MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (14)

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Many of the more informative and entertaining blogs come from the simplest ideas. Today’s Friend Electric is Charity Chic Music, maintained and managed by Charity Chic (or CC for short).

The first ever posting on the blog in November 2012 set out the philosophy:-

“The idea of this blog is to share music I have discovered in Charity Shops.

When real life kicks in and you can’t afford to buy as much music as you like or used to you are faced with a number of options:-

1. stop buying
2. buy less
3. buy less, hit the library and the charity shops

I’ve gone for option 3.”

It’s expanded a wee bit since then, taking in gig reviews and a range of themed postings including cult labels, southern soul and what must be a world first in ‘Bands I’ve seen in Helensburgh’ (a very small town at the end of the railway line some 25 miles west of Glasgow).

He will darken the doors off all sorts of charity shops in the hope of unearthing something for his blog, and I’ve stolen his words and music from a posting back in October 2013 partly as the shop in question is away up on the north coast of Scotland, not too far from the home town of my dear friend Jacques the Kipper, and partly as I agree with every word he says about the CD he featured:-

The Portsoy Thrift Shop Experience

Wouldn’t that be a great name for a band!

The thrift shop in the rather pleasant North East Scottish village of Portsoy has probably got the cheapest CDs that I’ve yet come across – four for a pound!

I could only see two that caught my fancy. In retrospect I should have grabbed another two and recycled the jewel cases.

This was one

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This Sheffield band is a personal vanity project of one Stephen Jones and are famous for one track “Your Gorgeous” which reached number 3 in 1996 .

Anyone spending more than 25p on the album and expecting more of the same will be extremely disappointed.

According to the sleevenotes Ugly Beautiful is the search for perfection and is like trying to kill flies with scissors.

A pile of pants I say

Babybird – Candy Girl

Babybird – You’re Gorgeous

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More friends electric tomorrow

THE MOZ SINGLES (Part 19)

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mp3 : Morrissey – I Have Forgiven Jesus

Released just before Xmas 2004, the song title clearly rattled the controllers at the BBC for they didn’t allow it to be playlisted on either Radio 1 or Radio 2. Other radio stations weren’t so concerned, nor were various music video channels, and so this became the fourth highly succesful single to be taken from You Are The Quarry, hitting #10 on its week of release.

Last week I mentioned that, between 1989 and 1997, only one out of the twenty of the great man’s singles released during that period got as high in as the Top Ten in the UK. Fast forward seven years to the comeback…and all four singles released in 2007 go Top 10. The only other act to enjoy such chart success in the UK that year was boy band McFly…..

The single came out on 7″ and on two CD formats. The b-side on the 7″ and the widely available CD1 is probably the weakest of the three previously unavailable songs – and its a cover of a record released back in 1987 by Raymonde, a band that featured James Maker who appeared as a dancer/backing vocalist with The Smiths at a handful of their very early gigs – but that in some ways is a bit of a harsh criticism as they all have something to offer:-

mp3 : Morrissey – No One Can Hold A Candle To You
mp3 : Morrissey – Slum Mums
mp3 : Morrissey – The Public Image

No One…is the cover version. Slum Mums and The Public Image surely deserved to be on something other than CD2 of the fourth single taken from an LP, for they are among some of the best things he has released since embarking on the comeback. Particularly ‘The Public Image’ which I think is a rather wonderful song….

The cover photo is a still taken from the promo video

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SINGLE (Part 100)

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From wiki:-

Shop Assistants were an indie pop band from Edinburgh, Scotland, formed in 1984, initially as Buba & The Shop Assistants. After achieving success with independent releases they signed to Chrysalis Records sublabel Blue Guitar, releasing their only album in 1986. After splitting in 1987, with singer Alex Taylor moving on to The Motorcycle Boy, they reformed for two further singles in 1990.

The original line-up was Aggi (Annabel Wright, later of The Pastels), on vocals, David Keegan (guitar), Sarah Kneale (bass), Laura MacPhail (drums) and Ann Donald (drums). This line-up released one single, the now highly-collectible “Something to Do” which was produced by Stephen Pastel. Stephen Pastel also contributed backing vocals.

Aggi left to be replaced by Alex Taylor. Soon after, the name shortened to simply ‘Shop Assistants’ and the first release under their new name was the Shopping Parade EP in 1985 on The Subway Organization, the lead track from which, “All Day Long” was described by Morrissey as his favourite single of that year. Ann Donald left round about November 1985 and was briefly replaced by Joan Bride (possibly a pseudonym!). Shopping Parade was followed in early 1986 with “Safety Net”, the first release on Keegan’s 53rd & 3rd Records, which peaked at number two in the UK Independent Chart, and the band recorded a national radio session with Janice Long and a second John Peel session, both of BBC’s Radio One.The exposure they gained from the sessions enabled the group to have two songs to be voted into John Peel’s Festive Fifty in both 1985 and 1986.

In 1986, they were featured on the NME’s compilation C86 with one of their slower songs, “It’s Up To You”, taken from Shopping Parade EP. Also in that year, they signed to Chrysalis Records’s sublabel Blue Guitar for another single, “I Don’t Wanna Be Friends With You” as well as their first and only LP album, Will Anything Happen. This spent one week at number 100 in the UK album charts, which gives the band the distinction of being the (joint) least successful act ever to hit the national charts. The album was re-released on CD in 2001, although it is now very hard to find.

The band split early in 1987, when Taylor left the group to join The Motorcycle Boy. After a two-year hiatus, the band reformed without Taylor in 1989 with Kneale on vocals and MacPhail on bass and the addition of Margarita Vasquez-Ponte of Jesse Garon And The Desperadoes.

And here is one of THE great indie-singles of the era:-

mp3 : Shop Assistants – Safety Net
mp3 : Shop Assistants – Almost Made It
mp3 : Shop Assistants – Somewhere In China

Again…from wiki:-

The song was first recorded for the band’s first session for John Peel’s BBC Radio 1 show on 8 October 1985.It was recorded for release on 24 and 25 October 1985 at Pier House, Edinburgh, and released as a single on guitarist David Keegan and Stephen Pastel’s 53rd & 3rd Records in February 1986, the first release on the label.

The single reached number two on the UK Independent Chart, spending seventeen weeks in the chart in total. The song was voted to number eight on the 1986 Festive Fifty, with only tracks by The Smiths, Primal Scream, The Fall and “Kiss” by Age of Chance receiving more votes.

“Safety Net” was described by David Sheridan of Trouser Press as “nothing short of brilliant”.Gillian Watson of The Scotsman called the song an “early classic”, which “captures how nervous and exciting it feels to be a young adult in the city at night”.

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (13)

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Today’s friend electric describes herself as a ‘music obsessed cooking freak’ which always makes me laugh.

The blog is called I Sing In The Kitchen and the genius behind it is Tricia.

I say genius and in this case I think it’s an accurate use of the word for it really does take someone special and talented to come up with the idea of a blog which has a daily recipe linked into a piece of music or a singer or band. And she’s been entertaining us in this way since January 2011 never ceasing to amaze with the extent and variety of the recipes and the music.

Tricia has an incredible taste in music and is forever using her blog to recommend all sorts of new stuff with a fair bit of it featuring singers and bands from Scotland, many of which were previously unknown to me. The thing is though….Tricia isn’t from my part of the world – indeed she lives a long long way from my part of the world.   Vermont, USA to be precise and it never ceases to amaze me the depth or her knowledge and the extent of her enthusiasm when it comes to Jock’n’Roll.

By most reckonings, I should be getting as far away as is humanly possible from a food related blog.  My taste in food is about as bland, unimaginative and boring as you could imagine and therefore so much of what Tricia so lovingly describes is wasted on me. My idea of cooking is to remove something from the refrigerator, pierce a hole in the cover and press the appropriate buttons on the microwave.

Tricia though, has a real passion for here recipes and recommendations.  Have a read at this from February 2011 and please note the photos are taken as Tricia prepares and completes the recipe:-

Ooh La La! French Macarons With Raspberry-Rose Buttercream.

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Recently my daughter needed to make a French recipe to share with her French class at school. We decided to have a go at making macarons and I am so glad that we did. French style macaroons, or ‘macarons’ en français, are two delicate meringue style cookies sandwiched together with a rich buttercream or ganache. When you bite into a macaron the crisp exterior of the cookie gives way into a slightly chewy center that in turn gives way to a delectable cream filling. Delicieux.

I had never used rose water prior to this recipe. The buttercream recipe only calls for a quarter teaspoon and the smallest bottle sold at my supermarket was 300 ml! Holy Rose Water! Please, if you know of any other good recipes using rose water send them my way!

Please indulge me while I have a momentary flight of ideas:

Rose + Water= Titanic——>Sinking

Kills me everytime!

Back to the baking.

French Macarons With Raspberry-Rose Buttercream

Cookies:

2 cups confectioners’ sugar

1 cup sifted almond flour

3 large egg whites

2 Tbs plus 1/2 tsp sugar

Filling:

16 oz frozen raspberries

1 cup plus 6 Tbs sugar, divided

2 large egg whites

10 Tbs unsalted butter, cut into small cubes, softened

1/4 tsp rose water

Directions:

1. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment.

2. Sift confectioners’ sugar and almond flour into a large bowl.

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3. Using electric mixer, beat egg whites, sugar and a pinch of salt until medium peaks form. Add egg white mixture to almond mixture and fold to incorporate.

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4. Working in two batches, fill a pastry bag fitted with a 1/4 inch diameter plain pastry tip with batter. (Batter will be thin and will drip from bag). Pipe batter in 1 1/4 inch rounds on baking sheets, spacing one inch apart. (Cookies will spread slightly). Let rest on baking sheets at room temperature for 20 minutes.

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5. Position 1 rack in top third and 1 rack in bottom third of oven.

6. Preheat oven to 375℉.

7. Bake cookies 5 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 325℉. Continue to bake cookies until puffed and golden on top, about 10 minutes, reversing sheets after 5 minutes. Cool cookies on sheets on rack. Carefully peel cookies from parchment.

(The cookies can be made one day ahead. Store in an airtight container at room temperature.)

Filling:

1. Bring raspberries and 1 cup sugar to boil in a large saucepan over high heat, stirring until sugar dissolves. Cook until berries are soft, juices thicken, and mixture measures about 1 1/2 cups, stirring frequently, 7 to 9 minutes.

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2. Measure 1/2 cup of raspberry mixture and strain into a small bowl. Cool strained jam and jam with seeds separately.

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(The jams can be made one week ahead. Cover them separately and refrigerate)

3. Combine egg whites, 6 Tbs sugar and 1/4 tsp salt in bowl of a stand mixer. Set bowl over a large saucepan of simmering water. Heat until candy thermometer inserted into mixture registers 140℉, stirring often, 3 to 4 minutes.

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4. Using whisk attachment, beat egg white mixture at high speed until stiff meringue forms and mixture is at room temperature, 5 to 6 minutes.

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5. With mixer running, add butter, 1 piece at a time, beating until each piece is incorporated before adding next. Beat in rose water. Add 3 Tbs seedless jam, 1 Tbs at a time. (If the buttercream should ever appear curdled, place bowl over medium heat and whisk to warm slightly for a few seconds, then remove from heat and beat again. Note: I never had any curdling and have no idea how common a problem that is.)

6. Line a rimmed baking sheet with parchment. Using 1/2 tsp jam with seeds for each, spread jam over flat side of half of macarons. (These are super delicate cookies. Handle very carefully or they crush.)

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7. Spoon buttercream into pastry bag fitted with a 1/4 inch plain tip. Starting at outer edge of flat sides of remaining macarons, pipe buttercream over in spiral. (I had to hold the macaron in one hand and pipe with the other since the dang things would move all over the place if I tried to pipe the buttercream while they were sitting on the parchment.)

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8. Gently press macarons, jam filled side down, onto buttercream coated macarons. Place on sheet. Cover and chill overnight.

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(The macarons can be made 2 to 3 days ahead. Store in the refrigerator. Let stand at room temperature 30 minutes before serving)

Adapted from Bon Appétit magazine. (They said they got about 3 dozen sandwiched macarons. Even when I realized, early on, that I was piping the cookies too big I still only ended up with about 24 sandwiched macarons.)

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Here are a few French songs to get you in a macaron mood.

Lloyd Cole-Si Tu Dois Partir

Serge Gainsbourg-Sea, Sex And Sun

DeVotchKa-Viens Avec Moi

Cheers!

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I was lucky enough to meet Tricia, along with her incredible family, when they all came over to Scotland as part of a vacation a few years back.  I read on someone’s Facebook page that she’s heading our way again in the not too distant future….my fingers and toes are crossed.

JC

 

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (12)

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Here’s someone else who has been a long time friend of the blog.

Rol Hirst is, like so many of the folk I’m featuring this month, a great talent.  He has, in the past, produced some incredibly entertaining comics and if you go to his website/blog My Top Tens you will find a link to his novel, available as an e-book via kindle.

Rol has been responsible for some great on-line material over the years, especially over at the now defunct Sunset Over Slawit, and nowadays he entertains us with My Top Ten which is, in his own words – very little waffle, just ten songs on any given subject.

The thing is, in just under two years, Rol has written more than 200 such lists on all sorts of weird and wonderful subject matters. His imagination knows no bounds.  Here’s an example

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My Top Ten Strike Songs

I’ve been on strike today for the first time in my life. I managed 41 years without ever going on strike; I’ve been a full time teacher just over a month and already I’m unionised and refusing to cross the picket line. Billy Bragg would be proud…. which probably gives away this week’s Number One.

Special mention to the Flying Pickets… obviously.

10. Ewan MacColl & Peggy Seeger – Daddy, What Did You Do In The Strike?

Perhaps one day Sam will ask me this question. Perhaps I’ll point him to this post.

The song itself… you won’t hear a better chronicle of the darkest days of the 1980s.

9. Strike Anywhere – You’re Fired!

Very loud but extremely apt.

Hopefully the name of the band won’t lead me to the title of the song.

8. Elvis Costello – Clown Strike

I hate clowns, so they can stay on bloody strike for all I care.

7. Titus Andronicus – A More Perfect Union

Perhaps not about that kind of union, but what it lacks in relevance it makes up for in passion. And any song that mixes Bruce Springsteen with Billy Bragg gets my vote every time…

“No, I never wanted to change the world, but I’m looking for a new New Jersey
Because tramps like us, baby, we were born to die”

6. Ry Cooder – Strike!

Lots of songs about striking miners… couldn’t find any about striking teachers.

We’ve got it easy, to be honest.

5. Manic Street Preachers – A Design For Life

Growing up in Wales, the Manics were hit hard by the miners’ strike. Their biggest hit was inspired by it… and they’re still angry (referencing the Battle of Orgreave) on their excellent new album, Rewind The Film.

4. The Smiths – Bigmouth Strikes Again

Yes, yes, this is also somewhat off-topic… but you didn’t really think I was going to leave it out, did you?

3. Billy Joel – Allentown

Even the union can’t help the inhabitants of Allentown. For anyone who dismisses Billy as a balladeer, here he’s as angry at his country as Springsteen on Born In The USA. Great song.

2. Pulp – The Last Day Of The Miners’ Strike

Coming from South Yorkshire, Jarvis will have seen the worst effects of the miner’s strike firsthand too. Working in Barnsley, I’m reminded of it regularly. Those scars are still raw.

“Well by 1985, I was as cold a cold could be
But no-one was underground to dig me out and set me free
’87 socialism gave way to socialising
So put your hands up in the air once more
The north is rising”

1. Billy Bragg – There Is Power In A Union

Sharing its title with a song written in 1913 by Joe Hill (presumably not Stephen King’s son… unless time travel or supernatural naughtiness are involved), Billy’s version sounded defiant against Thatcherism in the 80s… but is it a forlorn hope today?

“Now I long for the morning that they realise
Brutality and unjust laws cannot defeat us
But who’ll defend the workers who cannot organise
When the bosses send their lackies out to cheat us?”

Those were my striking anthems. Which one would cross your picket line?

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mp3 : Billy Bragg – Don’t Mourn, Organise
mp3 : Billy Bragg – There Is Power In A Union (live)

Both taken from a gig recorded live at the Barbican Centre in London in March 2004…the first is the three minute spoken intro for the latter.

More Friends Electric tomorrow

 

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (11)

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Andrea over at Conventional Records writes his posts in Italian and I have to rely on one of those internet translation services to understand it – sometimes the translation doesn’t make perfect sense and it makes me wish I had learned to speak, read and write Italian.

For many years, Andrea was heavily involved in music in Italy either through the publication of articles and reviews or as a broadcaster on a local radio station in his home town of Lodi near Milan.  Nowadays, like so many of us, his time is taken up with work and family life and so his involvement in music nowadays is mainly through listening, attending gigs and writing about it on a blog.

He’s a big fan of My Bloody Valentine and so I thought I’d introduce you properly to him through some words he composed when MBV was released last year (and my apologies to Andrea that the translation service so often makes such a mess of your fine words )

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The return of My Bloody Valentine after 22 years has been a truly meaningful test than you might be willing to get serious with the ethics of extreme Conventional Records .

The album comes out suddenly impossible, whatever you want for years and years, to know what it could be after the sounds of superhuman Loveless, one forgotten by everyone as scientifically impossible. Exits overnight and exists only on the other side of a screen, or on a display. On the website of My Bloody Valentine, on YouTube, I assume also on iTunes and Spotify, linked on blogs around the world. With its electric blue cover made of pixels. But no cardboard, no aluminum, vinyl somewhere. Well, good.

Then do nothing, Kevin Shields. I’ve waited 22 years, look again. I waited another 2 months, and then the blue pixels electrical materialized behind the window of Libraccio, as I tried in vain, for the umpteenth time, the new Johnny Marr. Label a deadly price: 24 €. No problem, here we are at the checkout. Actually helped a lot that I had to download the 100 points earned on the card HI, amounting to € 20. Great thing, and a great name, High Fidelity card. A place: 4 € 3rd album by My Bloody Valentine officially came into my life, between Loveless and Nearly God. And then, of course, inside the iPod …

Listened months after reading reviews more or less authoritative, it’s all true, they are all right. Those excited like kids and those who wonder if we really need it. The ones that everyone else by comparison disappear, and those who took 22 years seems to be patched and finished quickly. There can not be a neutral and objective way to approach this album, because it is too subjective is the relationship that each may have developed with the songs and the sound of My Bloody Valentine. Why is mainly dependent on them when it was discovered and heard, and what is the relationship that you have with the music today.

I’m right there in this album. Not looking for, do not expect more, and the sound out of the world of Loveless was part of the fondest memories of the 90s. But now that I got myself into, it seems that, subconsciously, I needed it. I do not think mbv, how it operates, will hold up over time compared with Loveless and Is Not Anything; but here and now, in 2013, it compensates its imperfections and unevenness of style with a powerful evocation of the world 20-25 years ago.

mp3 : My Bloody Valentine – She Found Now

 

More Friends Electric tomorrow

 

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (10)

1983

I’m returning to Germany again for today’s Friend Electric who is Walter:-

“I’m a mid-age man, spending a lot of my time listening to music, watching soccer, reading books and other stuff” (i.e he sounds just like the bloke who writes TVV!!!!!!)

And he also posts very regularly on A Few Good Times In My Life.

This is another great blog in which the author writes in a language other than his native tongue and again it puts those of use who can speak just one language to shame. Some of the posts on this blog are quite short – for instance Walter might just say that he is sharing a particular song because it popped into his head and reminded him of how great it was.

But more often or not, the post will be in-depth and in one particular series, 40 Records in 40 Years, in which Walter is telling the story of his life, you will find yourself reading things and having your memory jogged in ways that go way beyond music. I’ve posted below his entry in respect of 1983.

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When I think back what happened in this year of my life that it was stamped by two influences: First is the wakeup of my political thinking and second was that I started playing football again.

Compared to now the twenty something was more interested in politics and tried to show their point in mostly peaceful ways. I still remember what we discussed these times. There was the NATO Double-track decision that offered the Warsaw pact the deployment of the mobile American middle-range missiles (Pershing II) to rebuilt the state of Mutual Assured Destruction. NATO offered immeditate negotiations with the goal to ban nuclear armed middle-range missiles from Europe completely, with the provision that the sam missliles could be installed four years later should the negotiations fall. Knowing that the Americans deposited a lot of nuclear warheads in southern Germany and not far away from our place we were afraid of the so called ‘war by mistake’ and a nuclear Holocaust in Europe.

This was the birth of the peace movement in Germany. We demonstrated against the NATO double-track decision on some marches through the cities and finally in October with the largest human chain. More than 300.000 people stood between Stuttgart and Neu-Ulm (more than 100 km) hand in hand to say no to this decision. How proud we were to be members of this.and I still remember that slogan ‘Petting instead of Pershing’. It was also the time when our new government by Mr. Kohl turned into another politic of nuclear energy forcing the building of new atomic reactors. Reminding the accident on Three-Mile-Island we had fears about what could happen when we lose control over the systems. We supported the Green Alternative so that they were elected in the autumn to the German Bundestag. In this connection I have to remember the leading person of this party Petra Kelly and her partner the former general Gert Bastian – that they died a few years later at suicide is another story to be told.

The third thing I remember was the census that should be done in this year. A lot of questions to be answered in interviews partly very private. The easiest way to say to the census was not opening the door to the interviewer. And after some judical judgements the government denied the census.

This was the background we discussed at long evenings in our local pub. A lot of them lads I did know for years – others were totally new to me. One day the owner of the pub wrote with chalk on the board: ‘Is anyone interested to play football in the name of the pub?’ We sat there watching him writing and said spontaneous ‘Try us!’ And that was the birth of a hobby team that lasted for nearly 20 years. We all knew that we could be successful because we all played football in different clubs. But our first tournament was a totally disaster because we thought we were unbeatable and play with several beers in our head. But more of this later.

Now back to music from 1983:

(JC adds – at this point in the piece, Walter puts up some videos – which given it was 1983 and the height of MTV-mania seems very apt – before returning back to words)

My first thought was that this year were not released as many remarkable and leading records compared to the last year. Maybe a little break for the things will come. Anyway – by adding them up I have to say that I was wrong. Here some records that I remember well:

Malcolm McLaren – Duck rock: Turned away from his punk roots to combine south African music with American Rap

Roxy Music – The High Road: Just a four track EP but great

David Bowie – Let’s Dance: Sound of the summer that fit to a lot of people

Aztec Camera – High Land, Hard Rain: Their first masterpiece; awesome songs

New Order – Power, Corruption and Lies: Elementary for what will be called dancefloor later

Talking Heads – Speaking In Tongues: Excellent record after a couple of years

Yello – You Gotta Say Yes To Another Success: s.a. New Order

Big Country – The Crossing: Love to hear some good guitars again that sounded like bagpipes

Rufus – Stomping At The Savoy: Together with Chaka Khan a furious live recording

Marc And The Mambas – Torment and Toreros: Following project from Marc Almond together with Matt Johnson. A crude mixture of French chansons, freaky guitars, string arrangements, dance tracks and a little bit of dark wave.

The The – Soul Mining: Matt Johnson gave us a combination of wave, dark and dance

Michael Franks – Passion Fruit: I always loved his voice, and now he released a little masterpiece of funk and fusion

I didn’t went often into the cinema this year but there are still some movies I can remember::

Trading Places: Dan Aykroyd an upper class broker and Eddie Murphy a homeless street hassler changing their lifes because of an immoral bet.

The Big Chill: Lawrence Kasdan shows us what could happen when you meet your former class mates after 15 year according to a funeral of your friend

Silkwood: My first time I recognized Meryl Streep as an actor when she stood up against the atomic industry

Carmen: Never seen flamenco like this before – awesome

Cujo: Another horror thriller based on a novel by Stephen King – beware of the dog

Gorky Park: Crime in the Soviet Union – nearly impossible?!?

Zelig: Woody Allen shows us his Jewish roots

Not only the protest against the decisions of our government ruled the world – there was something else:

The mighty Björn Borg retired from Tennis; 25 members of the brigada rossi were imprisoned for life after for murder of Aldo Moro; Klaus Barbie is officially charged with prison for war crimes; over 2000 people, most of them Bangladeshi Muslims, were massacred in Assam, India; Strategic Defense Initiative by Ronald Reagan – became well know as ‘Star Wars’; Motown celebrates 25th anniversary and Michael Jackson creates the moonwalk; Sterm magazine releases the Hitler diaries which are later found to be forgeries; Aberdeen FC wins the European Cup Winner’s Cup by beating Real Madrid 2:1 after extra time; the Tories are re-elected by a landslide majority; Anti-Tamil riots begin and nearly 3000 where killed – start of the Sri Lanka civil war; Korean Air Lines Flight 007 is shot down by interceptor when the civil aircraft entered Soviet airspace; Maze prison escape.

The second official record from Fun Boy Three is on of the most perfect records ever that combined political and social commentary with fantastic harmonies and melodic twists. The whole record has a full touch of sadness and hopelessness all over. Often combined with the last hope: love.

It was produced by Talking Heads member David Byrne who also played guitar on  it. I can’t remember when I heard three voices (Terry Hall, Neville Staple and Lynval Golding) in that harmony before and after. Their single ‘Our lips are sealed’ reached the top 30 in Britain these year. Less people will remember that this song (co-written by Terry Hall) was recorded by the Go-Go’s a few years ago (also a band I remember very well sometimes). It is pure pop but effective arrangements feature trombone, cello and other orchestral instruments make this record a milestone in British music.

mp3 : Fun Boy Three – The More I See (The Less I Believe)
mp3 : Fun Boy Three – Our Lips Are Sealed
mp3 : Fun Boy Three – The Tunnel of Love

More Friends Electric tomorrow

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (9)

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Today’s friend electric is Phil Spector. No, not the one in the photo above, but the one from Ayrshire in Scotland who is responsible for Plain Or Pan, a blog which describes itself as being ‘outdated music for outdated people’, in which case I am very happy to be outdated.

Phil is another whose breadth and depth of knowledge of all things musical is quite astounding. He’s another of those incredibly talented writers who make things look very easy. It’s also a blog which you can never quite predict what is coming next…

Once again, there were so many things I wanted to steal and post here, but in the end I’ve only gone back a few months to a post put together when the news that Johnny Marr had broken his hand emerged:-

It’s All Right Marr, I’m Only Bleeding

March 20, 2014

I got my first real six string when I was 16. Bought it second hand from a wee guitar shop in Irvine that disappeared the day after I paid my £30 for it. The guy who ran it was never seen again. About 2 days later, indulging in a spot of fat-fingered She Sells Sanctuary riffing, the pick-up gave me an electric shock and a temporary Sid Vicious haircut. That guitar was a right temperamental block of wood, but I loved it. I played it till my fingers bled. To paraphrase even further, it was the Summer of ’89. That’s when I realised I’d never be Johnny Marr.

I’ve always loved Johnny Marr. In The Smiths, he wrote an obscene number of brilliant, inventive tunes. Lazy writers would go on about his ‘chiming‘, ‘jangly’ guitar sound, but there was far more to his arsenal than that. There was always, even in the Smiths’ most tender moments a bite to his guitar. He could fingerpick. He could play inventive chord patterns. He could fingerpick and play an inventive chord pattern underneath it at the same time. With 10 fingers sounding like 25. ‘Like Lieber and Stoller piano lines playing alongside the guitar‘, to misquote him from the early days in The Smiths. Then there were the open tunings, the Nashville tunings, the hitting strings with knives to get the desired effect. He reinvented the wheel.

Johnny was (and probably still is) my idol. Even though he dyes his hair. And runs over 50 miles for fun each and every week.

Slightly on the wrong side of cocky (and so would you be if mercurial quicksilver tunes like those fell off your fingers and onto the fretboard as effortlessly as a bride’s knickers), he’s not much older than me, yet he’s done a ridiculous amount of music. Previous posts on here have gone on at length about all the non-Smiths stuff he’s done. There’s literally hundreds of things he’s been involved in. Not always up there with the vintage riffing of yore, but always fresh-sounding and never anything less than interesting. Clearly, he’s the guitarists’ guitarist, the one they call when they need a bit of magic sprinkled on top.

Last week when he broke his hand, my first thought was, “I wonder if I can play ‘Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others’ better than him now?“

Probably not, is most definitely the answer. One of my favourite non-Smiths Johnny moments is on Electronic‘s Forbidden City, from the patchy Raise The Pressure LP released in (gulp) 1996.

mp3 : Electronic – Forbidden City

It runs the whole gamut of Johnny’s guitar attack. A heady rush of major and minor chords played on an acoustic guitar here and electric guitars there, Johnny picking his trademark arpeggios atop some mid-paced strumming. He plays terrific little 2-string run-downs and fills between the singing that are concise and snappy and perfect. On the chorus he lets the right notes ring out at the right times. In a lesser pair of hands, it all might sound a wee bit lumpen. But Johnny knows just how to make his guitar sparkle and sing. By the middle eight, he’s flung in a backwards bit and dooked the whole lot in a bath of feedback before coming back to the song in a ringing, shimmering blaze of glory. The whole track is, of course, carried along brilliantly by a Bernard vocal that recalls New Order at their uplifting, melancholic best. And I believe that’s Kraftwerk’s Karl Bartos on drums as well. What’s not to like?

johnny-marr-bang

In a typically Marresque coda to all of this, Johnny’s broken hand was put into a special sling that’ll allow him to perform his day job without compromise. Broken hand or not, no-one plays guitar like Johnny.

Told you this guy was good…….

More Friends Electric tomorrow.

THE MOZ SINGLES (Part 18)

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Take a look at the personnel playing on this single….

Morrissey (voice)
Kirsty MacColl (vocals)
Craig Gannon (guitars)
Neil Taylor (guitars)
Andy Rourke (the bass)
Mike Joyce (the drums)

And with Stephen Street on production duty, it’s practically a reunion of The Smiths, so by all accounts, this should be a memorable 45. And it almost is:-

mp3 : Morrissey – Interesting Drug

It was the fourth solo single, released in April 1989 (cant believe it was 25 years ago!!!), and the first that didn’t grab my attention on the initial listen. Indeed, it took quite a few plays on the CD player before I began to enjoy it – and in truth, I felt (and still believe) that its most redeeming feature is its lyric. But I’m also happy to say that time has mellowed my views on the actual tune – I now think that its passable as opposed to appalling.

A clear attack on Thatcherism (rampant at the time of the song’s release) and a warning of what can happen if you dabble with the ‘interesting drug’. But what exactly is the ‘interesting drug’? Some have suggested it has a literal meaning and refers to ecstasy, which, at the time, was being hyped-up by the UK tabloids as the next big danger to our youth…..

I’ve another theory….

the one that you took
TELL THE TRUTH
it really helped you
an interesting drug
the one that you took
God, it really helped you
I wonder why you’re only half-ashamed
“because Enough is too much
and look around
can you blame us
can you blame us”

That’s how the lyrics appear on the back of the 12″ sleeve. Couldn’t they be aimed at working-class folk who had been wooed by the evil Tories and had literally bought into a false dream with their newly-owned council homes and shares in the recently privatised public utilities? Just a thought….

Like the first three solo singles, this went Top 10 – peaking at #9 in the UK. Little did anyone realise that of the next 20 singles Morrissey would go on to release in the UK, only one would be a Top 10 hit….

Of the two tracks on the b-side, one was an original and the other a live version of a track by The Smiths, recorded at the now (in)famous free concert given at Wolverhampton Civic Hall in December 1988.

mp3 : Morrissey – Such A Little Thing Makes Such A Big Difference
mp3 : Morrissey – Sweet And Tender Hooligan (live)

Oh and another thing…..I hate the sleeve for this single. It makes the great man look like some sort of villain in a bad sci-fi movie.

Happy Listening.

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (8)

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The above image is that which you will find at the head of Bagging Area, another excellent blog with a bit of an indie-bent but which is waaaaay more eclectic than you find in my own inane ramblings (for instance there’s been a long-running and entertaining series on rockabilly).

It is the work of Swiss Adam, who, in his own words when he started the blog is ‘a 40 year old man from Sale, Manchester who likes records’. As concise a description as is necessary.

Here’s something of his from May 2014 that I really liked:-

Be My Baby is, quite clearly, an utterly fantastic pop record derived from the imagination of Phil Spector and the combined voices and attitudes of The Ronettes. It has one of the form’s definitive drum beats (which it is impossible to get tired of).

It is also –  and this is a fact –  a song that can be put on any mixtape/compilation cd, before or after any other song by anybody, and still work perfectly. Try it.

mp3 : The Ronettes – Be My Baby

A posting of just five lines – but it makes the point perfectly. That’s what I call great blogging.

More Friends Electric next Monday

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (7)

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I was tempted to leave my look at today’s Friend Electric until this coming Sunday so that it would tie-in nicely with the final of the 2014 World Cup….but I thought instead that putting it on the morning after the second semi-final was determined might help you with build up.

Football and Music isn’t a blog but a fully blown website managed and delivered by Webbie. He started it going in 2007 for a very simple reason and from what was a very modest undertaking he now is responsible for one of the best and most original things out there:-

Football and Music is run by a British Expat now living in North Carolina in the USA.

The website was born not by design but by accident.

One day for reasons unknown to me now I wanted to watch the Anfield Rap video again.
I think I wanted to remind myself of how craptacular it was.
After this I began looking at other football/musical items and then had that eureka moment. As I was looking I discovered there was much, much more out there than I imagined. I must tell people about this…

Over the years I’ve discovered some gems. But most of the time they are horrors. You will discover that football and music is a genre that shouldn’t exist. But it does. Something I thought wouldn’t last, but every day I find something new. This journey never seems to end.

The site is constantly changing to reflect the times…for instance right now ‘2014 World Cup Songs – Every Team’ does exactly what it says on the tin. There’s a great permanent section called ‘Find Your Team’ under which all his posts have been tagged – there are 300 teams/subject matters ranging from the sublime to the ridiculous. As a Raith Rovers fan I have to highlight this particular post from September 2009, which is a mix of words, video and music so its much easier to provide the link:-

http://www.footballandmusic.co.uk/dancing-on-the-streets-of-kirkcaldy/

I’ll leave you to determine if that’s an example of the sublime or the ridiculous.

Here’s one of Webbie’s great postings from earlier this year:-

Tierney (A Ballad To…)

How many times have you been watching a match and you hear the commentator say…”the ex-Manchester United trainee there…”

Happens often doesn’t it. Well this is the story (and song) about one of those.

The player in the spotlight today is one Paul Tierney, the English-born Republic of Ireland Under-21 left back, who as mentioned was signed to Man Utd as a trainee. But like quite a few others it didn’t happen for him there.

The information I have about him is brief and comes from the Wikipedia entry, a couple of football news items – and mostly from the song.

That we’ll get to in a moment, but for now let’s look at the subject in hand:

Signed onto the Old Trafford books in 1999 and turned professional a year later, at first Tierney was loaned out to Crewe, Colchester and Bradford. But he did make an appearance for his parent club – Dec 2003: versus West Brom in the league cup.

Eventually Paul was released and signed for Livingston in the Scottish Championship, the second tier of the Scottish football leagues. That was only for one season, but a significant one because this is where a certain Glaswegian music took note of him…which I’ll come to in a minute.

Moving back down to England he signed for Blackpool, went out on loan to Stockport during that time and then after being released he joined the Alty… and that’s the last entry on his Wiki page. I don’t know where Paul is still playing now or if he’s still playing.

Looking at that journey, the appearances and the clubs it’s easy to make a Doc “Moonlight” Graham in the movie Field Of Dreams comparison. Like the young Archie Graham with his brief glimpse at the big league, Paul Tierney did make the Manchester United first team appearance in that league cup game alongside Cristiano Ronaldo. Also in his time at Blackpool he was part of the League One playoff final winning team.

He has a Wikipedia entry. His career stats are recorded on Soccerbase. Paul Tierney in his time did something we all dream about – playing football for an elite team. Playing football professionally and being paid for it. That’s more than you can say.

⇒ To the music then and as mentioned it was when Paul Tierney was turning out for Livingston that Paul Tierney noticed him. For obvious reasons.

This person, usually in the spotlight for something. In this case football. This person becomes your “other self” and you do wonder how your more famous other self is doing today. I myself have a namesake who is the lead singer of a big charting musical group and ever since discovering this I always look him up.

This other Paul Tierney is a Scottish singer-songwriter and he followed the fortunes of his footballing self, which eventually led him to record a song.

There is an excellent article over on the Daily Record from which I will borrow a quote:

It’s a bittersweet tale of early promise, career-changing mistakes, bad luck and unfulfilled potential.

Glaswegian Paul, now based in Bristol, said: “I knew a wee bit about Paul’s career because he had the same name.

“His story is sad in some respects, but the song asks the question, ‘Who would you rather be? Him or me?.’ To have been a footballer at any level, you have to be brilliant.”

Paul, who now records and performs as Lonely Tourist, recorded the song in Glasgow with Attic Lights’ guitarist Jim Lang.

Paul said: “I wasn’t sure whether anyone would hear it. But I got an email from Steve Lamacq saying he remembered Paul at Colchester and that he loved the song.

“It went from there to being played on Radio 6 to me getting an email from Paul’s brother-in- law saying he loved it.

“Then I got an email from Paul himself thanking me for it, saying that he wasn’t at all offended, that he thought it was genius and that he was going to get everyone to buy it.

“I honestly didn’t even think he’d ever hear it.”

mp3 : Lonely Tourist – The Ballad of Paul Tierney

….which you can buy via Bandcamp – and you can name any price to download this song.*

A beautiful, if slightly melancholy tune which perfectly describes the fortunes of the playing Tierney better than a Wikipedia entry ever can.

 

* just as I did when I stole this post – JC.

More Friends Electric tomorrow

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (6)

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The famous bloke in the picture above is suave, handsome, intelligent, funny and a magnificent orator. The other is the current President of the United States of America.

C’mon…..you saw that bad joke coming a mile off.

The bloke on the TV screen is Dirk. The genius behind Sexy Loser.

Dirk was one of the first regular visitors to latch onto TVV back in 2006. Hardly a post went by without him leaving behind some interesting snippet of information, often related in some shape or form to John Peel.

Now those of us living in the UK can go on and on about how important the late DJ was in shaping our views and opinions on music; but if you read what Dirk has said over the years, of how his exposure in Germany to the great man came via Armed Forces Radio and the impact it had, not just on his musical tastes but to his life, then you will begin to see just why John Peel was held in such high regard as a broadcaster and as a human being.

Such was the impact that Peel had on a young Dirk that he made a pilgrimage to Peel Acres to meet the man in person back in 1989 and here’s a photo of Dirk in John’s attic surrounded by some of the tens of thousands of bits of vinyl owned by the DJ –

at Peel Acres Apr. '89

Many of Dirk’s finest postings on Sexy Loser feature material that he studiously collected on cassette tape from recording the Peel shows on Armed Forces Radio. A bit like Brian (whose Linear Track Lives featured last week), this is someone who knows his subject matter inside out…

Sexy Loser has come and gone a bit over the years as happy events in Dirk’s life have impacted on his ability to spend time on the blog – there were only about 30 posts in a 3-year period between 2009 and 2011 –  but he got very active again last year and it was great to see my old friend was as brilliant as ever as he did a rundown of his all time favourite single.

What I particularly love about Dirk is that he writes in English, which is obviously not his first language (but he still speaks it better than most people from Dundee), and he writes as if he was talking aloud to you. Oh and he ALWAYS begins his postings in the most polite fashion imaginable….

“45 45’s until I’m 45” (#25/45)

Good morning to you,

I know this will sound like a most lame excuse for my laziness, but – believe it or not – today there is a reason for my unability to tell you something interesting about the choice of the day, and a good one at that:

Mostly I write my little essays when being at work, no problem with that, but earlier on I constantly failed to ascertain any background information to today’s pick whatsoever, because some stupid internet filter screamed “ALARM!” whenever I googled for either ‘Tits’, ‘Stiff’ or ‘Teenage’! Pornography rules this world, I tell you!

So, as I don’t want to see the head of our IT Department appearing behind me in a few minutes in order to ask – quite rightly so – what is wrong with me, and thus finding myself on the dole tomorrow, I thought I’d better just give you the record without further ado: your number twenty-five, friends, enjoy:

mp3 : Dawn Chorus & The Bluetits – ‘Teenage Kicks’
Stiff Records – DAWN 1 (1985)

If memory serves Dawn Chorus were Liz Kershaw and Carole Vorderman … well known names to the Brits amongst you, I suppose, they don’t mean that much to us over here in real Europe.

Remarkably, David Bowie is credited with playing bass guitar, while the Undertones’ Damian O’Neill is listed as guitarist. Then again, over the years, I never really believed Bowie to have participated here.

Would you?

Cheerz,

Dirk

There were loads of great postings from Dirk that I could have posted but I went for it as it has a link with John Peel, it features something obscure that only the greatest of anoraks would recall and it highlights that Dirk, like the best bloggers, doesn’t take himself too seriously.

I’ve been fortunate enough over the past 8 years to have met many great bloggers whose work I admire – most of them as you’d expect are from Scotland but I’ve also met some American and Canadian friends along the way.  I haven’t yet been blessed with the good fortune to meet Dirk in the flesh…but I’m making a promise to myself that, in the words of Moz, it’s going to happen one day.

More Friends Electric tomorrow

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (5)

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Tuesday is normally the day that you come here and find a guest posting from S-WC. Today is only slightly different as it’s a lift from his brand new blog, When You Can’t Remember, which in just a few short weeks has already given t’internet a much-needed shot in the arm (not that I’m suggesting t’internet is a needy junkie…..)

The blog has a number of wry and humourous series underway – including the highly original ‘Tim Badger’s Animal Collective’ which looks at whether the band or the animal.creature the band is named after is more interesting….

Today’s steal is from the series ‘Forty Albums YOU need to hear before I am 40:-

Number 38 – ‘The Boy in Da Corner’ – Dizzee Rascal

Yeah, Dizzee Rascal, shut up. Before ‘Bonkers’ and all the chart topping stuff that you all secretly pretend to dislike, Dizzee Rascal released three albums of top drawer uk grime hip hop. The best being this one, his debut record. As I have said before this list isn’t about the best records ever made, its about records you should listen to and appreciate for their brilliant qualities. Records that have had an impact on my life and probably should on yours. Without Dizzee Rascal and in particular this record I would have never listened to Plan B, Roots Manuva, and countless other brilliant acts from the UK’s blossoming grime scene (at the time, anyway).

When this came out, Dizzee Rascal was 18 years old (and remember what I said about teenagers making music) and he instantly staked a claim that East London is hip-hop’s next great international outpost. Yup East London. For years the UK hip hop scene was ridiculed for basically copying the American one, but when this came out, we had something new. They called it grime, but in effect what you had was disillusioned UK (black and white) youths rapping about their surroundings and this time it rang home with millions of people in similar surroundings. Dizzee led the way talking about his youth in Bow, East London, his words reflecting the social and political landscape – he famously says on one of the tracks that ‘he is a problem for Anthony Blair’. It was this, the lyrical delivery and gutter beats that accompanied it that dragged UK hip away from the money, cash, hoes nonsense we saw before.

Opening track ‘Sittin Here’ sees Dizzee setting the scene talking about being weak, because his thoughts are too strong, this as an ambient sound of guns and police sirens just edges into the background. There is a strong craving for innocence crossing the whole album, which is easy to see when he is talking about teenage pregnancy, police brutality and losing friends to the insane gang culture that he was caught up in. By the end of the track he is saying ‘I’ll probably be doing this, probably forever’ that there is as decent a statement about a musical ambition as you will ever hear.

MP3: ‘Sittin Here’ – Dizzee Rascal

Of course there are tracks about girls, but instead of a bragging know-it-all swagger he approaches the topic with caution, using female rappers on tracks like ‘Wot U On’ who tells him ‘Love talks to everyone, money talks more’. Whilst ‘Jezabel’ deals with promiscuity in a manner which only Dizzee knows how. Dizzee’s debut single ‘I Luv U’ was recorded when he was 16 (16!) which again sees the use of a female MC – and it is pretty much an argument rapped out before your ears, an argument accompanied by bleeps, blips and a bass so deep you could abseil into it, lyrically it is astounding, remember folks, he was 16, “Pregnant/ Whatya talkin’ about?/ 15?/ She’s underage/ That’s raw/ And against the law/ Five years or more”. If there is a better more captivating moment in the last fifteen years of rap music anywhere in the world, I’d like to hear it.

MP3: ‘I Luv U’ – Dizzee Rascal

I’ll admit this now, I love rap music, I love it more when it makes people sit and listen to what it is actually saying. When this first came out, people laughed at me for championing it, saying it was sexist, gun worshipping rubbish, they hadn’t actually listened to it. It won the Mercury Music Prize about six months later and suddenly people were listening, a few years later UK Rap and Grime Music was more popular than ever, admittedly it has disappeared up it own backside a bit since 2006 but at the front of the scene when it mattered was Dizzee Rascal. This is an incredible record one which I urge you all to buy and listen to. To add weight to it is also helped me in my quest to learn to ski, that is another story for another time but I will end by saying that Dizzee Rascal is perhaps this generations Morrissey. Go on, buy it, see for yourself.

MP3: ‘Fix Up Look Sharp – Dizzee Rascal

JC adds:-

I also recall the first time I heard and saw Dizzee Rascal and being blown away by his talent. I’ve not got a great deal of rap in the collection but The Boy In Da Corner has a place and my views on it mirror those of S-WC…..although maybe not quote to the extent that he is this generations Morrissey. I think that accolade has to sit with Justin Beiber….always finding new ways to embarrass his millions of fans who nevertheless stand by their man.

More Friends Electric tomorrow

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (4)

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Most bloggers are blokes…..its an undeniable fact. But some of the best and most enthusiastic bloggers are from the fairer sex as perfectly demonstrated by today’s Friend Electric.

Last week’s posting from Matthew highlighted that some bloggers had subsequently been able, through their talents, to carve out some sort of career in mainstream journalism and the talents and brains behind Last Year’s Girl is a fine example of this.

It’s probably easier just to cut’n’paste from the ‘About’ section of what should more accurately be described as a website rather than a blog:-

According to Wikipedia, that first port of call for general knowledge and pub quiz answers in the information age, the term “blog” was first coined in 1999. Curiously that’s when I began blogging myself, although I’d never have given those early teen-angst fuelled online diaries so lofty a title. My blogging is as old as blogging! That’s actually pretty neat.

I’m 31 and still can’t walk in heels. Apparently, this is actually due to being born with flat feet and not, as I previously suspected, because I’m not graceful. I live in Glasgow, in the west of Scotland; with a boy I met on Myspace, two rambunctious kittens called Scooter and The Big Man and our monkey companion Moriarty. We got married in 2010, which was hilarious.

I describe myself as a journalist by profession because every time I’ve considered doing something else I’ve realised that I’d still have to blog about it when I got home. At the moment I’m using my Masters in the subject alongside my law degree, writing content for the online news resource of a top UK law firm. After hours I write for all sorts – generally on music – such as national arts site The Arts Desk, The Herald and Is This Music?

My friend Tyler once described me as having “Clarkson Syndrome: she hates everything.” He meant it as a compliment, which is fine because I took it as one. I think that tells you everything you need to know about my personality.

I adopted Last Year’s Girl as an online handle in 2003, when Jesse Malin sang it at me from the stage in King Tut’s (it’s a lyric from his song “TKO”). I’ve blogged here on my own domain since 2005: mostly about music, media law and overpriced make-up. Big hugs to my Web Hedgehog for tech support and things.

Oh, and you can call me Lis, and email me ; lisamarie@pixlet.net.

Last Year’s Girl is actually a bit like a quality on-line newspaper – you click on the home page and you are immediately given the option of visiting a load of sections as well as the chance to listen to Last Year’s Girl Radio. It’s not simply about music either….the current headings as I look at the page include What’s On Glasgow, Feminism, Fashion and #team14; the latter is primarily about the cultural programme which is supporting the staging of the 2014 Commonwealth Games here in Glasgow (an event which my day job is very heavily linked to and why July is such a busy month).

There’s also a section where Lis highlights gigs she has either been to or is looking forward to – one visit there and you will soon see that we have a habit of bumping into one another at music venues on a regular basis.

Last Year’s Girl comes very highly recommended and is written by one of the nicest and most affectionate people on the planet and who in recent weeks has even gotten herself on a new locally, based television studio as a reviewer. Maybe it won’t be too long till she’s famous to a wider audience – she deserves it.

These tunes are for you Lis:-

mp3 : Heavenly – Atta Girl
mp3 : Camera Obscura – Modern Girl
mp3 : BMX Bandits – The Next Girl
mp3 : Aztec Camera – Orchid Girl

 

THE MOZ SINGLES (Part 17)

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It’s taken me 17 weeks, but I’ve finally decided that I have to share the review given to a Morrissey single by the NME:-

He has become the embarrassing incontinent grandfather of Britpop. The song is piss-poor old crap and a tune-impaired three-minute drone.

Now, given that the world’s most famous vegetarian and the paper have waged a bit of a war with one another since the late 80s, it’s no surprise that many of his releases have been treated with some disdain by various correspondents. It has to be said however, that this is a particularly vitriolic putdown.

But whisper it……they’re right….well the bit about it being piss-poor old crap and tune-impaired.

mp3 : Morrissey – Dagenham Dave
mp3 : Morrissey – Nobody Loves Us
mp3 : Morrissey – You Must Please Remember

It’s a 3-track CD single saved by the quality of Nobody Loves Us, a song that amidst so much flotsam and jetsam demonstrates that the great man could still give us something worth clinging onto as we floundered for reasons to keep believing.

The cover star for once is not Morrissey, but instead is a photo taken sometime in the 60s of footballer Terry Venables (born in Dagenham). If you want to know more about the life of that particular chancer, read here.

The single was released in August 1995 and reached #26 in the UK charts. It can also be found on the largely unloved Southpaw Grammar LP.

Happy Listening.

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SINGLE (Part 98)

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From a profile in The Guardian newspaper back in November 2009:-

Series: New band of the week : The Sexual Objects (No 669)

With big pop tunes, giant choruses and ace titles, this new group from former Fire Engines singer Davey Henderson is no half-hearted stab at glory.

Hometown: Edinburgh

The lineup: Davey Henderson (vocals, guitar), Ian Holford (drums), Simon Smeeton (guitar), Douglas McIntyre (bass).

The background: It’s nice to see those original Postcard boys, Edwyn Collins and Paul Haig, back in action and on fine form. Roddy Frame has never really been away, so that just leaves the fourth man of early-80s Scottish indie pop, Davey Henderson, to stage a return and we’ve got the full set. Henderson was never on that seminal independent label with his band of the time, Fire Engines, but he was a hugely important figure in that transitional period between post-punk and new pop. In their scratchy, shambling, rhythmically perverse way, Fire Engines’ tracks such as Get Up and Use Me and Candyskin taught white boys how to dance and should have made singer/guitarist Henderson a household name.

Then again, in the minds of some people, he always was as big a superstar as Michael or Madonna, as cute as Bolan with the bite of Rotten, and so when he disbanded Fire Engines to form a groovy, glam outfit called Win claiming to offer “chewing gum for the ears”, a small coterie of admirers continued to hail him as rock’s great unsung hero. When Win failed to match critical acclaim with commercial success, even with sure-fire hits such as You’ve Got the Power, Henderson moved on once more, this time to the jerkily Beefheartian melodramas of Nectarine No 9, who received considerable praise for their eight albums between 1992 and 2004.

Nectarine didn’t sell any more records than Fire Engines or Win, but at least Henderson got the official seal of approval from a new generation of indie-funkers at the time of the band’s dissolution, coinciding as it did with the emergence of Franz Ferdinand – they didn’t just claim Henderson as an influence but actually recorded a double-A-side seven-inch single with a briefly reformed Fire Engines, the Engines covering Franz’s Jacqueline and FF having a bash at Get Up and Use Me.

Henderson could easily have left it at that, having passed the baton on, but something keeps him coming back. So here he is with band number four. The first thing you notice about the Sexual Objects – featuring former members of Win and Nectarine No 9 as well as Creeping Bent label boss Douglas McIntyre – is that, as with Win and Nectarine No 9, this is no half-hearted stab at glory. This is proper stuff: big pop tunes in a T Rex or Bowie/Eno (glam era, not Berlin) vein played on guitar, bass and drums with handclaps and giant choruses and titles that would look fab in neon flashing over Times or Leicester Square: Here Come the Rubber Cops, Full Penetration, Queen City of the Fourth Dimension.

As ever with anything bearing Henderson’s name, the songs are full of references to old pop hits, the performances veer perilously close to collapse while throughout he employs his trademark cheeky louche drawl – an analyst might conclude that he knows his subject too well and almost wants it (the pop success that has constantly eluded him) so badly he sabotages it before it’s had a chance to happen. And yet the music’s so ace, you decide it’s not your problem that Henderson is probably living on state hand-outs while musicians with a tenth his talent are scoffing caviar. There’s freakbeat here, there’s doo wop, there’s narcotic funk that suggests Prince in a drug den with Peter Perrett, there are Velvets/Television drones and the sweetest sugar pop. And to cap it all the Sexual Objects are apparently recording their debut album with electronic dreamers Boards of Canada! Now if they could get Sky Ferreira in to duet with Davey on their next single we really could die happy.

The buzz: “Henderson and Co are still the best rock’n’roll band on this or any other planet.”

The truth: Time to lubricate your living room again.

Most likely to: Achieve full penetration of the pop chart of our dreams.

Least likely to: Become sexual objects.

What to buy: Full Penetration is out now on Creeping Bent. The Sexual Objects play London’s Buffalo Bar on 27 November.

File next to: Win, Bowie, Bolan, early Eno.

mp3 : The Sexual Objects – Merrie England
mp3 : The Sexual Objects – Demonstration

A single from 2007…..

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (3)

toadsketch

Matthew Young has a blog called Song by Toad and he also runs a fantastic label called Song By Toad Records. He is an incredibly talented, generous and humourous human being on so many levels. He’s also a fantastic writer.  I wish I’d come up with this from earlier this month:-

TEN YEARS OF SONG BY TOAD, WHY DO I FUCKING BOTHER?

First things first: the answer to the above question is that I have absolutely no fucking idea why I bother.

Secondly: I have absolutely no idea if I’ve been doing this for exactly ten years, but I know it’s roughly there or thereabouts. It may not have a date stamp, but the first review I ever wrote was of Modest Mouse’s Good News for People Who Love Bad News, and that was released in April 2004, so I guess ten years is a reasonable guess.

It’s not strictly ten years of Song, by Toad either, because when I first started writing about music on the internet I didn’t call it Song, by Toad and it wasn’t a blog, initially. I just fired up reviews on a static site which nobody read.

I only discovered blogs a couple of years later, and realised that I was actually writing one already, so I moved everything over to Blogger and suddenly there I was, writing a blog like so many others. And the rest, of course, is history – if you know about the site you probably know it all already, and if you don’t then you probably don’t care.

I suppose I have to mark a (vague) ten-year anniversary one way or another though, and I suppose I’ve lived through the full cycle of blogging as it emerged, peaked and now seems to be petering out somewhat.

I say that, but people who talk about the death of blogging annoy me now as much as journalists who, back when it first emerged, would say that blogging was killing journalism. Blogging is simply a form of writing, and any good writer should be able to write a compelling blog. Blogging itself has simply been incorporated into mainstream journalism, and there are also more and more ways for amateur enthusiasts to get involved these days, so it would be daft to say that blogging is in decline.

What is in decline, though, is the sense that blogs are the drivers of the broader music conversation*. Back in about 2007 or 2008 they – or we, I suppose – seemed to be where an increasing number of fans went to read about new music. But that audience seems to have wandered off recently and blogging has diffused into dozens of different variations, from online magazines like Drowned in Sound, which publishes plenty of bloggy pieces but is still basically a magazine in digital form, to Twitter, which is published fan participation at its most minimal.

If you think about it, back when they first began to rise to prominence, blogs were the embodiment of the promise of the internet. Interactivity, amateur involvement, instant reactions… all the things we still talk about now. But back then there was no social media, for example, so all the silly conversations we see on Facebook and Twitter now actually used to take place in forums and in the comments sections on blogs. The informal nature of the writing was a welcome change to the rather stuffy world of real music journalism as well, but they learned their lesson pretty fast, and now professional journalists (being talented writers, generally) write some of the best blogs out there.

Most prominent bloggers with ambition either parlayed their status into jobs in the music industry itself or turned their blogs into online magazines, and the emergence of these has filled a large amount of the space between the amateur and the professional music press which bloggers had briefly threatened to overrun on their own.

Random chatter has now moved to social media as well, and as a consequence not only have blogs’ readerships declined, but that argumentative bickering in the comments section has moved elsewhere as well, and with it the obvious evidence of an engaged audience which made blogs so enticing to a music industry which, in 2009, had pretty much no idea where its audience had gone.

Nowadays, we know. Music fans are all over social media, they supply all their listening stats on Spotify, and with Soundcloud and YouTube embeds it is pretty easy to gauge exactly how much traction a newly released song has gained. Blogs somehow seem so old fashioned these days.

Partly, they have destroyed themselves, I must say. Posting and re-posting all the same old shit, regurgitating press releases, needless click-baiting, it all seems a bit passionless and craven. Some people made a real name for themselves with their blogs and it seems a lot of people are entering into the field with that as the goal from the start, rather than just for the joy of writing.

Back then, people blogged for loads of reasons. Some of those reasons are better served by social media these days, and others by other forms of participating in the music industry. Not all that many people wrote blogs for the particular joy of writing, or even because they thought of themselves as writers. They weren’t, they were music fans, blogging was just a way of enjoying music.

But I think that’s why I am still going some ten years later, when most people have a two or three-year trajectory from starting off to petering out. As well as music, I actually love writing and I always have. Song, by Toad isn’t just about reviews or finding the most acest new music ever, I just enjoy sitting down at the keyboard and wondering what nonsense is going to emerge this time.

It’s a pretty standard artistic cop-out to say that I don’t really expect people to read this blog, but I don’t. I’d like people to read it of course, but it’s not something I expect. There are more informed and analytical writers out there, and god knows what most people make of my music taste.

I’ve no idea where I’m going from here, either. There’s no real sense that I want to stop, although I would imagine that it’s pretty obvious that the label is taking more and more of my time these days. But two things come together here at Song, by Toad – my love of music, which writing the blog has enabled me to explore to levels I never really imagined, and my enjoyment of the act of writing.

I rarely know what I am going to write about, and although I think about albums a lot before I write about them, I never really plan the actual thrust of a write-up or think about phraseology or anything like that, I just sit down and write. And it’s fun. And I guess that’s probably why I’m still going after ten years when so many people who started at the same time has quit.

*Awful expression, I know. Sorry.

JC adds

Matthew didn’t add any songs to that particular posting, so I’m going to post a few things you’ll find on his label, beginning with an old song from probably the best-known act on Song By Toad Records:-

mp3 : Meursault – A Few Kind Words

Now a songs taken from Imaginary Walls Collapse, a release that should have been named Scottish Album of The Year 2013 (but somehow it didn’t even make the final shortlist of 10)

mp3 : Adam Stafford – Cold Seas

And finally, something rather beautiful and moving from Bastard Mountain, a Scottish indie/folk supergroup (of sorts!) given that they consist of Pete Harvey & Neil Pennycook from Meursault, Jill O’Sullivan from Sparrow & the Workshop, Rob St. John from eagleowl & Meursault, Rory Sutherland from Broken Records & Reuben Taylor from James Yorkston & the Athletes.

mp3 : Bastard Mountain – Meadow Ghosts

Now get yourself over to this website and spend some money.

More Friends Electric next Monday

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (2)

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The internet has made the world a much smaller place….and it has also made it easy to realise that there are kindred spirits out there, often in the most surprising of places!

Today’s friend electric is Brian who is the mastermind behind Linear Track Lives. I know that many of you have been keeping up with Brian, especially in recent months when he has been putting together an excellent Top 50 of UK indie hits 1980-89 featuring dozens of sings that you’d also find here on TVV, so you don’t really need to be told that he has a great taste in music and he is a damn fine chronicler of the indie scene.

But I can also vouch that Brian, together with Mrs Linear Lives, are a lovely couple having had the very good fortune to meet up with them a few years ago when they travelled all the way from Seattle to Glasgow just to fulfil one of Brian’s lifelong ambitions which was to catch Big Country play a gig at the Barrowlands Ballroom in my home city. The enthusiasm and passion he brings to his blog is clear for all to see but believe me, it is miniscule compared to the real-life enthusiasm and passion for indie music….here’s a man who would happily spend his entire life browsing around dusty second-hand vinyl stores and making visits to legendary venues and landmarks in whatever town or city he found himself. Let’s put it this way….if we went on Mastermind he would make his specialist subject ‘obscure b-sides of 80s indie music’ and he’d get 100% correct with no passes.

Brian tends to write short and snappy pieces, very often of a factual nature but when he does turn his mind to more in-depth stuff then it’s all to easy to see his fandom comes with a great writing talent as this example from August 2012 demonstrates:-

The blog has been pretty quiet this month because I have been doing a bit of traveling with the family. The good news is, along the way, I got to hit two legendary record shops worthy of mention.

The first, the cozy Vintage Vinyl in Evanston, Ill., is an old haunt I have returned to several times since my college years there two decades ago. Back then, my pockets were full of lint, and this not a store for the poor. For the most part, all I could do was dream. Even now, with a shekel or two in the piggy bank, I still can’t waltz out with much of a stack. There are no bargain bins, and I have never bought even a 12″ single for less than $15 to $20. The most absurd price for an album I saw this time around was $100 for ‘The Sound of The Hit Parade.’ Still, if you can get past the dollar signs, the selection is a real head turner.

You can find every imaginable genre, including a very impressive selection of ’60s rock, but the real treasures are unearthed in the UK-heavy punk/new wave section. Just to give you a taste, there aren’t too many spots in the U.S.A. that would even have an Associates section, let alone one with 18 pieces of vinyl, as I witnessed on a recent Friday afternoon. I picked up a few gems, including a handful Lloyd Cole 12″ singles that have eluded me for many years.

For a terrific mention of Vintage Vinyl from a real writer, read this piece from the great Dave Eggers that appeared in the Guardian back in ’06.

The second shop I visited this month was one I heard about in a most unusual way. Back in February, during my trip to Scotland, I was looking for the works of several local bands at Elvis Shakespeare in Edinburgh. As you may have guessed from its name, it was equal parts record and book store. I struck up a conversation with the owner and asked about the likes of Close Lobsters, Altered Images and others. He was out of virtually everything I desired. He explained he usually had what I was looking for but there were these two Americans that recently came in and cleaned him out. He said they fly over to the UK a few times a year and hit dozens of record shops, including his, to stock their own store back in Los Angeles. I took all of the info on this mystery store and hoped for a reason to be in SoCal.

Perusing the stacks at Wombleton Records made me anxious and giddy all at once. There were so many albums I had always wanted. There were so many more I had read about but had never actually seen before. Like Vintage Vinyl, the prices are out of my league. Since these fellas go to Europe, handpick the albums, hire a customs agent to take care of the bureaucracy and ship them to America, you can sort of understand why the Sounds’ first album, for example, was $60.

Other than the prices, just about everything else at Wombleton is wonderful. It’s an intimate and fantastically decorated shop. It’s — more or less — all vinyl, and the real hard-to-find albums are given their own section. I have never seen so much C86 in my life, and I didn’t see a single reissue. These were very old but well taken care of originals. And, oh, the 7″ singles! At one point I had six from Postcard in my hand… even though I knew I would never be able to afford them all. It just felt good to hold them. When the dust settled, I got a Hit Parade 7″ on Sarah, Orange Juice’s “Poor Old Soul” and Josef K’s ‘The Only Fun in Town,’ both on Postcard, a few rare Go-Betweens albums and an old favorite from Strawberry Switchblade. Seriously, if money was no object, I could have spent thousands of dollars. The scary thing is, according to the owner, his stock was low. They will be hitting the UK again next month. I hope I can find another excuse to head to Cali.

mp3 : Lloyd Cole & The Commotions – My Bag (dancing mix)
mp3 : Josef K – The Angle

More Friends Electric tomorrow

MY FRIENDS ELECTRIC (1)

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July is shaping up to be a ridiculously hectic month for me and I’ve got grave concerns that I’ll be able to devote enough time to keep the blog up to the standards that you’ve come to expect. But, like the hapless Baldrick, I have a cunning plan.

Over on the right hand side of TVV you will find a list of blogs that are a lot like my relatives (including my parents) and my dearest friends in that I’m constantly aware of them being near to me but I never find or make enough time to give them the attention they deserve.

My excuse is that there are only so many hours in a week that I can devote to blog-like activity and by the time I put my own daily posts together then there’s nowt left for visiting other people and leaving behind appreciative comments.  I’m going to try and make it up to those good people by paying tribute in a way I hope nobody minds.  It basically involves thieving….

I’ll be going into some of my favourite blogs and nicking an entire posting from them in an effort to show you the quality of what else can be found out there (just in case you weren’t previously aware).  The stuff you normally find in here with the exception of the weekend stuff (ie Moz and James series, the Saturday singles from Scotland) will return in August when I’ve got the time to do my own things once again.

I’m starting all this with The Robster whose blog is called Is This The Life?

This blog only started in February 2014 and it has proved to an astonishing piece of work in which the author sets out his life in words and music in numerous periodical installments.  He did this in a series of postings over a period of three months and unlike many others, there’s no re-writing of history to  exorcise those bands/singers/songs that many years on are now embarrassing to admit a liking to and unlike many others, there’s no shirking away from memories which are very personal and very painful.  Such as this:-

I suppose if you want to blame anyone for kickstarting my interest in all things music it would probably be my mum. Personally, I could never thank her enough. It was her records that I first picked up and listened to and it was she who bought me many of my earliest singles as I started to develop my own taste. And while she may have hollered at me to “turn it down” on more than a few occasions, she never once even suggested that I might be spending a little too much time listening to records in my bedroom and that I should be out doing something more constructive.

My earliest memories of my mum’s musical influence on me I’ve already documented but perhaps my fondest memories, as well as one or two of the saddest, come much later on.

The weeks that followed my first gig, the Wedding Present at Exeter Uni in 1988, involved me playing Wedding Present records often and loudly. Every so often, mum would pass by the bedroom door and remark: “They played that one, didn’t they.” Apparently, she heard the last 20 minutes of the show from the car park while waiting for us to come out. Not only that – she took in every tune and could identify them weeks afterwards! Not bad for a Frankie Vaughan fan, I thought.

Mum was never shy to offer her opinion when she felt the need:

“I think that record’s smashing.”
“I like his voice.”
“He’s a lovely looking chap.”

Those latter two were directed towards Tim Booth, enigmatic frontman of James, while the first statement was used to refer to the original version of their single Sit Down. (She was also known to remark “What a bleddy racket” about all sorts of things, but that’s another story!)

Sit Down was first released in 1989 when the band was in a sort of limbo state. They had been dropped by Sire records but not yet picked up by Fontana. The band released two singles on Rough Trade in this intervening period, the other being Come Home. Neither were hits at the time, but both were later re-released by Fontana and catapulted James to stardom.

I bought that original 12″ of Sit Down. It contained the extended 8 minute version with the lengthy instrumental ‘dub’ segment and it became one of my most played records. Because of this, it was inevitable that mum would become exposed to it at some point. When she was, she was immediately hooked.

Mum liked a good song, a proper song; a good strong melody, meaningful lyrics and no faffing about. Sit Down ticked all those boxes, plus in Tim Booth, it had a singer who could properly communicate the song. He’s one of those rare performers who sounds so perfectly genuine, even in his more obscure, arty moments. This wasn’t lost on mum. She was drawn to Tim Booth by his vocal expressions, the way he sang as much as what he sang.

Sit Down became our song and I always think of mum whenever I hear it, whatever version is played, and I smile because I’m reminded of how happy it made her feel.

“Those who feel the breath of sadness
Sit down next to me.” – ‘Sit Down’ by James

Another song that reminds me of mum, for entirely different reasons, is This Is How It Feels by Inspiral Carpets. Now there’s another band who knew how to write a decent tune, a prime example of a superb singles band (though their albums got progressively better; ‘Revenge Of The Goldfish’ is certainly worthy of a critical reappraisal). This Is How It Feels was released in 1990 as the lead single from the band’s debut album ‘Life’. The single and album versions had slightly different lyrics, but one particular line, present in both, still resonates with me and makes me think of mum.

In the 12-18 months leading up to that point, mum had started to become ill. There were no visible symptoms, but it started when she keeled over in the street for no apparent reason one afternoon. At the time she laughed it off as just clumsiness. Mum laughed all the time, and she was as stoical as the day is long. No fuss and nonsense for her, just laugh at your misfortunes and get on with it – that was her way.

But then, a week or two later, it happened again. Then again. That’s when she began thinking something was wrong. The next few months consisted of increasing visits to the family doctor, followed by misdiagnosis after misdiagnosis. Cancer was ruled out, multiple sclerosis was in, then out, until eventually we were told it was Motor Neurone Disease. The problem was, none of us knew anything about MND, and even our GP admitted he had never seen a case of it himself. Often the unknowns are far worse than the knowns.

Looking back, it’s easy to reflect on how terrified mum must have been. She would, in all likelihood, have been told her condition was terminal, but the lack of information available in those pre-internet days would have only served to stoke the fear and worry she must have felt. I know pretty much for certain her biggest concern would have been her boys and what would happen to us when she wasn’t here.

Meanwhile I just carried on as normal. It was like some form of denial I suppose, but at the time I refused to let what was happening affect my life. I’ve torn myself up over this ever since, but accept the guilt I feel as deserved punishment for the way I acted in the face of this catastrophic event.

Amidst all of this however, the one abiding memory I have is something my mum said to me as she passed my bedroom one evening. I was, as usual, playing records. On this occasion it was This Is How it Feels. It’s not a happy song, rather it evokes the feelings of helplessness, despair and turmoil in the face of domestic trials such as unemployment and depression. Mum heard a line which particularly resonated with her:

“Kids don’t know what’s wrong with mum
She can’t say, they can’t see
Putting it down to another bad day.”

“That’s like us,” she said. “Kids don’t know what’s wrong with mum, putting it down to another bad day.”

That’s all she said, but it’s all she needed to say. She understood. She couldn’t fully explain what was happening, and she knew I had to cope with it in my own way. Her citing of this lyric showed her empathy, compassion and warmth along with her own regret that she didn’t feel she could really tell us how she felt. I’ve thought about that an awful lot in the intervening years. I still carry the guilt but gain some comfort from that one moment. Of course, it also showed how she knew music was the one way she could truly communicate with me.

Things didn’t improve. Mum’s condition got progressively worse. She became wheelchair-bound, unable to dress herself, feed herself or go to the toilet by herself. She even lost the ability to speak. Her dignity and pride gradually ebbed away along with her capability to control her own life. Even worse, her mind was intact. She was fully aware of everything and everyone, but was unable to do or say anything. And all the while I just carried on regardless.

She passed away in a hospital bed one evening. I wasn’t there. I think I was watching TV. Arthur, our closest family friend who had recently become engaged to mum, was at her side. But I wasn’t. That remains the single biggest regret of my life. I can never change it. I hate that so much.

All I can do now is remember with fondness the way mum connected with me through music. She would probably hate that I can’t forgive myself for how I behaved back then, but that’s the sort of person she was. “Let’s just put it down to another bad day,” she would be telling me now. “Come and sit down next to me.”

I got round to reading that post about six weeks  after The Robster put it out there back in March.  I wanted to leave a comment but just couldn’t find the right words.  It is an astonishingly beautiful, heartfelt and moving piece of writing that reads as if it was composed by one of those much-heralded and award-winning columnists who populate the weekend supplements of our UK newspapers.

A couple of weeks ago, The Robster got right up to date with his life story, but thankfully, he’s keeping the blog going for now and most recently was sharing his personal memories of going to Glastonbury in the 90s.  It’s well worth a visit. In the meantime, here’s the tracks from the 12″ version of the songs that helped inspire that piece, together with an angry and very good cover version

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mp3 : Inspiral Carpets – This Is How It Feels (extended)
mp3 : Inspiral Carpets – Tune For A Family
mp3 : Inspiral Carpets – This Is How It Feels (radio mix)
mp3 : Inspiral Carpets – Seeds of Doubt
mp3 : Carter USM – This Is How It Feels

More Friends Electric tomorrow.