THE JAMES SINGLES (3)

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A short while ago, someone asked, via the comments section, whether I could start a series that featured the various singles released by James over the years.  I’m going to do my very best to comply with the request but there’s a few gaps in the collection that I might be unable to fill as the weeks and months go by.

Those of you wanting to go back to the very beginning will need to search the archives of T(n)VV and in particular the posting from 21 November 2013 featuring the songs that made up Village Fire, a 12″ EP from 1985 that brought together all the tracks recorded for Jimone and James II.

The band’s next release still causes a degree of confusion.  Here’s wiki:-

“Chain Mail” is a single by Mancunian band James, released in March 1986 by Sire Records, the first after the band defected from Factory Records.

The record was released in two different versions, as 7″ single and 12″ EP, with different artworks by John Carroll and, confusingly, under different names. The 12″ version was released as “Sit Down, three songs by… James”, even though it did not contain the later James hit, “Sit Down”, which in 1986 had not been written yet.

The only difference between the two versions musically was the inclusion of the song “Uprising” on the 12″ version. Neither song made it onto James’s debut album, Stutter, although live versions of “Chain Mail” and “Hup-Springs” were later included in the live album One Man Clapping.

It received rotten reviews from the UK music press  – “cold, turgid and morose” was the verdict delivered by Sounds, and it was completely ignored by mainstream radio.  Not surprisingly it came nowhere near troubling the charts.

mp3 : James – Chain Mail
mp3 : James – Hup Springs
mp3 : James – Uprising

It can’t be denied that this was a very bizarre choice of single.  It is whimsical and almost folk-like as indeed are the b-sides…..and yet, almost 28 years later it remains a hugely enjoyable listen……but even the most diehard of fans has to admit it would have been a miracle if it had made TOTP.

ALVIN LIVES (IN LEEDS)

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This is one of my own….but it was inspired by an idea and contribution from a reader.

Just the other week I featured the cover of Make Me Smile (Come Up and See Me) by The Wedding Present.  A comment from The Robster informed me that this was the band’s second take on that particular song as it had first been aired on an LP called Alvin Lives (In Leeds) : Anti Poll Tax Trax which, as the title suggests, was aimed at raising funds to help those campaigning against a particularly unpopular piece of government legislation.

Released in 1990, it consists of 12 indie acts doing cover versions.  As is often the case with a record like this, the output it is a bit hit and miss but what is quite astonishing is the sheer cheesiness of some of the choices:-

Tracklist 

Lush – Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep
Five Thirty – My Sweet Lord
Cud – Bohemian Rhapsody
The Popguns – Bye Bye Baby
Crocodile Ride – I Feel Love
Robyn Hitchcock – Kung Fu Fighting
Corn Dollies – Le Freak
The Wedding Present – Make Me Smile (Come Up And See Me)
The Close Lobsters – Float On
14 Iced Bears – Summer Nights
The Siddeleys – Love Grows (Where My Rosemary Goes)
The Perfect Disaster – Wanderin’ Star

It’s a bunch of huge hits from the 70s and  I kind of got the feeling that having been asked to be part of what was a worthy cause and then told they had to come up with a cover of a well-known record from the 70s, most of them then tried to think what could be the most ridiculous departure from the norm.

Special mention must be made of Cud.  They’ve taken one of the sacred cows of pomp rock and ripped the total pish out of it.  All the words and a semblance of the tune do appear to be in place but they bash the whole thing out in a little under three minutes:-

mp3 : Cud – Bohemian Rhapsody

Anyone can see (and hear), nothing really matters to them.

Elsewhere, the song taken on by Lush is more akin to a nursery rhyme but yet somehow in their hands it works as indie-pop with meaningless lyrics while Robyn Hitchock and his mates become human beatboxes on a crazy take of a novelty song:-:-

mp3 : Lush – Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep
mp3 : Robyn Hitchcock – Kung Fu Fighting

As you’d expect, the Weddoes do their usual fine job (and it is marginally different than the version recorded with Steve Albini and made available on the 3 Songs EP) while  I was also quite taken by some parts of Le Freak in which The Corn Dollies occasionally do a fine tribute to Gang Of Four:-

mp3 : The Corn Dollies – Le Freak

There were a few disappointments, none more so than The Close Lobsters whose take on what I’ve thought was always an appalling song somehow made me long for the original although the biggest waste of vinyl has to go to Five Thirty for what is a pointless re-tread of the George Harrison hit.

When this LP was mentioned in the comments, my dear mate Dirk from Sexy Loser professed his love for this track:-

mp3 : The Siddeleys – Love Grows (Where My Rosemary Goes)

It’s one that didn’t jump out on first hearing but I’ve persisted and now fallen for its charms.

In summary, Alvin Lives (In Leeds) is, like so many other projects of this nature, a mixed-bag, but I was delighted to have been given the opportunity to learn about it after all these years.  Hope those of you who aren’t familiar with the versions featured today will appreciate them.

Thanks Robster.

A YEAR IN THE LIFE OF GIGGING : 2013

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Today’s posting is from Aldo.  I first met him about ten years ago via Jacques the Kipper – they were work colleagues. Aldo is in his early thirties and incredibly enthusiastic about music.  He moved through to Glasgow a while back since when we’ve spent a fair bit of time socialising, particularly going to gigs and the occasional indie-club night.  He was also part of the small team who came with me to Toronto last August as part of my 50th birthday celebrations and the photo above is one he took at the legendary Horseshoe Tavern.  The band on stage are The Zilis.  Here’s his take on live music in 2013:-

 

Those of you who used to read the old blog may recall the challenge set down by JC and myself in 2012 to attend one gig a week in that calendar year, rounding off when the tidy figure of 50 gigs was reached. I entered 2013 with no intention of attempting to repeat the feat and indeed indicated to pals that I’d probably cut back a bit on live music.

It didn’t quite work out like that….

The year had began fairly slowly with only one gig in January and a handful in February, sticking by my intention to stay in more often. However, a number of gigs in the spring/summer, allied with the fact there was a steady stream of enticing shows being announced into autumn/winter brought on the realisation that I could very likely make the magic 50 again.  I’m proud that I did and that the final show of the years turned out to be one of the main highlights.

Looking back over the list there were some incredible highlights, from big acts in tiny venues (Franz Ferdinand, Albert Hammond Jr), to awards ceremonies (SAY awards, BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards), returning indie gods (Stone Roses, Suede, Pastels), motorcycle-helmet wearing bluesmen (Bob Log III) and even a concert with my mum (Eddi Reader).

‘So what were your favourites?’ I hear you cry, well here’s the top 5 standouts:

1. The Stone Roses at Glasgow Green

Having resisted any urge to go and see them at any of their 2012 comeback shows, there was no way I was missing them as soon as they announced a gig at Glasgow Green. Being well aware of their live shortcomings, I’d tempered my expectations for a band I’d idolised since my mid-teens, however, they were way better than I could have hoped. This despite the fact I could only enjoy the strains of Fools Gold from the first aid tent, as I’d been knocked over and suffered a cut to my hand in the melee a few numbers in!! A hugely memorable day.

mp3 : The Stone Roses  – Fool’s Gold

2. CHVRCHES at ABC, Glasgow

Sensational homecoming return from arguably Glasgow’s band of the year, another gig which exceeded my expectations and left me on a high for days after.

mp3 : CHVRCHES – Lies

3. Twilight Sad at King Tut’s, Glasgow

The 50th gig of the year and an early Christmas present for JC and I, our faves the Sad playing their debut album Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters in the close confines of King Tuts. Phenomenal. This edged out their show with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra (RSNO) in the majestic surroundings of Paisley Abbey which also deserves an honourable mention.

mp3 : The Twilight Sad with the RSNO – The Room (live at Paisley Abbey)

4. Suede at Barrowland, Glasgow

An enthralling run through the back catalogue and a reminder why Brett was one of the greatest frontmen of the Britpop era. A beautiful nostalgia trip.

mp3 : Suede – Trash

5. Arcade Fire at Barrowland, Glasgow

A mariachi band as support, most of the audience in fancy dress, papier-mache heads, a storming run through the new album, and turning the Barras into the city’s coolest disco afterwards – outstanding.

mp3 : Arcade Fire – Afterlife

The 50 in full (Glasgow venue unless otherwise indicated)

1. Radio 2 Folk Awards –  Royal Concert Hall
2. Trembling Bells – Glad Cafe
3. Ocean Colour Scene – ABC
4. Veronica Falls – Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA)
5. Kid Canaveral – Glad Cafe
6. Franz Ferdinand – Nice n’ Sleazy
7. Inspiral Carpets – King Tuts
8. Casual Sex/Amazing Snakeheads – Nice n’ Sleazy
9. Bob Log III – Mono
10. Father Sculptor – Stereo
11. Pere Ubu – Mono
12. Twilight Sad – PJ Molloys, Dunfermline
13. Pastels – CCA
14. Billy Bragg – Queens Hall, Edinburgh
15. Frankie & Heartstrings – King Tuts
16. Stone Roses – Glasgow Green
17. Bruce Springsteen – Hampden Park
18. SAY Awards – Barrowland
19. Twilight Sad, BMX Bandits, Meursault etc. – Oran Mor
20. Jazzateers + Vic Godard – Stereo
21. Ballboy – Glad Cafe
22. Indietracks Festival – Derbyshire
23. The Ballet – Glad Cafe
24. The Zilis – Horseshoe Tavern, Toronto
25. The Just Joans – Wee Red Bar, Edinburgh
26. Wire – King Tuts
27. Hooded Fang – Broadcast
28. Art Brut – Broadcast
29. Manic Street Preachers – Barrowland
30. Vaselines, Rick Redbeard, Adam Stafford, Ela Orleans – Platform
31. Paul Weller – Barrowland
32. CHVRCHES – ABC
33. MGMT – ABC
34. Admiral Fallow + Twilight Sad – Paisley Abbey
35. PiL – ABC
36. Big Country – Alhambra, Dunfermline
37. Veronica Falls – Broadcast
38. Suede – Barrowland
39. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Barrowland
40. Savages – Classic Grand
41. Deap Vally – Oran Mor
42. Arcade Fire – Barrowland
43. Julia Holter – CCA
44. Eddi Reader – Alhambra, Dunfermline
45. Withered Hand – Glad Cafe
46. Factory Floor – Stereo
47. Quasi + Hookworms – Broadcast
48. Albert Hammond Jr – Broadcast
49. Wonderstuff, Jesus Jones, PWEI – Picture House, Edinburgh
50. Twilight Sad – King Tuts

After all that I’m definitely cutting back in 2014……

Aldo

JC adds….

I was with Aldo on 12 of the above occasions.  I probably got to about another 8 shows that he wasn’t at so I’m reasonably happy with 20 in a year.

It is likely, by the time this piece appears that we will have been to our first gig together in 2014 as we were scheduled to catch RH Hubbert /Aidan Moffat last night.  But while that while be my first live show of the year (one that promise to be quite busy for a whole range of reasons), Aldo is already ahead of me thanks to him going to see The Pop Group/The Sexual Objects last Saturday night.  I’ve a feeling he will end up at 50 again this year.

FROM THE SOUTH-WEST CORRESPONDENT..WHAT’S IN YOUR BOX (17)

cds-in-murfie-boxKINGMAKER – IN THE BEST POSSIBLE TASTE

The flat mate who was having sex whilst I played Sparklehorse loved Kingmaker. I remember him vividly, singing along to this album (badly, out of tune, and without a care in the world) often he would forget the words and kind of ‘la la la’ a bit until the chorus kicked it and then it would be back to a very bad X Factor audition impression. I’m not sure what the ladies saw in him but I hope to God it wasn’t his singing skills. He was fluent in six languages so maybe it was that.

Where was I? Oh yeah Kingmaker, the third best band to ever come out of Hull (Debate time, name the other two…) I once got mildly slated in the mainstream press for calling Kingmaker a poor man’s Jesus Jones. I can understand why now in hindsight because Kingmaker are better than Jesus Jones. The poor man’s Wonder Stuff perhaps, without the fiddles, or the intelligent man’s Ned’s Atomic Dustbin, without the two basses? To be honest I just wanted to name check Ned’s Atomic Dustbin there, Kingmaker sound nothing like them.

Kingmaker’s early work achieved moderate success, they had Top 20 hits and their debut album called Eat Yourself Whole was really well received (and rightly so, its excellent). At the time, they were, along with so many others, The Next Big Thing (a phrase which basically deals a death blow to any band). After the success of the debut album, they struggled creatively, the second album failed to set the world on fire. Soon Kingmaker were criticised by the Hull glitterati (two words I never thought I would ever type together there…) for being middle class pretenders and they fell out of fashion. Personally I think Britpop happened and we were too busy listening to Menswear in our skinny jeans to notice Kingmaker any more.

Kingmaker split after the release of In the Best Possible Taste. They reformed again a few years ago without charismatic lead singer Loz Hardy, I’m not sure what happened to him but he always had a catchy soundbite to quote. To me he was the spirit behind Kingmaker and without him they seemed like faceless blokes who could have been in any band at any time. The problem was that when they released the LP no one was listening anymore – it bombed terribly failing to make the Top 75. The lead single made the Top 40 but only just.

I don’t think it helped that the album itself was released one month after the death of Kenny Everett – and I’m not sure if people though they were being ironic or not. Bit of a shame really as its pretty good, its flirts with rockabilly a couple of times on it, which is NEVER EVER a good thing, even if you are a rockabilly band – whether we the public are to blame for their demise for not getting it or whether it was just that they stopped making excellent records its not for me to say (but it’s the latter of the two) – its still a shame that Kingmaker never became as popular as they should have been.

mp3 : Kingmaker – You and I Will Never See Things Eye To Eye

I heartily recommend the debut album of Kingmaker, you all own much worse records, (probability is that at least one person reading this will own a Toploader record or something by The 1975) but I wouldn’t recommend the New Kingmaker (Kingmaker MMX to give them their full, terrible name) to you though, although tracks are available to download or stream on their website so you can decide for yourself.

S-WC.

JC adds the only Kingmaker single from the collection.  Have to say, listening to it again for the first time in the best part of 20 years do I hear what S-WC has pointed out and that’s how similar they sound to Wonder Stuff,  a band I caught live a couple of times in that era. Time has passed very quickly.

mp3 : Kingmaker – Ten Years Asleep

Enjoy!

MY LIFE AS A TEENAGE DEAD TROUT

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One of the things I was most proud of over at the old blog was that I was able to post loads of guest contributions – I reckon something close on 70 different folk must have written something for The Vinyl Villain at one point or other over the near seven years of its life.

S-WC is of course continuing the tradition with his regular Tuesday slot but I’m delighted to say that for the next few dyas at least, the blog is going to have a series of things from other folk.  And I’m starting with something that, following on from last week’s Cope/McCulloch/Wylie musings,  is very apt.   It is also very funny, self-deprecating and brilliantly written.  Prepare to smile and most likely laugh out loud.   Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Phil Oates, the brains behind the corn poppy blogspot and ex-member of the beat-combo Dead Trout:-

Over at thenewcornpoppy.blogspot.co.uk I’ve been reminiscing, trying to post a lifetime of songs from 1961 to 2014. To be honest, I don’t really remember what I was listening to in the crib (when a crib meant a crib) but I’m looking forward to getting to the ‘70s. Then there’s a pretty fallow period from the early ‘80s . . .

While looking for pictures of Liverpool in the 60s and 70s to illustrate these posts I came across an excellent blog (streetsofliverpool.co.uk). Thumbing through I found a picture of Kirklands Wine Bar from 1977  . . .and it’s been used to illustrate this post.

Upstairs at Kirklands bands used to play. I remember going to a benefit gig there to save the Lyceum, once a Gentleman’s Club, later Liverpool’s first lending Library, later still a Post Office. This would have been late 1978. It must have been a successful gig because the Lyceum is still there.

I don’t recall exactly who was on the bill; I think the Moondogs played, remember the Accelerators were advertised to appear but didn’t, Big In Japan almost certainly headlined. One I do remember was Julian Cope playing his second gig as Teardrop Explodes. They played as a two piece: Julian on bass and stylophone (as advertised on tv by Rolf Harris) and Gary Dwyer on drums. It was a short set, just four songs, including Louie Louie and Robert Mitchum , Julian’s fanboy tribute “you’re such a dude, such a guy, you’re so half asleep” which turned up a decade later on the Skellington Chronicles.

More significant for me that day was a conversation with a couple of students whose band I had seen a few nights earlier at Eric’s.

Hello, I said. You’re the Dead Trout.

Hey, they said. Our first fan.

Which is how I fell in with the Dead Trout. (This was a long time ago, c’est juste une histoire, not a history book. Apologies in advance for any inaccuracies).  They were Jon and Julian and within a few weeks they suggested I perform a song with them. It was to be based on a single note (E) and have one line. I am the controller. Although I was painfully shy and had no singing voice I obviously said ok. Because that’s what you do when you are 17.

My first public performance was at the Everyman Bistro and I remember nothing at all about it.

Bill Nighy’s first public appearance was also at the Everyman Bistro.

The next was at the Factory in Manchester. This was Tony Wilson’s club in Hulme, Manchester. There were rough bits of Liverpool in 1978 but Hulme was much, much worse.

Dead Trout were supporting Pink Military who suffered the indignity of having bottles and ashtrays hurled at them. Nobody really paid much attention to the Trout. I remember more about the before and after of that day than the gig itself. We met up at Jayne Casey’s flat in central Liverpool. Spent some time there. Oh hi Holly Johnson, hi Spitfire Boys, hi Pete Burns. Yeah, we’re part of this scene.

There was the Commer van journey down the M62 to Manchester and back as the snow began to fall. We heeded advice and didn’t stop at the traffic lights around Hulme. We had to carry gear miles through the snow when we got back to the Halls of Residence. And like George Harrison in Hamburg I was too young even to be going into the venue.

The highlight was a Saturday night at Eric’s. My Fifteen Minutes. I only found out about the gig on the Friday. Joe Jackson was playing at Eric’s and I was mithering him trying to get him to give me the Ramones badge he was wearing. These two came over and interrupted. Joe turned to give them the autographs he expected they were after but it was me they wanted.

We’re playing here tomorrow night.

This had been in the offing for a while, Roger Eagle, Eric’s manager, always happy to give enthusiastic amateurs their moment in the sun. Ok. We were the unadvertised support for pragVEC.

Being a typically pretentious teenager and trainee diva I had done my best to develop my part. I had expanded the lyric of I Am The Controller. I had translated its one line into French, German and Italian. Probably I was inspired to do this by the fact that Bowie had just recorded “Heroes “as “Helden” and “Heros”. Plus I knew an Italian guy called Dom. So now the song went:-

“I am the controller,
je suis le controller,
ich bin der controller,
Io son il controllotore.”
(repeat ad nauseum)

I step up onto the stage.

The stage previously graced by the Ramones, the Clash, Sex Pistols, Talking Heads, Iggy Pop, Elvis Costello, Rezillos, XTC, Punishment of Luxury, the Mekons, the Teardrops, Bunnymen, Big in Japan . . . This is my Madison Square, my Rainbow, Budokan. The weight of expectation. A short time earlier I’d been one of the crowd and now . . . The band, which numbered around seven that night, started this rhythmic drone (do I contradict myself? I contain multitudes . . .) the usual bass, drums, guitars, plus violin, kazoos and more. And I stepped up to the mic. I’ve never claimed to be a singer, so all I do is to intone the words, kind of in the style of Ian Curtis “day in, day out, day in, day out”. Getting a bit faster at the end, kind of shouting io son il controllotore. Went ok.

They’re still playing. Do the verse again. I can hear another voice singing the words, a fraction of a second behind me. This hasn’t happened before, ok, I’ll slow down and then we’ll be in time. I slow down . . . I . . .am . . .the . . .con . . .troll . . .er . . . the other voice slows too, still behind me. It kind of dawns that it is just a trick of the PA, a delay or echo but it is too late. I keep going. Deathly slowly. Like it is supposed to sound like this. It seems the slower I go the more the band get into a stramash, faster and noisier, everything playing at once. I think they’re going to finish so I turn around to watch them. If there’s one thing that feels more unnatural to me than singing it is dancing so I don’t dance.

But you can’t help but move, so I’m waving my arms around, except being too cool for school I don’t take my hands out of the pockets of the long mac I’m wearing. So I have my back to the Saturday night Eric’s crowd with this coat waving round like a raven having an epileptic fit. I’m not saying that Ian Curtis was in the audience that night but JD’s career began to take off after that.

When we came off Pete Wylie, then of Crash Course, later Wah! Heat said either “I wish I was in a dance band you can think to” or “I wish I was in a thinking band you can dance to.” Either way it sounded like a validation.

(and now back to JC for the choice of tunes related to today’s post)

mp3 : Pink Military – Did You See Her
mp3 : Spitfire Boys – British Refugee
mp3 : Those Naughty Lumps – Iggy Pop’s Jacket

Enjoy!!!!!

CULT CLASSICS : IS THIS THE LIFE by THE CARDIACS

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Joy of joys……………this week’s contribution is from The Robster – the man who, together with Echorich, makes an incredible number of very welcome and worthwhile  contributions to the blog via the comment section.

When I started getting into indie music back in the mid-late 80s, I bought some of those Indie Top 20 compilation albums. One of them included ‘Is This The Life’ by Cardiacs. It stood out as a highlight of that particular record and got me interested enough to buy their album.

I had no idea who they were, that they had been going for a decade, or that ‘Is This The Life’ had already been released twice before – on the cassette-only albums ‘Toy World’ and ‘The Seaside’. All I knew was that I loved their sound, and it was one of the coolest songs I’d heard with a sax in it!

The album intrigued me and it was a fixture on my record deck for months. This was one very strange band, clearly touched by genius but far too odd to ever really gain any support or credibility from the media (as evidenced by the NME banning the very mention of their name).

‘Is This The Life’ was probably the most accessible track on that album; arguably it is one of the most accessible songs in their entire canon. It’s still a really bloody good track to this day, though I did have to wrestle between this one and ‘Dirty Boy’ (from their 1996 masterpiece ‘Sing To God’). ‘Is This The Life’ was the closest they ever came to a hit (it still didn’t make the top 75) and it was the one that introduced me to Tim Smith’s brilliantly bizarre mind.

Sadly, Tim’s illness (he suffered a heart attack and two strokes in 2008) probably means Cardiacs will never work again. At least they have a legacy though. Even if ‘Is This The Life’ had been the only record they ever cut, it would still have been worth it.

mp3 : The Cardiacs – Is This The Life (1981, from the ‘Toy World cassette’)
mp3 : The Cardiacs – Is This The Life (1988. single version)
mp3 : The Cardiacs – Is This The Life (1995. live version from ‘All That Glitters’)

Video available to view right here.

The Robster

JC adds

First time I’ve ever heard this…….and it comes highly recommended.  The single version reminds me in places of The Cure…

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

mp3 : Big Hard Excellent Fish – Imperfect List

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

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

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

Enjoy.

AN INDIE-DANCE TUNE FROM THE PEN OF LEONARD COHEN

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No….your ears do not deceive you.  But it is courtesy of a cover version:-

mp3 : Ian McCulloch – Lover Lover Lover

Bearing absolutely no resemblance whatsoever to the 1974 original, Mac the Mouth gives us something we can all shake our snake hips to.

Released back in 1992, it got as high as #47 in the singles chart and was the highest placed of the eight singles Mac released as a solo artist.  The cupboard contains the 12″ version which was produced by Henry Priestman (ex It’s Immaterial and The Christians) and mixed by Mark Stent (who went on to find huge fame and fortune working with Oasis) :-

mp3 : Ian McCulloch : Lover, Lover, Lover (Indian Dawn Remix)

I suppose,  for the sake of completeness, I should also shove up the b-sides:-

mp3 : Ian McCulloch : White Hotel (acoustic version)
mp3 : Ian McCulloch : Vibor Blue (acoustic version)
mp3 : Ian McCulloch : The Ground Below

The first of the acoustic numbers is a version of a song on his 1989 LP Candleland while the second is a version of one than can be found on Mysterio from 1992.

Enjoy.

BLESS MY COTTON SOCKS

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One of my fondest memories is going to see a Queen gig at Ingliston in Edinburgh in 1982. But before anyone reports me to the bad-taste cops, I need to say that I went along purely to see the support act – The Teardrop Explodes.

Whoever came up with that line-up certainly had a fantastic sense of humour. Julian Cope came on to a barrage of abuse and taunted the crowd like I’ve never seen before or since. The band (which was more or less session musicians by this point) played a stormer. Julian would say things like…’Here’s the one of mine that I’m sure you all know and love’ before launching into an obscure b-side….which he sung in French!  Magnifique.

Sadly, I only have the english language version….but you’ll see from the pace and mood of the record that this was not what the rock fans had come to heae….

mp3 : The Teardrop Explodes – Use Me

The Teardrop Explodes were only able to release two LPs at their peak, both of which have dated incredibly well while their one smash single remains instantly recognisable and enjoyable more than 30 years on.  I think it is fair to say that interest in the band has remained reasonably high long after their demise, largely due to the quality of that material and also for the fact that Julian Cope remains such a curious yet charismatic individual whether as a musician or writer including  two incredibly readable volumes of autobiography as well as more obtuse and difficult books on  cult German and Japanese music .

In 2000, he was asked if he ever envisaged his band reforming. In reply, Julian said : “Would you ever return to having your mother wipe your asshole?”

I think we can safely assume he meant no.

mp3 : The Teardrop Explodes – Reward
mp3 : The Teardrop Explodes – The Culture Bunker
mp3 : The Teardrop Explodes – Tiny Children

Enjoy

FROM THE SOUTH-WEST CORRESPONDENT…WHAT’S IN YOUR BOX (16)

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Weather and Feminism

But to start with a bit about the weather and something completely different. Recently the weather in the South West has been terrible, awful, most of it is underwater and I swear I saw a Merman the other day in the local branch of Waterstones.

So yesterday as I trudged back from the sandwich shop clutching my avocado and pine nut salad sandwich (I say sandwich shop, I mean, ridiculously expensive deli) a song came on my Ipod. It was ‘Sennen’ by Ride and as I walked through the lakes and wind lashed more rain into my face, I smiled, because this song made me feel warm, dry and a little bit cosy.

For those of you who don’t know, Sennen is a beautiful beach in Cornwall (check it on the Interent – I thoroughly recommend a visit), right at the end near Lands End. It is one of my favourite places on Earth and I firmly believe that it has never rained there.

The song itself by Ride is a sunny type of song, and in the perfect world, when the weather forecasters say ‘Rain, Wind, Hail, Plague of Frogs’ they should then be forced to say ‘Never mind all that though, here’s Ride with Sennen, now smile you miserable toads’. So if its wet, damp and your lounge is full of mud, here’s Ride with ‘Sennen’. Hope for the four minutes or so that you listen to it, it makes you smile as much as it did me. Play it in the rain and grin like a loon.

mp3 : Ride – Sennen

Anyway back to the box choice, Bandit Queen, for those who don’t know, where a Manchester three piece fronted by former Swirl (nope, me neither) singer Tracey Gooding, released one album ‘Hormone Hotel’ in the mid 90’s. (which is what has come out of the box).  A second album was recorded and never released until the power of the Internet allowed it to be self released in 2010. They came across on the ‘feminist angle’ back then and they seem a fitting choice for today because as I type it is Simone de Beauvoirs 106th birthday and if the Google Doodle is correct, she’s looking good on it. There were also named after the Indian Freedom Fighter Phoolan Devi and were strongly influenced by Frida Kahlo (even putting her on the cover of Hormone Hotel) so you get the agenda that they were addressing.

 

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I have chosen the lead single of the album ‘Miss Dandys’, a spiky little pop song all about crossing dressing gigolos.

mp3 : Bandit Queen – Miss Dandys

The bands bio states that they sit perfectly in between The Breeders and Throwing Muses and you will see why, they have that clever lyric writing going on that the Throwing Muses had and they have the angriness of The Breeders, although Miss Dandys is no ‘Cannonball’. Decide for yourself.

mp3 : The Breeders – Cannonball

I remember quite liking this when I was a student and I made it Single of the Week in my column in the Student Rag I know this as in pen next to the song I have written ‘SOTW’, today I checked the archives and it beat ‘Mansize Rooster’ by Supergrass to that accolade, so I think I must have been drunk when I listened to it. I mean its good, but its not that good. The album promised much, and kind of delivers, you get much more of the same, decent indie pop, well worth an investment if you can find a cheap copy, (or give me a shout and I’ll see what I can do).

S-WC

THE MOZ SINGLES….

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Back in November 2008 over at the old place, I began a series that looked at the 38 singles released by Morrissey.  It was intended to be a weekly series but between one thing and another,  the project took just over a year to complete. 

It was, unsurprisingly, one of the most popular features that ever appeared on TVV.  I’m now considering resurrecting it here on T(n)VV, partly as I’m guessing a number of readers are reasonably new to the stuff that I write and won’t necessarily have been around in 08/09 but also because I am finding increasingly difficult to come up with fresh stuff for the blog on a daily basis.

The thing is dear readers, if it is something that you feel is a total waste of time then please let me know and I will desist….the comments box, as ever, is all yours.

I’m going to do the series in the same random(ish) order from first time round but it won’t simply be a re-write from the first time round as I will incorporate some of the things that were said in the comments section.

For those of you who may not be familiar with the subject matter, Steven Patrick Morrissey was born on 22 Nay 1959 in Manchester. He first found fame as the lead singer with The Smiths (1982-1987) but the following quarter of a century saw him embark on a solo career that has had its highs and lows and which has so far consisted of 9 studio LPs, 2 live LPs, 1 live EP, 11 (count them!!) compilation LPs and 38 singles. Oh and 1 autobiography.

His 39th single was released as a digital download in December 2013 but the vinyl versions won’t be available until late-January 2014. The single and the b-sides are all live tracks…but that’s for a future posting.

Today’s offering dates from 1995 when the great man had just moved label to RCA after seven years with EMI. After the critical and commercial success of Vauxhall and I in 1994 which at long last had folk talking about the songs again instead of simply looking at Moz the strange and often contrary and controversial individual, the content of follow-up LP Southpaw Grammar baffled many.

It contained just 8 tracks in total, of which two were more than 10 minutes in length and a huge departure from anything else he’d done in his solo career. It was an album cover that did not feature a photograph of Morrissey – again this was a departure from anything else thus far in the solo career, albeit the single Boxers, his final record for EMI at the beginning of 1995, had also not featured the singer on the cover.

Southpaw Grammar was released at the end of August 1995 and for the main part received a critical panning, although it sold well enough with long-time fans to reach #4 in the UK charts. It is an album that most fans rate as the most disappointing of the career although there are others who rate it highly for the very reason that it is so different from anything else he has ever done (although I don’t know anyone who is a fan of the extended drum solos!)

Two singles were taken from the LP. The first was Dagenham Dave, which appeared some 7 days in advance of the album (it too had a non-Morrissey sleeve).

The second single was The Boy Racer which came out some three months later. Given the time gap between the two singles, and the fact that Morrissey appears on the sleeve of one of the two CDs that were issued, I’m making an educated guess that it was an effort by the singer and his label to try to generate some fresh interest in the LP.

It was a ploy that failed, as the single got next to no airplay and barely dented the Top 40.

The lack of new songs for the b-sides didn’t help either – all that was on offer were live recordings from a London gig in February 1995.

It’s a bit of a shame as The Boy Racer, while by no means the greatest thing ever recorded, is a reasonable single that was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. It’s certainly the most accessible bit of music on the parent album.

But if there’s one thing it did highlight, it was that Morrissey’s performances of songs by his old band left you pining for Johnny Marr:-

mp3 : Morrissey – The Boy Racer
mp3 : Morrissey – London (live)
mp3 : Morrissey – Billy Budd (live)
mp3 : Morrissey – Spring-Heeled Jim (live)
mp3 : Morrissey – Why Don’t You Find Out For Yourself (live)

Enjoy.

CULT CLASSICS : ‘I CAN’T CHOOSE JUST ONE’

Today’s wonderful words were typed by Friend of Rachel Worth, the talent behind the much-loved and much missed blog Cathedrals Of Sound (the final posting was May 2013 but you can still enjoy what he had to say by clicking here)

Well this has caused some angst as most of my record collection consists of stuff that I’m convinced should have outsold thriller and be hailed as a work of Sgt Pepper type genius but sold diddly squat and disappeared to find a life only on long forgotten home made compilation tapes or in the darkest corners of the internet

I can’t choose just one so have had to go with 4 bands and 5 songs that should have been massive and played regularly in school assemblies

1.  Ballad of the Band – Felt

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First up is by surely the ultimate cult band….Felt. Led by Lawrence with a vision of 10 singles and 10 lps in 10 years and then split up. Feted by critics and many of his peers and living in an alternative world where he saw himself as a top pop star with Felt rubbing shoulders with Madonna at the top of the charts, it never really happened as Lawrence was convinced it would. Instrumental lps and songs with long strange titles meant that they never really made it past the indie chart (does such a thing still exist?) and the festive 50.

Their best known song is probably Primitive Painters with the Cocteau Twins’ Liz Fraser sharing vocals, however I’ve gone for a band divorce played out in a 3 min pop song. The departure of long time guitarist Maurice Deebank prompted Ballad of the Band with its lyrical riposte and the swirling Hammond organ turned up high in the mix as an added insult to the guitarist.

Where you been
Aint seen you for weeks
You’ve been hanging out with all those jesus freaks

Where were you
When I wanted to work
You were still in bed
You’re a total jerk

mp3 : Felt – Ballad of The Band

It also has a gorgeous cover.

2.  Heavenly Pop Hit – The Chills

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Another band built around a maverick , this time New Zealander Martin Phillipps. Not sure if they really count as they had success in their own country , but in the UK gloriously under achieved. The more culty song is probably early single Pink Frost about the death of former band mate. It is a haunting tune with a bit of early Cure thrown in.

However I love Heavenly Pop Hit which does exactly what it says on the tin .. except for the hit bit.

For about a month this single and the lp it came from (submarine bells) were championed by Record Mirror but quickly dumped when they realised they had failed to back a winner … again (always much better than NME or Sounds at spotting a lost cause or backing the wrong horse)

Its a joyous summer sound that you need a big breath to sing along to and ends with a simple offer

It’s a Heavenly Pop Hit
For those who still want it

The last line whispered / mumbled , a sad realisation of what pop would become in x factor wilderness

mp3 : The Chills – Heavenly Pop Hit

It too has a gorgeous cover

3. The Sun It Shines Here / I’ll be Your Surprise – Hurrah!

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The exclamation mark is important! Hurrah! were one of the fantastic 4 (alongside The Kane Gang , The Dainties and Prefab Sprout) signed to Kitchenware records. They released a glorious set of jangly guitar singles (brought together in the lp Boxed) before being signed by a major and taking a step too close to rock (leather jackets and supporting U2 included) . The trio benefitted from the fact that all 3 were songwriters and could sing (the quality showed it wasn’t a case of letting Ringo have a go)

The first 4 singles were glorious and the debut double a side remains one of my favourite singles. It may sound like it has been recorded in a cardboard box with broken bass dial and the treble turned too high , but the guitars sparkle with a Byrds sound that at the time seemed fresh and the harmonies are spot on.

I’m not sure how on earth I got hold of a copy of the single (there was no way this made its way into Spalding Boots’ singles rack) so can only think I must have sent away for a copy
Released in 1982 (a year before Hand in Glove), at 15 they felt like my own private cult band

Later solo lps show a spiritual , religious side that has made me look back on some of the earlier lyrics , which at the time would have had me running for the hills (not that we had any hills in the fens), but for a period they seemed like the coolest band going

mp3 : Hurrah! – The Sun It Shines Here
mp3 : Hurrah! – I’ll Be Your Surprise

Fitting in with the style of other Kitchenware releases , it has a great cover

4. Indian by Eg and Alice

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From one extreme to the other . Take one ex member of Brother Beyond add an ex bmx champion and model and you shouldn’t really have the makings of a cult single. This also breaks the indie label rule and is so smooth it sails close to the dinner party wind , the kind of soulless soul music that was all over the radio in the late 80s.

Somehow Indian rises above all this, it manages to be haunting and catchy at the same time, with enough going on to keep it out of the bland. It ‘s got a strange kind of emotional punch that can creep up on me when I hear it. If it pops up unawares on shuffle it is one of those songs that sneaks its way into the foreground and means I stop whatever I’m doing to listen and start remembering

Its cult because it is one of those songs that just feel like a lost classic and those that like it love it with a passion. One of the joys of the internet is finding like minded souls, and Indian is one of those acid test singles. When it comes up in conversation , if peole like it (and most who have heard it do) then I’m feel pretty safe with anything they are going to recommend

If it hasn’t washed over you the lp it comes from ,24 Years of Hunger is well trying to get hold of.

Eg is now a songwriter for hire , often with people I cant stand , however he has released 2 solo lps that are full of quirky diamonds

mp3 : Eg and Alice – Indian

The cover is pretty smart too

Apologies for being so greedy , I could go on and on !

Note from JC

Ballad of The Band and its related b-sides was one of the very last postings I ever made at TVV before google pulled the plug on it.  Can’t help but agree with Friend of Rachel Worth about it being a classic….as indeed are the other tracks which until now were previously unknown to me.

It could well be that FoRW will be asked to go on and on…..I’ve only, at the moment, got two more weeks of cult classics to go as the inital flurry of e-mails when I started the series has not been followed up with many more over the festive period.

If there’s a flop 45 or 45s you’d like to bring to the attention to the few hundred daily visitors to T(n)VV, then please drop me an e-mail : thevinylvillain@hotmail.co.uk

Cheers

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SINGLE (Part 75)

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From wiki:-

Love and Money are a rock/soul/funk band formed in 1985 in Glasgow, Scotland. The band was formed by three former members of Friends Again (singer-songwriter and guitarist James Grant, drummer Stuart Kerr and keyboardist Paul McGeechan) along with bassist Bobby Paterson, who replaced Friends Again’s Neil Cunningham and who had been a member of Set The Tone, a band previously signed to Island Records in 1983.

In their initial nine years together they recorded four moderately successful albums, three of which were released in the United States, and had six chart hits in the United Kingdom.

Now given that I’ve long professed a huge amount of affection for the work of Friends Again, it really should follow that I’m a huge fan of Love and Money, but it never worked out that way.

I did try.  I went along to loads of the early gigs which were enjoyable enough but in a scary reprise of what had happened with Friends Again when they signed with a major label, the production on many of the  records left me cold.  It was almost as if the label bosses had a pre-conceived ideas in their collective heads that Love and Money could obtain the same sort of pop audience that had been attracted to Wet Wet Wet. Some very fine songs were butchered in the studio, at great expense and with big-name producers in the chairs,  and all to no avail as single after single failed to dent the higher echelons of the charts.

The strange this is that having turned my back on the band after 2 LPs that were just too clinically conceived for my liking, the band then delivered Dogs In The Traffic in 1991 which was very stripped-down and almost rootsy compared to previous efforts…..but I didn’t know that for about another 10 years when I picked up a very cheaply priced second-hand copy and gave it a listen.  Since then….and again back to wiki:-

Love and Money’s fourth album, Littledeath (1993) was released independently on Iona Gold records and featured the single, Last Ship on the River. Due primarily to lack of promotion, Littledeath sold 25,000, around one tenth of the sales for Strange Kind of Love and the group were subsequently released from Mercury. Bassist Bobby Paterson had split from the band to form a career in bar management and did not feature on this album, Grant himself taking on bass duties. The remainder of the band went their separate ways in 1994, although they did regroup for one, seemingly final, gig at Glasgow Barrowland on 23 December 1994.

James Grant released his first solo album Sawdust in My Veins in 1998 and has released four further albums, My Thrawn Glory, I Shot The Albatross (a collection of poetry set to music), Holy Love, and Strange Flowers. The latter was released in February 2009 and Grant premiered the tracks at the Glasgow ABC venue as part of the 2009 Celtic Connections festival. He also scored the film, The Near Room and has collaborated with Capercaillie’s Karen Matheson, performing live and writing songs for her solo records.

Love and Money reformed ‘for one night only’ for a successful sell out show at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall as part of Celtic Connections 2011. They played the albums Strange Kind of Love and Dogs in the Traffic in their entireties and dedicated the song Walk The Last Mile to bassist Bobby Paterson, who had died in 2006. It was announced in March 2011 that the band would continue their reunion with a show at the Clyde Auditorium in Glasgow on 4 December 2011.

The band previewed its fifth studio album ‘The Devil’s Debt’ to a sold out show at King Tuts Wah Wah Hut in Glasgow on 5 May 2012. The album was released on Vertical Records in October 2012 to positive reviews.

Maybe one day I will get around to getting my hands on the later material, but I just cant really listen to the band without thinking about what could have and probably should have been. James Grant was a bit of a guitar hero of mine back in the day and I really wish the harder rock-orientated versions of the songs from those early live gigs had seen the light of day. In the meantime, here’s the debut single in all of its 12″ finery:-

mp3 : Love and Money – Candybar Express (extended mix)
mp3 : Love and Money – Candybar Express (LP version)
mp3 : Love and Money – Love & Money (dub)

As produced by Andy Taylor of Duran Duran and The Power Station.  It has, I’m sorry to say, dated appallingly.

 

ANOTHER MISUNDERSTOOD LYRIC

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“This one goes out to the one I love”.

With that such simple sentiment seemingly at the heart of the song, it is easy to understand why it has become a bit of a favourite among newly married couples as the wedding waltz.

The fact that the rest of the lyrics are clearly about a failed relationship, and one that the protagonist is quite happy to boast was nothing more than a passing fancy, surely means that this is a song whose true meaning has bypassed most listeners.

mp3 : R.E.M. – The One I Love

Michael Stipe, as long ago as 1988, was proclaiming the song to be incredibly violent and was about using people over and over again – an idea given further credence when you take into consideration the background refrain sung by Mike Mills – “she’s coming down on her own again”

The single was originally released in 1987 and the 12″ contained an instrumental and a live recording on the b-side:-

mp3 : R.E.M. – Last Date
mp3 : R.E.M. – Disturbance At The Heron House (live)

This particular live recording dated from 24 May 1987, when members of R.E.M. played two consecutive acoustic sets at McCabe’s Guitar Shop in Santa Monica as a benefit for Texas Records. Four of the songs performed were, at the time unreleased one of which was the above. As was this, which was made available on the b-side of the 12″ of It’s The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine):-

mp3 : R.E.M. – This One Goes Out (live)

That was the original title of the song….the subsequent re-naming has, I’ve indicated, caused untold confusion.

Oh and it’s worth mentioning that the only reason we have been able to experience these McCabe recordings is that the singer enjoyed the shows so much he carried around a cassette copy of them and insisted that they be used as b-sides on subsequent singles.

Enjoy

COME UP AND SEE ME (MAKE ME SMILE)

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The title of today’s posting is a deliberate mistake but it does reflect what most folk think is the title of a #1 song from February 1975.

It is one of those timeless classics that has been re-released on a number of occasions, usually to coincide with its use in a TV commercial or a film soundtrack, and on each occasion it has made its way into the UK singles chart.  It is a staple of nights with the karaoke machine and it is estimated there have been over 120 cover versions recorded.

It sounds like a happy, jolly sort of song and yet Steve Harley has said he is often bemused by the widespread love there is for it given his lyric was an attack on members of Cockney Rebel – the band had more or less disintegrated the previous year with the various members being disgruntled as being seen by fans and critics alike as mere backing musicians for the charismatic frontman.

Indeed, the fact that the song has such bitter and misunderstood lyrics has led the composer to say that of all the cover versions he has ever heard only one has captured its true meaning and understood the venom in the lyrics:-

mp3 : The Wedding Present – Make Me Smile (Come Up And See Me)

This particular song might have had 120 covers and that can’t be far off the number of wonderful and often weird cover versions of songs recorded over the years by The Wedding Present, a band who have never shied away from the genre. Some have worked a lot better than others and more often than not, if the track was one you weren’t familiar with, you’d reckon it was something David Gedge himself might have written. Their take on Make Me Smile (Come Up And See Me) is an absolute belter of a cover and it’s no surprise that the composer is a big fan.

It was released in in 1991 as part of a piece of work known as the 3 Songs EP, which was the first time the band had worked with Steve Albini, a partnership that would extend into the LP Seamonsters which is reckoned by many (including myself) as their ever piece of work. Certainly, it has been the highest charting LP of their entire career, reaching #13 in the UK album charts.

Here’s the other 2 songs from the EP:-

mp3 : The Wedding Present – Crawl
mp3 : The Wedding Present – Corduroy

Corduroy would be re-recorded for Seamonsters:-

mp3 : The Wedding Present – Corduroy (LP version)

Even after all these years I can’t make my mind up which one I prefer mind you…..but the noise after about 35 seconds of the single is one of my favourite bits of music ever…..turn it up and play very loud for best effect.

Enjoy.

YOU KNOW THE SCENE IS VERY HUMDRUM….

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A very short but interesting e-mail arrived in the inbox on 2 January:-

I heard Rip It Up in a Starbucks of all places this weekend and now they just played it on KCRW. What the what? I live in California. no one here has EVER heard of Orange Juice. I mean it’s cool and all, but I’m scratching my head.

Eric Freeman

I’ve absolutely no idea why Edwyn & co’s biggest hit single has all of a sudden gotten airtime on the west coast of the USA….my  stab in the dark is perhaps that it has somehow made its way on the soundtrack of some movie or other, but as someone who hasn’t darkened a cinema in more than six years (the last time being at the Toronto International Film Festival premiere of Control) I’m probably waaaay out with that guess.  Any thoughts dear readers?

Anyway, Eric’s e-mail got me thinking it was time the song appeared on T(n)VV:-

mp3 : Orange Juice – Rip It Up

Rip It Up was released as a single in the UK in February 1983 and a few weeks it reached #8 in the charts.  It was made available as a standard 7″ single, as part of a double-pack (plus poster) on 7″ and as a 12″ single. The sleeve, which seemingly depicts a  US P-40 Warhawk fighter plane, decorated with eyes and teeth and partially submerged, tail first, in the sea, was drawn by Edwyn Collins.

Here’s the other tracks from the double pack:-

mp3 : Orange Juice – Snake Charmer
mp3 : Orange Juice – Love Sick (live)
mp3 : Orange Juice – A Sad Lament

Snake Charmer is a Malcolm Ross composition. Love Sick is a live studio recording of an old Postcard single while the 12″ version of A Sad Lament would later be included on the Texas Fever LP.

The 12″ version of Rip It Up is only marginally longer (about 10 seconds) than the 7″, with the longest version being reserved for the LP version which extends out to some 90 seconds beyond the 7″:-

mp3 : Orange Juice – Rip It Up (LP Version)

If you listen closely, especially on the LP version, you will hear the wonderful voice of Paul Quinn on backing vocals. It’s a pity that he wasn’t asked to appear with the band on Top of The Pops on either of the two occasions they appeared performing the song, although they did smuggle Jim Thirwell onto the show to play saxophone….

The other great thing about Rip It Up is the nod it gives to Boredom by Buzzcocks.  Not only does Edwyn utilise some of the lyrics and proclaims it be his favourite song but there’s also a tribute to the infamous two-note guitar solo.  Have a listen to see what I mean:-

mp3 : Buzzcocks – Boredom

Enjoy!!

FROM THE SOUTH-WEST CORRESPONDENT…WHAT’S IN YOUR BOX (15)

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A tale of love lost this week…..

Remember a couple of weeks back I mentioned the cute girl from Our Price in Chatham. Well her favourite band was Cud or The Cud Band as she affectionately called them. I have her to thank for introducing me to their music. Once, in a pub in Camden Town (that’s in London folks) we were waiting to go and see Cud at the old Town and Country Club, and ‘Changes’ by Sugar came on. This features on Sugar’s seminal ‘Copper Blue’ album and I happened to say that for me Copper Blue was the greatest record of the last five years (it was 1993 I think, so better than ‘Nevermind (which it is), better than ‘Debut’ (which it isn’t) and better than the just released ‘Asquarius’ by Cud (which it definitely without question is). An argument ensued, there and then and I am pretty sure that is the only time I have been dumped for ‘musical differences’.

Cud formed in 1987, when legend has it the four friends found a drum set in a skip and then gained other instruments. They had recorded their first Peel Session before releasing a record. All seemed perfect. They signed to the indie label Imaginary and they released their first two records ‘When in Rome, Kill Me’ and ‘Leggy Mambo’ and gained a fairly big following. Then they signed to A&M records and that is where it went wrong. Their first major label album was ‘Asquarius’.

Now don’t get me wrong, Cud are, or at least were, a fine band. They have some tremendous records, ‘Robinson Cruesoe’ for example is a wonderful few minutes of indie pop not bettered by many at the time and ‘Purple Love Balloon’ is in my opinion a record that should be in everybodys record collection (a song which started life as a B Side before getting a single release of its own).

mp3 : Cud – Purple Love Balloon

Before the age of ‘Asquarius’ (see what I did there, I’m wasted in the civil service I tell you, wasted) heralded Cud’s finest moments, they were quirky, very indie and one of those ‘cult status’ bands. To some (see above) ‘Leggy Mambo’ is one of the great lost records of our generation. The singles ‘Robinson Cruesoe’ and ‘Magic’ both failed to hit the Top 75. Although in fairness ‘Robinson Cruesoe’ deserved better.

‘Asquarius’ gave them moderate success, ‘Rich and Strange’ went Top 30 and the rerecorded B Side ‘Purple Love Balloon’ followed it but A&M wanted more. Cud didn’t look like pop stars, and no amount of soft focus press releases could change the fact that singer Carl Puttnam was not that much of a looker (although others would disagree, see above, sigh).

That night in Camden Cud were supported by The Family Cat, a much better band, and they were stacks better live than Cud. Cud had turned it a Vegas act, (something which I stated in the argument which continued on the train home, it didn’t help). Flooding the room with purple balloons with ‘Love’ emblazoned on them had for me killed the band, I don’t really do gimmicks and that to me was a gimmick, Our Price Girl loved it and actually punched a man on the tube who burst her Love Balloon (it wasn’t me). It shouted ‘Look at us’ when they should have been pleading ‘Listen to us’. Then again, maybe I am just bitter?

This song is taken from ‘Showbiz’ the follow up to Asquarius, which flopped. This was the lead single and to be honest was better than most of the last album. Bit more raw and less polished.

mp3 : Cud – Neurotica

JC adds

S-WC’s tale is a sad reminder again of how things can go wrong so quickly for a young, promising and highly listenable band once they find themselves signed to a major record label.  It always seems to be the case that the label bosses immediately want to shorn  all the things that made such bands so promising and exciting in the first place.  I’m still bitter 30 years later about what happened to Friends Again when Phonorgam got their hands on them….

REMEMBERING SUGARCUBES

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I’m sure many of you know that Bjork enjoyed a fair bit of fame pre-solo career with Sugarcubes, who until the recent emergence of Sigur Ros were probably about the only Icelandic pop act many of us could name. They formed in 1986, and went onto release three LPs on One Little Indian to mixed critical acclaim.

The debut LP Life’s Too Good was almost universally praised, with most focus being on the extraordinary vocal style of the gorgeous looking female lead singer. Indeed, lead-off single Birthday, was voted #1 in John Peel’s Festive Fifty in 1987. Surely the only ever record about a love affair between a five year old girl and her 50-year old neighbour…..if the tabloids had been able to make out the lyrics there would surely have been an outcry.

mp3 : Sugarcubes – Birthday

All of this attention and focus on Bjork didn’t sit entirely well with Einar Benediktsson the other vocalist in the group. The follow-up LP Here Today, Tomorrow, Next Week! featured far more of his contributions than before, a situation that led at least one reviewer to advise listeners that if they wanted to remain fans of the bands there were a number of tracks that the skip button had surely been invented for. The first single lifted from the LP brought Einar’s talents to the full:-

mp3 : Sugarcubes – Regina

The LP did climb in to the Top 20 of the album charts which created a situation where the band were in a sort of limbo…..being just too successful to be simply a cult indie band, but unable to make that leap into pop stardom via Radio 1 daytime exposure and Smash Hits magazine.

The next LP, Stick Around For Joy, took a fair bit of time and money to make…much of the recording was in an expensive studio in New York. It was far more of a pop album than any of the previous efforts and it did yield a cracking Top 20 single and an appearance on Top of The Pops:-

mp3 : Sugarcubes – Hit

Things might have turned out differently for everyone if the follow-up single had enjoyed similar success, but despite it being even more commercial than Hit, it sold dismally:-

mp3 : Sugarcubes – Walkabout

Two more flop singles followed, shortly followed by the inevitable break-up not long after. Bjork of course released a debut LP some 18 months later that turned her into a global superstar.

On 17th November 2006, Sugarcubes reformed for a one-off concert in Reykjavik to mark their 20th Anniversary. At the time, in a posting over at the old place, I did express a hope that maybe in 2011 for the 25th Anniversary they might briefly reform and tour. It didn’t happen and I’m guessing Bjork has a big enough pension fund to ensure it never will.

Sigh.

CULT CLASSICS : PART TIME PUNKS by THE TELEVISION PERSONALITIES

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I’ve recently finished reading Alan McGee’s autobiography Creation Stories, a book that recounts the story of his involvement with bands like the Jesus and Mary Chain, Primal Scream, Teenage Fanclub and inevitably Oasis but which also manages to devote some time to less widely known acts such as The Television Personalities, who McGee first saw live in 1982 in London, a show where Joe Foster ‘sawed Dan Treacy’s Rickenbacker in half! It was maybe a grand’s worth of guitar. They were only getting paid about £50 for the gig!’

From that moment on, McGee was hooked and he soon started heaping praise on them in his Communication Blur fanzine as well as booking them to perform at his Communication Club on a bill that also included the Nightingales and Vinyl Villain favourites the Go-Betweens.

Significantly, the TVP’s pop art label Whaam! in part inspired McGee to set up Creation Records and one of the first ever releases to carry the name Creation (as Creation Artifact) was a flexidisc distributed with the second issue of his fanzine that featured two tracks by the TVPs.

Alan McGee wouldn’t the last high profile fan the band would attract. At Kurt Cobain’s insistence they were invited in 1991 to support Nirvana and more recently Pete Doherty and MGMT have declared themselves admirers, the latter titling one track Song for Dan Treacy on their critically acclaimed Congratulations album.

Despite the high profile recommendations though, mainstream success has never materialised for the TVPs and this is likely down to the fact that Dan Treacy, the sole consistent member of the band since its inception, is one of those mercurial talents who are completely ill-suited to fame – even many of his devoted coterie of fans might find it difficult to disagree with the theory that he has repeatedly and deliberately sabotaged his own career over the years.

Despite this, Treacy has continued to make fascinating and innovative music over a period of decades that have also seen him suffer periodic breakdowns and homelessness. He’s also been imprisoned four times; battled long term drug and alcohol problems and, in 2011, he ended up in a critical condition in hospital that required an operation to remove a blood clot from his brain, the singer having to be induced into a coma for some time afterwards.

His band, who can claim to be massively influential on what has become known as ‘indie’, first surfaced in 1978 with a ramshackle DIY debut single 14th Floor, which they put out themselves on GLC Records.

John Peel was highly encouraging, he played the track and read out a letter that Treacy had sent him that listed the band members as Hughie Green, Bob Monkhouse and Bruce Forsyth; Peel also mentioned them in his weekly column in Sounds, where he connected them to another pivotal independent act, the Swell Maps whose Read About Seymour was another big Peel favourite of the time.

The next TVPs release, the Where’s Bill Grundy Now? E.P would again be on their own label, this time named King’s Rd Records – Treacy being largely brought up on the 7th (rather than the 14th floor) of a King’s Road high-rise. The only other release on this label would be another E.P, We Love Malcolm by ‘O’ Level.

Here’s Part Time Punks from the E.P, a satirical dig at the tabloid inspired new wave masses who would descend on Chelsea at weekends to pose, and if you had never understood the following references in the song’s lyrics before, you do now: ‘They’d like to buy the ‘O’ Level single, or Read about Seymour, but they’re not pressed in red, so they buy The Lurkers instead.’

mp3 : Television Personalities: Part Time Punks

And here’s Shadow, a 1977 single by the Lurkers, that was the first ever track released on the independent imprint Beggars Banquet and which was pressed in black, white, blue and, of course, red vinyl.

mp3 : The Lurkers: Shadow

(as submitted by Jamie H)

Fancy adding your own contribution the series?  All I need are a few words and an mp3 copy of the tune, fired over to thevinylvillain@hotmail.co.uk

Go on, draw attention to an underground classic that’s close to your heart…..

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SINGLE (Part 74)

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From wiki:-

Lord Cut-Glass is the current stage name of Alun Woodward. He is a singer-songwriter from Motherwell, formerly of the influential Glasgow based band the Delgados. The name, Lord Cut-Glass, comes from a character in the Dylan Thomas radio play Under Milk Wood.

His first full-length album, self-titled Lord Cut-Glass, was released on 22 June 2009.

He has, furthermore, contributed two other tracks under the moniker of Lord Cut-Glass. The first, “A Sentimental Song”, released in March 2007, was part of the Scottish indie/folk compilation Ballads of the Book with lyrics written by the author Alasdair Gray. It was released by record label Chemikal Underground which, as part of the Delgados, Woodward helped create in 1995. He also served as the record label’s director. Woodward has subsequently released one further track, “Maybe”, as part of the compilation Worried Noodles.

In 2007, The Guardian wrote of his performance for Ballads of the Book: “He is whispery, tremulous in the extreme, and his fragile folky melodies are bolstered with cello and violin; a definite trope in the Glasgow music scene.”

He played his debut solo set as part of Tigerfest in Dunfermline on 16 May 2009 where he premiered material from his first solo album.

In reviewing his self-titled album, The Scotsman called the work “unconventional yet strangely compromising, one of the year’s best.

The Scotsman reviewer was spot on.  It’s a very quirky but incredibly listenable album, quite different from the often straight-forward indie-pop of The Delgados.  There were a number of tracks that would have been excellent choices as singles, but just the one cut was lifted and made available on 7″ plastic and I’m delighted to offer it and its b-side as Part 74 of this series:-

mp3 : Lord Cut-Glass – Look After Your Wife
mp3 : Lord Cut-Glass – Over It

Enjoy!!!