NEXT YEAR’S NOSTALGIA FEST (Part 20 of 48)

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There’s a few folk who would make a case for this being the best song of the 48 which appear on CD 86:-

mp3 : The Bodines – Therese

I for one wouldn’t argue as it sounds as if Julian Cope is fronting an energetic and lively Orange Juice which is a recipe for unadulterated magnificence.

The Bodines were from Glossop in the north-west of England not all that far from Manchester.  Featuring Mike Ryan on vocals, Paul Brotherston on guitar, Tim Burtonwood on bass with Paul Lilley on drums (only for the debut single before he was replaced by John Rowland), they were very quickly snapped up by Creation Records for whom they released three singles, the second of which was Therese, with these as the b-sides:-

mp3 : The Bodines – I Feel
mp3 : The Bodines – Scar Tissue

The song was also part of the original C86 tape.

They signed to Magnet Records at the beginning of 1987 which is where and when things badly unravelled. A new mix of Therese flopped as did a follow-up single and their debut album despite the continued support from many supporters in the music press with next to no play for their songs o mainstream radio. And before the year was out, their label had lost faith with the band and so it was no surprise that they split up.

A very brief reformation came in 1989 for a one-off single on a small Manchester-based label and that was that until 2010 when Cherry Red Records re-released the long out-of-print debut album, Played,with a few bonus tracks thrown in. It’s a record that come highly recommended by your humble scribe.

Here’s a bonus of the re-released version of Therese with b-sides from a 2 x 7″ bundle thrown in:-

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mp3 : The Bodines – Therese (new mix)
mp3 : The Bodines – Heard It All
mp3 : The Bodines – Clear (live)
mp3 : The Bodines – God Bless (live)
mp3 : The Bodines – I Feel (live)
mp3 : The Bodines – William Shatner (live)

And finally, an extended mix made available on the Cherry Red reissue:-

mp3 : The Bodines – Therese (extended mix)

Enjoy

THIS WAS STUCK TO THE FRONT PAGE OF A MAGAZINE (8d)

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Concluding the look back at Ruby Trax.  Here’s songs 31-40:-

Sunny Afternoon   #1 for The Kinks in 1966, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Bob Geldof

If Ruby Trax had come out a few years later then I’m certain this would have been handed to anyone of a number of Britpop acts who would have been thrilled to have a go.  Instead, it was the responsibility of the ex-Boomtown Rat and Live Aid founder which made a bit of sense as his vocal style isn’t too dissimilar from Ray Davies.  It’s a song I love and having initially not been convinced of this cover I’m happy to admit I’ve slowly been won over.

Tainted Love  #1 for Soft Cell in 1981, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Inspiral Carpets

A song originally written and released in 1965, the Inspiral Carpets do a cracking job in turning it into something they can rightly claim as their own as it owes nothing to either Gloria Jones or Marc Almond/David Ball.

The Good, The Bad and The Ugly  #1 for Hugo Montenegro in 1968, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Johnny Marr & Billy Duffy

Nope….it’s not a misprint on my part.  The tune, famously composed by Ennio Morricone, was taken to #1 two years after the movie’s release with a cover version.  It is a tune that it is instantly recognisable and has been used so often as the backdrop to scenes set in the American desert in popular culture this past near fifty years.

Johnny Marr teams up with his old gunslinger partner of days of old and between them they deliver something quite remarkable and astonishing.  It sounds at times like a Smiths instrumental and at times like an Electronic outtake and at other times it is unmistakably Ennio Morricone.  And it lasts twice as long as the original version. I love it…..

The Legend of Xanadu   #1 for Dave Dee, Dozy, Mick and Titch in 1968, it was covered for Ruby Trax by The Fall

A strange song to begin and so it’s a bit disappointing that this was the one allocated to or chosen by Mark E Smith.  A band that could be so inventive with their own material or indeed cover versions and this sounds as if they are just going through the motions. Disappointingly dull.

The Model   #1 for Kraftwerk in 1982, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Ride

Yup. Ride.  The kings of shoegazing do all electronic on us.

Remember back in part one of the series I mentioned how Tears for Fears did something akin to a 1970s Top of The Pops take on Ashes to Ashes? Well….the same thing could very much be levelled at Ride even down to what at times sounds as if they are trying to replicate the broken-English vocals from Kraftwerk.

The difference of course is that this is Ride as you’ve never heard them before and it is so unexpected that it borders on the brilliant.  Go on, play it someone who doesn’t know they ever covered this song and I bet it will take them hours to come up with the right answer.

Vienna   #2 for Ultravox in 1982, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Vic Reeves

The only non #1 on Ruby Trax.  If you enjoy the surreal and occasionally childish humour of Vic Reeves then you’ll appreciate this comedic take on the po-faced hit single.  It comes with totally different lyrics across the verses and it very much et the template for the impressionist round in the TV series Shooting Stars when it first aired in 1995

Voodoo Chile   #1 for Jimi Hendrix in 1970, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Jesus Jones

Jesus Jones, even back in 1992, were not to everyone’s tastes and well also deemed guilty by many of having sold out to American audiences and so it was a brave move on their part to take such a well-known track by of the American guitar gods and put their own mark on proceedings.  It is a radical re-working of the song and on an album where quite a few played it safe they must be applauded.  But I’m not sure that it actually works….

When Will I See You Again?   #1 for The Three Degrees in 1974, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Billy Bragg

There’s something very ironic that Billy covers a track from a group that was widely reported to be the favourite of the 20-something Prince Charles.  I love Billy Bragg to bits….I’ll even find a way to defend his ‘weaker’ solo records but this is just awful.

Where Do You Go To My Lovely?   #1 for Peter Sarstedt in 1969, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Welfare Heroine

I had to dig deep to get the info on this cover.  The original I knew told the tale of Marie-Claire who, having grown up in poverty in Naples, has somehow become a member of the jet set and living in some style in Paris.  It owed a lot of its success to the very French sounding accordion and that there was a lot of love in the air for the songs of Serge Gainsbourg and if it hadn’t been for the fact that a follow-up single went Top 10 a few months later then Peter Sarstedt would have been a very clear one-hit wonder.

But who were Welfare Heroine?

If you go into Discogs you’ll find music released under that name that can be attributed to an Oakland-based composer Joseph Hornoff.  But the Ruby Trax lot have nothing to do with him.

Instead this was a band, fronted by NME writer Dele Fadele, accompanied on guitar by a photographer called Stefan de Batselier and backed by members of This Mortal Coil.   It would seem this is all they ever got down for commercial release.  And it’s not at all shabby.

World Without Love    #1 for Peter & Gordon in 1964, it was covered for Ruby Trax by World Party

A Paul McCartney song, that he wrote at the age of 16, that was rejected a number of years later for The Beatles by John Lennon.  But such was their pulling power that a sub-standard track hit #1 on 23 April 1964 bringing an end the three-week reign of Can’t Buy Me Love…….

World Party, who were riding high at the time in critical terms without ever really making a huge commercial breakthrough, do a very competent take on it making it sound very much like a song of their own.

mp3 : Bob Geldof – Sunny Afternoon
mp3 : Inspiral Carpets – Tainted Love
mp3 : Johnny Marr & Bily Duffy – The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
mp3 : The Fall – The Legend Of Xanadu
mp3 : Ride – The Model
mp3 : Vic Reeves – Vienna
mp3 : Jesus Jones – Voodoo Chile
mp3 : Billy Bragg – When Will I See You Again?
mp3 : Welfare Herione – Where Do You Go To My Lovely?
mp3 : World Party – World Without Love

And that brings an end to this look back at Ruby Trax.

Normal service resumes next week.

THIS WAS STUCK TO THE FRONT PAGE OF A MAGAZINE (8c)

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Returning to look back at Ruby Trax.  Here’s songs 21-30:-

Maggie May  #1 for Rod Stewart in 1971, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Blur

It’s hard to imagine now but Blur would only have been an afterthought in terms of who was most sought after for appearing on Ruby oTrax.  They had enjoyed some success with the debut LP the previous year but their most recent single Popscene had bombed somewhat and the live shows were playing to half empty venues.  It’s no surprise therefore that the cover version feels a bit limp and half-hearted from a band that was very low on confidence.

Mr Tambourine Man   #1 for The Byrds in 1965, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Teenage Fanclub

A cover of a cover.

The Byrds had taken a Bob Dylan song and reduced it in length from five-and-a-half minutes to less than two-and-a-half minutes by cutting out most of the original versus.  The Fannies stick with a very faithful take on the shorter version of the song which is no real surprise given how much of an influence the 60s Rickenbacker guitar sound had on the band’s most recent material which had been hailed as the next great thing by the critics.  Great stuff if you like Teenage Fanclub but probably not much cop if you’re not a fan.

My Sweet Lord  #1 for George Harrison in 1971, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Boy George

A cover of a cover??

Being a young kid, not quite eight years of age, this is one of the first musical memories I have from listening to the radio which was mostly done first thing in the morning on the way to school or on Sundays when there was no television programmes to like.  It appealed to the kid in me but within a number of years as I developed my own tastes in music I grew to dislike it immensely. And given that I still find it rather awful to listen to and throw in my view that Boy George is another whose talents I consider to be hugely overrated then this is one that I’m glad the day the skip button was invented.

Oh and of course the reason for the question up above is that Harrison was later found, in what was very much a test case, to have infringed copyright law by plagiarising He’s So Fine, a hit for The Chiffons back in 1963.

Ring My Bell : #1 for Anita Ward in 1979, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Tori Amos

This is another one of the big surprises on the album.

The original was a lightweight disco hit that had owed much to of its success to what in the day had been innovative chimes and electronic drums with a lyric that was actually written for an 11-year old teenybop artist about teenagers talking all the time on the phone.

Tori Amos provides what can only be described as a very adult performance loaded with sexual innuendo and delivered in a way that leaves you in no doubt that this is one very horny lady ready to pounce on her man. Think Kathleen Turner in BodyHeat….

Rock Your Baby   #1 for George McCrae in 1974, it was covered for Ruby Trax by The House Of Love

A second successive disco number for your enjoyment and again it is turned inside out and almost out of all recognition.  There’s still that disco beat in the background but its given the indiepop treatment and turned into something which was very contemporary for 1992.

If it wasn’t for the fact that the song is one of the biggest selling of all time in terms of worldwide sales – 11 million physical copies of the single saw it reach #1 in countless countries – then you’d probably have taken it for a House of Love original.

Secret Love  #1 for Doris Day in 1954, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Sinead O’Connor

From the movie soundtrack Calamity Jane, the original was a ballad that would later be re-recorded in a really upbeat style in 1964 and go Top 3 for Kathy Kirby, one of the most famous mainstream female singers of that era in the UK. Over the [ast 50 years it has also been covered in many different styles including pop, disco, classical, folk, country and soul, by all sort of singers of both sexes.  Sinead takes us down the swing route and is more than decent if that sort of sound floats your boat.

Shaddap You Face   #1 for Joe Dolce Music Theatre in 1981, it was covered for Ruby Trax by EMF

Taken to #1 in more than ten countries by an American-born singer who just two years previously had moved to Australia and yet I bet most folk will think it was the work of an Italian trying to sing in a non-native language.  There is so much just wrong with the whole notion of this song – here in the UK we now cringe at some of the ‘comedy’ and ‘variety’ of the 70s and 80s where actors blacked up and adopted accents in the name of entertainment – and it’s not really different here.

It is totally unrecognisable in the hands of EMF, a band that were at the forefront of efforts in the UK to mix dance/techno with rock and pop.  They weren’t everyone’s cup of tea but I was an admirer if not a committed fan.

Show You The Way To Go  #1 for The Jacksons in 1977, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Danni Minogue

The NME has always had an annoying habit of grafting an unlikely pop icons onto its various releases and in this instance it was the youngest Minogue sister whose debut LP had hung around the pop charts for much of 1991 spawning five singles though when I look at the song titles I can’t recall any of them.

Seems apt then that the cover chosen was another song of which I had no recollection whatsoever. Even when I looked it up and read that it had been the only UK #1 for The Jacksons it still drew a blank. Looked it up on watched it on you tube….and nope, I’m still none the wiser.

Stranger In Paradise  #1 for Tony Bennett in 1955, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Saint Etienne

The song was written in 1953 as part of the Broadway stage musical Kismet which was turned into a film in 1955, the same year it came to London theatres.  Quite unbelievably, such was the public thirst for this song that six different versions charted hit the Top 20 in 1955, five of which were vocal efforts with the other an instrumental.

The original is very much of its age and so full credit to Saint Etienne for doing a reasonably modern take on it while remaining true to its roots.  Having said that, its one of the most disappointing songs on Ruby Trax as I was expecting so much more on the back of the band’s previous efforts at covers.

Suicide Is Painless  #1 for The Mash in 1980 it was covered for Ruby Trax by Manic Street Preachers

The story behind this song is quite astonishing.

It is of course the theme song for the movie and TV series M*A*S*H.  The film had been released in 1970 and the song was conceived initially for a scene in which Private Seidman would sing during the faux suicide of his colleague Private Waldowski.  The movie director, Robert Altman, insisted that the song had to be called Suicide Is Painless and that it had to be a stupid song to fit in with his vision for the scene. He had a go at writing something himself to fit with the tune composed by Johnny Mandel but having failed miserably he asked his 14-year old son to have a go…..it took Mike Altman all of five minutes according to folklore.

Ten years later, with the TV series at the height of its popularity, the song was given a belated single release in the UK and went to #1, the vocalists being four uncredited session singers from the day.

As mentioned the day before yesterday, this was the track chosen as a 45 to promote the album and it gave Manic Street Preachers their first experience of the Top 10.  Given that three years later Richie Edwards would disappear without a trace and then in 2008 be declared as presumed dead, it now looks as if it was a highly inappropriate choice of song to cover….but hindsight is a very easy thing to use.

mp3 : Blur – Maggie May
mp3 : Teenage Fanclub – Mr Tambourine Man
mp3 : Boy George – My Sweet Lord
mp3 : Tori Amos – Ring My Bell
mp3 : The House Of Love – Rock Your Baby
mp3 : Sinead O’Connor – Secret Love
mp3 : EMF – Shaddap You Face
mp3 : Danni Minogue – Show You The Way To Go
mp3 : Saint Etienne – Stranger In Paradise
mp3 : Manic Street Preachers – Suicide Is Painless

The fourth and final part of the series is here tomorrow

A LAST SECOND CHANGE OF PLAN

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Part 3 of Ruby Trax will have to wait. S-WC has an important few words to offer up:-

Ipod Friday – The Result

I guess that in the end Billy Bragg was right. I tried to mix pop and politics and ending up asking myself what the use is. The message was completely irrelevant. Partly because I didn’t give people the set list and by mistake stuck the ipod playlist on ‘shuffle’ instead of just play. So I wasted time trying to find cover versions by bands starting with ‘Y’.

Still the music went down well. In parts. I put a piece of paper on everyone’s desk with the question on it and that was that. They tried. Some obviously guessed. Philippa – one of the mumsy types put this “there are 38 all of them apart from Blue Monday and Yazoo are cover versions”.

Others, didn’t even try – One of the cool kids put “I don’t care, is it 6”.

My hipster boss got worryingly close, “27, and I love the Vaccines cover version and the Rolling Stones one” (I think he meant the Concretes version of Miss You).

David the Northern Soul guy won the Mars Bar – he said 24 – he was closest – I think he was using Shazam or Google though, still he made the effort and that’s what matters. He did ask for a copy of every song on the set list though as he thought it was the best selection (since his).

I guess what was good is that it did stimulate debate and some reaction. The Eels cover version of Get Ur Freak On provoked laughter. The Radiohead one started a lengthy debate as to who was most depressing Thom Yorke or Morrissey, which soon descended into a ‘Who is the Biggest Twat’ Argument Thom or Morrissey (Morrissey won on both questions by the way) and the Flaming Lips version of Can’t Get You Out of My Head was according to James, the token gay guy, ‘one of the worst things his ears have ever heard’, for what its worth I sort of agree with him. But almost certainly not for the same reasons I imagine.

This week on Friday we have Kelly, she has already told me she is doing back to back Usher, Maroon 5 and Prince. Luckily I have a prearranged meeting in Torquay to go to.  Torquay on a Friday morning is not much fun, but compared to three hours of Maroon 5 and Usher, its like a weekend at Keira Knightly’s house.

For those still wondering – there were 25 cover versions in the set list – well done to anyone who guessed it. Dirk you got closest on the comments – so I’ll send you an email in the next few days to get an address to send you almost a complete Bounty. On that subject – has anyone else noticed that you can no longer buy red Bounty bars, just the inferior blue ones. Probably just me.

Here are some of the other tracks from the set list that I didn’t post and as its cover version week on T(n)VV they are all cover versions. Perhaps. Oh and one I didn’t include on the set list but have included here because I happen to love it.

mp3 : alt-J – Lovely Day
mp3 : Angel Haze – Doo Wop That Thing
mp3 : Azealia Banks – Harlem Shake
mp3 : Crocodiles – Groove Is In The Heart
mp3 : Dinosaur Jr – Just Like Heaven
mp3 : I Monster – Daydream In Blue
mp3 : Levellers – The Devil Went Down To Georgia
mp3 : Major Laser (feat Elephant Man) – Halo
mp3 : Of Montreal – Fell In Love With A Girl

S-WC

JC adds…….Many thanks to S-WC for such a great set of posts and to everyone who joined in with the comments. I just couldn’t resist offering this up for those in his office who took part in the great philosophical debate last Friday:-

mp3 : Radiohead – The Headmaster Ritual

Enjoy.

THIS WAS STUCK TO THE FRONT PAGE OF A MAGAZINE (8b)

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Continuing with the look back at Ruby Trax.  Here’s songs 11-20:-

Down Down  #1 for Status Quo in 1975, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Cud

Cud were a much-loved outfit among the indie cognoscenti back in the early 90s. They had finally managed, after a number of years, to get onto a major label and with its backing crack the singles charts, albeit in the lower end of the charts rather than smash hits end.  I personally never fell for the charms of Cud and anything I have of theirs has come via inclusion of compilation albums or more recently from downloading via blogs.

I think their take on the famous 12-bar boogie hit Quo demonstrates where the problem lies.  It’ not that it’s a bad effort – it diverges enough to sound more like Cud than the Quo particularly with the occasional changes in pace – but not enough to warrant more than a couple of listens before becoming all too dull

Everything I Do (I Do It For You)    #1 for Bryan Adams in 1991, it was covered for Ruby Trax by The Fatima Mansions

The very inclusion of this song must have raised eyebrows.  It had spent 16 weeks at #1 in the UK the previous year and had become hugely symbolic of everything that was wrong with pop and chart music at that point in history.  It was a soppy, sentimental ballad that soundtracked a hit movie starring the then biggest box office draw in Hollywood.  Even when the radio stations stopped playing it, the sales still mounted up as folk came out of the cinema and headed the next day into the record shops.  To steal a phrase from my dear friends from the States….this song sucks.

So there was nobody better placed than Cathal Coughlan and his band of outlaws to offer their sleazy, jazz/hip-hop fusion take on it.  To steal it back from the tasteless rich and give it back to those in need of quality music. And it gave the band a Top 10 hit!!

Yup….to help publicise Ruby Trax it was decided to issue a 45 with Manic Street Preachers take on The Theme From M.A.S.H. selected for task. The Fatima Mansions were selected as the other track for the double-A release (knowing fine well that radio stations would completely ignore it!) but it enabled them to claim success…and in the same way that a few years previously when an MME charity single had put Wet Wet Wet on one side and an unexpected #1 placing for Billy Bragg.

Bloody Marvellous.

Go Now  #1 for The Moody Blues in 1965, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Tin Machine

I am so sorry that for completeness sake this has to be included.  It’s just downright awful.  It’s a live version, the vocal is from Tony Sales and it makes your ears bleed.

I Feel Love #1 for Donna Summer in 1977, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Curve

Going straight from the ridiculous to the sublime.  One of the greatest singles of all time….not that I immediately recognised that fact back in 1977….given a stunning goth disco makeover by a band that had just burst onto the scene but who would sadly never turn their talent and critical acclaim into commercial success.

Turn this one up loud and get dancing.

(If Paradise Is) Half As Nice  #1 for Amen Corner in 1969, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Aztec Camera & Andy Fairweather-Low

This is an interesting one.

Aztec Camera were long removed from their indie beginnings.  Roddy Frame was now increasingly writing and recording mature, acoustic numbers that were sometimes brilliant but all too often toppled over into what has since been described as dad-rock.  He had already tipped his hat to this song by writing and recording a song called Paradise on the hugely succesful Love album back in 1987 and for the charity recording he went two steps further – the first being to decide to cover the song that he had  referenced back in 1987 and the second to ask the man whose vocal had helped take it to #1 in 1969 to join him on the track.

The song was originally written in Italian where it had been a huge success and when translated into English became the fifth successive hit single for Amen Corner, a band from Cardiff in Wales who were all in their early 2os but played with a maturity that belied their years…..sort of similar to Mr Frame himself.

I’m A Believer #1 for The Monkees in 1967, it was covered for Ruby Trax by The Frank & Walters

Those of you who are an age with me will have grown up with The Monkees thanks to their shows being endlessly repeated during the couple of hours that BBC1 dedicated daily to children’s TV in the 70s – it was a period just when you got home from school and it stopped when the evening news came on.

All of their hit songs were therefore very well-known and none better than I’m A Believer, a track originally written and recorded by Neil Diamond.  It had been covered before its inclusion on Ruby Trax and it would be covered again by other singers and bands in later years.  It is also very much a staple of the karaoke scene.

It’s such a brilliantly simple composition that it is near impossible, provided you stick to the formula, to do anything wrong with it.  The Frank & Walters – another band who really deserved to be much more successful and famous than it turned out for them – give us a faithful enough interpretation to be enjoyable.

I’ve Never Been To Me #1 for Charlene in 1982, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Ned’s Atomic Dustbin

The original, which had been released in 1977 but only became a hit five years later after it what would be described today as going viral on the back of it being played constantly by a DJ at a radio station in Tampa, Florida.  The song, which is atypical of the playlists you find on easy-listening stations, proved to be a worldwide hit but the only success that Charlene ever experienced.  A genuine bona-fide one-hit wonder.

Ned’s Atomic Dustbin do all sorts of strange and occasionally wonderful things to the song and for 99% of the time it is completely unrecognisable.  Even the vocal doesn’t register for the most part.  And here’s the rub…it doesn’t even sound all that much like too many other tracks the band recorded during their career.

This was one that I thought I’d hate given the low regard I had for the original, but its one of my favourites on the compilation.

Lady Madonna  #1 for The Beatles in 1968, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Kingmaker

Back in 1992, Kingmaker appeared to be on the cusp of something big. They had picked up a sizeable following in the old-fashioned way of constant touring and were beginning to make an impact on the mainstream charts.  It made perfect sense therefore to have them on Ruby Trax and select them as the band to have a stab at a Beatles number…that they chose the one that had, within its title, the name of the biggest and most succesful pop artist in the world was probably a bit of an in-joke.

Like a number of other efforts on this compilation, the band played it reasonably safe with their interpretation and just about got away with something passable.  History shows however, that within three years the fickle world of indie pop had all but turned its back on Kingmaker.

Like A Prayer  #1 for Madonna in 1989, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Marc Almond

I can just imagine the sense of excitement in the NME offices when word came through that Madonna’s people were OK with one of her biggest hits being given the green light for Ruby Trax.  But how best to do justice to a song that was OTT in so many ways with its mix of pop, dance and gospel not to mention a still reasonably fresh controversy over a video that had depicted a racist murder by the Klu Klux Klan and the appearance of a black saint.

The answer was to send for Marc Almond who had a great history when it came to cover versions.  And he doesn’t disappoint adding more than a touch of soul and camp to the number so that it sounds like one own. And listen closely for the quick inclusion of The Theme From Mission Impossible that is thrown in at just after the 4 min mark…

Little Red Rooster  #1 for The Rolling Stones in 1964 , it was covered for Ruby Trax by The Jesus & Mary Chain

Fact: Little Red Rooster is the only time a blues song has topped the singles chart in the UK which it did for one week in December 1964.  It had originally been recorded three years earlier by Howlin’ Wolf and like many famous blues songs it contains a highly ambiguous lyric.  Yup, it could very well be innocent enough about a farmyard animal whose task was to waken every up as the sun rose, but then again the Rolling Stones version was banned from being released as a single in the USA….despite an earlier version by Sam Cooke being given the OK.  But then again, the Stones were the bad boys of rock’n’pop in those days….just as the JAMC had been when they had first burst onto the scene.

And the boys from East Kilbride more than do it justice with another of the best efforts on the album.

mp3 : Cud – Down Down
mp3 : The Fatima Mansions – Everything I Do (I Do It For You)
mp3 : Tin Machine – Go Now
mp3 : Curve – I Feel Love
mp3 : Aztec Camera & Andy Fairweather Low – (If Paradise) Is Half As Nice
mp3 : The Frank & Walters – I’m A Believer
mp3 : Ned’s Atomic Dustbin – I’ve Never Been To Me
mp3 : Kingmaker – Lady Madonna
mp3 : Marc Almond – Like A Prayer
mp3 : The Jesus & Mary Chain – Little Red Rooster

Feel free to drop in tomorrow for the next instalment of this short series.

 

THIS WAS STUCK TO THE FRONT PAGE OF A MAGAZINE (8a)

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I was always intending to have an in-depth look at the subject matter of today’s and the next few days worth of postings but it has been accelerated by many readers declaring their love for cover versions when S-WC asked for some help this time last week.

The NME celebrated 40 years of being at the forefront of music journalism in the UK with the release of Ruby Trax in November 1992.  Subtitled “The NME’s Roaring 40” It consisted of 40 cover versions of (mostly) #1 singles with many of the contributors being among the top indie bands of the time or indeed well established bona-fide chart acts with only a handful by a singer/band who never made it.

Ruby Trax was released in three formats: vinyl (3 x albums),  cassette (2 x tapes) and compact disc (3 x discs). I’ve no doubt that those responsible took great time to deliberate over the best running order but I’m going to blow all that out of the water over the next four days by taking ten tracks at a time and featuring them in alphabetical order by song title. Here’s your first ten…..

Another Brick In The Wall  #1 for Pink Floyd in 1979, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Carter USM.

Carter USM were one of the biggest bands in the UK in 1992 with a #1 LP under the belts as well as six successive Top 30 singles.  They turned this despairing rock classic into something which wouldn’t have been out-of-place on any of their own records…with a little bit of additional swearing to get you joining in. Unlike many of the other acts who got involved with Ruby Trax, Carter USM didn’t make the track available elsewhere on a b-side which meant their considerable fan base would have been forced to buy the album or CD, which given all the proceeds went to charity, was no bad thing.

Apache  #1 for The Shadows in 1960, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Senseless Things

An instrumental number (naturally given who took it to #1 back in the days), it’s a piece of music that you’ll find if you look up the wiki page, has been given the cover treatment on numerous occasions and in ways that seem intriguing. It’s a pity that this version, by a band whose star was on the wane by the time of its release, is very much on the dull side.

Ashes to Ashes  #1 for David Bowie in 1980, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Tears For Fears

It’s a bit of a pity that I’ve gone for the alphabetical approach one of the dullest versions is immediately followed by what is quite simply the most dreadful and appalling version.

Quite simply, this would fit perfectly one of those Top Of The Pops 1970s compilations that so many of us ‘fondly’ remember when, pre K-Tel Records, the only way to get affordable LPs offering the hits of the day was to buy a record in which session musicians did their best to recreate the sounds of the superstars. This particular cover version is ghastly…..a note for note (musically and vocally) awful tribute to Bowie.

Atomic   #1 for Blondie in 1980, it was covered for Ruby Trax by The Mission

While this version is very much recognisable as the mighty Atomic it’s not obvious that it is being performed by The Mission.  There’s nothing goth or rock about it and it almost feels a bit like the band were going through the motions for the sake of being on the charity record…but it is one of those songs that is worthy of a few listens to get a better picture.  It is quite a bit slower than the original and there’s some nice fiddly-electronics added in for good effect.  It’s certainly a lot better than the later version recorded by Sleeper for the Trainspotting soundtrack

Baby Come Back   #1 for The Equals in 1968, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Elektric Music

This is one of the most unusual takes of any of the songs covered on Ruby Trax.

Elektric Music was a new act for 1992 but it was the work of a very experienced and highly influential musician in the shape of Karl Bartos who had left Kraftwerk just a couple of years previously.  At the time it would have appeared quite a futuristic sounding number but it has rather dated over the past twenty-plus years, but if you can cast your mind back to the early 90s and listen to it in that context then you’ll probably enjoy it.

Bad Moon Rising   #1 for Creedence Clearwater Revival in 1969, it was covered for Ruby Trax by The Blue Aeroplanes

This is another song that has been widely covered in a variety of styles over the years but it is so famous in its original form that the new versions are usually found wanting.  The Blue Aeroplanes had been around for quite some time without ever really making any great inroads and their invitation to participate in this project does seem strange.  They do their own thing – i.e.. make a guitar-heavy song that could pass for a pub band doing a cover down a social club near you. They also made the track available on an EP release of their own in 1995.

Brass In Pocket  #1 for The Pretenders in 1980, it was covered for Ruby Trax by Suede

One of the great highlights of Ruby Trax.  That is of course if you’re a fan of Suede….if you’ve no time for that particular band you’ll probably have no time for it.  This was a band on the cusp of something very special on the back of just a couple of singles but they had a lead singer who was loved and loathed in equal measure.  Brett Anderson must have loved being given the chance to sing to the world that he was soooooo special.

Coz I Luv You  #1 for Slade in 1971, it was covered for Ruby Trax by The Wonder Stuff

The Wonder Stuff were also one of the biggest bands in the UK in 1992 – they were certainly one of the best live acts of the era. I’m guessing they wanted to cover Slade given that both bands hailed from the same area and had neither had ever hidden their pride of being from the Black Country in the West Midlands.

Both were bands that relied on a string instrument as a key part of their sound; indeed it was the electric violin as much as the glam-rock stomp chorus and fade-out that had made Coz I Luv You so massive back in the days – it is certainly a song that lodged in my memory as an 8-year old and I can sill sing along knowing all the words decades later. As such, it made perfect sense for The Stuffies, with their use of the talents of Martin Bell on the fiddle, to go with this song.

It won’t be to everyone’s tastes but I do have a soft spot for it.

Cumberland Gap  #1 for Lonnie Donegan in 1957, it was covered for Ruby Trax by The Wedding Present

In many ways, this cover is typically David Gedge as it is so unexpected.

Cumberland Gap was most likely written as a folk song in the late 19th century with its first known recording dating back as far as 1924.  All sorts of American folk and bluegrass artists, including Woody Guthrie, had put it down on record, but it only came to prominence in 1957 when Lonnie Donegan did a skiffle version that spent five weeks at the top of the charts.

The Wedding Present do a Wedding Present number on it.  And its all over in just 90 breathless seconds.

Don’t You Want Me   #1 for The Human League in 1981, it was covered for Ruby Trax by The Farm

The Farm had spent years languishing in obscurity before hitching a ride on the baggy train from 1989-1991 and enjoying a fair degree of chart success.  However, by the following year they were very much on the slide with their singles were failing to hit the Top 40, the critics rounding on them and their fans turning their attention elsewhere.

As they had a talented female co-vocalist in their line up at the time, it made sense to have a stab at what is still one of the most loved and recognisable pop hits of all time.  I personally think it sounds like a drunken couple having a laugh on the karaoke machine but I’m clearly in a minority as the band released it as a single that went Top 20 in the UK….the very last time The Farm would trouble the charts until a 2004 charity release of a remix of their big hit Altogether Now.

mp3 : Carter USM – Another Brick In The Wall
mp3 : Senseless Things – Apache
mp3 : Tears For Fears – Ashes To Ashes
mp3 : The Mission – Atomic
mp3 : Elektric Music – Baby Come Back
mp3 : The Blue Aeroplanes – Bad Moon Rising
mp3 : Suede : Brass In Pocket
mp3 : The Wonder Stuff – Coz I Luv You
mp3 : The Wedding Present – Cumberland Gap
mp3 : The Farm – Don’t You Want Me

The remainder of Ruby Trax will appear over the coming three days.

Enjoy

NEXT YEAR’S NOSTALGIA FEST (Part 19 of 48)

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A repeat post from exactly one year ago today:-

If you own a mint copy of today’s single, then make sure you continue to look after it lovingly. And maybe think about adding it to an insurance policy.

The first ever single release on Sarah Records was by The Sea Urchins. From wiki:-

The initial line-up of The Sea Urchins was James Roberts (vocals), Simon Woodcock (guitar), Robert Cooksey (guitar), Mark Bevin (bass), Bridget Duffy (tambourine, organ), and Patrick Roberts (drums).  Their first two releases were flexi discs given away with fanzines in 1987.  Bevin soon left, to be replaced by Darren Martin.

Their “Pristine Christine” single was the first Sarah Records release, and is highly coveted among vinyl record collectors. With the following year’s double-A-side “Solace”/”Please Rain Fall” they began to show more mod-rock influences. Both singles were successful in indie terms, but Sarah Records were unwilling to commit to an album, and Duffy and Martin left.

Woodcock took over on bass, with James Roberts adding guitar. The band released one more single for Sarah (“A Morning Oddyssey” in 1990), but disagreements about the next single saw them move on to Cheree Records, who issued “Please Don’t Cry” in 1991. The band split up in summer 1991.  Two albums were subsequently released; Sarah Records issued a compilation of the band’s material for the label, including the flexi-disc tracks, as Stardust in 1992, while Fierce Recordings issued a live album in 1994.

James Roberts, Cooksey, and Woodcock later formed the band Delta.  James Roberts, Patrick Roberts, and Robert Cooksey also formed The Low Scene.

It’s no exaggeration to say that the record is ‘highly coveted’ with the copies copy on Discogs having an asking price of over £250.  I don’t own a copy, and while it would be nice to, I’m happy enough that I have the song via one of the many CD86 style compilation CDs that have been released over the years:-

mp3 : The Sea Urchins – Pristine Christine

On thing to note is just how young all the band members were at the time this single was released – all of them were with just 17 or 18 years of age.  When I look around today at similarly aged kids of a number of friends, I find it a scary thought that such fresh and innocent faces would be  capable of such works of class.

——————–

And here’s the two completely gorgeous b-sides to said precious single:-

mp3 : Sea Urchins – Sullen Eyes
mp3 : Sea Urchins – Everglades

All in all, a fabulous three tracks with which to introduce yourselves to the world.  Deserved to be a mainstream pop success.

Enjoy

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #14 : ARMOURY SHOW

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The Skids had broken up back in early 1982 and the solo career of Richard Jobson had stalled. Two years on, and still only 24 years of age, he decided to try again and formed The Armoury Show with his mate Russell Webb (ex Skids) and John McGeoch and John Doyle both of whom had been integral to the sound of Magazine.

On paper it had a lot going for it but the three early singles – Castles In Spain, We Can Be Brave Again and Glory Of Love failed to hit the spot with the record buying public.  All three tracks were included on debut LP Waiting For The Floods in September 1985 while Castles In Spain was re-released on the back of some high-profile TV appearances and support slots for well-know bands.  All to no avail.

Two more singles followed in early 87 before the band called it a day.

Maybe the world wasn’t quite ready for a mid80s era Simple Minds tribute act….which may sound harsh but have a listen to this track from their one album to see what I’m getting at:-

mp3 : The Armoury Show – Kyrie

Enjoy.

 

 

 

I-POD FRIDAY

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SW-C has been back in touch re his i-pod Friday which takes place today. I hope none of his work colleagues read this as it will only spoil the surprise(s)

Ipod Fridays

So in the end I made a decision…I wanted to portray a message in the music that I selected. So with a selection of cover versions and some other tracks I spelt that message out.

I’m also turning my Ipod Friday into a quiz featuring a solitary question, I’m offering the prize of a Mars Bar for whoever gets closest. Here is the question: –

How many cover versions are there in my forty songs?

So here is the set list – and go on then – folks how many cover versions are there in this list (JC you are banned from entering as you know the answer), the closest guess gets a special prize which will be revealed later, I appreciate its hard without hearing all the tracks though. Oh and if anyone wants to take a guess at the message I was telling people, then please feel free to comment.

Dandy Warhols – Primary
Alabama 3 – Speed of the Sound of Loneliness
Vaccines – The Winner Takes It all
I Monster – Daydream In Blue
Dinosaur Jr – Just Like Heaven
Carter USM – Down In the Tube Station at Midnight
Azealia Banks – Harlem Shake
Major Lazer – Halo
Eels – Get Ur Freak On
Radiohead – Nobody Does It Better
Oasis – I am the Walrus
Number One Cup – Joe the Lion
Rolling Stones – Not Fade Away
Exlovers – Wicked Game
Angel Haze – Doo Wop (That Thing)
Levellers – The Devil Went Down to Georgia
Lemonheads – How Will I Know?
Yung – Imaginary Calls
Interpol – Specialist
Saint Etienne – Only Love Can Break Your Heart
Alt – J – Lovely Day
Flaming Lips – Can’t Get You Out of My Head
Ultrasound – Fame Thing
Chromatics – Ceremony
Kaiser Chiefs – Golden Skans
Isobel Campbell and Mark Lanegan – Black Mountain
New Fast Automatic Daffodails – Big
Girls Names – Zero Triptych
Astrid – Redground
Nai Harvest – Sick On My Heart
New Order – Blue Monday
Of Montreal – Fell In Love With A Girl
Yazoo – Situation
Idlewild – American English
New Kingdom – Mexico Or Bust
Glamorous Hooligan – Stoned Island Estate
Concretes – Miss You
Ultra Vivid Scene – Mercy Seat
Nirvana – All Apologies
Tilly and the Wall – Night of the Living Dead

As usual any comments you want to make about any of the choices are more than welcome.

mp3 : Dandy Warhols – Primary
mp3 : Vaccines – The Winner Takes It All
mp3 : Carter USM – Down In The Tube Station At Midnight
mp3 : Radiohead – Nobody Does It Better
mp3 : Interpol – Specialist
mp3 : Lemonheads – How Will I Know?
mp3 : Saint Etienne – Only Love Can Break Your Heart (A Mix of Two Halves)
mp3 : Flaming Lips – Can’t Get You Out Of My Head
mp3 : Isobel Campbell & Mark Lanegan – Black Mountain
mp3 : Glamorous Hooligan – Stoned Island Estate
mp3 : Concretes – Miss You

S-WC

THE ALTERED IMAGES SINGLES (4)

i_could_be_happy The huge success of Happy Birthday was more than maintained with the fourth single from Altered Images. I Could Be Happy, a brand new song, was almost like a nursery rhyme in its structure as Clare reels off three unrelated things that make her feel good about life – climbing a tall tree, heading over the sea to Skye or going for a lengthy dip in the River Nile.

But it turns out that she doesn’t want to do any of these things just for any sheer unadulterated joy; nope, these are all on her radar to let her bring a relationship to an end. It was, tune wise, also just about the simplest thing they had written and recorded so far and, thanks to a very crisp and clear production from Martin Rushent, it was unashamedly pop in its approach and style with the aim of getting regular radio play.

It was a record that had the feel and sound of a summer record and yet it was released in the depths of winter at the beginning of December 1981 at a time when the big hit single was still riding high in the charts. None of this mattered as I Could Be Happy proved to be every bit as enduring, spending twelve weeks in the charts including nine successive weeks in the Top 30, helped no doubt by some Top of the Pops appearances in which viewers could not have done anything other than be enchanted by Claire.  The single was released in 7″ and 12″ form.

7″

mp3 : Altered Images – I Could Be Happy

mp3 : Altered Images – Insects

As I mentioned the other week in the Saturday series, I’m a huge fan of Insects which is one of their most enduring songs; and depsite being one of their most ‘Banshees by numbers’ efforts it was Rushent and not Severin who was in the producer’s chair.

12″

mp3 : Altered Images – I Could Be Happy (extended)

mp3 : Altered Images – Disco Pop Stars

The use of 12″ vinyl to offer extended and remixed versions of the three minute pop single was becoming increasingly popular around this time. More often than not the extended versions didn’t work all that well and seemed to take aWay from the radio friendly versions – the likes of Soft Cell were very much an exception as they managed somehow to turn the 12″ single into an art form. Altered Images weren’t the worst offenders though and the 12″ of I Could Be Happy is bearable.

The bonus track on the 12″ made me laugh out loud at the time and still does. It’s a band re-production of the sinister flop debut single but in a way that makes it instantly disposable. And it’s not been down in any shape or form that would see it put on the turntables of any discotheque that I can think of.

Oh and I’d like to dedicate today’s post to Carlo Zanotti. Many thanks for your kind words of encouragement and appreciation the other night at the Belle & Sebastian post-gig bash at The Admiral.

Enjoy

IN PRAISE OF….. DENMARK

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Another quality and imaginative contribution from S-WC.

In a few weeks’ time Mrs S-WC, Princess S-WC and I are heading off to Copenhagen for a few days to celebrate my 40th birthday. I’m not that fussed about being 40, its just another year after all but last night Mrs S-WC dropped the surprise trip on me and now I am really looking forward to going to Denmark and celebrating my 40th in a place that I’ve never been to there before. I have read nothing but good reviews of the place and Copenhagen is supposed to be one of the most child friendly cities on the planet. It also happens to be the home of one of the best music scenes on the planet and all the time I spent endlessly waffling on about the ‘Danish Scene’ appears not to have been wasted. She was pretending to be completely uninterested, how do women do that?

So let’s rewind back to 2011 and if like me you are in anyway interested in indie rock then you would have probably stumbled across New Brigade the debut LP by four Copenhagen teenagers called Iceage. This record singlehandedly put Danish indie rock on the map. ‘New Brigade’ also introduced Iceage to a wider world and in my opinion it is nearly a perfect record, 24 minutes of wailing, bromance and gothic charm, the Guardian described it as ‘A yobbish Joy Division’ and they are spot on, as usual.

mp3 : Iceage – White Rune

The immediate problem is that nearly every band that came out of Denmark was labelled the ‘new Iceage’and record companies fell over themselves to ‘find them’. Over in Denmark though, the best bands in Iceage’s circle such as Lower and Sexdrome, made such bleak and brutal rock that they had almost no visible commercial value, well not to the UK and US Markets at least. All Lower want to do is destroy your eardrums, I mean, they are fantastically brutal but they are not Iceage Mark 2.

mp3 : Lower – Craver

Let’s come back to 2015, and an awful lot has changed, Denmark is blooming and nearly every week there is a new band from Denmark that is generating a buzz of hype. This weeks thing are Yung, they hail from Aarhus the (I think) second biggest city in Denmark. Their debut record Alter has shown that not all bands from Denmark have to sound like Iceage.  ‘Alter’ is jangly indie pop with just a dash of spikiness thrown in. In the last couple of years noir-ish Danish TV programmes have been all the rage and Yung appear to have tapped into that with the video for lead track Nobody Cares – they basically mess around on cold looking dock and we half expect a lady in a knitted jumper to start investigating.

mp3 : Yung – Nobody Cares

Like I said the developing scene is not all about Iceage soundalikes, take Communions for example, they are perhaps the band most like Iceage in their looks but they sound like The Stone Roses just after Sally Cinnamon was released (ie when they were really good). Their debut EP Cobblestones is outstanding and something I thoroughly recommend to you all, I am quite excited by Communions, they could produce something really special.

mp3 : Communions – Cobblestones

I should perhaps point out, that even Iceage don’t actually sound like Iceage anymore, – the closest thing I can liken it too is when Idlewild released American English which sounded like REM rather the early Fugazi inspired records – the last Iceage record Plowing Into the Field of Love has a distinct alt country feel to it and to be honest it sounds a lot like the Libertines circa Up The Bracket, which obviously is a very very good thing indeed. There were not many better records released last year than ‘Plowing Into the Field of Love’.

mp3 : Iceage – The Lords Favourite

I hope you all enjoy the tracks that I have posted – and as ever I’ll be interested in what you all think.

S-WC

I SPEAK YOUR EVERY WORD

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The mere mention of his name yesterday inspired me to adapt and update a post from January 2007 over at the old place.

The post-punk era in the late 70s and early 80s wasn’t all about jumping about down the front.

The man pictured above is John Cooper Clarke. He is a poet.

You listened to what JCC had to say. He was often a support act for many acts – let’s face it, all he needed was the bus/train fare and a microphone – and he had a fantastic stage presence that commanded attention.

Maybe it was the big hair; maybe it was the unmistakable Salford/Manchester accent; maybe it was because he had something meaningful to say, often in a very humourous way; maybe it was a combination of all of the above.

I saw him a few times in the 80s – most often at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in the days when it was truly an underground sort of event rather than a vehicle for comics to come to town and make a fortune over a three-week period.

The mp3 offering might sound like a bit of a misogynist rant. But listen carefully and you’ll hear that it is a brilliantly worded attack on bigots who can’t bear to see mixed-race marriages.

mp3 : John Cooper Clarke : I Married A Monster From Outer Space

But what I consider to be his best piece of work was recorded with a backing band.

mp3 : John Cooper Clarke – Beasley Street

A poem written in 1980, and it’s a sad reflection on society and its inability to deal with inequalities that there is almost certainly a Beasley Street not too far from where you live – especially if you live in a major city.

JCC is still very much on the go today. The original posting in January 2007 was inspired by an interview with him in the then current edition of Mojo magazine – an interview conducted by Alex Turner of The Arctic Monkeys.

Here’s another one that I used to know off by heart back in the days:-

mp3 : John Cooper Clarke – Twat

You can read all his poems here.

DREAM SEQUENCES

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Today I’m featuring a single that I picked up a few years ago in a charity shop for the princely sum of 25p.

mp3 : Pauline Murray & The Invisible Girls – Dream Sequence I
mp3 : Pauline Murray & The Invisible Girls – Dream Sequence II

Pauline Murray was one of the first girls to come out of the punk movement. She was just 18 years of age when she came to prominence as lead singer with Penetration, whose debut single from November 1977 is a true landmark effort:-

mp3 : Penetration – Don’t Dictate

Sorry, I couldn’t resist including that – a rare example of a single from punk era that has just not lost any of its appeal the best part of 40 years on.

Penetration split up in 1980 after just two albums and five singles. Pauline was just 22 years of age at the time, and her next project was with the aforementioned The Invisible Girls who were in fact the backing band for the Salford poet John Cooper Clarke. The new combo released a self-titled album in 1980, a piece of work that was critically acclaimed but didn’t sell all that well.

It was a record that came out on Illusive Records which was a subsidiary of RSO Records which, if memory was the biggest label in the world at the end of the 70s as it was home to The Bee Gees as well as being the label for the soundtrack to Grease.

But it would have been perfectly at home, and indeed a better fit, if it had been on Factory Records as it  had production from Martin Hannett (who also played on the record) and a sleeve by Peter Saville, both of whom of course are central characters in the rise and fall of the best label to ever come out of Manchester. Oh and the drummer was John Maher of Buzzcocks….

I was delighted to grab a copy of the single as I used to have a copy of the subsequent self-titled Pauline Murray & The Invisible Girls debut album but as I’ve not seen it in the cupboard for years so I can only assume that I loaned it to someone and forgot to ask for it back. What I do remember is that it was a record slightly ahead of its time, relying on the then largely unfamiliar sound of synthesisers with Pauline’s vocals often being well back in the mix as if they were an instrument. It really is one of the great lost albums of the era (literally in my case…..).

I do see that last year the album was re-released with a bonus disc of Peel Sessions, remixes and live versions.  I might well go and track it down….or I might go to the online second-hand market for a copy of the vinyl.  Either way, it’s on a list of things to do.

Enjoy.

NEXT YEAR’S NOSTALGIA FEST (Part 18 of 48)

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Here’s an unlikely confession from a Glasgow-based indie kid…….

…………..I don’t own all that much by The Pastels.

They’ve been part of the local music scene since I was a teenager with their first recordings seeing the light of day back in 1982.  I suppose my problem was that I didn’t take an instant shine to many of the early records and the first few times I caught them live, either as a headline or support act, I was rather underwhelmed.

But looking back now I can see and appreciate just how much of an influence they have had, not just on the local music scene, but on the growth and development of indie music over the past 30+ years.

They must have been one of the most experienced bands to be associated with the C86 movement as by that time they had released a number of singles on various labels including Rough Trade and Creation and by the year in question were on Glass Records for whom they would record their debut LP that was recorded in 86 and released in early 87.  The track on CD86 came from the debut album but it had also been released back in October 1984 as a b-side on a single released on Creation:-

mp3 : The Pastels – Baby Honey

A fantastic song extending to almost seven minutes in length it is actually the last song on CD 2 and so brings the 48-track compilation to an end.  For those who associate The Pastels with tweeness it must come as a bit of a shock as it, to all intent and purposes, rocks out a fair bit.

Anyways, as has been my practice with this series to try to track down any recordings associated with the track on the compilation album then here’s the other two songs on the 1984 single:-

mp3 : The Pastels – A Million Tears
mp3 : The Pastels – Surprise Me

A Million Tears is a fantastic piece of music and while I’m not so enamoured by Surprise Me I take it that a certain Jarvis Cocker listened to it more than a few times and came to be heavily influenced.

Finally…..if anyone ever wants to ever bump into Stephen McRobbie (nee Pastel) you can do so by dropping into Monorail Music in Glasgow where you’ll find him, as owner, behind the counter. His store is something to treasure and has become my first port of call for new music on the few occasions that I buy it!

Enjoy

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #13 : ARAB STRAP

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I said more than enough yesterday.

mp3 : Arab Strap – Gilded (live at King Tut’s, Glasgow on 16 October 1996)

Wish I’d been there.

Originally recorded for the b-side of the debut single.  As you’ll hear from the introduction, this was the very first gig the band played but already there were folk who knew all the words!!

The boys have since admitted they were far from sober when they took to the stage.  But at least their nerves had been steadied…

 

 

AN IMAGINARY COMPILATION ALBUM #14 – ARAB STRAP

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I know this effort will not get anything like the same attention as #11 in the series for the simple fact that there are far more fans out there with a knowledge of and an opinion on The Clash than there are when it comes to Arab Strap.  But for me, this narrowing down to just ten tracks was every bit as impossible a task and one that I will complete and immediately look at it and feel I want to make a change.

The reason for turning to this particular band today is quite simply down to the fact that they are due to feature in tomorrow’s Saturday series and I was stumped as to which song and from which era to plump for.  So I decided it would be best to have a go at the imaginary compilation LP and then add something else in for the Saturday series.

Arab Strap are probably my favourite Scottish band of all time, although The Twilight Sad are vying for that top spot.  It’s probably only the fact that Aidan Moffat and Malcolm Middleton continue to produce so much in the way of outstanding post-Strap material that keeps their former band at the top of that particular chart.

They released six albums between 1996 and 2005 along with a dozen or so 45s/EPs, one live album, a number of limited edition pressings and finally an end of career compilation followed by a box set.  Of all of these, only the live album (as so often with many bands) proved to be a bit of a letdown coming nowhere close to capturing how good they could be on stage.

Their material offers much from a musical point of view. There were nods to indie, dance and techno in much of the material as well as Middleton displaying an incredible talent for all forms of guitar playing from melancholy acoustic string-plucking right through to axework worthy of the rock gods he grew up worshipping.  Lyrically there was and still hasn’t been anything quite like them with Moffat using his distinctive Central Scotland brogue to half-speak and half-sing what seemed like highly personal tales of a drug and drink fueled existence that all too often ended in pain, misery and regret.  And there was never any thought given to cleaning up the langage….this was music set to discussions you would have with your mates in a pub or at the football….it was authentically working class and it was more authentically Scottish than anything I had ever heard before.

And so, without further delay, here’s what I’ve come up with for today’s imaginary compilation LP:-

Side A

1. Packs Of Three (from the album Philophobia, released in May 1998)

“It was the biggest cock you’ve ever seen
But you’ve no idea where that cock has been
You said you were careful – you never were with me
I heard you did it four times
But johnnies come in packs of three”

Has there ever been such a  shocking and heart-wrenchingly opening few lines to any song as to this opening number to the band’s second LP?  If so, please enlighten me….

The lyric is so powerful that it initially distracts you from the wonderfully understated guitar work going on in the background and then, for that final emotional punch in the guts for the final minute and a half the melancholic cello kicks in……

2. The Shy Retirer (from the album Monday at The Hug & Pint, released in April 2003)

The opening track from the band’s fifth album set to a tune that is worthy of being classified as an indie-disco classic – it’s the sort of thing you could imagine appearing on a Belle & Sebastian or indeed a Go-Betweens record although while Stuart Murdoch/Robert Forster/Grant McLennan (RIP) have written many a fine and poetic song about the pain of unrequited love they never quite got to the nitty-gritty in the way that Aidan Moffat does in this instance.

Everyone involved knew that this song deserved a much wider audience than one of its lines with its stark lyric would have allowed and so a radio edit was put together and issued as the lead track on an EP but it didn’t chart.

3. The First Big Weekend (single, released in September 1996)

This is the song with which Arab Strap announced themselves and is, in effect, a true short story of what a group of close friends got up to over the course of a long weekend from a Thursday afternoon through to a Monday afternoon, set to a tune driven by an acoustic guitar and a drum machine.

I can actually pinpoint the weekend in question – Thursday 13 to Monday 17 June 1996 – with the big clue being the reference to this big international football match on the Saturday afternoon. I can vouch that the weekend in question was ridiculously hot and sunny and I spent it in St Andrews with a group of mates getting drunk and playing golf and of course watching that very football match.

As much as I enjoyed myself that big weekend, there’s no doubt the packed few days of canteen quizzes, Glasgow night clubs, chatting up girls, getting high and drunk, coming down and starting all over again with an interlude of watching an episodes of The Simpsons was much more fun. But then again, on the eve of my 33rd birthday my crazy days were over…

It actually turns out that the debut LP, The Week Never Starts Round Here, was already finished but Chemikal Underground suggested a single to precede it would be a useful tool. It was written over a morning and recorded the same afternoon.  It was very quickly picked up by John Peel and Steve Lamacq on BBC Radio 1 and indeed would go onto be voted as #2 in the 1996 Festive Fifty.

4. Don’t Ask Me To Dance (from the album The Last Romance, released in October 2005)

From the first of the band’s songs to one of the last and it perfectly demonstrates just how much their sound evolved, developed and matured over the decade they were together.  It’s an album that has far more of a rock element than any of their others and the closing minute and a half enables Malcolm Middleton to demonstrate his guitar god credentials.

Nobody knew at the time that the band had decided to call it a day on the back of their sixth album and certainly none of their fans would have anticipated that both would go on and have successful solo careers, but the hints of what the seemingly lesser-appreciated/valued member of the duo was going to be capable of in the coming years can be heard on this and many other songs on what is a hugely underrated record.

5. I Saw You (Peel Session, recorded in March 1997)

I find it astonishing that the boys never released this until they had called it a day.  It’s a song that was part of many of their early live shows but given its fast tempo and rocking tune it didn’t fit in all that well with the material that would eventually find its way onto Philophobia in 1998.  And so the Peel Session was the only time it was ever recorded and it eventually saw the light of day on the Ten Years of Tears! compilation released in 2006.

Arab Strap had a great relationship with John Peel. As mentioned earlier, the debut single featured highly in the Festive Fifty and it was no surprise that early the following year they had a debut Peel session.  One of the other tracks they recorded was a re-worked version of The First Big Weekend with the lyrics re-written to document the trip to London to do the session. on which Stuart Murdoch and Chris Geddes of Belle & Sebastian also performed.

Side B

1. Love Detective (single, released in January 2001)

The band also used a fair bit of piano and keyboards to great effect on many of their songs, particularly in the second half of their career and this #66 hit single (and subsequent track on the LP The Red Thread) is a very fine example.   It’s also another frighteningly imaginative lyric in which Aidan recounts to a friend almost breathlessly over the telephone how his world has crashed around him after he broke into the box where his girlfriend keeps some secret things including a personal diary.

2. Here We Go (single, released in March 1998)

I didn’t pick up on Arab Strap until well after the debut LP had caught on and so this was the first thing of theirs I ever bought on its release and which I helped get to #48 in the singles chart (the highest position any of the singles ever reached).  This is a song that I listed at #17 in my 45 45s at 45 rundown back in 2008 and if I was to repeat the exercise today it would still feature so highly in any rundown.  I’m sure we’ve all been in this place at some point in our lives – sitting or standing looking at the other half of your relationship and wondering just what it is that has led to the two of you temporarily hating the sight of one another…..

3. I Would’ve Liked Me A Lot Last Night (from the album Philophobia, released in May 1998)

The second successive track lifted from Philophobia, one of the most brutally warts’n’all albums ever recorded with equally brutal warts’n’all artwork with a painting of a naked woman (Aidan Moffat’s girlfriend) on the front sleeve and a painting of a naked man (Aidan Moffat) on the back of the sleeve.

The word philophobia  is defined as “the abnormal, persistent and unwarranted fear of falling in love or emotional attachment; the risk is usually when a person has confronted any emotional turmoil relating to love in the past but can also be chronic phobia”

I’m guessing that those who suffer from philophobia will also have a huge degree of self-loathing.  If so, they would instantly relate to this incredibly sad and moving tale.

While it true that the 66 minutes that make up the record is never a comfortable listen it is also a work that manages to hold your attention all the way throughout.  It is the sort of record that really could only be made by people in their mid-20s as the subsequent decades of experiences would make them far better equipped to deal with the situations they are facing and the lyrics wouldn’t flow so easily.  But take yourself back to your teenage years and the decade that follows and I’m sure, having listened to Philophobia, that you will ne recalling all sorts of sordid and embarrassing memories and episodes.  It’s way cheaper than a psychiatrist.

4. Cherubs (single, released in August 1999)

Having enjoyed a load of critical success in the wake of Philophobia the band were the subject of a few offers to tempt them away from Chemikal Underground, one of which was accepted.

Go! Beat Records was the dance offshoot of Go! Discs one of the great indie labels of the 80s although by the time Arab Strap signed for them it was just another arm of the Universal Music Group.  Arab Strap had a thoroughly miserable time of it at the new label and within 18 months, after one album and one EP, they were knocking on the door at Chemikal who had no hesitation in taking them back with no hard feelings whatsoever.

If there was one good thing to come out of the time at Go! Beat it was this, the lead track on the EP the video of which I recall seeing on nationwide terrestrial television which would I reckon have been the first and possibly one time that happened in the band’s history.  It’s a fine blend of a punchy upbeat drum machine, fine strumming and a rinky-dinky keyboard behind a minimalist and faintly optimistic lyric. Yes, that’s right an optimistic lyric….of sorts.

5. There Is No Ending (from the album The Last Romance, released in October 2005)

The closing track on the closing album.  After dozens of songs that dealt with teenage and 20-something angst here’s one that celebrates love lasting forever until you grow old.

For a band that had to face up to so many accusations of being latent miserablists this is an extraordinary way to sign off and it captures Aidan Moffat for what I think he is – romantic at heart.  For the most part in the Arab Strap canon he’s been a sad and depressed romantic all too often seeking solace in the comfort of the bottle or from the drugs cabinet but now at last he’s happy and looking forward to the future and he wants the world to know it.

A joyous and wonderful anthem to finish things off.

mp3 : Arab Strap – Packs Of Three
mp3 : Arab Strap – The Shy Retirer
mp3 : Arab Strap – The First Big Weekend
mp3 : Arab Strap – Don’t Ask Me To Dance
mp3 : Arab Strap – I Saw You
mp3 : Arab Strap – Love Detective
mp3 : Arab Strap – Here We Go
mp3 : Arab Strap – I Would’ve Liked Me A Lot Last Night
mp3 : Arab Strap – Cherubs
mp3 : Arab Strap – There Is No Ending (7″single version)

That’s almost twelve hours since I typed the first word of this piece.  I’m away for a lie-down.

UNASHAMEDLY STOLEN FROM A FRIEND

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Brian over at Linear Track Lives! is one of the most consistently inventive and entertaining bloggers out there.  He is currently in the middle of a rundown of his Top 100 songs from the 90s and he’s already delivered some cracking surprises including this at #58:-

“There is something about the way frontman Kurt Wagner delivers words in that Tennessee drawl that takes me back to listening to my relatives spinning yarns at reunions back in the sticks of Illinois as a youngin’. Everything was just a little slower and a little simpler. Even when Wagner’s tales are filled with melancholy, I still find the music comforting. Perhaps I also like Lambchop because I think this would have been a group my father and I might have actually agreed on.

As for today’s pick, this is the second and last song on the countdown with the dreaded f-dash-dash-dash word (as Ralphie would say) in the title. If you only know Lambchop’s more recent work, you might find the tempo of this one quite surprising. “Your Fucking Sunny Day” most assuredly doesn’t sound like it was sung from a rocking chair. It comes from the band’s third album, ‘Thriller.’ That’s a little self-deprecating humor from a group that produced two earlier albums with few sales to show for it. On the off-chance this song might have received some airplay, there was a clean version called “Your Sucking Funny Day,” which is a smile, but I don’t think Merge or anyone else needed to worry too much about such things.

mp3 : Lambchop – Your Fucking Sunny Day

It’s also one of my favourite Lambchop songs – they were a band I was going to include in last week’s series in as much that I have quite a few of their albums but nowhere near the whole back catalogue. I’m particularly fond of the LP Nixon which was released in 2000 and is packed with great tunes with this being the track that would be edited back by a minute and released as a single. The album version is superior:-

mp3 : Lambchop – Up With People

Two years later the band followed up Nixon with Is A Woman with initial copies of the CD having a bonus disc that included a hugely inspired and genius cover version:-

mp3 : Lambchop – This Corrosion

For those of you who may not be familiar with the original, well it is considered by many to be THE greatest goth anthem of all time.  All 11 minutes of it.  Get those shoulders shaking:-

mp3 : Sisters of Mercy – This Corrosion (12″ version)

And finally, the Lambchop take on a punk classic:-

mp3 : Lambchop – (Get A) Grip (On Yourself)

Enjoy y’all.

N/O/C/E/K

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A wee treat for fans of The Twilight Sad.

Back in early 2012 the band released their third studio album. No One Can Ever Know was a work that shocked and stunned a lot of folk with a very clear move away from the ‘wall of sound’ guitars that had dominated the previous LPs into something that was heavily reliant on a dark and moody synth sound.  It was an album that I adored on its release with my appreciation heightened by a spellbinding performance in the confines of the Grand Ole Opry in Glasgow, a venue that 99.99% of the time caters for country music and Americana.

Later in the year the band went that bit further with the experimentation by authorising the release of No One Can Ever Know : The Remixes which was, as the name suggests a collection of remixes of songs from the album, many of which were quite experimental and more likely to appeal to fan of those doing the remixing than those who had gone nuts for the first two Twilight Sad LPs. Me?  I’m very happy to be counted in as a fan of the remix effort although I was a little disappointed that it was primarily the same songs that got the treatment with the nine tracks comprising three versions of Sick and two each of Nil, Not Sleeping and Alphabet.

But for diehard fans there was even more to come thanks to the existence of No One Can Ever Know : Tour EP which the band made available as a digital download when you placed an order through their online store or, as in my fortunate case, as one of 300 physical copies put on sale at the merchandise stall when the band went out on the road. It’s actually something the band are very good at in terms of rewarding loyal fans – over the year I’ve picked up a some limited edition mementos including CDs and prints.

The Tour EP offered up one entirely new song (in demo form), three new slowed-down versions* of tracks from the parent album and two songs otherwise only available on hard to get limited edition singles:-

mp3 : The Twilight Sad – Idiots (demo)
mp3 : The Twilight Sad – Alphabet (alternate version)
mp3 : The Twilight Sad – Not Sleeping (alternate version)
mp3 : The Twilight Sad – Untitled #67
mp3 : The Twilight Sad – Another Bed (alternate version)
mp3 : The Twilight Sad – A Million Ignorants

(* and in the case of Alphabet, a heart-wrenchingly beautiful rendition that is my favourite version of the song)

I’ve also discovered a cracking fan site devoted to the band. You can visit by clicking here on the new link I’ve put up on the right hand side of the blog.

Enjoy

THE ALTERED IMAGES SINGLES (3)

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The third Altered Images single was due to be released in September 1981 just in advance of the as yet unnamed debut album.  It must have been a nervy time for all concerned both within the band and at the label given how poorly the first two singles had sold, especially as there was a consensus that those were probably their best and catchiest songs.

Steve Severin had completed his production duties at Rockfield Studios in Wales but there was a nagging doubt that the resultant music wasn’t ever going to transform well to daytime radio and so alternative names were banded about with Martin Rushent emerging as the first choice.

He was someone who had enjoyed a fair degree of success in the post-punk era working in the producer’s chair for the likes of The Stranglers, Generation X and Buzzcocks.  But it was his work on Dare by The Human League that had taken things to a whole new level and so, perhaps as a final roll of the dice by Epic Records, he was asked to take over the reins of a new song called Happy Birthday in the hope that something a bit more pop-orientated would result.

The track was worked on at a studio in Berkshire and the results certainly pleased the record label who decided it would be issued in 7″ and 12″ form with the latter featuring an extended dance mix.  Not only that, and despite every other track on the proposed LP being the work of Severin, it was decided also to name the album after the third single. No pressure then.

It looked initially as if the idea wouldn’t bear fruit as the single crawled into the charts at a very lowly #63.  But unlike Dead Pop Stars which had dropped out of the charts immediately, there was a modest increase in sales in week two that saw it climb to #48.  Week three saw the band crack the Top 40 and so become eligible for increased daytime airplay and more importantly appearances on Top of the Pops.  Six weeks after its release, Happy Birthday hit the #2 spot in the singles chart, a position it held for three weeks. It was unable to initially dislodge It’s My Party by Dave Stewart and Barbara Gaskin and then it was leapfrogged by The Police and Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic. While I’m sure it was disappointing not to quite grab #1 the chart performance of Happy Birthday, especially given what had happened with the first two singles, has to be regarded as a triumph.

All told, Happy Birthday would spend more than four months in the Top 75 – it was still in the charts when the band’s fourth single was released in December 1981 and indeed just as it appeared to be ready to drop out Happy Birthday jumped back up the charts again thanks to end of year sales at Christmas time.

I remember at the time initially loving this song but, as so often happens when something hangs around the chart and daytime radio for what seems like an eternity, I got sick of hearing it and longed for the days when the band were a well-kept secret.  But as time has passed, I fully acknowledge and recognise that the breakthrough hit was a fabulous moment in pop music:-

mp3 : Altered Images – Happy Birthday
mp3 : Altered Images – So We Go Whispering

The b-side was self-produced and its dark and rather haunting tune, highly reminiscent of The Cure, would have been a bit of shock to those who had been attracted to the band by the lighter side of pop music on the a-side.

As mentioned, the 12″ came with an extended dance mix together with an additional track:-

mp3 : Altered Images – Happy Birthday (dance mix)
mp3 : Altered Images – Jeepster

The latter, again self-produced, is a more than passable stab at what had been a hit single for T Rex back in 1971/72 when the various members of Altered Images would have been young kids.

Enjoy