AN HOUR OF…..ARCTIC MONKEYS

As usual, I’m (kind of) closing the blog down over the festive period.

Every day, weekends and holidays included, up to Monday 6 January 2025, you will find an hour-long mix featuring one particular band.

mp3: One Hour of……Arctic Monkeys

Fake Tales of San Francisco
She’s Thunderstorms
My Propeller
Brianstorm
You Probably Couldn’t See For The Lights But You Were Staring Straight at Me
R U Mine?
Leave Before The Lights Come On
The Hellcat Spangled Shalala
I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor
Fluorescent Adolescent
Red Right Hand
Do I Wanna Know?
Why Do You Only Call Me When You’re High?
Still Take You Home
Crying Lightning
Don’t Sit Down ‘Cause I’ve Moved Your Chair
Who The Fuck Are Arctic Monkeys?
When The Sun Goes Down

We’ll stick to the guns. Don’t care if it’s marketing suicidal. Won’t crack or compromise. Your do-rights or individes will never unhinge us.

(that’s the TVV mission statement for 2025)

AN HOUR OF…..MAGAZINE

As usual, I’m (kind of) closing the blog down over the festive period.

Every day, weekends and holidays included, up to Monday 6 January 2025, you will find an hour-long mix featuring one particular band.

mp3: One Hour of……Magazine

Definitive Gaze
Model Worker
Philadelphia
Give Me Everything
Rhythm of Cruelty
You Never Knew Me
The Light Pours Out Of Me
Because You’re Frightened
Feed The Enemy
Shot By Both Sides
Permafrost
Thank You (Falletinme Be Mice Elf Agin)
This Poison
Song From Under The Floorboards

Everything would be just fine if I had the right pastime.

JC

AN HOUR OF…..THE FALL (2)

As usual, I’m (kind of) closing the blog down over the festive period.

Every day, weekends and holidays included, up to Monday 6 January 2025, you will find an hour-long mix featuring one particular band.

mp3: One Hour of……The Fall (Volume 2)

Hip Priest
Fantastic Life
I’m Frank
Why Are People Grudgeful?
C.R.E.E.P. (12″ version)
Jawbone and The Air-Rifle
I Can Hear The Grass Grow
The Man Whose Head Expanded
Couldn’t Get Ahead
Hey! Luciani
Hilary
Living Too Late
Return (Peel Session)
Oh! Brother
Theme From Sparta F.C.

Ours is not to look back, ours is to continue the crack.

JC

AN HOUR OF…..NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS

As usual, I’m (kind of) closing the blog down over the festive period.

Every day, weekends and holidays included, up to Monday 6 January 2025, you will find an hour-long mix featuring one particular band.

mp3: One Hour of……Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds

Dig, Lazarus Dig!!!
Stagger Lee
Deanna
Do You Love Me?
Nature Boy
The Curse Of Millhaven
Abattoir Blues
The Weeping Song
Papa Won’t Leave You, Henry
Red Right Hand
Tupelo (single version)
The Ship Song

A playlist that’s been on my hard drive for about 15 years, which is why none of its tunes come from any of the past four studio albums

JC

AN HOUR OF…..THE GO-BETWEENS (2)

As usual, I’m (kind of) closing the blog down over the festive period.

Every day, weekends and holidays included, up to Monday 6 January 2025, you will find an hour-long mix featuring one particular band.

mp3: One Hour of……The Go-Betweens (2)

By Chance
Love Goes On!
People Say
Apology Accepted
Bachelor Kisses
A Bad Debt Follows You
Head Full Of Steam
Born To A Family
The Clarke Sisters (acoustic demo)
Finding You
Love Is A Sign
Part Company
The Wrong Road
I Need Two Heads
Hammer The Hammer
Two Steps Step Out
To Reach Me
When She Sang About Angels (TVV fade-out version)

The things you have to do to keep it within time limits….

JC

AN HOUR OF…..THE GO-BETWEENS

As usual, I’m (kind of) closing the blog down over the festive period.

Every day, weekends and holidays included, up to Monday 6 January 2025, you will find an hour-long mix featuring one particular band.

mp3: One Hour of……The Go-Betweens

Bye Bye Pride
Man O’ Sand To Girl O’ Sea
Lee Remick
Dive For Your Memory
The Clock
Cattle and Cane
Spring Rain
Was There Anything I Could Do?
Right Here
Here Comes A City
The House That Jack Kerouac Built
Streets Of Your Town
This Girl, Black Girl
I Just Get Caught Out
Draining The Pool For You
That Way
My Rock and Roll Friend

Round and round, Up and Down.

And so many that I couldn’t fit in….which is why a second volume will appear tomorrow.

JC

TWO HOURS OF…..NEW ORDER

As usual, I’m (kind of) closing the blog down over the festive period.

Every day, weekends and holidays included, up to Monday 6 January 2025, you will find an hour-long mix featuring one particular band.

Except today where there will two hour-long mixes. It’s my Christmas present to y’all.   I know….my generosity knows no bounds.

mp3: The First Hour of……New Order

Age Of Consent
Your Silent Face
Ceremony
Temptation (12″)
Run
Love Vigilantes
True Faith
Blue Monday
Bizarre Love Triangle
Vanishing Point
Leave Me Alone

mp3: The Second Hour of……New Order

Fine Line
Paradise
Round and Round
Krafty
Let’s Go
Cries and Whispers
Bizarre Love Triangle (Stephen Hague Mix)
Temptation ’98
The B-Side
The Village
Sub-Culture (RM exclusive remix)
Procession
World
State of The Nation (7″)

 

I hope Santa was good to everyone.

JC

AN HOUR OF…..THE FALL (1)

As usual, I’m (kind of) closing the blog down over the festive period.

Every day, weekends and holidays included, up to Monday 6 January 2025, you will find an hour-long mix featuring one particular band.

mp3: One Hour of……The Fall (Volume 1)

Repetition
New Big Prinz
It’s The New Thing
The Classical
How I Wrote ‘Elastic Man’
Bingo-Master
Two Librans
Everything Hurtz
Prole Art Threat
Touch Sensitive
High Tension Line
Psycho Mafia
15 Ways
Mr. Pharmacist
Lie Dream of A Casino Soul
2 by 4
Free Range
Terry Waite Sez

As the title hints at, there will be further volumes.  Can’t ever have too much MES at Christmas. Or indeed at any time of the year.

JC

AN HOUR OF…..THE CLASH

As usual, I’m (kind of) closing the blog down over the festive period.

Every day, weekends and holidays included, up to Monday 6 January 2025, you will find an hour-long mix featuring one particular band.

mp3: One Hour of……The Clash

Janie Jones
Bankrobber
I Fought The Law
White Riot
Clampdown
(White Man) In Hammersmith Palais
Know Your Rights
English Civil War
Koka Kola
London Calling
Stay Free
Career Opportunities
Rock The Casbah
Safe European Home
Should I Stay Or Should I Go?
Tommy Gun
Straight To Hell
Train In Vain

A bit heavy on the singles, admittedly, but still a great listen nonetheless!

JC

THE WEDDING PRESENT SINGLES (Part Fifty-Seven)

I mentioned last week that I was particularly struck by the fact that the four musicians in The Wedding Present – David Gedge, Jon Stewart, Melanie Howard and Chris Hardwick – were given writing credits on the fourth 7″ single to emerge as part of the year-long 24 Songs project during 2022.

The credits on the fifth single offered up a number of different names, including former members of the band, which was maybe an indication that a couple of old(ish) songs had been dusted down.

To begin with, it feels as if the A-side, for the second month in a row, was going to be one that was slower than normal. Unlike Monochrome, this has quite a lot going for it in terms of a tune, as well excellent melodies between Mr Gedge and Ms Howard. And then, in a way quite similar to Come Play With Me, the fifth single from the year-long series back in 1992, it speeds up at the end with some excellent guitar work. A coincidence or deliberate? I’m really not sure.

mp3: The Wedding Present – X Marks The Spot

The writers on this one are Gedge/Howard/Wellauer/Beer-Pearce.

It’s only now, a long time after the event, that I’ve been able to piece this one together, and even then, there’s a fair bit of conjecture on my part.

Samuel Beer-Pearce had been the guitarist with The Wedding Present a few years previously, between 2013 and 2016, and he featured on the Going Going…album as well as being part of the touring band during those years. Nicholas Wellauer was the new drummer with The Wedding Present – something I had discovered just a few weeks prior to the postman delivering this single when I’d gone along to see the band play a gig in Glasgow and found that Chris Hardwick, whose face had become so familiar with the YouTube videos during lockdown, was not on stage.

Here’s the conjecture. I’m assuming that X Marks The Spot is a song originally worked up between Gedge and Beer-Pierce, and then a few years later additional contributions came from Howard and Wellauer to deliver the finished article to take into the studio. But however the jigsaw was put together, the end product was a more than decent effort. A ‘live’ video was made to accompany the release.

This was the same line-up that had played Glasgow the previous month – a tour in which Seamonsters was played in its entirety, followed by a dozen more tunes, including a handful that hadn’t as yet been released, but were due out later in the year as part of 24 Songs. As you might imagine, given my love for Seamonsters, this particular gig is up there as one of my very favourites by the band.

The b-side is fast and furious, and at a little over two minutes in length, a bit of a throwback to the very early days.

mp3: The Wedding Present – Strike!

The writing credits on this one are Layton, Wadey, Gedge and Howard. You may well recall from previous entries in this series that Charles Layton and Danielle Wadey had taken their leave of The Wedding Present at the end of 2019 when their baby was due. Melanie Howard had joined the band in 2018, and given the four musicians credited on Strike! was the touring line-up for a couple of years, I think it’s a fair assumption it’s a song which was worked up during that period but never given any studio time

 

 

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #434: CASUAL WORKER

Casual Worker are Eve King and Hamish Wickham, whose five-track debut EP, Mousetrap, was released in digital format by Extrapolation Records back in September 2022.  Their second, and as far as I know, most recent release, was issued in May 2023 on Last Night From Glasgow. It was a CD with three new songs along with the five tracks that had made up Mousetrap. Here’s one of the three newer songs mp3: Casual Worker – Model Number A quite decent two-and-a-half minutes worth of pop music if you want my opinion.

JC

THE 7″ LUCKY DIP (26) : Elvis Costello & The Attractions – Radio Radio

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Heading all the way back to October 1978 today for a stand-alone single that came out in the period between the albums This Year’s Model and Armed Forces

mp3: Elvis Costello & The Attractions – Radio Radio

It’s long been one of my favourite Elvis tunes, an acidic attack on the fact that mainstream radio stations were not entirely being fair in the coverage they were giving new wave acts. It’s also got a killer but rather creepy b-side which feels as if it takes its narrative from a horror film.

mp3: Elvis Costello & The Attractions – Tiny Steps

Who’s that down at the bottom of the garden?
Who’s that hiding underneath the sofa?
Who gets blamed whenever you’re in trouble?
She’s your friend and she’s your double

Looking back, it was the middle of an astonishing run of Elvis singles between late 77 and mid 79 – Watching The Detectives, (I Don’t Want To Go To) Chelsea, Pump It Up, Radio Radio, Oliver’s Army and Accidents Will Happen.  All in a post-punk style, which really does demonstrate how brave/confident he was in 1980 when he went down the R’n’B and soul paths with Get Happy!

Just to mention that today’s post is the among the last before I kind of close down the blog for the Festive Period.

The Saturday Scottish Song and The Wedding Present singles series will be in their usual places over the weekend, but from 23 December there will be something posted every day for a period of two weeks, all being a variation on a theme with not a lot of writing involved.  I think it’s something most of you will like. Well, I hope so anyway.

Normal service will resume on Monday 6 January.

JC

SONGS UNDER TWO MINUTES (8): LOVE YOU MORE

The-2-Minute-Rule

It’s a cut’n’paste from the Buzzcocks singles series back in September 2016.

I was really sure that Love You More was a much bigger hit than #34. I think it’s the fact that it hung around in the Top 50 for a while that leads to that conclusion, but its chart run was 41, 34, 35, 35, 60,53 and so yup, mid-30s it was.

What it did do was get the band their first all-important appearance on Top of The Pops in July 1978 thus instantly making their name and sound recognisable to millions more people overnight. Which sort of set them up for the rest of the year. In the meantime, enjoy the magic of the 1 min 45 second pop single

mp3: Buzzcocks – Love You More

And having mentioned the TOTP appearance…….

JC

 

WELSH WEDNESDAYS : #7 : LOS BLANCOS

aka The Vinyl Villain incorporating Is This The Life?

#7: Christina by Los Blancos

If you Google “los blancos” you’ll get quite a few results that don’t mention any bands from Wales. Not surprising really seeing as it’s not a very Welsh-sounding name. Yet very Welsh they are – formed, and still based, over to the west in the ancient town of Carmarthen (reputed to be the oldest town in Wales, in fact – you can’t get much more Welsh than that).

Once described by their record label as “beat up converse, rusty strings, cheap beer and heartfelt lyrics written on the back of half empty cigarette packets”, they live in a world soundtracked by American alternative and slacker rock – they cite Pavement, Pixies, Brian Jonestown Massacre and Ty Segall among their numerous influences. And that sort of sums them up really, other than the fact they perform in the Welsh language which none of those other acts do. They also provided the theme song to S4C’s coverage of the Wales football team’s (ultimately brief) World Cup campaign in 2022.

Christina is a single taken from their second album ‘Llond Llaw’ (trans. Handful) released in 2023. It’s a short- sharp blast of what they do best

mp3: Christina – Los Blancos (from ‘Llond Llaw, 2023)

The video was recorded for the Welsh language TV show Lwp which reflects the nation’s music and cultural scene. It’s another song from the latest album.

The Robster

A FINAL AND BONUS SHAKEDOWN OF 1979

mp3: Various – Shakedown 1979

All songs have appeared in the now completed series.  Happy dancing To y’all.

The Specials – Gangsters
The Human League – Empire State Human
The Jam – Strange Town
The Cramps – Human Fly
David Bowie – Boys Keep Swinging
The Selecter – On My Radio
The Fall – Rowche Rumble
The Pretenders – Kid
The Monochrome Set – Eine Symphonie des Grauens
The Undertones – Jimmy Jimmy
Squeeze – Cool For Cats
Magazine – Rhythm Of Cruelty (single version)
Joy Division – Transmission
Blondie – Dreaming
The Police – Roxanne
The B52’s – Planet Claire
Buzzcocks – Promises
Those Naughty Lumps – Iggy Pop’s Jacket
Dead Kennedies – California Über Alles (single version)
Suicide – Dream Baby Dream

Slighty more tunes than the normal mix tape.  And it runs to almost a minute over the usual hour.  But it’s worth it.

 

JC

SHAKEDOWN, 1979 (December)

79

The final part of what has been one of the most time-consuming series, in terms of research, referencing and cross-checking, that I’ve ever pulled together, with just short of 200 singles featuring, with the final 8 coming your way today.  As December’s releases are on the low side, especially on the non-chart side of things with the indie labels quite rightly steering well clear of the festive madness, I’m combining the usual Parts 1 and 2 into a single posting, starting with the Top 75 covering 2nd-8th December.

The highest new entry was at #56, an indication that not much was actually being released and that the record-buying public was happy to just shell out on the tunes that had been around for a few weeks, or indeed months.  I’ve picked up on three new entries at the very low end of the chart, one of which I have to admit I was really surprised to see.

mp3 : M – Moonlight and Muzak

Pop Muzik had been one of the biggest and best-selling 45s of the year. The fact it took more than six months for its follow-up to be released kind of gives the game away that nobody, including himself, really expected M (aka Robin Scott) to have enjoyed such success.  My memory may be playing tricks on me, but I’m sure that Moonlight and Muzak wasn’t actually written until after Pop Muzik had been a hit.  This one came in at #64 and peaked a couple of weeks later at #33.

mp3: The Beat – Tears Of A Clown/Ranking Full Stop

1979 was the year in which 2-Tone Records had come out of nowhere.  The first four singles on the label – Gangsters by The Specials, The Prince by Madness, On My Radio by The Selecter and A Message to You, Rudy by The Specials – had all been massive hits.   The 5th single came courtesy of another multi-racial band from the English Midlands, in this instance the city of Birmingham.

This 45 has been part of Dirk‘s superbly entertaining 111 single series, featuring back in January 2023. As he pointed out, The Beat would not only enjoy a few years of chart success from the outset, but there would also be a number of good bands that rose from the ashes of (former members of) The Beat: General Public, Fine Young Cannibals, Two Nations as well as the solo material from the late Ranking Roger.

The debut came in at #67, eventually climbing as high as #6 just after the turn of the year. It was the first of what would be thirteen chart hit singles going through to the summer of 1983.

And now….here’s the one which surprised me

mp3: Lori and The Chamelons – Touch

In at #70 and back out of the chart the following week in a ‘blink and you’ll have missed it’ style.   My surprise is that I would have bet a great deal of money that Zoo Records never had any chart success. OK, some of the band of their roster would become chart mainstays in future years, but that was after the label had folded, and they had signed elsewhere.

It was back in January 2015 that I featured all nine 45s issued by Zoo.   Touch was the label’s sixth single with the group being a trio consisting of label owners Bill Drummond (guitar) and David Balfe (bass and keyboards), along with vocalist Lori Lartey.    As I said, I had no idea it ever charted!

Moving on to the chart of 9-16 December.

There were three new entries in the Top 40, one of which was I Have A Dream by Abba, widely tipped to be the Xmas #1.  Spoiler alert….it ended up spending four weeks at #2, kept off the top by Pink Floyd!  One of the other new entries was a novelty number of the sort December charts no matter the year are full of, but the third, coming in at #23, was of some interest.

mp3: David Bowie – John, I’m Only Dancing (Again)

Originally dating from 1972, the song had been re-recorded in 1974 as David Bowie was keen to come up with a soul/disco hit for the American market.  It was slated to be included on the album Young Americans, and almost certainly as a single to be lifted from that album, only to be replaced late on by Fame.  Five years on, and the record label, RCA, decided to take advantage of the increasing interest in disco and issue it in the run-up to Christmas on the back of Bowie’s success earlier in the year with Boys Keep Swinging and DJ, as well as the album Lodger.

John, I’m Only Dancing (Again) spent eight weeks in the chart, peaking at#12, and in doing so, matched the chart position of the original 1972 version.

Just outside the Top 40 was this:-

mp3: The Clash – London Calling

The band’s ninth single, that’s if you include The Cost Of Living EP.    It was released on 7 December 1979 with the album of the same name hitting the shops seven days later.   The single came in at #43, and eventually reached #11, the highest ever 45 for The Clash during the time they were actually together.  The album came in at #9, stayed at the same position the following week, fell to #21 in its third week and then back up to #9 in week 4, no doubt benefitting from the spending power of Record Tokens given to young people as Xmas gifts from grandparents, aunties and uncles.

Also coming into the chart this week, another example of why 1979 was so special and different.

mp3: Booker T & The MGs – Green Onions

It might have dated back to 1962, but this was the first time the tune had been a chart hit in the UK, with the 2 Tone movement playing a big part in its success.  It came in at #74 in mid-December, but went all the way to #7 by the end of January, as part of a twelve-week stay in the Top 75.

There were just a handful of new entries in the Top 75 in the final two charts of 1979, none of which merit even a passing mention.  And with that, it’s time for one final flick through the big book of indie singles.

mp3: Cabaret Voltaire – Silent Command

Catalogue Number RT 035.  The release back in June 1979 of Nag Nag Nag has the number RT018, which just goes to show how active Rough Trade had been throughout the year. It’s not one I can recall from back in the day, and I’m not sure if I would have fallen for it, given how unusual and unorthodox a tune it is.

mp3: The Monochrome Set – He’s Frank (Slight Return)

The third single from the band in 1979. The previous two had been on Rough Trade, but this one wasn’t.  Well sort of…..

He’s Frank had been the band’s debut, a self-release on cassette only.  The interest in the band in recent times led to the decision to reissue it on vinyl, via a new imprint called Disquo Blue.  It was, however, a joint release with Rough Trade.  The next release on Disquo Blue wouldn’t be until 2012, when The Monochrome Set released their tenth studio album Platinum Coils, their first in nearly seventeen years.

And with that, Shakedown 1979 comes to a close.   I’m thinking I’ll re-hash the feature in 2025, looking in depth at the singles chart from one of the years that made up the 80s.

Thanks for all your views, opinions and thoughts throughout the series.  Much appreciated.

JC

THE CD SINGLE LUCKY DIP (15) : Radiohead – Knives Out

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Between January 1996 and May 2003, Radiohead released seven singles in the UK all of which climbed into the Top 10.

Except this one:-

mp3 : Radiohead – Knives Out

It only reached #13 in August 2001. It came on the back of Pyramid Song and again had plenty of fans and critics scratching their heads at its lack of commercial appeal. There was no obvious catchy chorus and no real effort at sounding all that memorable on radio.

I reckon its one of the best things they’ve ever done. I could have sworn it was Johnny Marr playing on the record the first time I heard it…….indeed it sounded at times as if The Smiths had reformed with a new vocalist. Still does. Have a listen to the 40 second section that begins at about 2 mins 25 seconds and tell me you can’t make out some Manchester magic…..

The single was released across 2 x CDs.

mp3 : RadioheadWorrywort
mp3 : Radiohead – Fog
mp3 : RadioheadCuttooth
mp3 : Radiohead – Life In A Glasshouse (full length version)

Again, all four tracks were quite different from what most fans were expecting. Here’s extracts of what it says about them on wiki:-

Worrywort is a slow and dreamy electronic song again featuring unique percussion effects or beat-boxing.

Fog is an ambient and melodic song, mainly bass-driven, and featuring some creative use of tambourine. This version of the song differs from Thom Yorke’s solo piano version sometimes played live. That brief live piano version was itself released as a b-side two years later, during the band’s Hail to the Thief era, at which point it was nicknamed “Fog (again).

Cuttooth has piano and bass working collectively and fluently, with samples running in and out throughout the song. It is notable for having been mentioned 12 times in Ed O’Brien’s online diary of the studio process for recording Kid A and Amnesiac, leading fans to expect it as a centrepiece of the band’s new material, though the song would not make the cut on either record. Some of the lyrics of Cuttooth (“I don’t know why I feel so tongue tied / I don’t know why I feel so skinned alive”) were later used in the song Myxomatosis, appearing on the band’s 2003 album Hail to the Thief.

The full length version of Life in a Glasshouse found on the single is derived from the same performance as the version found on Amnesiac, but differs in that it lacks the opening electronic effect, and features slightly more soloing by jazz trumpeter Humphrey Lyttelton and other members of his band before Yorke begins singing.

So there you go.

 

JC

THE WEDDING PRESENT SINGLES (Part Fifty-Six)

The fourth 7″ within the 24 Songs project emerged blinking on 15 April 2022.

It was inevitable that a slower number would, at some point, emerge as a single in this series, and it duly arrived with Monochrome.  It opens with a lovely couplet:-

And every day spent without you
Just becomes so monochrome
There’s no colour
Life’s just duller

mp3: The Wedding Present – Monochrome (7″ version)

And, I’m sorry to say, is about all the positive things I will say about it.   David Gedge has, over the decades, written some wonderful ballads, but Monochrome isn’t one of them.  The tune plods along almost as self-pityingly as the rest of the lyric, although Jon Stewart (I assume) does try to breathe a bit of life into it towards the end with a guitar solo in which the effect pedals make a mighty contribution.

But I’m pleased to say that the release is saved by a rather excellent b-side………one which had been premiered during the virtual ‘At The Edge of The Sea’ festival held on 15 August 2020, and later included on the Locked Down and Stripped Back album released the following February:-

Locked Down and Stripped Back was an interesting and timely release.  The idea of re-recording songs from the back catalogue in the only way that was possible during the COVID restrictions was a good one. The experience of getting to hear the re-recordings via YouTube recordings was enjoyable enough, but picking them up in a physical form was far more satisfying, with the bonus being that the two new songs – We Should Be Together and You’re Just a Habit… – felt like a real return to form.  It also looked from the video clips, and indeed hearing the music, that The Wedding Present were very much a band again and not just some musicians brought in to back up David Gedge.  The fact that the new songs gave writing credits to all four musicians seemed to be quite telling.

mp3: The Wedding Present – You’re Just A Habit That I’m Trying To Break

The studio version isn’t too far removed from the locked down take on things, albeit it’s about thirty seconds longer, thanks to a keyboard outro.

JC

JC

 

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #433: CASUAL SEX

I’m going all the way back to March 2013, to bring you this profile that was published in The Guardian.   I really should have paid attention. ———— Hometown: Glasgow. The lineup: Sam Smith (vocals, guitar), Edward Wood (guitar), Peter Masson (bass), Chris McCrory (drums). The background: Casual Sex are a Glasgow outfit in the Orange Juice/Franz Ferdinand tradition rather than in the Alex Harvey sense. Theirs is a spiky, tart pop music inspired by that moment in early 1981 when the penny dropped and UK post-punk bands began to realise one way out of the art of darkness was through the charts. They have a singer whose voice channels Lou Reed‘s droll spirit and some of Edwyn Collins‘s arch wit, and the way their players negotiate their instruments suggests an affinity with all manner of pop and rock styles and eras from glam to white reggae. The joint CVs of these late twentysomethings include stints in record production, studio engineering, other groups as well as “the fashion and telecommunications industries”, as their press release has it. They were brought together through chance meetings (and other Josef K song titles) before gathering at Glasgow’s Green Door Studio, where the idea of Casual Sex took shape. Observers reliably inform us they “look like they’ve walked out of Edinburgh/Glasgow circa 1979”, a reference to the formative stage of the careers of Orange Juice, Josef K, Fire Engines et al when Scottish bands resembled sexily dishevelled bank clerks straight out of the pages of a Franz Kafka novel. Fortunately, the music backs up the playful hyperbole. Their single Stroh 80 – “about being caught doing the nasty with your girlfriend’s pal in the aftermath of a drug party on the floor of a local occultist”, according to frontman Sam Smith – is great. Based on a Velvets-simple chord sequence that Charlie Boyer and the Voyeurs, to name but one of their peers, would kill for, it features handclaps and feedback, and elements of disco and discord. Smith’s voice is quite Steve Harley – Dylan at his most cynical put through a louche glam filter – and the music is equal parts Chinnichap and CBGBs. The other track on the single, Soft School – inspired by Smith’s dad’s exploits teaching in the rough classrooms of the 70s – opens with choppy Police-circa-Roxanne guitar, which is then overlaid by a menacing, angular riff worthy of Magazine as Smith does his best impression of Jarvis doing Bowie. It sounds like funk as played in 1975 by white rock musicians, or the Glitter Band impersonating Neu! at the height of punk. Extra track National Unity is excellent, with its echoes of white post-punks high on dub and a rhythmic propulsion that conjures the title of XTC‘s album Drums and Wires, all tinny clatter and a guitar line so wiry and thin it could pierce your skin. Casual Sex? We predict a long-term romance. ———– I knew of the band.  But I never, as far as I can recall, ever got round to seeing then, nor did I buy anything.  The long-term romance predicted in the above profile came to an end in under two years.  Discogs lists six releases between 2013 and 2015, all of them singles, EPs or promos. However, earlier this year, Past Night From Glasgow (part of the set-up at Last Night From Glasgow) issued a double LP, Collected Works 2008-2014, containing 23 tracks, all of which have been re-mastered by Sam Smith. All of the 14 songs listed on Discogs are included, along with nine others, some of which pre-date the release of Stroh 80 while others seem to have been made available for the first time.  All in all, it’s an excellent release, one that I really should have included within my favourite albums of 2024. Here’s all three of the songs referred to in the Guardian profile. mp3: Casual Sex – Stroh 80 mp3: Casual Sex – Soft School mp3: Casual Sex – National Unity Click here if what you’ve heard has made you want to pick up The Collected Works.

JC

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN SINGLES : #077

aka The Vinyl Villain incorporating Sexy Loser

#077: Pretenders – ‘Precious’ (Real Records ’80)

Hello friends,

today we have a track from most definitely one of the greatest debut albums of all-time, embodying equal parts of punk, ska and rock. New Wave may have been born a few years earlier but Chrissie Hynde and company brought it to the next level with their self-titled debut in 1980. James Honeyman-Scott‘s guitar talents are everywhere, the same is true for Chrissie Hynde’s vocal talents.

So it’s not too astonishing that all of the three tracks the record company chose to be singles turned out to become pretty successful – some 44 years later you still hear them on daytime radio here and there. I leave it up to you to decide whether this is an honour or not, but come on, they are all pretty neat: ‘Brass In Pocket’, ‘Kid’, ‘Stop Your Sobbing’ … nothing wrong with them, right?

‘But hold on’, I can hear you shout, ‘if the above were all of the three singles that were released, where does the one below come from?!’ Well, this is because Real Records licensed Hispavox in Spain to put ‘Precious’ out as a single, backed by ‘Stop Your Sobbing’ – in this form it wasn’t available anywhere else but in Spain. Well, that’s not entirely correct, ‘cos they also put it out as a single in The Netherlands, but with ‘The Phone Call’ as the B-Side.

And as far as I’m concerned, this was a very big mistake! I can understand that at the end of the day it’s all about money, and I also understand that a tune as raucous as ‘Precious’ may not really be as consumer-friendly as ‘Brass In Pocket’, ‘Kid’, or ‘Stop Your Sobbing’ – but hey, we are talking 1980 here, and punk was not entirely dead everywhere, so Real Records might have made a pretty penny when having had the guts to release this single Europe-wide!

I wish I could understand the thoughts of the record company decision-makers back then for not doing so: „Oh, those Spanish, they are all brutally hardcore, must be with this constant heat – they will buy this …and those Dutch, they have fallen off the dyke too often anyway, so they’ll buy it as well for sure!“.

Either way, me, I still listen to The Pretenders sometimes, also to their later albums, but whenever I put the debut album on, the first track puts a big smile on my face … the same smile that I produce when listening to the first track of The Clash‘s debut album!

And this, friends, this is an honour, at least in my little world!




mp3: Pretenders – Precious

Enjoy

Dirk