Showing posts with label Portishead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Portishead. Show all posts

Tuesday, 25 November 2025

Upon A Mouse #10: LCD And PTSD

LCD Soundsystem and Portishead take us into the fourth and final week of my personal votes for The 20 Greatest Eponymous Albums Of All Time, which originated with SWC at No Badger Required and were counted down in October.

In respect of placings, LCD Soundsystem came in at #10 on my voting sheet, whilst Portishead were the runners up at #2. But why?

Well... Sound Of Silver is my go-to LCD Soundsystem album., so I’d kind of forgotten how brilliant and fully formed their self-titled debut is. 

When SWC ran the (also excellent) series The Noughty Forty last year aka the 40 greatest albums of the 2000s, Sound Of Silver got my full points and came in at #6 overall, whilst LCD Soundsystem managed an admirable #6 and split opinion about whether the bonus CD should be included or excluded.

I deliberately based my vote on the 9-track ‘original’ vinyl album, ignoring the bonus disc that came with the 2CD version I bought, and therefore the singles Losing My Edge, Beat Connection and Yeah. 

In doing so, I acknowledged that if I’d added the latter, the eponymous debut would have been several places higher in Top 20. But hey, any reader of this blog will know that I love annoying myself with self-imposed rules. Sometimes it's the only way I can make a decision...!

But I digress. Back to LCD Soundsystem the album, it was watching On Repeat and Tribulations performed live at Glastonbury last year (on TV, I hasten to add) that brought it all back to me. 

And Daft Punk Is Playing At My House is not only one of the best album openers ever, but when James Murphy yells "solo!" at 2:49 and then launches into 30 seconds of cowbell, you know you're listening to something special.

 
 

Portishead by Portishead is a master class in the follow up album, when your debut defines not only a point in time but a whole musical genre. Given the weight of expectation, with their second album, Portishead understandably tried to distance themselves from both.
 
Okay, it took three years to get there - which is nothing compared to the eleven years between Portishead and Third – but every second and drop of sweat was worth it. 

The move from ‘borrowed’ samples to painstakingly created live recordings tilts the album in a different direction, but loses none of the momentum, pitching towards something terrifying yet bleakly optimistic.

Thankfully, Geoff Barrow, Adrian Utley and Beth Gibbons did come back for one more album - and the occasional reunion - and have continued to plough their own particular musical furrows to stunning effect. But if Portishead had only released one album - this - then they would still have left an indelible mark on the landscape.

Speaking of which, and in line with NBR rules, I also requested an extra Grovel point to be awarded to Portishead, for putting a North Somerset coastal town on the map.

 
 
 
The cover photo pinch from the TV is Alfred Molina as Joe Orton in the 1987 film Prick Up Your Ears. I haven't seen it for years and it's been recorded for several months, patiently awaiting it's moment to shine. Christmas family viewing at Casa K? Too much?

Friday, 19 September 2025

How Can It Feel This Wrong?

A stunning new version of Roads, performed by Portishead in support of Together For Palestine.

Filmed at the Cube Microplex in Bristol and posted the day that the festering sore on the backside of humanity left the UK.

Thank you, Beth, Geoff and Adrian.

Saturday, 15 February 2025

Decadance III: 1994

Side 1 of a nonsensical Nineties mixtape, today landing in 1994.

The year that 'The Bristol Sound' was gaining traction as a viable commercial prospect was also the year that I spent most of it living in another city. Yep, rather than chasing the zeitgeist, I seemed to spend most of my time racing away from it...!

Whilst Lloyd Cole had a lost weekend in a hotel in Amsterdam, I spent late 1993 to autumn 1994 in Derby. A large chunk of that was spent (over)staying with my incredibly understanding friend and his understandably increasingly pissed off girlfriend, before moving into a bedsit on the other side of town.

I'd lived in worse places, though not much. The winter was so cold that ice formed on the inside of the windows, faux-brickwork wallpaper covered the crumbly real stuff behind, and 50p in the meter would just about get enough water for a bath...as long as my neighbour didn't jump into the communal bathroom and nick it first!

Oh, and after several break-in attempts, I had to resort to removing my car battery every evening and keep it in my bedsit. It was quite literally the only thing worth nicking from car, but half-arsed attempts to do so had caused even more damage. 

I spent most of my time in Derby working for a paint company, 2.00-10.00pm shifts in their distribution warehouse, trying to input schedules on to spreadsheet with fingers that had turned blue and lost all feeling about 30 minutes into the shift. 

And it was where I gained a valuable lesson in the pronunciation of UK place names. My Scottish compadres may raise a wry smile when I mention the reaction I got from the person at the other end of the phone, when I wanted to update them on "a delivery to Hawick". They let me repeat several times before putting me out of my misery...
 
For all the anti-social aspects of the group, the people were fun, and I had a brief relationship with a woman in the upstairs office (I was one of the privileged few from downstairs allowed to go upstairs!), who lived out in the sticks and introduced me to some lovely walks in the Peak District. 

I also went clubbing a lot, given that I would finish work at 10.00pm and sleep was the last thing on my mind. I've forgotten most of the places I went to, but they included the Wherehouse for indie-type gigs and club nights. I also went to a few Renaissance nights at the relatively newly opened The Conservatory. I may have seen Sasha there but I have no recollection; I do remember that John Digweed and Ian Ossia were there pretty much every time, and seeing Justin Robertson, the latter peppered all over my record buying at the time.

Gigs were few and far between in that time. In fact, I've only recorded three that I can recall, and what a mixed bag: Freak Realistic playing to a handful of people; The Boo Radleys riding a wave of acclaim on the back of the magnificent Giant Steps, which proved to be impossible to capture live on stage. 

And then a brief trip over to Nottingham in March 1994, for a Megadog event featuring Transglobal Underground, Banco De Gaia and Loop Guru, which was superb. I was also supposed to be seeing Primal Scream at the legendary Rock City the same month but for some reason it never happened. Thirty years later and I've still never been there.

So how is it all of that reflected in today's selection of sounds from 1994? Not very well, if I honest!

Although the peaks for both genres were arguably still ahead, I've eschewed Britpop for Trip Hop, so there's no Blur, Pulp or Oasis (or, thankfully, Ocean Colour Scene) but Bristol's finest are represented with Massive Attack, Portishead and Tricky. Incredibly, only the first of these made the Top 30 though bigger hits were to come. 
 
In fact, this selection is much lighter on Top 40 hits - a mere 5 - compared to previous years, though I couldn't swap out any of these choices, even if it meant no room for Mazzy Star, Underworld, Gene, The Jesus & Mary Chain, Elastica, Kristin Hersh & Michael Stipe, Ride and Billie Ray Martin. And poor Pop Will Eat Itself never did get a look in this time around.

Beastie Boys make a long overdue appearance with Sabotage, which came with a typically brilliant video. Lazarus, possibly The Boo Radleys' greatest moment, wasn't a hit in 1992 and arguably still wasn't in 1994 compared to other singles though it was good to see it get a second crack at the Top, er, 55.

Jah Wobble's Invaders Of The Heart also returned with what I personally consider to be their best album, Take Me To God. I can't award it perfect album due to the guest spot of Dolores from The Cranberries, whose voice I can best and diplomatically describe as grating (sorry). However the single Becoming More Like God is monumental.

Pavement and Stereolab are largely thanks to John Peel playing them on the radio and a friend falling heavily for their music, which provided a sideways door to their songs. Veruca Salt too, although my collection remains largely limited to the Seether and Number One Blind EPs.

7 Seconds by Youssou N'Dour was slow burning single, taking a good couple of months to climb up the UK charts and reaching a peak of #3. No idea why, it's a fantastic song, made even better by appearance of Neneh Cherry and the inspired production of Booga Bear & Jonny Dollar aka Cameron McVey (aka Neneh's hubby) and Jonathan Sharp (who sadly passed in 2009). Neneh...sigh.

And I end with a start. If you've been following this series from the beginning, then you will know that there will always be more MAW. Today's Mandatory Andrew Weatherall is one of his own songs, for a change. Weatherall teamed up with Jagz Kooner and Gary Burns to form The Sabres Of Paradise. In 1994, second album Haunted Dancehall dropped, including a truncated version of preceding single Theme.

Theme, as the title may suggest, was a big, bold brassy cinematic epic, so it was no surprise that it literally ended up soundtracking a film. I don't remember all that much about Shopping the film, if I'm honest; I probably only saw it that one time in 1994. The soundtrack album however is phenomenal: Weatherall/Sabres appear twice, alongside Orbital, Smith & Mighty, The Disposable Heroes Of Hiphoprisy, and more. 

The version of Theme on the Shopping OST comes in at just under five and a half minutes, longer than the album version, shorter than the single version, though carrying all of the heft of the original.
 
1) Theme ("Shopping" OST Version): The Sabres Of Paradise
2) Sly (Underdog Mix By Trevor Jackson): Massive Attack ft. Nicolette
3) Sabotage (Album Version): Beastie Boys
4) Numb (Revenge Of The Number): Portishead
5) Lazarus (7 Inch Version): The Boo Radleys
6) Cut Your Hair (Album Version): Pavement
7) Ping Pong (Album Version): Stereolab
8) Ponderosa (Dobie's Rub Part 1): TrIcky ft. Martina Topley-Bird
9) Becoming More Like God (Radio Edit By Mark 'Spike' Stent): Jah Wobble's Invaders Of The Heart ft. Anneli Drecker
10) I Want You (Single Mix): Inspiral Carpets ft. Mark E. Smith
11) Seether (Album Version): Veruca Salt
12) 7 Seconds (Album Version By Booga Bear & Jonny Dollar): Youssou N'Dour ft. Neneh Cherry

6th February 1994: Crooked Rain Crooked Rain (#52): 6
27th February 1994: I Want You EP (#18): 10
3rd April 1994: Haunted Dancehall / Shopping OST (#56): 1
24th April 1994: Becoming More Like God EP (#36): 9
1st May 1994: Ponderosa EP (#77): 8
5th June 1994: Lazarus EP (#54): 5
13th June 1994: Numb EP (# n/a): 4
26th June 1994: American Thighs (#61): 11
3rd July 1994: Ill Communication (#19): 3
24th July 1994: Mars Audiac Quintet (#45): 7
4th September 1994: The Guide (Wommat) (#3): 12
23rd October 1994: Sly EP (#24): 2
 
Side One (45:59) (GD) (M)

Sunday, 22 October 2023

Hep Hop Excursion (Day Return)

Side 1 of a one stop tip top trip hop mixtape, compiled circa July to September 1996. Try saying that with a mouthful of muesli. 63 Sundays ago, I posted Side 2; now you can belatedly complete the set!
 
As with the previous side, this selection is skewed towards acts from or based in my birthplace Bristol; the final third features remixes by Massive Attack, Tricky and Portishead.  

Red Snapper open up with a track from their second release, The Swank EP, although like many I first heard this on the Warp Records compilation of their first three EPs, Reeled And Skinned. Red Snapper were originally active between 1993 and 2002 and cane together again in 2007. The band released the rather excellent Live At The Moth Club album a couple of days ago.

In 1995, Saint Etienne teamed up with Étienne Daho to record and release the Reserection EP, featuring several previous singles and B-sides, reworked and translated into French. Jungle Pulse is a version of 1991 single Filthy, Daho replacing Q-Tee's original rap over a Hendrix sample and some appropriately dirty beats.

The Charlatans were no strangers to the art of the remix, with several collaborations with The Dust Brothers/The Chemical Brothers under their belt. Van Basten provide a rather fine remix of Feel Flows. Named after Marco van Basten, up there in the lists of the greatest footballers of all time* and who had retired at the age of 28 the year before this remix appeared. Whilst van Basten was born in Utrecht in The Netherlands, Van Basten the trio - Gary Everatt, Gary Webster and Martin Reilly - hailed from Milton Keynes.

As before, several of my favourite chanteuses, appear here with standout tracks: Plavka, Neneh Cherry and Beth Gibbons.

When I posted Side 2 in August 2022, the UK was experiencing an unprecedented heatwave, with temperatures of 33°C; no chance of that in October 2023, as the island recovers from the passing of Storm Babet. 
 
1) One Legged Low Frequency Guy: Red Snapper (1994)
2) Jungle Pulse (Remix of Filthy): Saint Etienne ft. Étienne Daho (1995)
3) Move Ya (Bedouin Ascent Funky Fix): Rising High Collective (1995)
4) Feel Flows (Van Basten Mix): The Charlatans (1994)
5) Blow The Whole Joint Up (Decks 'n' Drugs 'n' Rock 'n' Roll Mix By DJ Mek): Monkey Mafia (1995)
6) Manchild (Massive Attack Remix): Neneh Cherry (1989)
7) Boundaries (Tricky Mix): Leena Conquest & Hip Hop Finger (1994)
8) Sour Sour Times (Remix): Portishead (1994)
 
1989: Manchild EP: 6
1994: Boundaries EP: 7
1994: Jesus Hairdo EP: 4 
1994: Sour Times EP: 8
1994: The Swank EP: 1
1995: Blow The Whole Joint Up EP: 5
1995: Feel The Fire/Wanna Move Ya EP: 3
1995: Reserection EP: 2

Side One (45:06) (KF) (Mega)
Side Two here

* as I was writing this post, the news came in of Bobby Charlton's passing. Another of the greatest footballers of all time. RIP Bobby.

Tuesday, 16 May 2023

Devotional

Side 2 of a Depeche Mode mixtape, recorded sometime around September or October 1998.

The triumphant return of the boys from Basildon with this selection focusing on a decade of mixes from 1988 (not 1989 as advertised above) to 1998, bridging live compilation 101 through to their second singles collection, the rather functionally titled The Singles 86>98.
 
Headstar is a good example of Mode's stock-in-trade B-side, an instrumental that could easily have wound up on a US TV drama soundtrack. World In My Eyes is remixed by The Beloved's Jon Marsh, tucked away on a limited edition single back in 1990.  
 
In Your Room wasn't a particular favourite of mine as a single/album track but the remixes were better, including the one here by Jonny Dollar and featuring my first encounter with Geoff Barrow working under the Portishead moniker. 
 
Wrapping up Side 2 - and the compilation - a rare occasion when I used an alternative to the definitive single version of Enjoy The Silence on a mixtape. Poor old Dave Gahan doesn't get a look in until the closing minute or so, but it's a good mix nevertheless. 
 
I haven't yet got around to buying the latest Depeche Mode album, more a reflection on the ton of great albums that have already landed in 2023 so far. 
 
1) Headstar (Single Mix By Tim Simenon & Robin Hancock) (1998)
2) Nothing (Zip-Hop Mix By Justin Strauss & Eric Kupper) (1988)
3) World In My Eyes (Mayhem Mode) (Remix By Jon Marsh) (1990)
4) I Feel You (Babylon Mix By Supereal aka John Crossley) (1993)
5) Barrel Of A Gun (United Mix By Paul Freegard & Marc Waterman ft. Vanessa) (1997) 
6) Home (LFO Meant To Be) (Remix By Mark Bell) (1997)
7) In Your Room (The Jeep Rock Mix By Jonny Dollar & Portishead) (Edit) (1994)
8) Enjoy The Silence (Ricki Tik Tik Mix By Daniel Miller & Phil Legg) (1990)

Side Two (46:22) (KF) (Mega)
 
If that's left you hungry for more Mode, here are the previous selections I posted in August 2021 and May 2022.
 

Sunday, 26 December 2021

Boxing Day

Too obvious?
 
1) Boxes: The Naturals (2007)
2) Call Box (1-2-3): Wall Of Voodoo (1981)
3) Heart-Shaped Box: Nirvana (1993)
4) Beast Box: Luxuria (1990)
5) Boxing Day: AFX (2006)
6) Hasj Box: Olav Brekke Mathisen (2003)
7) Glory Box / Toy Box (Remix): Portishead (1994)
8) Lanhydrock, Cornwall / The Old Music Box Playing In The Nursery (Produced by Jarvis Cocker): National Trust (2010)
9) The Box (Part Four): Orbital ft. Grant Fulton & Alison Goldfrapp (1996)
10) Pillar Box Red (Album Version By Clive Langer & Alan Winstanley): The The (2002)
 
Boxing Day (36:54) (KF) (Mega)

Tuesday, 15 June 2021

Black Swan To Blue Mountain

Bristol on the mix: Easton to Stokes Croft in seven steps.
 
1) Black Steel (In The Draw Mix By Substance) (Cover of Public Enemy): Tricky (1995)
2) Love Will Be On Your Side (Massive Attack Tabla Remix): Indo Animata (1996)
3) Roads (Monk & Canatella Remix): Portishead (2009)
4) Distorted Angel (Remix By Tricky): Elvis Costello & The Attractions (1996)
5) Spooned (Smith & Mighty Dusk Mix): Coldfeet (2001)
6) Burning (RSD aka Rob Smith Remix): Kakhand ft. Sizzla (2013)
7) Nefisa (Portishead Mix): Earthling (1995)