THE CD SINGLE LUCKY DIP (24) : Black Grape – England’s Irie

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The 2026 FIFA World Cup got underway yesterday. Being on holiday in a country that didn’t qualify I reckoned would have meant my ability to keep up with things would have been limited, but it turns out that among the many upgrades my hotel has had from a massive refurb programme is a state-of-the-art TV/entertainment package in each room.  I’ve just come off the beach at 4.30pm and found there’s loads of channels showing the opening match – 1-0 to Mexico after 65 minutes as I type.

I thought I’d dig out a football related tune for today, one that is now thirty years old.

England was the host nation back of European Football Championships in 1996.  This was an occasion when Scotland’s group involved a match against the host nation, a game we went onto lose 2-0.  Incidentally, the game took place on the same weekend as Aidan Moffat and Malcolm Middleton went on a bender in Glasgow, as recounted in The First Weekend of The Summer, the debut single by Arab Strap, with one of the lines in the song making reference to the football match.

The comedian Keith Allen, (and dad of future pop star Lily Allen) having been part of the NewOrderEngland set-up responsible for the 1990 hit World In Motion, decided he should get in on the act for Euro 96, but the offer for the official song had been made to Ian Broudie/Lighting Seeds, who collaborated with the comedians Frank Skinner and David Baddiel to come up with Three Lions.  Having been rebuffed, Keith decided to seek out and gain the help of a couple of English musical legends.

mp3: Black Grape (featuring Joe Strummer and Keith Allen) – England’s Irie

It’s a football anthem and it’s totally ramshackle.  But it’s great fun.  Shawn Ryder sounds, as usual, as if he’s off his tits on some drug or other.  The lyrics are all over the place, cynical in some places but nonsenical for the most part.  Joe Strummer‘s contribution is reduced largely to backing vocals.  Unbelievably, this made it all the way to #6 in the charts and led to a Top of The Pops appearance – and while The Clash, famously, never appeared on the programme, Joe shuffled his way onto the stage back in 1996.

There were three remixes added to the CD single:-

mp3: Black Grape (featuring Joe Strummer and Keith Allen) – England’s Irie (Pass The Durazac Mix)
mp3: Black Grape (featuring Joe Strummer and Keith Allen) – England’s Irie (Suedehead Dub)
mp3: Black Grape (featuring Joe Strummer and Keith Allen) – England’s Irie (Mel’s L.A. Irie  Mix)

The thing is, I can’t spot any differences between the Duruzac Mix and the Suedehead Dub…….

JC

IT WAS AN AMAZING AND UNEXPECTED COMEBACK

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With the demise of Factory Records in late 1992, you would have been forgiven for thinking that the musical world had seen the back of Shaun Ryder. In fact, you wouldn’t have got many folk disagreeing with the view that his time on planet earth itself was most likely coming to an end such was his drug addiction problem.

There were reports in the music press that he was forming a new band, along with his old sidekick Bez, as well as some other musicians from the Manchester scene, including members of Ruthless Rap Assassins and Paris Angels. But for months there was nothing coming out of the studio except rumours that Shaun, far from heading for an early grave, was in fact writing some of his best ever material.

I’m sure I first heard Black Grape on Radio 1 in mid 1995 when I was sitting in a car being driven to a midweek football match – which would probably mean it was on a show hosted by Steve Lamacq and/or Jo Whiley. I remember the other person in the car, who was about as far away from being a fan of the Happy Mondays as you could imagine, saying that he thought it was an amazing song, and I just knew from that sort of reaction that Shaun really was on to something pretty special.

The band were given a big lift with the endorsement of Radio 1 breakfast DJ and TV presenter Chris Evans, who was responsible for bringing a lot of the new Britpop bands to wider attention. But there was never any way that Black Grape could be linked into that genre..the fact they were in existence for a few short years at the height of Britpop was a mere coincidence…

For about 12 months from the summer of 1995, Black Grape released an incredible body of work, with five Top 20 singles (including an alternative football anthem to coincide with England hosting Euro 96) and an album, It’s Great When You’re Straight….Yeah, which hit the #1 spot. Sadly, the momentum wasn’t maintained, and by the time the follow-up album Stupid Stupid Stupid came out in 1997, the band were beginning to fall apart with drink, drugs and illness taking their toll individually and collectively. They split in early 1998….

Black Grape may not have been with us all that long, but it was great fun while it lasted. Just about all of their singles are belters with some of the best lyrics Shaun has ever written.

mp3 : Black Grape – Reverend Black Grape
mp3 : Black Grape – In The Name Of The Father
mp3 : Black Grape – Kelly’s Heroes
mp3 : Black Grape – Fat Neck
mp3 : Black Grape – England’s Irie
mp3 : Black Grape – Get Higher
mp3 : Black Grape – Marbles

A fairly magnificent 7 right enough (for the most part…Fat Neck isn’t that good).