C86 : THE ULTIMATE SERIES (Parts 43, 44, 45, and 46 of 114)

The final song in the most recent part of this series was an abomination.  Let’s quickly get things back on track with an excellent song:-

mp3: I Could Be In Heaven – The Flatmates

Track 14, Disc 2 of CD86.

The Flatmates are from Bristol, and were initially active between 1985 and 1989 before reforming in 2013.  During that first spell, they recorded five singles, all of which were released on The Subway Organisation, which is no real surprise given that the band’s guitarist and main songwriter, Martin Whitehead, had founded that particular record label.  I Could Be In Heaven was the debut single, in October 1986, and the sixth overall to have been issued by the label. It reached #17 on the Indie Singles chart.

The band reformed primarily to play live, but would then record new singles for small indie labels in 2013 and 2015, before, in 2020, their eponymous debut album came out on The Subway Organisation, the label’s first new release in thirty years.

Here’s another lot with almost no info out there on t’internet

mp3: I Don’t Need You – The Enormous Room

Track 25, Disc Three of C86 The Deluxe 3CD Edition.

This is actually the final track on the third and last disc of the boxset.  The Enormous Room appear to have come from Watford, and were a four-piece band who released two singles in 1986, the first being on the Peterborough-based Sharp Records and the second, of which this song is the a-side, on Medium Cool, home to a number of bands associated with C86 and all it entailed.

The Dentists were from Chatham, a town in Kent in the south of England, and were active between 1984 and 1995, during which time they released ten singles/EPs and four albums.  The initial releases were on their own Spruck Records:-

mp3: I Had An Excellent Dream – The Dentists

Track 12, Disc 1 of CD86.

It was originally recorded for the debut album Some People Are On The Pitch They Think It’s All Over, which came out in 1985.  In later years, they recorded for a number of different indie labels, all the while building up a cult following, particularly in the USA, and in 1991, they played the highly-regarded and often influential College Music Journal (CMJ) festival. Shortly afterwards, the Dentists were signed by an American label Homestead Records, which released the compilation Dressed (1992) and the album Powdered Lobster Fiasco (1993), the latter of which attracted the attention of a major label, and the band signed to Eastwest Records in 1993.

Their first album for Eastwest, Behind the Door I Keep the Universe, reached Number 8 on the CMJ College Radio charts and was followed by a six-week tour of the U.S. supporting Shonen Knife. A second album, Deep Six was recorded in early 1995 but when it failed to sell, and they parted company with Eastwest.  A final gig took place at the 1995 CMJ Music Marathon in New York City, after which the band broke up.

It was Half Man Half Biscuit who opened up this series with All I Want For Christmas Is A Dukla Prague Away Kit.  Their second appearance comes courtesy of this

mp3: I Hate Nerys Hughes (From The Heart) – Half Man Half Biscuit

Track 4 on side 2 of the C86 cassette; Track 15, Disc One of C86 The Deluxe 3CD Edition.

By the time it was included on the C86 cassette, the song was already well-known among fans of the band as it had appeared on the 1985 debut album Back In The D.H.S.S. which had come out on Probe Records in late 1985.  For anyone wondering about the identity of Nerys Hughes…..click here.  I’m guessing Nigel Blackwell wasn’t a fan of the long-running sitcom The Liver Birds.

 

 

JC

NEXT YEAR’S NOSTALGIA FEST (Part 30 of 48)

The-Dentists-Some-People-Are

I’ve lifted this from the bio, penned by a fan, over at all music….

Although The Dentists were arguably the first Brit-pop band, they never were able to capitalize when the style they’d perfected over the course of a decade suddenly became the Next Big Thing around 1994. Their signature sound, a combination of Mick Murphy‘s veddy British voice and Bob Collins‘ hyperactively jangly guitar, has been duplicated many times over, but it’s never quite been equaled.

Formed in their native Chatham, a small town in rural Kent, in 1983, the original lineup comprised Murphy, Collins, bassist Mark Matthews, and drummer Ian Smith. Their first single, Strawberries Are Growing in My Garden (And It’s Wintertime), was released on the tiny indie Spruck Records in 1985.  A neo-freakbeat masterpiece that sounds like it could have been recorded in 1967, “Strawberries” remained the Dentists’ best-known and most beloved song for the rest of their career. That early peak was quickly followed by the album Some People Are on the Pitch They Think It’s All Over It Is Now (the title taken from the famous end of the 1966 World Cup final won by England) and the six-song EP You and Your Bloody Oranges, which have no overlapping tracks. The album titles, matched with songs like One of Our Psychedelic Beakers is Missing and Where’s My Chicken, You Bastard, made the group out to be a bunch of paisley-clad goofballs in some reviewers’ eyes, a mistaken first impression that never entirely went away.

Smith left the group in early 1986, replaced by the equally anonymously named Alun Jones. In contrast to their exceptionally busy first year of recordings, the quartet only managed two EPs in 1986 and 1987, Down and Out in Paris and Chatham and Writhing on the Shagpile. In 1988, the Belgian label Antler released a compilation entitled Beer Bottle and Bannister Symphonies: A Collection of Some of the Finer Moments of Dentistry followed by an EP’s worth of new material, The Fun Has Arrived.

Oddly, for a band that had been so productive in the early years of their career, The Dentists all but disappeared for over two years at this point, only contributing one new track, Snapdragon, to the compilation Time Will Show the Wiser in 1989.

However, when they reappeared in 1991 with the new album Heads and How to Read Them, they launched a new and even busier phase of their career. Besides a pair of singles extracted from the album, both with excellent and otherwise unavailable B-sides, The Dentists landed exclusive tracks on a number of compilations and finally began an attempt to introduce themselves to the American market, which they had so far ignored. A 10″ EP, Naked, compiled seven rarities from 1986 and 1987, most of them previously unreleased. This was followed in 1992 by Dressed, a 22-track CD of other songs from the 1985-1987 era, containing nearly all of Some People Are on the Pitch and the best moments from the EPs. (There’s a fair amount of overlap with the 1988 Belgian CD.)

Along with that spate of reissues, the Dentists released a series of three thematically linked singles on three different indie labels, each with a poem by John Hegley on the B-side. The songs (but unfortunately, not the poems) were compiled in 1993 on the U.S. release Powdered Lobster Fiasco, along with re-recorded versions of several other songs from the preceding five years. New drummer Rob Grigg replaced Jones starting with these singles. Later in 1993, The Dentists unexpectedly signed with a major American label, the East/West division of Atlantic. Although this proved to be as unlikely a pairing as it sounded (East/West was primarily an R&B imprint), the label immediately went to work on establishing its indie credibility by releasing a box set of three 7″ singles, Bigbangredshiftblackholes, which included several tracks from their upcoming album and a clutch of demos, rehearsal versions, and otherwise unavailable songs.

That album, 1994’s Behind the Door I Keep the Universe, turned out to be one of their best, but it unfortunately stiffed completely despite East/West’s best promotional efforts, which included a hard to find but extremely cool hour-long promo disc called Radio Novocaine, featuring The Dentists playing some of their favorite recent singles and interviewing each other. Apparently disillusioned, they made the unwise decision of having New York City noise rock maestro Wharton Tiers produce 1995’s Deep Six. Tiers layers the songs with unnecessary guitar grunge and the tempos are uncharacteristically sluggish. It’s a dispiriting record with an unfortunately accurate title. After its release and subsequent commercial failure, East/West dropped the Dentists. Collins called it a day, retiring from the music business; Murphy, Matthews, and Grigg found a new guitarist and formed the short-lived Coax.

—————

The thing is, despite releasing so much material with a pedigree that should be of huge appeal to a man with my range of tastes, I only have one track by The Dentists and it is the one of the CD86 compilation.

mp3 : The Dentists – I Had An Excellent Dream

They are a band that passed me by completely and so I’m putting out the request……does anyone have the knowledge and music to do a Compilation Album to introduce me further??

Over to you dear readers….