Showing posts with label Intastella. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Intastella. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 February 2025

Decadance I: 1991

Side 2 of a made up mixtape, focusing on the Nineties. Today we arrive in 1991. 

Guitars are beginning to creep back into the mix, but today's selection is still very much about getting on to the dancefloor, whether of the club or indie variety.

Looking at the best-selling UK singles of 1991, there was clearly a collective madness permeating society as far as record buying was concerned. How else do you explain Bryan Adams spending four effing months at #1? Or The Simpsons also hitting the top spot and having the 5th best seller of the year? Is there any rational explanation for the existence of Color Me Badd?!!

I spent a large part of 1991 in Australia, whose singles charts were arguably just as bad, though I was at least spared The Stonk by comedians Hale & Pace. 

Continuing with the info on each single's peak (UK) chart placing and date throws up some interesting observations. As with yesterday's selection, 1991's dozen songs include eight UK Top 40 hits and four that, well, weren't.

Just the one #1 this time and that a cheeky piggy back on a re-release of Should I Stay Or Should I Go by The Clash thanks to a jeans TV advert. Mick Jones had regrouped and relaunched Big Audio Dynamite II the previous year and included a reworked and renamed song from their debut album. Change Of Atmosphere became Rush and it gave Mick another hit single...though it made little if no difference to the chart fortunes of follow up album The Globe.

The selection opens with Intastella, a band I loved but for whom commercial success seemed elusive. Century, despite a 12" remix from Adamski, peaked at #70 and proved to be the second highest charting single of their career in the UK. A shame, as they had some cracking tunes, including this one.

Today's MAW (Mandatory Andrew Weatherall, not to be confused with Masters At Work, although he's equally deserving of the label) is a monumental remix of 101 by Finitribe. Even the 3:20 single edit is a masterclass, to the extent that this was the album version selected for An Unexpected Groovy Treat the following year. 

Released in July 1991, as far as I can tell 101 managed to scrape to #171 by the end of August and that was it's peak. As I said above,  clearly a collective madness permeating society as far as record buying was concerned.

Apart from the aforementioned Big Audio Dynamite II stowaway, the only other song from 1991's Top 20 best sellers is Sunshine On A Rainy Day by Zoë. Quite an achievement given that the original 1990 version failed to make the same impression. All I will say is that returning to the UK and seeing the leather trousered, barefoot Zoë throwing all manner of shapes on Top Of The Pops made a lasting impression on me.

An unexpected delight whilst I was on the other side of the world was hearing Bristol-born boy done good Gary Clail cracking the Top 10 with Human Nature. I was already a fan of his work with Adrian Sherwood and On-U Sound System, but the additional boost of an in-vogue remix by Paul Oakenfold and Steve Osborne made all the difference. Hearing Gary's Bristolian burr ("put their hands in their pockets") alongside the dulcet tones of the legendary Alan Pillay still makes me smile.

Poor If? though, they really did try. They had some great tunes, seemingly tapped into the zeitgeist with their lyrical subjects and had impeccable taste in remixers, including Leftfield and Justin Robertson. Sadly, people just didn't buy any of their records. They had three goes with Saturday's Angels between 1991 and 1992, the 2nd being the best, with a peak of #83. This radio-friendly remix by The Grid aka Dave Ball and Richard Norris didn't in fact feature on any of the three attempts, instead tucked away as a B-side on another undeservedly flop single from 1991, Open Up Your Head.

Unfinished Sympathy was Massive Attack's first big hit...except it wasn't. Following a frankly bizarre edict regarding band names that might be triggering due to the ongoing Gulf War, the BBC banned a load of songs during this period.

The list apparently included Atomic (Blondie), In The Army Now (Status Quo), I'm On Fire (Bruce Springsteen), State Of Independence (Donna Summer), Walk Like An Egyptian (Bangles) and When the Going Gets Tough, the Tough Get Going (Billy Ocean).

The record label dodged this potential issue by renaming Massive Attack as Massive for this one single, but it seemed to work, although I sure that there were some music lovers out there devastated this this wasn't in fact a belated follow up by Massivo ft. Tracy.

Intastella weren't the only young upstarts, however. Saint Etienne, Flowered Up and The Mock Turtles were all establishing themselves, though arguably I should have made some room here for James or Manic Street Preachers. 
 
However, there was another band who showed some early promise, by the name of Blur. I wonder what became of them?

Be here next Saturday for some 1992 action. I'll be as surprised as you to find out what makes the final twelve.

1) Century (7" Version By Chris Nagle & Mike 'Spike' Drake): Intastella
2) 101 (Sonic Shuffle Edit By Andrew Weatherall & Hugo Nicolson): Finitribe
3) Nothing Can Stop Us (Album Version): Saint Etienne
4) Sunshine On A Rainy Day (7" Radio Mix 1991 By Youth & Mark 'Spike' Stent): Zoë
5) Do What You Feel (Dum Dum Vocal Edit By Dave Lee): Joey Negro ft. Debbie French
6) Human Nature (On The Mix Edit By Paul Oakenfold & Steve Osborne): Gary Clail / On-U Sound System ft. Alan Pillay
7) Saturday's Angels (Elevator Heaven Mix By The Grid): If?
8) Unfinished Sympathy (Nellee Hooper 7" Mix): Massive Attack ft. Shara Nelson
9) Take It (Album Version): Flowered Up
10) Rush (Edit): Big Audio Dynamite II
11) Can You Dig It? (Extended Mix By Martin Coogan, Pete Smith & Karl Madert): The Mock Turtles
12) There's No Other Way (Album Version By Stephen Street): Blur

20th Jan 1991: Saturday's Angels EP (#83): 7
3rd Mar 1991: Should I Stay Or Should I Go EP (#1): 10
10th Mar 1991: Unfinished Sympathy EP (#13): 8
14th Apr 1991: Can You Dig It? EP (#18): 11
21st Apr 1991: Human Nature EP (#10): 6
12th May 1991: Foxbase Alpha (#54): 3
12th May 1991: A Life With Brian (#34): 9
12th May 1991: There's No Other Way (#8): 12
25th Aug 1991: 101 EP (#171): 2
8th Sep 1991: Sunshine On A Rainy Day EP (#4): 4
17th Nov 1991: Century EP (#70): 1
17th Nov 1991: Do What You Feel EP (#36): 5

Side Two (47:18) (GD) (M)

Monday, 23 May 2022

Everybody Needs A Bosom For A Pillow

Side 1 of a mixtape, compiled 14th February 1998. 
 
I have no memory of this particular day so I can only hope that I'd woken early (as I do) to record this mixtape, rather than it being one of the least romantic Valentine's Days ever. I hasten to add that, either way, my girlfriend at the time was not the currently long-suffering Mrs. K.

This was definitely an attempt at an 'upbeat' selection, starting off with a Manchester two-hander from 808 State and Intastella, the latter remixed by A Certain Ratio's Martin Moscrop. Things then take a veer left(field) with possibly one of the maddest singles The Times/Ed Ball ever released, and that's including I Helped Patrick McGoohan Escape
 
Next up is Mucho Macho's remix of Cornershop's Brimful Of Asha, from the 'flop' first release of the single in 1997. I had to check the dates but, a mere two weeks after this mixtape was recorded, Brimful Of Asha was re-released with a Norman Cook remix and went straight to #1 in the UK, where it remained for a further 12 weeks, 11 of those remaining above the #60 peak of the original release. Spooky.
 
Planetary Sit-In is Julian Cope in string-drenched pop-with-a-message mode, his last ever UK singles chart hit, #34 in October 1996. 
 
Stay was 18 Wheeler's biggest UK hit, charting at #59 in March 1997. Wikipedia damningly cites their biggest claim to fame as being the band that Oasis were supporting (at King Tut's Wah Wah Hut in 1993) when Creation head honcho Alan McGee discovered the latter. Being on the same label clearly did 18 Wheeler no favours.

Fellow Scots The Apples fared similarly poorly with the record-buying public, managing just one UK #75 single, which isn't this one. This version appeared on the CD single, mis-labelled as the Stereo Guitar People Mix by Pete Lorimer. Ironically, this remix by James Reynolds is actually heavier on the guitar so you can understand the mix up. Reynolds arguably enjoyed much greater success, not least being the 4th Baronet of Woolton, having succeeded to the title in 2015.

Freak Power (aka Norman Cook & Ashley Slater) took two goes to have a hit with Turn On Tune In Cop Out, #29 in 1993 then #3 in 1995. Ashley Slater went on to appear in 2014 with his partner Scarlett Quinn as Kitten And the Hip in an excruciating X-Factor audition, which YouTube has preserved for posterity). Having survived this ordeal, the pair continue in a reformed Freak Power.
 
Not much to say about Groove Is In The Heart, other than Deee-Lite were a breath of fresh air in 1990 and this song still has the desired effect, three decades on.
 
Last but not least, the mysterious collective, The KK Kings. I heard this song originally on the soundtrack to the wonderful 1993 film Bhaji On The Beach. I think this was their only official single, though they'd previously released a promo, Justified & Ancient, which together with their prodigious use of samples, led to comparisons with The KLF. It's so much better than that and a shame that we didn't get to hear more from them.
 
As a final note, the mixtape title comes from a key line in Cornershop's Brimful Of Asha, which itself is the hook of the Mucho Macho remix. Despite all this, I still managed to write Everyone Needs A Bosom For A Pillow on the cassette sleeve. Again, either a case of not enough sleep or the worst Valentine's Days ever. Amazingly, I was in the same relationship the following year, but I have no record of whether Valentine's Day 1999 fared any better. It couldn't have been any worse, could it?
 
1) Lift (7" Version): 808 State (1991)
2) This Is Bendy (Remix By Martin Moscrop): Intastella (1991)
3) Finnegans Break (Edit By Ian Shaw & The Big Noize Supremists): The Times ft. Tippa Irie (1993)
4) Brimful Of Asha (Mucho Macho Bolan Boogie Mix): Cornershop (1997)
5) Planetary Sit-In (Album Version): Julian Cope (1996)
6) Stay (Radio Edit): 18 Wheeler (1997)
7) Beautiful People (Silver Sky Mix By James Reynolds): The Apples (1991)
8) Turn On Tune In Cop Out (Radio Mix By Norman Cook & Simon Thornton): Freak Power (1993)
9) Groove Is In The Heart (Peanut Butter Mix): Deee-Lite (1990)
10) Holidays (In The United KK Kingdom) (Extended) (Remix By Mikha K): The KK Kings (1994)
 
Side One (45:25) (KF) (Mega)

Monday, 11 April 2022

Wise Up! Again

Side 1 of a mixtape, recorded between December 1991 and January 1992. When I posted Side 2 last August, I mentioned the use of a couple of tracks from Keeping The Faith: A Creation Dance Compilation and there's another here. I didn't buy either of the two 12" singles of Come Together by Primal Scream at the time, but the excellent Hypnotone remix opened Side 2 of Keeping The Faith and remains my second only to Andrew Weatherall's unassailable mix. 
 
The other reference point on this mixtape side is Renegade Soundwave's debut album Soundclash. Excellent though it is, I think the real reason two tracks appear here is that I had been lent a copy by my friend Stuart and ended up cramming songs onto various mixtapes before returning it. 
 
There's also a heavy Adrian Sherwood vibe on this side, with production and remix duties for Cabaret Voltaire, Gary Clail / On-U Sound System and Tackhead. The full length version of False Leader featured on the album The Emotional Hooligan, whilst this edit was a B-side of the Escape remix 12". The Tackhead remix of Dangerous Sex was edited to squeeze onto the cassette side, so I've done the same here to preserve the original running time.
 
A Certain Ratio's Martin Moscrop remixes opening instrumental Bendy, which initially appeared on the Intastella single People; my copy resurfaced on the limited edition "Intastella Meet Adamski" remix 12" of follow-up Century. This is my favourite version of the song.
 
Killing Joke's Youth remixes Pop Will Eat Itself, dropping the BPMs and stretching the song out to over five minutes. Again, this one has the edge as my preferred version and - no surprise - provides the mixtape with its title.
 
Lastly, the song that introduced me to Colourbox. I picked up the Vertigo-Sampler from a record stall in St. Nicholas' Market in Bristol a few years previously, a Canadian import double vinyl compilation from 1985. If I'm honest, most of it is dispensable: late-period Boomtown Rats, Big Country, Dire Straits and - even more dire - Mark Knopfler solo, twice! However, there are a couple of sides of alternative and indie music: Cocteau Twins, Love And Rockets, This Mortal Coil and Colourbox, which made the price worth a punt. 

The Colourbox track is listed as Sex Gun (Instrumental Version) but is identical to the version (re)titled Just Give 'Em Whiskey on their eponymous debut album. The vocal version of Sex Gun made it onto the free extra album that came with limited quantities, though the one featured in today’s selection is far and away the best version out there, heavy with samples from Westworld and The Prisoner.
 
1) Bendy In The Disco (Remix By Martin Moscrop): Intastella (1991)
2) Biting My Nails (Album Version By Flood & RSW): Renegade Soundwave (1989)
3) Thank You America (Album Version By Cabaret Voltaire & Adrian Sherwood): Cabaret Voltaire (1987)
4) False Leader (Edit By Adrian Sherwood, Doug Wimbish & Skip McDonald): Gary Clail / On-U Sound System ft. Big Youth (1991)
5) Head Like A Hole (Album Version By Trent Reznor & Flood): Nine Inch Nails (1990)
6) Come Together (The HypnotoneBrainMachine Mix By Hypnotone): Primal Scream (1990)
7) Wise Up! Sucker (12" Version By Youth): Pop Will Eat Itself (1989)
8) Blue Eyed Boy (Album Version By Flood & RSW): Renegade Soundwave (1989)
9) Sex Gun (Instrumental Version) (aka Just Give 'Em Whiskey): Colourbox (1985)
10) Sex Overdubs (Remix By Adrian Sherwood, Doug Wimbish, Keith LeBlanc & Skip McDonald) (Edit): Tackhead (1990)
 
Side Two here

Monday, 31 January 2022

This Could Be Your Day...In The Sunshine

Intastella landed at the start of the 1990s, one of a number of bands that embraced the influence of dance music on indie guitar pop. The Discogs biog sums it up well:
 
"Their sonic aesthetic revolved around groove-based, densely layered psychedelic jams, which featured slightly ethereal vocals, acid house-influenced bleeps, shuffling danceable beats, deep basslines, and rhythmic funk guitar."
 
The band name is a play on words, you can read it as either 'interstellar' or 'into Stella', after lead Stella Grundy. The original line-up consisted of Grundy, Martin Mittler, Ian Bendelow, Martin Wright and Spencer Birtwistle, plus dancer Anthony Green. Sadly, Bendelow, Wright and Green have all passed in the last few years. Spencer Birtwistle joined the ranks of The Fall (twice) in the Noughties, whilst I could find little trace of Martin Mittler's musical exploits, post-Intastella. 

Stella Grundy began to release solo music in the early 21st century, subsequently forming a new incarnation of Intastella and - in a nice link with yesterday's post - recording with Jah Wobble. You can find all this plus some Intastella rarities on Bandcamp.
 
Today's selection dips into the three albums Intastella released between 1991 and 1997. As ever, not a 'best of', but a fairly random selection of singles and album tracks. I've left the closing track of third album Nuphonia more or less as is. On the CD version, the cover version of Gregory Isaacs' Mr. Cop was an untitled hidden track, appended after a minute or so's silence to the end of I Love The Smell Of New Grass. For this selection, I've segued the two for your instant gratification.

1) Century (12" Version) (1991)
2) Skyscraper (7" Mix) (1997)
3) Drifter (Album Version) (1995)
4) People (Album Version) (1991)
5) Nuphonia (1997)
6) Mr. Everything (1991)
7) Soon We'll Fly (12" Remix) (1997)
8) I Love The Smell Of New Grass (Album Version) (1997)
9) Mr. Cop (Cover of Gregory Isaacs) (1997)

1991: Century (12"): 1
1991: Intastella And The Family Of People: 4, 6
1995: What You Gonna Do: 3 
1997: Nuphonia: 5, 8, 9
1997: Skyscraper (CD single): 2
1997: Soon We'll Fly (CD single): 7
 

Monday, 8 November 2021

Jars Of Fun!

Andrew Barker, 9th March 1968 - 6th November 2021. 
 
Side One
1) Can You Fly Like You Mean It? (Gungadin) (808 State Mix): Intastella ft. Shaun Ryder (1993)
2) Trailer Music (808 State Remix): Pizzicato Five (1997)
3) Pacific 303 (Remix): 808 State (1989)
4) Ooops (Utsula Head Remix): 808 State ft. Björk (1991)
5) Dedicated To Glam (Icehouse/808 Showdown) (Remix By 808 State): Icehouse (1993)

Side Two
1) Plan 9 (Guitars On Fire Mix): 808 State (1993)
2) Sound And Vision (808 Giftmix By 808 State): David Bowie (1991)
3) Halo (808 Dub) (Remix By 808 State): Texas (1997)
4) Body To Body (Vox Mix By 808 State): Soft Ballet (1992)
5) In Yer Face (Mancunian Delight): 808 State (1990)*
 
* This remix is from the US 12" of Cubik and to these ears sounds identical to the In Yer Face Mix on the UK single, bar a slight repeat of the looped ending.