Showing posts with label Ciccone Youth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ciccone Youth. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 November 2023

Burn Baby Burn

Sunday 5th November is officially Bonfire Night, or Guy Fawkes Night if you prefer, although most of the displays in my neck of the woods inevitably took place on Saturday night. 

Things have changed dramatically since I was a kid. The weeks leading up to 5th November used to see children pitched up outside the local newsagents with a badly stuffed and clothed effigy and calling out for a "penny for the Guy". This year my local shop had a copper-hued approximation of Spongebob Squarepants, no kids and no indication of whether poor ol' Bob was going to end up on the pyre come the evening's festivities.

Hallowe'en was virtually non-existent as a "thing" when I was growing up but seems to have completely taken over from Bonfire Night in the last few decades. We were in Valencia for the former, which is followed on 1st November by el Dia de Todos los Santos ("All Saints Day" itself derived from the pagan festival "All Souls Day"), a national public holiday and a time to remember and honour the dead.

From a meteorological perspective, there couldn't have been a greater contrast. Hallowe'en and All Saints Day were bright and sunny, with temperatures in the mid-high 20s; Bonfire Night was bloody freezing and it had been raining for much of the day. We've not been to the local firework display since Lady K very quickly lost interest in it as a child and this year was no exception. Bah. And humbug.

However, it does give me an excuse to pull together a (let's face it, verrrry loose) Dubhed selection based on fireworks, bonfires and fires in general. Spoiler alert: despite the title, Ash doesn't feature at all.

What you do get for starters is a one-off collaboration between The Go-Betweens and The Birthday Party from 1982. From there, a trio of 1986 treats by XTC, Elvis Costello and Ciccone Youth, with more 1980s gems from Redskins, Siouxsie & The Banshees and Tom Robinson following later.

On Thursday, Walter - he of the excellent A Few Good Times In My Life blog - waxed lyrical about the 50th anniversary reissue of classic film The Wicker Man. As noted, Bristol legend Katy J Pearson was invited to cover a number of the soundtrack's songs. Katy brought some friends along, including Drug Store Romeos, Wet Leg and Sarah Meth for a spine-tingling version of Fire Leap.  

Speaking of covers, the only song I have by Joensuu 1685 is their full-volume cover of I'm On Fire by The Boss. The Helsinki-based band comprises three Joensuus - Markus, Mikko and Risto - though only the first two are related. Their second album was released in 2020 so I assume that they're still a going concern.

It would be remiss of me not to include a Spanish band in this selection and whilst they hail from Madrid not Valencia, who better than the raucous Hinds

By complete contrast, things drop down to a much more sedate level for the closing song, The KLF adding a chilled country twang to Build A Fire from their seminal album The White Room.
 
1) After The Fireworks: Tuff Monks (1982)
2) Sacrificial Bonfire: XTC (1986)
3) Indoor Fireworks: The Costello Show ft. The Attractions & The Confederates (1986)
4) Burnin' Up (Mike Watt Original Demo) (Cover of Madonna): Ciccone Youth (1986)
5) Building A Fire: James & Brian Eno (1994)
6) Worn From The Fight (With Fireworks): Castanets (2009)
7) (Burn It Up!) Bring It Down (This Insane Thing) (12" Version): Redskins (1985)
8) Light/Fireworks: The Fall (1993)
9) Fire Leap (Cover of Magnet): Katy J Pearson ft. Drug Store Romeos, Wet Leg & Sarah Meth (2023) 
10) Bonfire: Lamb (1999)
11) Fireworks (12" Version): Siouxsie & The Banshees (1982)
12) I'm On Fire (Cover of Bruce Springsteen): Joensuu 1685 (2009)
13) Looking For A Bonfire (Unreleased Alternate Recording): Tom Robinson (1984)
14) Burn: Hinds (2020)
15) Build A Fire (1991 Album Version): The KLF ft. Maxine Harvey (1991)
 
1982: After The Fireworks EP: 1
1982: Fireworks EP: 11
1985: (Burn It Up!) Bring It Down (This Insane Thing) EP: 7
1986: Burnin' Up/Into The Groove(y) EP: 4
1986: King Of America : 3 
1991: The White Room: 15
1993: The Infotainment Scan: 8
1994: Wah Wah: 5
1997: War Baby: Hope And Glory: 13
1999: Fear Of Fours: 10
2009: Texas Rose, The Thaw, And The Beasts: 6
2010: I'm On Fire / Perfect Grace EP: 12
2016: Skylarking (Steven Wilson Mix): 2
2020: The Prettiest Curse: 14
2023: The Wicker Man EP: 9

Burn Baby Burn (59:13) (KF) (Mega)

Sunday, 26 March 2023

Return Of The Karaoke Kings

Side 1 of a cassette compilation of cover versions, recorded sometime around late 1996, possibly early 1997.

Side 2 previously ushered in the weekend at your local spit 'n' sawdust bar with a few bottles of cheap Becks, salt & vinegar crisps, ripped seats, sticky carpets and the landlord's obsessive collection of novelty bottle openers glued to the upper skirt of the bar. 
 
Side 1 therefore must be the other end, when you realise karaoke night has become morning, the lock-in is over and the landlord's kicking you all out, with the grim realisation that the clocks went forward an hour whilst you were slaughtering T.Rex, Sister Sledge and Fat Larry's Band and you're one hour closer to the end of the weekend than you expected. 
 
On the bright side, the greasy spoon across the road is opening soon and may have the cure for the karaoke hangover you're nursing.

Take it away, people!

1) Get Back (Album Version): Laibach vs. The Beatles (1988)
2) Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?: Revolting Cocks vs. Rod Stewart (1993)
3) Know Your Rights (Edit): Primal Scream vs. The Clash (1994)
4) Gimme Gimme Gimme (A Man After Midnight) (Bonus Mix): The Leather Nun vs. ABBA (1986)
5) Tuff Titty Rap / Into The Groove(y) (12" Version): Ciccone Youth vs. Madonna (1986)
6) Kiss (Single Mix); Age Of Chance vs. Prince (1986)
7) Funtime (Album Version): Boy George vs. Iggy Pop (1995)
8) Smells Like Teen Spirit: Tori Amos vs. Nirvana (1992)
9) Lundi Bleu (Version Française De Blue Monday) (Radio Edit): The Times vs. New Order (1991)
10) Rock-A-Hula-Baby (Album Version): Pop Will Eat Itself vs. Elvis Presley (1990)
11) I Put A Spell On You: Marilyn Manson vs. Screamin' Jay Hawkins (1996)

1986: Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! EP: 4
1986: Kiss EP: 6
1986: The White(y) Album: 5
1988: Let It Be: 1
1990: The Last Temptation Of Elvis: 10
1992: Lundi Bleu EP: 9
1992: Silent All These Years EP: 8
1993: Da Ya Think I'm Sexy? EP: 2
1995: Cheapness And Beauty: 7 
1996: Lost Highway OST: 11
1997: Kowalski EP: 3
 
Side One (46:12) (Box) (Mega)
Side Two here

Sunday, 25 September 2022

Hokey Karaoke

Volume 1 of a CD-R of cover versions recorded for my friend Stuart on 19th August 2008.
 
I love a cover version and my forays into cassette compilations included many made up of people singing other people's songs. Many of the songs featured here have cropped up on previous mixtapes but I quite like the flow of this CD-R that I made for my friend's birthday a decade and a half ago. Always one for overdoing things, this was the first of three volumes that I gifted him at the time.

My Bloody Valentine start off with their version of the key song from the sixth James Bond film On Her Majesty's Secret Service, originally recorded by Louis Armstrong in 1969. If you're expecting a typical MBV wall of noise, you'll be disappointed; unexpectedly, it's a faithful and rather lovely cover version.

A few cover versions go acoustic. Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly deliver an urgent Northern take on Gallic dance duo Justice. Devine & Statton aka Ian Devine (nee Pinchcombe) from Ludus and Alison Statton from Young Marble Giants and Weekend team up for a beautifully stripped down version of a New Order classic. I remember hearing this on the John Peel show back in 1989. Australian band Frente! were clearly paying attention. Deacon Blue aren't particular favourites of mine but anyone willing to have a stab at a Julian Cope song gets a thumbs up from me. 

Several versions take the song in interesting directions. Whilst not surpassing the originals, they've come up with a different approach that makes the song their own. Primal Scream are the first in line, with an amped up, dirty version of The Clash's Know Your Rights. Tunng go all folky with club classic Naked In The Rain by Blue Pearl, whilst Locust offer up an almost jazz lounge duet on Depeche Mode's Master And Servant. 
 
I'm also a big fan of Mark Eitzel's uptempo but downbeat run through Move On Up by Curtis Mayfield. Associates' bold debut in 1979, covering Boys Keep Swinging weeks after the original was released, is every bit as good as David Bowie. If I had to choose between the two, Anita Lane's unique take on Sexual Healing, ably assisted by Mick Harvey and Barry Adamson, surpasses Marvin Gaye's original.

Ciccone Youth aka Sonic Youth take things to the natural and extreme end with a version of Robert Palmer recorded in a karaoke booth. The video - recorded in the same booth for $25 - is a striking send up of the overblown original, Kim Gordon's deadpan singing and lacklustre dancing against a backdrop of images from the Vietnam War. I vaguely recall watching this on a late night TV show and the studio guests ripping the song and video to shreds, but they were woefully missing the point.

Speaking of overblown, sometimes the only way to do a cover is go even bigger and louder. Stairway To Heaven is one of those songs indelibly etched in the memory of my childhood listening to music on the radio and has been covered countless times over the last half-century. I remember being subjected to a version during a school assembly in the 1980s by a 'supergroup' made up of my Biology, Geography and P.E. teachers. It wasn't pretty.

Like many, seeing Aki Kaurismäki's 1989 road movie Leningrad Cowboys Go America was my first introduction to the titular Finnish band. Leningrad Cowboys continued to release records up to 2013 but they appear to have disbanded some time after. Their version of the Led Zeppelin song came from a collaborative album with The Alexandrov Red Army Ensemble aka The Alexandrov Ensemble aka The Red Army Choir, the official choir of the Russian armed forces. Tragically, on Christmas Day in 2016, 64 members of the Ensemble were killed when their plane crashed into the Black Sea.

The world has changed dramatically this year and collaborating with the official choir of the Russian armed forces is unlikely to be on anyone's wish list, now or any time in the foreseeable future. How different things were in 2008 when I compiled this collection.
 
1) We Have All The Time In The World: My Bloody Valentine sing Louis Armstrong (1993)
2) Know Your Rights (Full Length Version): Primal Scream sing The Clash (1994)
3) There's A Ghost In My House: The Fall sing R. Dean Taylor (1987)
4) Naked In The Rain (Rob Da Bank Session): Tunng sing Blue Pearl (2007)
5) D.A.N.C.E.: Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly sing Justice (2008)
6) Move On Up: Mark Eitzel sings Curtis Mayfield (2002)
7) Everybody's Gotta Learn Sometime: Beck sings The Korgis (2004)
8) Bizarre Love Triangle: Devine & Statton sing New Order (1989)
9) Addicted To Love: Ciccone Youth sing Robert Palmer (1988)
10) Making Plans For Nigel: Datassette sing XTC (2006)
11) Boys Keep Swinging: Associates sing David Bowie (1979)
12) Master And Servant: Locust sing Depeche Mode (1998)
13) It's A Man's Man's Man's World: Natacha Atlas sings James Brown (2003)
14) Some Velvet Morning: Slowdive sing Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood (1993)
15) If You're Lookin' For A Way Out (Album Version): Tindersticks sing Odyssey (1999)
16) Sexual Healing: Anita Lane ft. Mick Harvey & Barry Adamson sings Marvin Gaye (1993)
17) Trampolene: Deacon Blue sing Julian Cope (1989)
18) Stairway To Heaven: The Leningrad Cowboys & The Alexandrov Red Army Ensemble sing Led Zeppelin (1994)

Volume One (1:19:43) (GD) (M)