WHEN THE CLOCKS STRUCK THIRTEEN (September Pt 2)

In which I hope to have kept to my promise that this one will feature all sorts of great ‘non-hit’ singles.  The well-thumbed big red book is again being flicked through.

mp3: Cabaret Voltaire – Sensoria

Anyone reading this post and hearing Sensoria for the very first time in their life might have a hard time in believing it’s a song that’s 41 years old. One that takes me back to the Strathclyde Uni Students Union downstairs disco on Friday and Saturday nights, held in the space that was normally where we devoured our daily helpings of pie, beans and chips.  As I’ve said before, this is one for flailing around the dance floor with your raincoat flapping behind you like Batman’s cape as he chases the bad guys.

mp3: The Daintees – Trouble Town

The second single from a newish-band based in the north-east of England who had been snapped up by Newcastle-based label Kitchenware Records, largely on the basis of the talents of their singer/songwriter frontman.  It would take until mid-86 before the band, now called Martin Stephenson and The Daintees, to enjoy a small amount of commercial success via their albums and dynamic live shows.

mp3: Go-Betweens – Bachelor Kisses

The second and final single to be lifted from the album, Spring Hill Fair.  After Part Company had failed to wow the record-buying public, Sire Records went for a Grant McLennan composed number this time around.  The record label actually went a bit further. Believing that they had a radio-friendly number on their hands, they gave the album version to producers Colin Fairley and Robert Andrews, who earlier in the year had worked with The Bluebells, and asked them to make it just that little bit more commercial.  Robert Forster would later comment “we got new producers, more days on the bass drum, and a version of the song of no great variance to the original take.”

Money was also spent on a promo video:-

The female backing vocal is courtesy of Ana da Silva, the lead singer of post-punkers The Raincoats, and a band much loved by Kurt Cobain.  The failure of the single led to Sire Records dropping the band a few weeks later.

mp3: Grab Grab The Haddock – I’m Used Now

The Marine Girls, a trio from the south of England featuring Tracey Thorn, Alice Fox and Jane Fox, had made a small splash in the indie-pop world in the early 80s, eventually signing to Cherry Red Records and releasing the well-received album Lazy Ways in early 1983.  By this time, Tracey had relocated to Hull University where she would meet Ben Watt and form Everything But The Girl; meanwhile, Jane had recorded material with her boyfriend, the Manchester-born poet Edward Barton, with one of the songs, It’s A Fine Day later being re-recorded as an electronic dance track by Opus III in 1992 and proving to be a massive hit.  After the Jane and Barton mini-album in late 1983 had sunk without trace, the Fox sisters formed what proved to be a short-lived band called Grab Grab The Haddock who would release a 12″ single and an EP on Cherry Red in 1984/85.  I’m Used Now was the debut single.

mp3: Paul Haig – The Only Truth

The production is credited to B-Music/Dojo, otherwise better known as Bernard Sumner and Donald Johnson. How many of you wanted to shout out ‘Confusion’ just before Paul’s vocals kicked in?

One word to describe this one?  Tune.

mp3: The Higsons – Music To Watch Girls By

A band formed by students at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, The Higsons had been around since 1981, and in due course would sign for 2 Tone and release a couple of non-hit singles for the label in 1982/83.  By 1984, they were on the London-based indie-label Upright Records, who would release the band’s sole LP from which this cover version of the easy-listening 1967 hit single by The Bob Crewe Generation was the lead single.  The band broke up the following year, and lead singer Charlie Higson would find fame and fortune as a comedy actor/writer in The Fast Show, while trumpeter/saxophonist/guitarist Terry Edwards would forge a very successful musical career which continues to this day.

mp3: The June Brides – Every Conversation

The band’s second single on the newly established Pink Records somehow managed to surpass the magnificence of debut In The Rain from a couple of months earlier.  A band that would get lumped in with the C87 ‘movement’ despite all their music, in their first incarnation, all being from June 84-May 86.

mp3: The Loft – Why Does The Rain

The Loft, as with The June Brides, get lumped in with the C87 ‘movement’ when in fact they had already broken up in late 1985.  This was the debut single, and it’s an absolute belter.  The next 45, Up The Hill And Down The Slope, was even better, but singer/songwriter Pete Astor then called it a day and went on to form The Weather Prophets, a band who would release their own take on Why Does The Rain on their debut album, Mayflower, in April 1987.

mp3: Red Guitars – Marimba Jive

The third and final single of the year from Red Guitars, whose profile was fairly high after a load of well-received live shows opening for The Smiths UK tour in early 1984.  Sadly, and undeservedly, the singles failed to connect with the record-buying public, and likewise with debut album Slow To Fade which was released just before the end of the year.

mp3: Marc Riley & The Creepers – Shadow Figure

The fifth single to be recorded by the band set up by Marc Riley after he ‘took his leave’ of The Fall in January 1983, but their first following the release of debut album Gross Out back in June 1984. An unusual number in which the kitchen sink seems to have been thrown at the tune during the production process….almost chamber pop in execution.

mp3: Shriekback – Mercy Dash

The second flop single in a three months.  This one is dedicated to Post Punk Monk, one of the finest on-line writers out there, and a huge fan of Shriekback.

mp3: Violent Femmes – It’s Gonna Rain

The second and final single to be lifted from the album Hallowed Ground.  I remember at the time being a bit underwhelmed by the album, but then again, it had been an impossible task to follow the eponymous debut that had landed in the UK in late 1983.  I’ve grown to appreciate things just a little bit more as the years have passed, but it remains hard to fully embrace an album of folk/country tunes with more than a hint of Christianity sprinkled in.  It’s Gonna Rain is actually an interpretation of the Noah’s Ark story, and in places it’s not too far removed from the sort of music Jonathan Richman does so very very well.

mp3: The Mighty Wah! – Weekends

The second and final single to be lifted from the album, A Word To The Wise Guy.  And while Come Back had gone Top 20 earlier in the year, the radio stations ignored the follow-up!

Told you this month was a good ‘un.

late addendum/correction : huge thanks to those who corrected me on Jane and Barton (see the comments section).  Much appreciated.

 

 

JC

WHEN THE CLOCKS STRUCK THIRTEEN (June)

June 1984.  The month I turned 21 years of age.  I wish I had a photo or two to show you, but it was an era when nobody bothered too much with cameras. There was no huge celebration to mark the occasion, mainly as my birthday fell on a Monday, but much drink was consumed and I ended up playing Girl Afraid by The Smiths on constant rotation back in the flat, grateful to be indulged by my flatmates in such a manner.

Having been out all day, we missed seeing the TV news, which would have been full of one-sided reporting of a shameful day for Britain.

The soundtrack to this state-sanctioned police brutality?

3 – 9 June

One new entry in the Top 40, courtesy of Spandau Ballet, in at #5, with the utterly forgettable Only When You Leave.  I mean that, I cannot recall this one at all, despite it seemingly spending nine weeks in the charts and peaking at #3.

The next highest new entry was at #43, and is one featured previously on TVV:-

mp3: Scritti Politti – Absolute

The follow-up to Top 10 hit Wood Beez (Pray Like Aretha Franklin) was released a couple of weeks before the band’s debut album for Virgin Records.  Any initial disappointment at not cracking the Top 40 right away would have been dissipated quickly as Absolute spent ten weeks in the charts, peaking at #17 and getting Green & co another appearance on Top of The Pops where anyone who hadn’t been keeping up with things since the release of the scratchy Skank Bloc Bologna back in 1978 might have rubbed their eyes in astonishment:-

It is so 80s isn’t it?  (and I don’t mean that as a bad thing!!!!)

The Damned were still doing there thing a full eight years after New Rose had lit us all up:-

mp3: The Damned – Thanks For The Night

They were never really a band for hit single.  This was their 19th (by my reckoning) assault on the UK charts and only twice had they gone Top 40 (Love Song and Smash It Up, both in 1979). Thanks For The Night didn’t change things. In at #52 and peaking a week later at #43.

This week’s chart was responsible for the only time a single by Working Week ever made the Top 75:-

mp3: Working Week – Venceremos (We Will Win)

A jazz-dance band with something of a fluid membership, the single was a benefit record made to raise funds for the UK Chile Solidarity campaign, and had been inspired by the Pinochet junta’s brutal murder of political activisit Victor Jara (who had been namechecked by The Clash in Washington Bullets from the Sandinista! album). The vocalist are Claudia Figuerora, Robert Wyatt and Tracey Thorn.  This came in at #66 with the 12″ version, which comes in at just over ten minutes in length, being the easier to find in the shops than the 7″:-

mp3: Working Week – Venceremos (We Will Win) (Jazz Dance Special 12″ version)

10-16 June

A new #1 to bring an end to Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go‘s two-week stay at the top.  And a brand-new entry at that:-

mp3: Frankie Goes To Hollywood – Two Tribes

It’s worth recalling that there were some genuine fears that a nuclear war could erupt as the Cold War between the USA and the Soviet Union intensified, and FGTH’s take on things, including the controversial and violent video featuring a wrestling match between President Ronald Reagan (USA) and General Secretary Konstantin Chernenko, captured the zeitgeist.

Two Tribes would spent nine weeks at #1 and wouldn’t drop out of the singles chart until late October.

At the other end of the Top 40, a couple of TVV regulars show their faces:-

mp3: Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark – Talking Loud & Clear (#39)
mp3: Elvis Costello & The Attractions – I Wanna Be Loved/ Turning The Town Red (#40)

Worth mentioning that Locomotion by OMD was at #41 this week…..

Talking Loud & Clear is one that has grown on me a little bit over the years, albeit I wasn’t all that keen on it back in the day as mid-temp electro-pop wasn’t really my thing. It eventually reached #11, which illustrates I was out of touch with the record-buying public that summer.

Elvis’s record company went with a double-A sided single.  I Wanna Be Loved was a cover version of an obscure 1973 b-side by Teacher’s Edition, a little-known US soul group, and seemed a strange choice at the time.  A week or so later, the album Goodbye Cruel World hit the shops when it became clear that almost all of the Costello originals penned for the album were not exactly tailor-made singles.  The flip side was a stand-alone song that had been written as the theme tune for Scully, a seven-part drama/comedy series broadcast on Channel 4 in May/June 1984, set in Liverpool and in which Elvis Costello had a minor but re-occurring part as the brother of the main character. It probably helped sales to some extent as the single, which is far from one of Costello’s best, peaked at #25.

mp3: Associates – Those First Impressions (#52)

Two long and difficult years had passed since the Associates had seemingly come to an end when Alan Rankine quit.  Billy Mackenzie soldiered on under the band name, but to all intent and purposes, he was riding solo with a few session musician friends to help him out.  The record label weren’t happy with what was being written and recorded, and Billy was utterly miserable.  Those First Impressions got to #43. None of the subsequent singles ever got that close to the Top 40. The Top of the Pop era was well and truly over.

17-23 June

The height of summer. The single chart was a tad moribund. The highest new entry came from Pointer Sisters, in at #24 with Jump (For My Love).  Urgh.

It’s a chart that saw the return of Gary Glitter after a number of years away as he and his band hit the university circuit , cashing-in on the fact that much of his original pre-pubescent audience were now propping up student unions up and down the country.  I know this becuse he played Strathclyde a few times..  Urgh.

A couple of half-decent pop songs arrived further down the chart:-

mp3: The Bluebells – Young At Heart  (#54)
mp3: Alison Moyet – Love Resurrection (#55)

Young At Heart was the second hit of the year for The Bluebells.  It was radically different cover of a song that had originally been written and recorded by Bananarama for their 1983 debut album Deep Sea SkivingRobert Hodgens of the Bluebells had helped with the writing having, at the time, been the boyfriend of Siobhan Fahey. The Bluebell take on things, which was credited soley to Hodgens and Fahey – went onto reach #8 in late July, at which point I don’t think anyone would have imagined that nine years later, having been used to soundtrack a car commercial, it would be re-released and reach #1.

Alison Moyet was embarking on a solo career after Vince Clarke had called it a day on Yazoo.  It wasn’t anticipated that she would continue down the electro route, and it was no surprise that she was teamed up with songwriters whose main focus was the pop market, with a nod to AOR.  I’m not actually that fond of much that she did, and indeed continues to do, in her solo career, but I’ve always had a chuckle that her debut single, which went Top 10, deals with erectile dysfunction.

24- 30 June

I mentioned last month how there had been a negative recation to the Human League‘s comeback single The Lebanon.  The record label obviously felt that a rush-release of the follow-up might act as a bit of a distraction:-

mp3: The Human League – Life On Your Own (#29)

A bit more akin to the sound with which they had shot to fame and made much fortune, but there was still something of a muted response among the critics and the fans.  In time, this would reach #16, but this was a long way short of what everyone was expecting, given the enormous bills run uop in various studios over the years.  To illustrate how big the dip was in popularity, Dare back in 1981/82 sold not far short of 1 million copies.  Hysteria, which had now been in the shops for a month by the time Life On Your Own was released, would ship around just over 10% of that number.

mp3: Prince & The Revolution – When Doves Cry (#44)

After many years of critical acclaim but next to no commercial success in the UK, Prince had made a breakthrough with the album 1999, which spawned two huge hit singles via the title track and Little Red Corvette.  Two years down the line, and the industry was buzzing with what was coming next in the shape of an album/soundtrack to a much-anticiapted film, Purple Rain, based on the life and times of the musician and in which he would star.  When Doves Cry was the first single to be lifted from the new album, and by late July, it was sitting at #4 while the album was Top 20.  The film was released at the end of July – it had cost $7.2 million to make and it grossed $70.3 world-wide at the box office.  The album would go onto spend 63 weeks in the UK charts, sellling 600,000 copies.  Across the world, the album would sell 25 million copies, over half being in the USA.

It’s fair to say that Prince was a big a global superstar as anyone in the mid-80s, but he never was as big a favourite in Villain Towers as the frontman of our next song:-

mp3: The Mighty Wah! – Come Back (#53)

As mentioned earlier, Billy Mackenzie had gone through a misearble time with WEA Records in the mid 80s.  So too, had Pete Wylie.  He escaped to Beggars Banquet and wrote the sort of song those at WEA had been pleading for in vain.  It was the proverbial two-fingered salute. This is another that Dirk has included in his 111 singles series, doing so last July.  Click here for a reminder of what he had to say.

There was a ying to the yang that Wylie brought to this week’s chart.

Aga-fucking-doo came in this week at #66.  It would hang around the Top 75 for 30 weeks, right through over Christmas and into early 1985,  Maybe when people suggest that the 80s were among the worst decades for pop music, they are thinking of Black Lace.  I know I have something of a mantra that there is no such thing as shit music, just a difference in tastes….but for Agadoo and ‘party/novelty’ songs of its ilk, I have to make an exception.  It is music with any merits whatsoever.

My take on June 1984 is that I had a great time of it socially, and indeed I was gearing up to hit the railways of Europe over the summer months.  Musically, the charts were a bit shit with the odd exception while politically, it was a shambles; astonishingly, on both fronts, we hadn’t reached rock-bottom.

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!

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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

BONUS POST : ADDITIONAL WYLIE

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Not too long ago, I posted a review of the Pete Wylie and The Mighty Wah! gig at King Tut’s in Glasgow.  In truth, it was a hurried review, piggybacked onto a review of a gig by Yard Act a few days later, and I didn’t really do it justice.

I’ve finally been catching up with lots of things that have been written at some of my favourite blogs these past weeks – the trip to Vienna and a few other things to deal with on my return resulted in me missing out a fair bit at the time – and I was delighted that Adam over at Bagging Area posted a much more detailed review of Pete’s show in Manchester.  Please click here to have a read.

Adam arrived slightly late and missed a couple of songs, including Come Back, one of the few hits in Pete’s back catalogue, and which he seems to be airing as the second tune in the current tour.  I thought, as a way of thanking Adam for his review, that I’d return to part of a TVV posting from back in October 2015, when I wrote about the three chart hits under the heading of ‘BIG, BOOMING AND MEMORABLE’

1983 : Come Back

“Pete was infamous for being a bit of a gobshite who loved to spout opinions about everyone and everything, and an unwillingness to play by the record industry rules and regulations. Nevertheless, he was regarded as such a talent that WEA, the biggest label in the world at the time, signed him up after The Story of The Blues. He delivered an album that horrified them, and they refused to release it, and in doing so nullified the recording contract.

In due course the album was partially re-recorded and eventually released on Beggars Banquet as A Word To The Wise Guy. There was a Top 20 hit single from it, released in a number of formats including this 12″ version:-

mp3 : The Mighty Wah! – Come Back (The Story Of The Reds)/The Devil In Miss Jones (combined and extended)
mp3 : The Mighty Wah! – Come Back! (The Return of the Randy Scouse Git)
mp3 : The Mighty Wah! – From Disco Dicko to A Kid in Care

This was an almighty two fingers gesture to WEA. It was the big sound they had demanded of the album but only provided after Wylie had gone to pastures new…and in the b-side version the lyrics were altered to enable a sideways swipe at WEA singers and bands who were enjoying regular chart success.”

I’ll throw in the 7″ edit of the song for good measure, along with the b-side as a stand-alone track in additional to how it was offered up on the 12″:-

mp3 : The Mighty Wah! – Come Back (7″ edit)
mp3 : The Mighty Wah! – The Devil In Miss Jones

The Randy Scouse Git has a biting lyric, one that Pete must have had great fun composing.  I can’t find them anywhere on t’internet, but I’ve done my best to work them out, albeit there are a couple of gaps.

Well did you ever hear of hope?
A small belief can mean relief when troubles start
Well did you ever hear of faith?
Encouragement, development,
and it’s all up to you, yes it’s all up to you

Come Back! It’s been over a year
Come Back! When you’re gone I’ll be here
Come Back! Well, it is your career
Come Back
Come Back! Howard Jones can have hits
Come Back! The Pretenders have hits
Come Back! even The Truth can have hits
Come Back!

We’ll get to shoot some videos
We’ll bribe the shops ? change
Cos money talks
We’ll get you on the Sooty show
Exposure is ???
And Annabel Lamb..it’s a battering ram

Come Back! It’s been over a year
Come Back! When you’re gone I’ll be here
Come Back! Well, it is your career
Come Back
Come Back! Howard Jones can have hits
Come Back! The Pretenders have hits
Come Back! even The Truth can have hits
Come Back!

There’s then an outro in which the wall of sound production makes it difficult to work out all the names being shouted, but there’s certainly mention of Aztec Camera and Yes among others.

Feel free to offer up suggestions as to who is missing (or if I’ve got things badly wrong!!!).

JC

AFTER COPE THEN McCULLOCH….IT HAD TO BE WYLIE ON FRIDAY

wylie

The best summary of Pete Wylie that I’ve ever read appeared in a piece in The Guardian just over 12 months ago:-

Pete Wylie was one of John Peel’s pet projects. He’d been one of the legendary (and barely existent) Liverpool group the Crucial Three with Julian Cope and Ian McCulloch before those two formed the Teardrop Explodes and Echo and the Bunnymen respectively. Wylie formed Wah! Or rather, with a grasp of how to succeed in the music business that fell far short of his grandiose ambition, he formed Wah!, Wah! Heat, Shambeko Say! Wah!, Wah! The Mongrel, JF Wah! He got a major label, he released an album with the please-don’t-buy-this title Nah = Poo! – The Art of Bluff, he had a hit single with The Story of the Blues, he lost the major label deal. Through it all was a sense of a character who felt destined to be a star, and who had imagined the whole process from start to finish, with the possible exception of the bits in which he knuckled down and did what aspirant stars have to do: kissing label arses; doing the meet-and-greets; being a good boy.

The bio on the official website describes him as ‘part time rock star – full-time legend’ and reminds us that he has been behind some epic chart hits in our lifetime with the likes of Story of The Blues, Sinful and Come Back, the 12″ versions of which all have a place in the cupboard full of vinyl.

What I also think is well worth a read are the words of Wylie on how Story of The Blues became a hit:-

I started re-checking the Chilites doing this beautiful, very direct, emotional thing & around the same time saw Alan Bleasdale’s ‘BOYS FROM THE BLACKSTUFF’; it made powerful political points by connecting emotionally, by dealing with the human costs of the day + MOTOWN WALKER BROTHERS etc all kicked in like long-lost family – we brought in mike HEDGES as producer (I love and love his work with the Associates, who during the recording brought in the most ale I’d seen at that point, and we ‘watched’ Scotland v Brazil, 82 world cup – love ya Billy). I programmed drumbox, arranged, played guitar, piano even – WEA thought BIGTIME; PEELE & JENSEN hammered it on Radip 1, the world breathed a sigh of indifference. Then, months after release, dead on its feet, we got a call; Granada TV were doing a Christmas show, Duran or such has been collared doing something shady, they needed a replacement quick and we were the nearest group; we did the show (first WAH! TV goes pop); in the make-up (MAKE-UP!) room Bet Lynch took a look at my quiff and said ‘OOH I haven’t seen one that big for years” I worw a tux (Like when ELVIS sang with SINATRA). The show aired Christmas day, the shops opened soon after and we humbly took our place in the nation’s charts – 6 MONTHS OF DOOM THEN BOOM! And it all got very different

mp3 : Wah! – The Story of The Blues (Part 1)

A rather less polished version was later recorded on 22 August 1984 for the John Peel Show:-

mp3 : The Mighty Wah – Basement Blues/Story Of The Blues

One of my other favourite Pete Wylie things was written in 1989:-

mp3 : Big Hard Excellent Fish – Imperfect List

It’s a spoken-word track is a list of his most hated people and things read by Josie Jones. Fast forward to 2004 and that very track was used as the opening salvo in Morrissey’s gig at the Manchester Arena (which myself and Mrs Villain managed to pick up tickets for!) and subsequently can be found on the DVD Who Put the M in Manchester?

And finally, here’s a rare chance to listen to Pete’s vocal contribution in 1990 to the original hardcore near nine minute version of a track that would be re-recorded and become a hit single a year later :-

mp3 : The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu (feat Pete Wylie) – It’s Grim Up North

Enjoy.