it comes as a digital download, with all proceeds going to the Midland Railway Trust, which played host to the festival throughout its existence between 2007 and 2019.

mp3: The French Defence – If You Still Want Him

This really is indie-pop by numbers.

A fast-paced, upbeat tune driven along by what sounds like the classic four-piece band, with acoustic and electric guitars to the fore.   A lovelorn lyric filled with hope and optimism.  A vocal delivery that doesn’t always hold the notes.  The sort of thing we’ve all listened to thousands of times with a smile on our faces, while our foot taps away in appreciation.  There may even be a few out there who have danced to the song at an indie-disco in towns and cities the world over, when the DJ goes to that bit of their set-list marked ‘obscurities that people will ask about’.

The French Defence has/have an online presence of sorts.  My lack of decision to go with the singular or otherwise is down to what is said there.

Leeds-based one-man (at the moment!) indie-pop goodness, dealing in the not-very-diverse themes of chocolate, love, sex and the Yorkshire weather.

The one-man is Owen Lloyd who I assume is the singer/songwriter.   The musical influences listed are Trembling Blue Stars, Belle and Sebastian, R.E.M., Blueboy, The Lodger, The Research, Laura Veirs, good 90’s Britpop, Mazzy Star, The Wannadies, Ooberman, Saint Etienne, The Field Mice, Sarah Records and indie-pop far and wide, just about all of which can be detected in the song offered up today.

Over at Bandcamp, (from where the above photos has been lifted), there’s six releases available to explore further, albeit three of them are collections of out-takes and demos, while another is a single.   The two main sets of songs are on the EP We Had Fun, Didn’t We, released on Anorak Records in 2007 and Sketches of The September Leaf, a digital release from 2013 which is, of course, the year the band played Indietracks.

The fact that the most recent release at Bandcamp dates from December 2014 is an indication that The French Defence is/are a long time removed from the indie-pop scene.

JC

AND FOR THE SEVENTH MONTH…….

7th

……I’ve created a mixtape of songs to be found as Track 7 on albums.

Despite the gimmickry, it flows quite well.

mp3: Various – And For The Seventh Month

The Libertines – Up The Bracket (from Up The Bracket)
R.E.M. – Orange Crush (from Green)
Teenage Fanclub – Metal Baby (from Bandwagonesque)
The Sugracubes – Walkabout (from Stick Around For Joy)
New Order – Sub-Culture (from Lowlife)
The Close Lobsters -Foxheads (from Foxheads Stalk This Land)
Wolf Alice – Play The Greatest Hits (from Blue Weekend)
The La’s – Feelin’ (from The La’s)
We Were Promised Jetpacks – Quiet Little Voices (from These Four Walls)
Bar Italia – Yes I Have Eaten So Many Lemons Yes I Am So Bitte (from Tracey Denim)
Beastie Boys – Intergalactic (from Hello Nasty)
International Teachers of Pop – Age Of The Train (from International Teachers of Pop)
Half Man Half Biscuit – Joy Division Oven Gloves (from Achtung Bono)
PJ Harvey – Down By The Water (from To Bring You My Love)
The Twilight Sad  – And She Would Darken The Memory (from Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters)
Edwyn Collins – Gorgeous George (from Gorgeous George)
The Wedding Present – Shatner (from George Best)
The Lucksmiths – There Is A Boy Who Never Goes Out (from Naturaliste)

JC