THE TESTIMONIAL TOUR OF 45s (aka The Singular Adventures of Edwyn Collins)

#16:Don’t Shilly Shally : Edwyn Collins (Elevation Records, ACID 4/WEA 248273-7, 1987)

Alan McGee had co-founded Creation Records in 1983.  As indie-labels go, it had been a relative success, but there was an element of frustration that the limitations of the typical set-up of indies, particularly around distribution and finance, prevented singers and bands crossing over into at least part of the mainstream and enjoying greater rewards from their endeavours.

McGee approached WEA records, the biggest of them all, and suggested a joint venture whereby some Creation acts would benefit from the way the major label operated in the market.  This new hybrid label was called Elevation Records, and it was set to go from March 1987. McGee brought Creation signings The Weather Prophets and Primal Scream to the label, along with Edwyn Collins who, at long last, would be recording as a solo artist, with his debut single enjoying a release in July 1987.

It proved to be a song that wasn’t a million miles away from the sort which appeared on The Orange Juice LP back in 1984.  There are no musicians credited on the single, but there’s a very interesting producer on board – Robin Guthrie of the Cocteau Twins.  He was responsible for all three songs which appeared on the single, but there was possibly a hint of dissatisfaction with the production as Edwyn’s old friend and trusted ally, Dennis Bovell, was later brought into to remix the A-side

mp3: Edwyn Collins – Don’t Shilly Shally

Here’s the two other songs from the session:-

mp3: Edwyn Collins – If Ever You’re Ready
mp3: Edwyn Collins – Queer Fish

The first of these was included on the 7″and 12″ releases, and makes for an interesting listen as there’s the occasional hint of the sort of guitar playing you’d pick up listening very closely to the Cocteau Twins.  It’s proved to be a song that Edwyn is very fond of it, as he would later re-record it on two occasions, the first being for his 1989 album Hope and Despair, and the second being as a b-side to a single in 1995 (watch this space!!!).

The second of the songs was only on the 12″, and in terms of what Edwyn had released up to this point, was quite experimental with a more electronic sound rather than relying on guitars.  It’s not one I go back to all that often.

None of the early singles on Elevation had been hits.  Don’t Shilly Shally was no different.  In an era when the singles chart went all the way to a Top 100, it came in, for one week, at #93.

JC

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #487: INCREDIBLE BLONDES

Back in April 2019, not long after I bought the Big Gold Dreams boxset, I picked out one of its tracks and highlighted it on the blog.

mp3: The Incredible Blondes – Where Do I Stand?

Not being ashamed to regurgitate what I said back then, this Glasgow four-piece, consisting of Barry McLeod (vocal, guitar), Robert Campbell (drums), Stephen Boyle (bass) and Eddie Campbell (keyboards) were yet another highly tipped outfit beginning to get noticed on what was a lively and thriving local scene. Although unsigned, they were invited to record a session for the Janice Long Show on BBC Radio 1 following which they were contacted by Nick Low, the founder of No Strings Records, the label that had released the first ever Del Amitri single, and subsequently, The Incredible Blondes were added to the roster in 1985.

Where Do I Stand? was released as a single.  More than 30 years later, I heard it for the first time thanks to it being included within the boxset.

I went on to mention that while the band had called it a day when the single failed to chart, there had been a postscript in 2005 when Nic Lowe and Barry McLeod bumped into one another and, as you do, did some reminiscing. They realised that this one-off single was still highly sought-after by collectors, particularly in Japan, where the band still enjoyed cult status among fans of indie-pop. This led to the two of them delving into the vaults and deciding to give a belated release to a debut album by The Incredible Blondes on the resurrected No Strings Records.

Where Do I Stand? was the name given to the album – and a new version of the song was recorded with a lyric translated into and sung in Japanese by Aya Matsumoto, a waitress living in Glasgow at the time.

mp3: The Incredible Blondes – Where Do I Stand? (Japanese version)

The album was a mix of old recordings from the 80s and songs penned more recently by Barry. It was launched in March 2005 with the band reforming again for a one-off gig in their home city.

One more postscript, as far as this blog is concerned, came in August 2022, more than three years after the original post when none other than Barry McLeod left this belated comment:-

‘So glad you liked the single. Real life/ Uni, etc. took over. Still, good fun at the time’

Genuinely thrilled that he saw the post and commented on it.

 

JC

 

FICTIVE FRIDAYS : #7

a guest series, courtesy of a very friendly lawyer

Mixed Messages : Or Why Can’t People Make Their Mind Up

Accidents Will Happen – Elvis Costello & The Attractions

Apparently written after an “awkward tryst” with a cab driver at her home in Tucson, Arizona. The second single from Armed Forces, when EC and the boys could only make outstanding albums.

Accidents Never Happen – Blondie

Written by keyboardist Jimmy Destri as a parallel to Elvis’s song (they were both released in 1979). Supposedly about the mysticism former bassist Gary Valentine inspired in the band. Incongruously, featuring Judy Garland‘s daughter Lorna Luft on background vocals.

I Believe You –  Todd Snider

Poor Todd Snider. He died of pneumonia this past November, aged 59. He was a great storyteller, with songs full of funny lines about serious situations. (See Some Songs Are Great Short Stories, Chapter 35). From his 1996 LP Step Right Up.

I Don’t Believe You –  Magnetic Fields

If there’s a better lyricist than Stephen Merritt writing today I can’t imagine who it could be. He’s our century’s Cole Porter. This song comes from the 2004 album i, which is a collection of 14 songs beginning with the letter ‘I’ in alphabetical order. In other words, he’s as weird as I am.

Everyone Knows – Slowdive

The shoegaze stalwarts disbanded in 1995 and lead songwriter Neil Halstead went on to form Mojave 3. When that outfit packed it in he released all kinds of music before resurrecting the Reading quartet with a new drummer. The band’s self-titled comeback album came out in 2017–22 years after their last release.

No One Knows –  Queens of the Stone Age

First single from 2002’s Songs for the Deaf. Co-written with the late great Mark Lanegan who at the time was a band member. Lanegan isn’t on the single but the ferocious drums are courtesy of Dave Grohl. And the strings are performed by Ana and Paz Lechantin, before the latter joined Pixies.

Too Little Too Late – Metric

Has Metric ever made an appearance here at TVV?  (JC interjects – NOPE!!!) If not, it’s high time. The Canadian group, led by the wonderful Emily Haines, has been at it for almost 30 years and have released 10 solid records since 2003. This is an album track from the second one, 2005’s Live It Out, which featured a great single called ‘Monster Hospital.’ [note to JC, add that one as a bonus track at the end, if possible]

Too Much Too Soon – Green Day

I loved Green Day when they hit the scene. They were just the right mix of energy, irreverence, pop, and punk. Then they got popular, which is always irritating. But they kept making solid records, including 2004’s American Idiot, which this track is taken from. My cover band plays the title track, which I’m ashamed to say became the theme song for our government.

Everything I Need – Men At Work

The Australian combo only released three records in their day. They all went gold, including Two Hearts, which includes this track as its lead single. But the band was fracturing, and only three of the five original members appeared on it. Guitarist Ron Strykert actually bailed during the sessions. But MAW were always all about Colin Hay, anyway. He has that singular voice and wrote their best songs. Hay proved to be a nice guy that moved to my adopted hometown of Santa Monica, CA. I see him at Truetone guitar shop from time to time, and he gets involved with the music program at my kids’ high school.

Nothing I Need – Lord Huron

You’d be right in observing that half the music I listen to was released in 1979. But that doesn’t mean I don’t keep an ear open for great new music. This single was released by the Los Angeles indie stars in March of this year, from the album The Cosmic Selector Vol. I, which came out in July.

 

Jonny

 

C86 : THE ULTIMATE SERIES (Part 1)

I’m sure most folk who drop by these parts will know all about C86, the compilation cassette released by the NME in May 1986 and which, in due course, was the name attached to a style or genre of music, derided by some but loved by many, centred about guitar-bands who recorded, in the main, for small and independent record labels.

The cassette, which came via mail order, contained 22 songs. It proved to be so popular that six months later, a vinyl version was issued by Rough Trade Records. Fast-forward to 2006, and Bob Stanley of Saint Etienne helped mark the 20th anniversary by curating CD86, a two-disc compilation of 48 tracks inspired by the original cassette. This particular compilation was released by Sanctuary Records, but just three of the songs that had been on C86 were included on CD86, albeit fifteen of the original groups had alternative tracks included.

Fast-forward again to 2014, and Cherry Red Records issued NME C86 : Deluxe 3-CD Edition, containing the 22 songs from the cassette, along with 50 other tracks from the era with some sort of link to the genre, along with an 11,500-word booklet of sleeve notes written by former NME journalist Neil Taylor.

Oh, and in August 2022, Whatever Happened To The C86 Kids?, a truly fabulous book written by Nigel Trassell was published. Indeed, the contents of that book were set to form a series for the blog across 2026, but in the end, I’ve decided to be more ambitious/self-indulgent (delete as appropriate).

It’s now 40 years since the cassette was released, and I’m sure there will be some events etc. to mark the occasion in due course. I thought I’d steal a march (of sorts), by running a year-long series looking at, in alphabetical order, the 114 different songs you can find across CD86 compilation and the C86 triple-CD box set. Don’t worry, it won’t be over 114 different postings, as most will feature three or more at a time. But given I’ve had to do the introduction today, then it’s just the one to open things up.

mp3: All I Want For Xmas Is Christmas Is A Dukla Prague Away Kit – Half Man Half Biscuit 

Track 12, Disc 2 of CD86.

Here’s the thing. The version on CD86 is slightly different from the one I’m most familiar with, which is also ‘the official audio’ over on the HMHB You Tube page.

The song was, to the best of my knowledge, originally released on one side of a 7″ single back in 1987, along with a remix of The Trumpton Riots. It was then added to what became a second pressing of the 12″ The Trumpton Riots EP, when it was expanded from four to five songs, and then added to the debut album Back In The D.H.S.S, when it was given its first release on CD in 1988. I don’t own a copy of the 7″ or the expanded 12″ EP, so perhaps it is from one of those.

And of course, HMHB are still very much on the go today, arguably better than ever. Last year saw the release of All Asimov and No Fresh Air, their 16th studio album.  I included one of its tracks in my 25 from 2025 rundown, but Rol over at My Top Ten not loo long ago posted an outstanding review of the LP.  Click here and enjoy.

 

JC

AN IMAGINARY COMPILATION ALBUM : #400 : BUZZCOCKS

This will be the 30th TVV post in which Buzzcocks have been specifically added to the index, while there have been quite a few more where they have featured within posts that have been logged as ‘Various’.  But I have no idea why none of us have ever thought to come up with an ICA, other than perhaps believing the job was done for us via the Singles Going Steady album.

I’ve made a few draft starts at different times over the years, always looking to incorporate songs the band recorded and released in the latter and less well-documented part of their career, namely the seven albums that have been issued since 1993, including Sonics In The Soul, a 2022 release that was their first after the death of Pete Shelley in December 2018.  But, no matter how hard I tried to include any of the reunion years material, I just couldn’t put any of it into what I consider to be the top ten songs.  In the end, noticing that I was about to hit the landmark 400th Imaginary Compilation Album, I bit the bullet and accepted it would need to consist solely of tunes from their halcyon days back in the late 70s.  But I’ve one perhaps surprising inclusion, given some of the words I’ve typed in previous postings.

SIDE A

1. Breakdown

Where else to start but at the very beginning with the Spiral Scratch EP of January 1977?  Four songs much discussed over the decades, and most recently on this blog last October thanks to Fraser Pettigrew‘s loving look at the EP.  It’s nigh on impossible to disagree with Fraser’s assessment that just about everything that can possibly be written about Spiral Scratch has already been said, so let’s just do the imaginary pogo in our minds and get ready for the next tune.

2. Why Can’t I Touch It?

The idea that Buzzcocks were a one-dimensional punk-pop band capable only of short, fast and energetic tunes gets blown away by this near seven-minutes of groove that was originally tucked away as a b-side, probably in fear of the punk purists being shocked and horrified.

Confession time.  I first heard this when I was 15 years old when I turned over my newly bought copy of Everybody’s Happy Nowadays.  I didn’t like it, as I wasn’t prepared for it. I wasn’t a punk purist who was shocked and horrified, just a bit confused by it all.  I rarely listened to it afterwards and indeed as recently as 2016 I was scathing about it in a blog post, only to be shot down by quite a number of folk via the comments section, all of which made me go back and try again.

The fact it has made it onto the ICA shows that I am willing to admit I got it badly wrong.  Looking at the song solely via the prism of early 1979 was a huge error.  I’m grateful to those of you who pointed out the error of my ways.

3. What Do I Get?

The second successive song on the ICA to ask a question…..I don’t think that’s happened across any of the previous 399.  The band’s second single after they signed to United Artists, it was the first to crack the pop charts when it reached #37 in February 1978.  A hugely underrated song, one that was left off the debut album which hit the shops a few weeks later on the basis that punk bands never put old 45s onto albums.  Pah!

4. I Don’t Mind

The thing is….as The Clash had already found out to their disgust….bands are quite helpless when record labels then choose to issue songs on albums as later singles, even when it is against a band’s wishes.  Another Music In A Different Kitchen had peaked at #15, and United Artists insisted on giving it a second wind two months later, choosing what many believed to be its most instant song to be the next 7″ release, backed with another track, Autonomy, that was also taken from the album.  The ploy sort of worked, as the album did actually go back up the charts for a week, but the single was a relative flop in that it stalled outside the Top 50.

5. You Say You Don’t Love Me

The passing mention of flop singles leads nicely to this. 1979 can be looked upon as the year the band began to run out of steam.  I reckon they had tried to do too much in 77/78, and coming up with the same high quality of songs for what was to be a third album proved to be just beyond them.  That’s not to say that A Different Kind of Tension is a poor record, but it didn’t have the same fizz or energy as the previous albums.  By now, the band had accepted the idea that new albums should be promoted by an advance single, but for some reason or other, radio stations ignored You Say You Don’t Love Me and with next to no airplay, it became the first single not to at least make the Top 75.  It deserved a far better fate.

SIDE B

1. Fast Cars

Tempting as it was to open Side B up with another track from Spiral Scratch, I’ve bottled out by using the song whose opening 20-odd seconds replicates Boredom prior to turning into possibly the most new wave of all Buzzcocks songs in that you imagine it being written by many of their contemporaries.

2. Ever Fallen In Love (With Someone You Shouldn’t’ve)

Which is not something you can say about this song, as only Pete Shelley of the class of ’78 could have come up with something as majestic and timeless as their biggest hit (#12).  As with Spiral Scratch, everything that can possibly be written about Ever Fallen In Love…..has already been said. Dirk included it in his 111 singles series, and I had it as part of the 45 45s @ 45 rundown back in 2008 (#23).  I would imagine many thousands of others who have a great love of post-punk/new wave music would list this as one of the greatest of them all.

3. Sixteen Again

Ever Fallen In Love was the advance single for Love Bites, the band’s second album which in due course would become their biggest selling, peaking at #13.  It would be fair to say that much of that success was propelled by the hit single, but it mustn’t be overlooked that it’s an album with more than a smattering of great tunes, albeit it perhaps suffers from being recorded so quickly (just two-and-a-half weeks) and there are a couple of instrumentals whose lack of lyrics perhaps betray the rush to get it out of the door a mere six months after the debut.  Sixteen Again would have made for a very fine follow-up single, but the band had other ideas.

4. Promises

This proved to be the follow-up to Ever Fallen In Love.  A stand-alone, non-album single whose release in came at the end of November 1978.  It would go on to spend 10 weeks in the charts, yo-yoing up and down a bit, and eventually reaching its peak of #20 in the last chart of that calendar year, which surely indicates that there were a fair few copies given to folk as Christmas presents.  Given the time of year it was released, and that it didn’t leave the charts until the last week of January 1979, there’s every chance this was actually the band’s best-selling 45 of them all.

5. I Believe

The closing track on A Different Kind Of Tension comes in at a tad over seven minutes and is one of the band’s most overlooked and underappreciated songs. As with Spiral Scratch, and as with Ever Fallen In Love….everything that can possibly be written about Buzzcocks has already been put to paper, and nobody has done it better than Paul Hanley whose 2024 book, Sixteen Again, is an essential read.

 

JC

 

LET’S GET IT STARTED IN HERE

 

mp3: Various – I Give You Things You Don’t Need?

Ballboy – Welcome To The New Year
Malcolm Middleton – Happy Medium
Pet Shop Boys – Too Many People
Elvis Costello & The Attractions – High Fidelity
Bar Italia – Eyepatch
Echo and The Bunnymen – All My Colours (Peel Session)
The Libertines – Can’t Stand Me Now
Win – Super Popoid Groove
Follytechnic Music Library – Vanished
Working Men’s Club – John Cooper Clarke
Sea Power – No Lucifer
The Walkmen – The Rat
Shop Assistants – Safety Net
Blondie – Denis
Yard Act – Dead Horse
The Specials – Friday Night, Saturday Morning
The Wedding Present – Once More

 

JC

 

2026 : A KIND OF PREVIEW

Good morning. Good Afternoon, Good Evening, wherever you are around the globe and whatever time of day it happens to be.

Welcome to TVV’s first ‘proper’ posting of 2026, in that the Festive Period series has come to an end, and the two regular series for Saturdays and Sundays have been covered.  A year that will hopefully see the blog celebrate its 20th birthday, and my wee brain is already going into overdrive thinking of ways to mark the occasion, albeit it’s still over nine months away.   Indeed, my wee brain never stops thinking about how best to continue to make this little corner of t’internet a place that folk will want to come and visit on a regular basis, especially given that time is increasingly precious for all of us and there are many other music blogs out there that have better writers with far more nous and knowledge than I’ll ever have……and more worryingly, seem to have way more ideas than me to keep things fresh and inviting; but in saying that, seeing so many other great blogs very much on the go provides inspiration to maintain high standards here (grammar and accurate spelling mistakes aren’t part of those standards!!)

I thought I’d begin the new year by offering up a sort of sneak preview of what lies ahead.

Firstly….a few givens.

Saturdays will continue to be set aside for songs by different Scottish singers and bands, It’s just hit #486, but I reckon I have at least another fifty who haven’t yet featured that will take us through this calendar year.

Sundays will, for the next few months, continue to look at the Edwyn Collins singles, and when that comes to its natural end, I’ll hand the day over to some other long-running act…I’ve already got one in mind, but I’m just as liable to change my mind as the time approaches.

Fridays, every second week, should see postings all the way from Santa Monica.  Fictive Fridays are genuinely special for me as I have no idea, until the email drops in, which direction Jonny is going to take the blog.

The mention of Fictive Fridays does allow me to reiterate that guest postings are key to TVV.  Jonny will have his regular gig, as too will Fraser who has already fired over more offerings for his EPs series. Steve‘s ‘stealing’ series was a real highlight of 2025, every one of his masterpieces managing to educate/inform and entertain in equal measures; he’s quietly promised something fresh for this year, advising that it has so much info it will be likely need to be published in three parts (it’s almost a book he’s proposing!!), and knowing which band he’s looking into, I know it will go down well.

I’m also hopeful that Dirk, having regaled us so fantastically with his 111 singles series over the past three years, will get on board again….he’s certainly thinking about it.  As I’ve repeatedly said, I never turn down any guest postings, so if anyone reading this wants to do the 21st century equivalent of putting pen to paper, then please be my guest.

But what am I going to bring to the party this year? By and large, more of the same.

There are five types of post that will continue to be the workhorse of TVV.  The ‘lucky dips’ across my music collection enable me to share some thoughts on a particular 7″, 12″ or CD single, while I’ll also continue to shine a light on songs that are under two minutes in length, and songs that proved to be a debut release.

The monthly book review is here to stay, although I need to get my act together and start reading a bit more intensely. The older I get, the increasingly difficult I am finding it to get through books the way I used to.  Again, if anyone wishes to offer up guest reviews, I’d be more than happy to take them….and if I get inundated with reviews, then I’ll make sure the series appears more frequently.

The monthly mixtape will continue.   January’s has been delayed, but it’ll be with you before tomorrow.  The ICAs will continue with #400 coming up later this week, which will be followed by a couple of very interesting guest offerings.

Work is well underway on three new series for 2026, all of which will likely last the entire calendar year – one will involve 13 posts, one will have somewhere in the region of 30 posts and the other will be one that may only last a short time, depending on the reaction of the TVV cognoscenti.  The 30 posts series will be launched later this week.  As they say, watch this space.

As ever, thanks for reading.  I think it’s time for a song.

mp3: Frightened Rabbit – Music Now

I still miss Scott Hutchison.  He really was such a talent.

 

 

JC

THE TESTIMONIAL TOUR OF 45s (aka The Singular Adventures of Edwyn Collins)

#15:Ain’t That Always The Way : Paul Quinn (Swamplands, SWP6, 1985)

March 1985.  The latest single to come out on Swamplands Records.

mp3: Paul Quinn – Ain’t That Always The Way

It’s a song written by Edwyn Collins.  It’s a song co-produced by Edwyn Collins.  It’s a song on which Edwyn Collins definitely plays guitar, but isn’t credited as doing so.  It should be a song attributed to Paul Quinn & Edwyn Collins but couldn’t be for contractual reasons.

Last time out, I mentioned that the sleeve notes attached to Pale Blue Eyes advised that Paul Quinn appeared courtesy of MCA Records and Edwyn Collins appeared courtesy of Polydor Records. This time round, MCA isn’t mentioned at all, which would suggest Paul had extricated himself from the contract.  Edwyn was still attached to Polydor, and while there was no indication that funding was going to be given for any new recordings, there was an insistence that he couldn’t be on anything Alan Horne was issuing via Swamplands.

But let’s not worry too much about the legalities – this may well be a 45 on which Edwyn Collins’ name might not appear, but I’m firmly of the view that it belongs in this particular series. Besides, it’s again an ‘Original Sound Recording by Alan Horne from the soundtrack of Punk Rock Hotel’ which really does give the game away, as does the b-side:-

mp3: Paul Quinn – Punk Rock Hotel (closing time)

An instrumental on which Paul Quinn doesn’t appear. An instrumental written by Edwyn Collins and Paul Heard, who you may recall was part of the final live line-up of Orange Juice.

There was a 12″ version issued, but in this instance there is no difference in the length or mixes of the A-side and b-side of the 7″.  The bonus track was this:-

mp3: Paul Quinn – Corrina Corinna

A song first recorded in 1928 by Bo Carter, an American blues musician, but had earlier roots going back to 1918.  Like so many songs of that era, no writer is given clear acknowledgement, and so the credit on this single goes to ‘Trad’, just as it did when Bob Dylan recorded it in 1963 for The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan LP.

Ain’t That Always The Way failed to chart.  Indeed, none of the six of the singles released on Swamplands became hits, and unsurprisingly, in the cut-throat music industry, London Records stopped its funding and closed it down.  It’s more than likely that Edwyn thought he might end up on Swamplands after eventually freeing himself from Polydor, but kind of ironically, he instead would end up on a label whose arrangements weren’t too dissimilar to the way Swamplands had been set up.

 

JC

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #486: HOLY MOUNTAIN

 

Holy Mountain is/were a hard/psychedelic rock band from Glasgow, Scotland, comprising Andy McGlone (guitar and vocals), Pete Flett (drums) and Allan Stewart (bass). The reason for the ‘is/were’ pause in the previous sentence is down to their last album being back in 2014 and the website domain name now lying unused.

They came together in 2010 and were signed up by Chemikal Underground, with two albums being released – Earth Measures (2012) and Ancient Astronauts (2014).

mp3: Holy Mountain – Luftwizard

This instrumental was released as the advance single for Ancient Astronauts.

A trigger warning.   It’s not the usual sort of thing found round these parts, but I do have a copy of the album (gifted to me by the label) and every album/single that I own has been converted to digital and put on the hard drive of the laptop – and this series will feature every Scottish artist who has at least one song on said hard drive.

 

JC

 

THE 25/26 FESTIVE PERIOD SERIES (8)

I thought I’d end this short series with a look at what I reckon could be as fine a free CD giveaway as there’s ever been.  It came with the October 2012 edition of MOJO magazine.

1982: It was the year marked by UK unemployment topping three million…the Falklands War between Britain and Argentina…the sale of over 400,000 council houses under the right to buy scheme…the IRA bombings of Hyde Park and Regents Park…the collapse of Laker Airways…and the privatisation of the British National Oil Company.

Meanwhile, in Manchester, May of that year saw two major events: the launch of the Hacienda Club and the meeting of Morrissey and Johnny Marr. In the five years that followed, the pair would lead The Smiths with a sense of fierce ambition. Joined initially by Andy Rourke and Mike Joyce, their uniquely British sound – a mixture of forward-looking musical dexterity and mordant lyricism – also established them as the standard-bearers for the independent music scene. This compilation brings together a number of The Smiths’ contemporaries and provides a snapshot of the scene they dominated during their brief five-year tenure.

From the glorious jangle-pop of Felt through to the post-Velvets vibes of The Weather Prophets and on to the insurrectionary spirit of Billy Bragg and Television Personalities, this collection recalls a period in indie rock when the intentions were pure and the music mattered.

We invite you to enjoy 15 tracks whose spirit remains intact. The light shines on…

mp3: Felt – Sunlight Bathed The Golden Glow
mp3: The Weather Prophets – Almost Prayed
mp3: Hurrah! – Sweet Sanity
mp3: The Woodentops – Well Well Well
mp3: Close Lobsters – Nature Thing
mp3: The Nightingales – Crafty Fag
mp3: The Flatmates – I Could Be In Heaven
mp3: The Go-Betweens – Cattle and Cane
mp3: Billy Bragg – Levi Stubbs’ Tears
mp3: Martin Stephenson and The Daintees – Crocodile Cryer
mp3: Television Personalities – How I Learned To Love The…Bomb
mp3: The La’s – Open Your Heart
mp3: The Blue Aeroplanes – Action Painting
mp3: The Dentists – Strawberries Are Growing In My Garden (And It’s Wintertime)
mp3: The Chesterfields – Completely and Utterly

The CD can be had for 95p plus P&P over at Discogs.  An absolute bargain.

 

JC

THE 25/26 FESTIVE PERIOD SERIES (7)

In February 2009, The Cure were the recipients of the ‘Godlike Geniuses’ Award at the annual awards dished out by the NME.  As part of the celebrations, there were gigs at the O2 Arena in London, while the 25 February edition of the publication gave away a free CD.

Editors, The Futureheads, British Sea Power, Art Brut, The Dandy Warhols and Lostprophets are among the artists featured on a free album of The Cure covers to be given away with the NME on February 25, to coincide with the NME Awards.

Speaking on a spoken word introduction that features on the CD, Robert Smith said, “When I started out with The Cure we didn’t have many songs. We often ended rehearsals playing other people’s stuff. We tried pop, rock, psychedelia, rockabilly, reggae and punk favourites. Banging our way through them was a lot of fun. It was also very instructive.”

NME editor Conor McNicholas added: “When we started asking bands and artists if they wanted to take part in the CD, people couldn’t say ‘Yes’ quick enough. It proves not only how influential The Cure are, but also how strong their songs are, as they easily stood up to be reinterpreted.”

Given the later controversy surrounding Ian Watkins, the lead singer of Lost Prophets (recently murdered while serving a very long prison sentence for multiple sex offences, including the sexual assault of young children and infants), you’ll hopefully accept the logic for not including the band’s contribution to the CD.

mp3: The Cure – Introduction
mp3: Mystery Jets & Esser – In Between Days
mp3: Marmaduke Duke – Friday I’m In Love
mp3: Dinosaur Jr. – Just Like Heaven
mp3: The Big Pink – Love Song
mp3: Editors – Lullaby
mp3: British Sea Power – A Forest
mp3: The Dandy Warhols – Primary
mp3: The Get Up Kids – Close To Me
mp3: The Futureheads – The Lovecats
mp3: Art Brut – Catch
mp3: Metronomy – Fascination Street
mp3: Alkaline Trio – Cut Here
mp3: Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly – In Between Days

The CD can be had for £2.99 plus P&P over at Discogs.

 

JC