C86 : THE ULTIMATE SERIES (Parts 2, 3 and 4 of 114)

First of all…..many thanks for the positive responses to the idea of this series.  It has to be said that not all the 114 songs that will be featured over the coming months  have aged well….and indeed a number of them were pretty awful to begin with, but then again taste is subjective!!!

Three more today, but thankfully all of them pass the litmus test here in Villain Towers.

Another Sunny Day was the name used by multi-instrumentalist and vocalist, Harvey Williams, who hails from Cornwall in the far south-west of England. He was one of the first to join the then fledgling, and later to become famous, Sarah Records, based in Bristol.  Between 1988 and 1992, he would release five singles on the label and one other for the Caff Corporation, a boutique label run by Bob Stanley, with each single usually getting a very limited run of around 500 copies. This was the debut:-

mp3: Anorak City – Another Sunny Day

Track 8, Disc 1 of CD86.

SARAH 3.  A flexidisc, released in April 1988 and given away with SARAH 4, a 22-page fanzine. Second-hand copies of Anorak City, if and when they appear on the market, go for upwards of £200.  Just as well, then, that the song has been included on a number of subsequent compilations.

Harvey Williams would later join The Field Mice, Blueboy and Trembling Blue Stars, all of whom were hugely popular bands on Sarah Records or its successor label, Shinkansen Recordings.  He also recorded two solo albums in the 90s.

Anorak City is a wonderful song, albeit, like many from the era, is of its time and place; but then again, that’s largely the entire point about TVV and particularly this series.  I’ll leave the discovery of new bands to others……(insert smiley face emoji!!!!!!!!!!!!).

 

Yeah Yeah Noh are from Leicester and were originally around between 1983 and 1986, before reforming in 2011.  The band was initially signed to In-Tape Records, a label from Sale, just outside of Manchester, which was owned and run by Marc Riley, best known at the time as a past member of The Fall.  The band and would go on to release five singles and one studio album and in 1984 and 1985.

mp3: Another Side To Mrs Quill – Yeah Yeah Noh

Track 2, Disc 2 of C86 The Deluxe 3CD Edition.

Their fourth single for In-Tape in 1985.  It reached #10 in the Indie singles chart.  The band, after reforming, would re-record the song in 2014.  I’ve had a listen to the update version over at their bandcamp page, and whisper it…..I prefer the 2014 recording, especially as some of the vocal delivery reminds me of Cathal Coughlan.

A few things to mention.  Yeah Yeah Noh were first mentioned on the blog last year, thanks to their inclusion on a guest compilation mix from Leon McDuff.  The band remain very much on the go, gigging and in the process of recording and releasing a new album. They are part of the line-up at the 2026 Leicester Indiepop Festival taking place on 28 February/1 March.

Oh, and Sale, the base for In-Tape Records, is also home to our great friend Adam, whose Bagging Area blog is an essential read on a daily basis.

 

The Wolfhounds are from Romford, on the outskirts of London, and were originally around between 1985 and 1990, before reforming in 2005.  The band was signed firstly to the London-based The Pink Label for whom there would be three singles and one album in 1986/87 before moving to Midnight Music, based in Watford, on the outskirts of London, with two singles and three albums across 1989-90.

They are one of a number of bands who will make more than one appearance in the series, and today’s offering is an absolute belter of a song.  It was their second single for The Pink Label, released in September 1986 and which would reach #6 in the Indie Charts.

mp3: The Anti-Midas Touch – The Wolfhounds

The Wolfhounds have released three studio albums since reforming, the most recent being in 2020.

JC

WHEN THE CLOCKS STRUCK THIRTEEN (October Pt 2)

October 1984.  As we have previously seen, a seriously underwhelming month in respect of decent songs making the Top 75 of the UK singles chart.  Hopefully, the indie labels offered up a few things that were more palatable.

mp3: The Brilliant Corners – My Baby’s In Black

The third single of the year from one of Bristol’s finest ever combos.  Commercial success would evade them throughout their career, which lasted until 1993.  Lead singer and principal songwriter Davey Woodward is still very much on the go today, and his latest album Mumbo In The Jumbo, which is a very fine collection of tunes, was released earlier this year on Last Night From Glasgow.  Click here for more info.

mp3: Dali’s Car – The Judgement Is The Mirror

This should have actually appeared in the chart show edition of this series, as it had come in at #69 in the final week of October before peaking at #66.  Big things were expected of Dali’s Car, whose three members were Pete Murphy, Mick Karn and Paul Vincent Lawford, with the first two named having been in Bauhaus and Japan, respectively.  But they split after this, their only single, as well as subsequent album The Waking hour, sold poorly.

mp3: Devo – Are You Experienced?

In which the American new-wavers offer their take on a 1967 song written and recorded by Jimi Hendrix.  And here was me thinking that their earlier 1977 take on Satisfaction by the Rolling Stones offered a different take on the original….

mp3: The Fall – No Bulbs 3

The Fall again defy convention by insisting that the record label, Beggars Banquet, issue a new album along with a new single.  But not just in any bog-standard way, as the new single was to come out on 12″ vinyl, accompanied by a free 7″ single.  The new album was called The Wonderful and Frightening World Of….and it contained nine tracks with a running time of just over 40 minutes.

The 12″ goes by the title Call For Escape Route, and contains three songs – Draygo’s Guilt, No Bulbs and Clear Off!.  The bonus 7″ contains No Bulbs 3 and Slang King.  I could happily have selected any of the five songs, but in the end No Bulbs 3 won out in what was a lucky draw.  The full version of No Bulbs extends to a few seconds short of eight minutes while the edited down version, given the title of No Bulbs 3, is around four-and-a-half minutes long.

mp3: Hurrah! – Who’d Have Thought

One of the first bands to sign to Kitchenware Records, this was their third single for the label, and it made it to #7 in the Indie Chart.  It’s kind of indie-by-numbers and quite different from their better known label mates Prefab Sprout, The Daintees and The Kane Gang.  I saw them a few times back in the day, and while I really wanted to fall for their charms as I loved the label they were on, they never quite ticked all my boxes.

mp3: The Men They Couldn’t Hang – The Green Fields of France

A folk/punk band who kind of emerged from the busking scene.  They were initially closely aligned with The Pogues, playing gigs alongside them, with bassist Shanne Bradley having been in The Nipple Erectors alongside Shane McGowan. There’s also the possibility that the group name The Men They Couldn’t Hang emerged from one of McGowan’s early ideas for what eventually became The Pogues.

The Green Fields of France was the debut single, a song written by Eric Bogle, whose And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda had earlier in the year been covered by The Pogues.  It was a version much championed by John Peel, and despite being released quite late on in the year, it still gained enough votes to make #3 in the Festive Fifty of 1984, just behind How Soon Is Now? by The Smiths and Pearly Dewdrops Drop by the Cocteau Twins.

mp3: The Pastels – Million Tears

The band’s second 45 for Creation Records is a fabulous jingly-jangly number. It was released on 12″ vinyl, and copies fetch a decent price on the second-hand market these days.  I don’t have a copy, sadly.  Million Tears is one of two songs on the A-side of the 12″.  The best-known track, at least nowadays, was tucked away on the b-side.

mp3: The Pastels – Baby Honey

Running to almost 7 minutes in length, it’s a song that has featured on quite a few indie compilations over the subsequent years.  An absolute gem of a track.

mp3: Yeah Yeah Noh – Beware The Weakling Lines

A band who featured on the September one-hour mix thanks to the guest posting on In Tape Records from Leon MacDuff.  As Leon said, “Yeah Yeah Noh really ought to have a post to themselves at some point. Leicester’s finest musical export of the era (well OK, maybe tied with The Deep Freeze Mice), their time as an active group was brief but mighty: In Tape issued a string of EPs and a full album of their witty, lyrical lo-fi “unpop”, and their self-deprecating “Bias Binding” (“Yeah Yeah Noh, so full of ourselves / Not a real band, done no video elpee”) made JP’s Festive Fifty. They were ace.”

This was their second single of 1984, with the catalogue number of IT 010.  And given I missed out back in June with their debut, and it’s catalogue number of IT 008, I’ll take this opportunity to rectify matters:-

mp3: Yeah Yeah Noh – Cottage Industry

And that, my friends, wraps things up for this month.  It wasn’t too shabby, was it?

 

JC