Showing posts with label The Stone Roses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Stone Roses. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 November 2025

Upon A Mouse #12: Why Don't You Dance With Me?

When SWC at No Badger Required asked the NBR Musical Jury to nominate for The 20 Greatest Eponymous Albums Of All Time, my immediate thought was The B-52's by The B-52's.

Thankfully, I wasn't the only one to think so, and The B-52's made it onto the voting shortlist. Again, there was no hesitation from me. It got the full twenty points, plus the "maximum three Grovel points please, because it’s deserves to be in the Top 10 at least, if not #1!"

Sadly, I may have been the only one to think so, as whilst The B-52's was my #1, in the final countdown, it was the ranked the 16th Greatest Eponymous Album Of All Time.

There's a compare-and-contrast table below, but no spoiler - and perhaps no surprise - that The Stone Roses' self-titled debut was #1 in the definitive NBR countdown. 

I have to admit that Ian, John, Mani and Reni didn't get a single point from me.

Wait! Before you write SWC / your local MP / Judge Rinder (or Judy) demanding that I be barred from any jury service in future, this was my confessional cover letter to SWC back in late August.

A bit of a struggle this time as I only realised when going through the shortlist 
that I haven’t heard many of these albums, 
even though I may have plenty of other stuff by said artist. 

And of those I do have in my collection, 
a fair few rarely get an airing, 
so I’ve had to listen to a few again more recently 
to remind myself how good (or bad) they really are. 

My other self-imposed rule was that, if a shortlisted album wasn't already in my collection at the time of casting votes, then it was automatically disqualified. I wasn't going to acquire an album just to shoehorn it into my final list, but it did mean that there were some glaring omissions from my final vote.

The Beatles, The Charlatans, The La's, Placebo, The Smiths, Suede and The Stone Roses all made the NBR Top 20 but with no help whatsoever from me. Sorry about that!

And whilst I'd heard all of the above, other self-titled albums that remain unheard include Alvvays, Fleet Foxes, The Libertines and Weezer.

I got hold of a copy of The Stone Roses following The 20 Greatest Eponymous Albums Of All Time, some weeks before the tragic passing of Mani aka Gary Mounfield. As I commented in my tribute post on Monday,

My friend Stu had the album and I liked it, 
but not enough to buy anything more than the standalone single 
Fools Gold / What The World Is Waiting For, which I loved. 

Listening to The Stone Roses again, it's a worthy winner and even if I hadn't felt that way, Swiss Adam from Bagging Area wrote such a wonderfully compelling case that I suspect even diehard opponents would reconsider their position.  

That said, if The Stone Roses hadn't fallen foul of my self-imposed voting criteria, whilst it would likely have been in my Top 10, The B-52's would still have been my #1.

And it was all thanks to the necessary evil of record label plugging.

If Rock Lobster hadn’t been re-released in 1986, then The B-52’s 1979 album probably wouldn’t have been the first album of theirs that I bought, age 15. But what a debut.
 
From the opening outer space bleeps of Planet Claire to the closing party sounds on their cover of Downtown, and all points in between, this is a sound so quirky and retro, it defied the homogenised nostalgia of the mid-late 1980s.
 
Educational, too. I’m still prone to shouting out, “Why don’t you dance with me? I’m not no Limburger!” or, at every mention of Krakatoa on TV or in conversation, casually pointing out that it’s “East of Java”.
 
The B-52’s was also the album that I lent to my school friend Phil, as proof that there was more to music than his prized cassette rip of Dire Straits’ Brothers In Arms (worse the ‘extended version’ released on CD). A few weeks later, I had to prise it out of his hands to get it back. 

You can read a little more about this in my post from 6th July 2021, 42 years to the day that The B-52's debut was released.

I never tire of listening to The B-52's and I have a love for each and every one of their albums. The world as a whole is a better place for having The B-52's in it. And their debut album made that clear from the start. 

Forty years later, The B-52's is - and will probably always be - The #1 Greatest Eponymous Album Of All Time for me.

Note: I've run out of time for today's post, but please come back on Friday and I will re-post links to previous Dubhed Selections featuring The B-52's. In the meantime., here a trio of fine videos.

Note (28th Nov): Thanks for your patience! Here also are a trio of Dubhed selections celebrating The B-52's ... and a belated happy birthday to Keith Strickland, 72 on Wednesday.


 
 

Thanks for coming along with me for the past four weeks and especially to SWC, who keeps coming up with these brilliant ideas time and again, they're such fun. If you'd like to sign up for Musical Jury service, email SWC at Nobadgerrequired@googlemail.com. You won't regret it!

So, as promised, here's a recap of my list, alongside the official No Badger Required Top 20. 


Dubhed Top 20

1) The B-52’s
2) Portishead
3) Ramones
4) The Doors
5) Orbital
6) Franz Ferdinand
7) Elastica
8) Gorillaz
9) Blur
10) LCD Soundsystem
11) The xx
12) The Velvet Underground (which should have been The Velvet Underground & Nico!!)
13) The Clash
14) The Specials

15) The Coral

16) Roxy Music

17) Blondie

18) THe Stooges

19) Echo & The Bunnymen

20) Duran Duran (for Mrs. K)



The No Badger Required Top 20

1) The Stone Roses
2) Suede
3) The Smiths
4) The Specials
5) The Velvet Underground & Nico
6) The Clash
7) The La’s
8) LCD Soundsystem
9) Ramones
10) Portishead
11) Elastica
12) Franz Ferdinand
13) Blur
14) Orbital
15) The Charlatans
16) The B-52’s
17) The xx
18) Echo & The Bunnymen
19) The Beatles
20) Placebo


If you've made it all the way to the end, then thank you! I have to give a final nod to today's random cover star, Michelle Yeoh, whose acting talent is anything but random. Michelle is in a scene from 2022 film Everything Everywhere All At Once which, if you haven't seen, you really must. Like, now. Right now.

Monday, 24 November 2025

Mani Memories

Celebrating Mani aka Gary Mounfield, 16th November 1962 to 20th November 2025.

There have been so many wonderfully written and heartfelt tributes to Mani in the past few days that there's not a lot that I can add. Unlike many of my blogosphere peers, my life wasn't transformed by The Stone Roses. 

My friend Stu had the album and I liked it, but not enough to buy anything more than the standalone single Fools Gold / What The World Is Waiting For, which I loved. 

When The Stone Roses played at The Bierkeller in Bristol in the summer of 1989, I was either skint or otherwise occupied. My live picks for that year included Pixies, Inspiral Carpets and, er, The Monkees.

For all that, I thought they were great, and had a particular fondness for Mani, so when he joined Primal Scream following The Stone Roses' end, it was a very good thing.

In the tributes, there is an overwhelming sense of what a decent, down to earth person Mani was. Even from my ignorant distance, what stands out is his loyalty; Mani stuck with The Stone Roses., gave 15 years to Primal Scream and then heeded the call to get the old band back together.

There was also Freebass, the supergroup with Peter Hook and Andy Rourke, though other extra curricular activity was rare: a couple of songs on Bryan Ferry's 2010 album Olympia, two live rehearsal tracks with The Racketeers circa 2004, another couple with Aziz Ibrahim in 2000, and that's all I have.

What ties them all together is Mani's superlative bass. In compiling today's tribute, I found a 1983 demo by The Waterfront, a precursor to The Stone Roses, and Mani's talent shines through from the start.

At the end, I've pulled together a 10-song tribute to Mani, spanning all of the above. I won't pretend to be an expert, and my picks for The Stone Roses and Primal Scream may be obvious choices, but I hope the selection overall does Mani justice.

Man, could Mani play bass.

In preparing this post, I received an email from my friend Mike:

Hi Khayem,

sad news about Mani today. 
I'm not sure my 'review' is appropriate in its entirety but:
1) Its a reminder for me about how I felt 30 years ago and 
2) it does help me reflect on how good Mani was in a live setting.
Feel free to just read or take a bit of the essence

Regards,
Mike

I'm sharing Mike's entire item, unedited.

The Stone Roses – Great Hall Exeter University 5th December 1995

On a cold Tuesday night nigh on 30 years ago my mate Chris and I travelled down the M5 to see a band that many felt were the greatest of that era.

We both didn’t know Exeter at all and tried to find a car park that was ‘central’ before trudging off to find the University. Once entering the venue we realised it was packed to the rafters with students and blokes in their early 20’s hoping to have their ‘Spike Island’ moment. From memory it wasn’t long until the band took to the stage and a long intro started. The sound was good and the first thing you noticed was how good Reni and Mani sounded together. It didn’t take long until John Squires started to unleash his trademark riffs and all was good with the world. And then Ian Brown started singing…

I’ve often thought about this gig and looked at people reminiscing about going to see the Stone Roses in the late 1980’s-mid 1990’s. Were Reni and Mani the best rhythm section of our lifetime? A bold statement yes but I think one that could be argued. Was John Squire one of the best lead guitarists to come out of the UK? Again I think that is something that has good evidence behind it. However my issue always was the lead singer. I remember on the night trying to go to different parts of the Hall to see if it was a dodgy speaker or just where I was stood. The final track was ‘I am the Resurrection’ and I just thought at the time would I ever hear a better bassline played live in my lifetime and now that Mani has passed I think I can honestly say probably not.

We drove home through the snow agreeing on one thing – that when it was down to the musicians in the band they were faultless – Mani, Reni, John we salute you. If only you had let your lead singer go then they could have been one of the greatest live bands ever 

RIP Mani.

Many thanks, Mike, wonderfully expressed. And now for some music.

1) BF Bass (Ode To Olympia) (Album Version): Bryan Ferry (2010)
2) Breaking Into Heaven (Album Version): The Stone Roses (1994)
3) Can't Go Back (Album Version): Primal Scream (2008)
4) Nuts For You (Live Rehearsal Track): The Racketeers (Wayne Kramer & Brian James) (2004)
5) You Don't Know (This About Me) (EP Version): Freebass ft. Tim Burgess (2010)
6) Where The Wind Blows: The Waterfront (1983)
7) I Am The Resurrection (Album Version): The Stone Roses (1989)
8) If They Move, Kill 'Em (Album Version): Primal Scream (1997)
9) Middle Road (Aziz Album Mix): Aziz ft. Paul Weller (2000)
10) The Milky Way Is Our Playground (EP Version): Freebass ft. Pete Wylie (2010)

Mani Memories (51:43) (GD) (M)

Tuesday, 1 April 2025

April Fools

What else for All Fools' Day than an all fools playlist?

Oh, and whilst I'm here: pinch, punch, first of the month, no returns.

And happy birthday, Mama K.

1) Caravan Of Fools: John Prine (2018)
2) Don't Be A Fool (12" Extended Version): Loose Ends (1990)
3) The Fool On The Hill (Demo): The Beatles (1967)
4) Fools (Single Version): Depeche Mode (1983)
5) Fools Gold (Grooverider's Mix) (Edit 2): The Stone Roses (1999)
6) Where Fools Rush In (Radio Edit): Billie Ray Martin (2001)
7) Fool Yourself (Skit): Little Feat (1973)
8) Ditch The Fool: The Pastels (1989)
9) These Foolish Things (Album Version) (Cover of Leslie Hutchinson): Bryan Ferry (1973)
10) Why Do Fools Fall In Love: Frankie Lymon & The Teenagers (1955)
11) Wise And Foolish (John Peel Session): Misty In Roots (1980)

1955: Why Do Fools Fall In Love EP: 10
1973: These Foolish Things: 9
1983: Love In Itself EP: 4
1989: Sittin' Pretty: 8
1990: Don't Be A Fool EP: 2
1995: The John Peel Sessions: 11
1996: The Beatles Anthology 2: 3
1997: Tribe Vibes Vol. 1: 7
2000: The Remixes: 5
2001: Where Fools Rush In EP: 6
2018: The Tree Of Forgiveness: 1

April Fools (46:29) (KF) (Mega)

Sunday, 8 September 2024

Decade V: 1989


Side 2 (or Side 10, if you will) of the Decade mixtape series, compiled 8th April 1990.
 
As David Byrne asked waaay back in 1980 on the opening side of this epic venture, "Well, how did I get here?"

I don't know about you, but the last five weeks have flown by for me. Yet, 10 sides, 120 songs, 7 hours, 40 minutes and 28 seconds later and that's it for my look back at the 1980s. 
 
If you've followed some or all of my selections over the past five weekends, I hope there's been something that's resonated with or reminded you. That, or you've been introduced to some of the more obscure chart misses that you weren't aware of or were too young to experience first time around.

Before I delve into 1989 itself, a few Decade facts for those of you that like that kind of thing. Across the 120 songs, most artist appearances were one-offs, but 16 managed 2 appearances, some perhaps surprisingly so.

Bronze medals therefore go to Julian Cope, Echo & The Bunnymen, Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Heaven 17, The Human League, The Jesus & Mary Chain, Killing Joke, O.M.D., Pete Wylie & Wah!, Pixies, R.E.M., Scritti Politti, Siouxsie & The Banshees, The Cult, Visage and - who would have thought? - Wall Of Voodoo.

Just 4 artists managed a total of 3 appearances. Silver medals to Talking Heads, Talk Talk, The Smiths and U2. No band managed to feature on both the first and the last selection, but Talking Heads and U2 achieved the greatest span, both with first and last appearances in 1980 and 1988. 
 
A special mention for Siouxise Sioux, whose two appearances with The Banshees (in 1980 and 1983) and The Creatures (1989) gets her an honorary Silver medal and also the 'greatest span' achievement award as an individual artist. Seems fitting, as Ms. Sioux was never one to be bound by conventional rules.

Only 1 band achieved 4 appearances and, especially given that I compiled the series in 1990, it's no surprise that the Gold medal goes to Depeche Mode. Sharing the 'greatest span' record with the above, the Basildon boys first featured in 1981 with New Life, returned in 1983 with Everything Counts, came back in 1986 with Stripped and make their final appearance in 1989 with Personal Jesus.

But enough preamble, what about 1989? It was a year of historic events, too many to go into here though I will just acknowledge that it marked Margaret Thatcher's tenth year as Prime Minister, the first to do so in the 20th century. Little wonder then that I was formulating plans to leave the country and go travelling for a year, something that I managed to do in 1990. 

I was working full-time and any money left over from 'housekeeping' (aka rent to my parents, but considering cheaper than a city centre bedsit), running the car, record buying and nights out was being put aside for my planned escape. 

Gigs in 1989 therefore were few and far between, but varied. I didn't keep a record so I've long forgotten the local/unsigned bands and the growing number of club nights and DJ sets that I saw. However, the few tickets that I've managed not to lose since tell me that I variously enjoyed the live experiences of The Monkees (sadly minus Mike Nesmith), The Jesus & Mary Chain, Inspiral Carpets and Pixies (again), this time supported by The Wolfgang Press. 

Once again, plans for a companion series Decadance means that today's 1989 selection is light on dance music, though one pioneering electronic act makes the cut and a couple of indie/dance crossovers barge their way in.

Surprisingly making their first appearance in the series, right at the end, are The B-52's. Channel Z was a precusor to 5th album Cosmic Thing, released in June 1989. I bought the 12" single which did little to help, as it failed to chart. Likewise, the album managed one week at #75 before disappearing... until March 1990 that is, when second single Love Shack got to #2 and boosted Cosmic Thing into a Top 10 album with a six-month run in the charts.  
 
Channel Z got a second go in August 1990 and still only managed a peak of #61, which is a shame. Maybe it was just too political and angry (well, as angry as The B-52's could possibly get) for the UK's fragile minds.

After years of pioneering and cutting edge sounds, Cabaret Voltaire signed to EMI and released Groovy, Laidback & Nasty, their most commercial and conventional album to date (and of all, as it transpired). Stephen Mallinder and Richard H. Kirk seemed to cop a lot of flak for 'selling out' and mimicking the prevailing music fashions rather than influencing then, which I think was unfair.

It had mixed results: the album failed to chart and although the three singles managed #66, #55 and #61 respectively, they remain Cabaret Voltaire's highest charting singles. I think - as I did back then - that Hypnotised is a great single. Remixed by Fon Force, Mute label boss Daniel Miller and A Guy Called Gerald, with backing vocals from Ten City, it was an interesting diversion even if it proved to be short-lived.

I first heard Pop Will Eat Itself on a couple of compilations and fell for their Grebo sound, even more so as they started to play around with samples and beats. Wise Up! Sucker is perhaps less familiar than Can U Dig It? though there's surprisingly little between then in terms of chart placing. PWEI seriously troubled the UK Top 40 in the 1990s, but Wise Up! Sucker remains one of my favourite songs that they ever did.

Also making a comeback of sorts was Depeche Mode with Personal Jesus. This heralded a new direction, lots more twangy guitar than you might expect and a catchy yet off-kilter chorus. I bought the singles on 12" (there were usually at least 2) on release, but never 7" hence the inclusion of one of the (three) remixes by François Kevorkian. 
 
According to my handmade cassette inlay, I originally faded out the song around at 4:13. On recreating the tape for this post, I found that this selection was running considerably short, so I've included the full length Holier Than Thou Approach here. 

I'd heard very little by The Stone Roses at this point. My friend Stuart had their album, which I'd heard a couple of times but wasn't blown away by. Their standalone double A-side single in November 1989 was another matter entirely, though. What The World Is Waiting For was good, though not a million miles away from the album that preceded it. Fools Gold was another matter entirely and got my attention from the start. Despite my preference for the 12" format generally, and the fact that Fools Gold was stretched out to nearly ten minutes, at the time I plumped for the 2-track 7" single. I retrospectively came to love those earlier songs, but Fools Gold is the one that really switched me onto The Stone Roses.

Making an unexpected reappearance were The Creatures aka Siouxsie Sioux and Budgie, then-partners in The Banshees and in life. I really liked The Creatures' music, which followed a more disciplined, minimalist structure, playing to the strengths of Siouxsie's distinctive vocal styling and Budgie's phenomenal percussion skills. Standing There was remixed by Mike Hedges and I bought the 12" and 10" singles. 
 
The latter, titled the La Frontera Mix, was under 4 minutes and featured on the cassette. I haven't been able to rip my vinyl for this recreation and, as far as I can tell, it's essentially an edit of the 10-minute Andalucian Mix on the 12". So, I've edited the latter to provide a clean ending at approx. the same point as the La Frontera Mix to maintain the original sequencing.

Mekons had been around for over a decade by the time I bought a record by them. But what a record. I think I'd heard and quite liked Ghosts Of American Astronauts, didn't really know anything else that they'd done and bought The Dream And Lie Of... EP on 10" without hearing a single song, purely down to a rave review that I'd read in NME, Melody Maker or Sounds. I wasn't disappointed.

Three of the four songs appeared on the subsequent album The Mekons Rock 'n' Roll and Club Mekon is the penultimate song on the EP. The flurry of country punk, Sally Timmins' vocals and the opening verse of
 
When I was just seventeen, sex no longer held a mystery
I saw it as a commodity to be bought and sold, like rock and roll

had me hooked and even now, Club Mekon puts a shiver down my spine and a smile on my face when I hear it. Superb.

Pixies could do no wrong and Monkey Gone To Heaven was no exception. I saw Pixies perform this song live at the Studio in Bristol, two months after the single release and a few weeks after the album Doolittle had blown my teenage mind. Hearing Black Francis scream, And God is seven! And God is seven! And God is seven!, to an audience that were screaming right back at him, was incredible.

Next is the one true WTF? moment, with the inclusion of Destroyed by Scottish metal band The Almighty. I'm struggling to explain this one, or remember why I even had anything by them. I'm supposing that it was either the recommendation/influence of my brother, or that I was trying to impress a girl in the hope of asking her out at some point. 

Delving into my gig ticket tin, I find that I saw The Almighty at the Bierkeller in Bristol on 26th February 1990. No memory of that one at all. The fact that I recorded the Decade V cassette six weeks after the gig perhaps explains its inclusion and the brevity of my interest in the band. I remember buying the Blood, Fire & Love album from which this song is taken though I suspect that it was culled from my collection not long after. 
 
Listening to it now? I'm finding it hard to tell the difference between The Almighty and Def Leppard, to be honest, and that's not intended as a compliment. It must surely have sounded outdated even in 1989! For a second or two, I considered swapping out The Almighty for something less anachronistic but whatever the reason, I considered it 'good' enough for inclusion so it has to stay. Don't do drugs, kids!
 
The The restore the intellectual equilibrium with The Beat(en) Generation, their first new single in a couple of years and the first to more explicitly pitch The The as a band rather than a solo venture for Matt Johnson. Well, if your band included Johnny Marr, you would shout about it, wouldn't you? 

I love The Beat(en) Generation, even though I'll admit that I still find Matt's pronunciation of 'reared' in the chorus a bit jarring (!). Diction notwithstanding, the general public evidently agreed as The Beat(en) Generation became The The's first ever UK Top 20 hit, reaching #18 in April. There were two additional remixes on the 12" and I picked the stripped back Campfire Mix for this selection.

Another surprise - nay, shock - late entry to this series is The Cure. In April 1990, I still didn't own any of their albums though I had a few of their 12" singles, so I'm as surprised as you that it's taken until 1989 for them to debut. That said, as the original tapes covering 1982 to 1985 have been lost forever and were recreated from scratch, it's possible that Let's Go To Bed, The Lovecats or Close To Me previously featured but I'll never know for sure.

Lullaby is an astonishing single with yet another memorable video directed by Tim Pope, so it's not really a surprise that I bought it. Again, it was the 7" not 12", so I most likely got it from the bargain bin at Woolworths. Still, it's #5 peak was another reason why Top Of The Pops and the Radio 1 chart rundown weren't a complete waste of time in the late 80s.

So, the selection and the series comes to a close with another first-time appearance here, Kate Bush and the title track of her album The Sensual World. The single entered the chart at #12 on 24th September 1989 and began a slow slide back out in the following four weeks. In my opinion, it's one of the finest songs she's ever recorded. From the opening church bell peals, to the Irish music flavours and Kate's sweetly restrained vocals, it's a magical journey from start to finish and a perfect way to end this voyage into the past.

I thought when I started this, that it would be a fun run though for a few weeks, with some top tunes and a few attempts at wit thrown in. It's been a lot more than that: I've revisited artists - and subsequently albums - that I haven't heard in a long while; I've also dredged up memories and snapshots of my callow youth.

Thanks so much for coming along with me, and your words of encouragement on the way. I am gradually getting back to responding to your many and lovely comments. And yes Ernie, I will answer your burning question about my first proper girlfriend ;-)

That's it for now. I never got around to the more dance-themed 80s collection or repeated this endeavour for the 1990s when I reached the new millennium. It was fun while it lasted.

Normal service resumes next weekend. By that, I mean the return of winging it and off the cuff musings...!

1) Channel Z (Remix/Edit): The B-52's
2) Hypnotised (The Fon Force Edit): Cabaret Voltaire ft. Ten City
3) Wise Up! Sucker (7" Version): Pop Will Eat Itself
4) Personal Jesus (Holier Than Thou Approach): Depeche Mode
5) Fools Gold 4.15 (7" Version): The Stone Roses
6) Standing There (Andalucian Mix) (Edit By Khayem): The Creatures
7) Club Mekon (Album Version): Mekons
8) Monkey Gone To Heaven (Album Version): Pixies
9) Destroyed (Album Version): The Almighty
10) The Beat(en) Generation (Campfire Mix): The The
11) Lullaby (Remix): The Cure
12) The Sensual World (Album Version): Kate Bush

Side Two (46:08) (KF) (Mega)

If you missed any of the previous posts, you can jump straight to them here.
1980   1981   1982   1983   1984   1985   1986   1987   1988

Saturday, 22 June 2024

A Different Donald

Celebrating Donald Sutherland, 17th July 1935 to 20th June 2024.

A brilliant actor, Martin over at New Amusements nailed it with a succinct and spot-on summation of his star turn in the 1978 remake of Invasion Of The Bodysnatchers, also a personal favourite. 

Donald brought an intensity to every role that he played, sometimes seemingly effortlessly, always enhanced by those piercing blue eyes. In ...Bodysnatchers, you could absolutely believe that Donald's character had gone for days without sleep and was running on empty...and that final scene. Stayed with me for a long time!

It was also a joy to see Donald appear in the video for Cloudbusting along with Kate Bush. Frankly, whatever he was in was better for his presence. Much is made of Will Smith's against-type role in 1993's Six Degrees Of Separation, but it stands or falls on the dynamic with the couple that his character encounters. It works because Donald and Stockard Channing were cast in the roles. Worth watching if you can track it down.
 
Which clumsily dovetails into the theme of today's selection. Unlike son Kiefer, Donald didn't release any albums or play gigs at the Cheese & Grain in Frome, However, he has appeared in many, many films, and there are plenty of songs in my collection that share titles. I've got form with this, having created previous selections based on the work of Faye Dunaway, Elizabeth Taylor and Juliette Binoche (possibly others, but I forget).

Unfortunately, no songs titled Six Degrees Of Separation (I do have a 12" by a band of that name, which I'll spare you) but I did run a few posts last year based on the fun variation Six Degrees Of Kevin Bacon
 
So, an obvious starter for today's selection were The Comsat Angels, whose members include (the other) Kevin Bacon. Conveniently, they also recorded a song for 1982 album Fiction with the same name as one of Donald's most famous films. Don't Look Now, but I think I've got away with that tenuous connection!

It's an eclectic sequence of songs and artists, taking in Roxy Music, The Kingfishers, Black Uhuru, late period Ultravox and Scanner aka Robin Rimbaud collaborating with Anni Hogan and Thomas Lang. I've taken some liberties with spelling and the inclusion or omission of the definite article here and there. I've also crowbarred in a reference to Donald's starring role in 1971 film Klute, where the titular drum & bass artist appears in the song name. It also allows me to sneak Mogwai in through the back door. Just imagine if Donald had accepted a role in Gremlins, it would have been even better...!

I felt compelled to include Cloudbusting but at the eleventh hour swapped Kate Bush for a cover version that Neil Halstead (Slowdive, Mojave 3) recorded for a US compilation in 2010. I like it.

It seemed appropriate somehow to pick a fellow Canadian to close the selection, and Neil Young happily stepped up to the mark. Ordinary People was Robert Redford's directorial debut in 1980 and Donald is astonishing as you might expect. Timothy Hutton won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. Donald was never nominated for an Academy Award, though he received an honorary Oscar in 2017.  

Not one to do things by halves, Neil Young's take on Ordinary People is an 18-minute chug-a-thon epic, with all the bells and whistles that you may expect, but doesn't feel a second too long. I don't know what Donald thought of Neil's music but I've just discovered that they did meet at least once, when they were both inducted into Canada's Walk Of Fame in 2000, along with Joni Mitchell, Michael J. Fox, Martin Short and William Shatner. Now, that must have been some dinner table conversation...!

Ninety minutes of music then that I hope will also get you looking up some more of Donald's films - Kelly's Heroes! - and rediscovering what singular, otherworldly talent Donald Sutherland is.

And the post title? Well, another take is that when I read the sad news, I wished that the Grim Reaper had come calling for a different Donald instead...

Rest easy, Mr. Sutherland, you did good.

1) Don't Look Now: The Comsat Angels (1982)
2) Casanova: Roxy Music (1974)
3) Instinct: Iggy Pop (1988)
4) Setting Sun (Edit): The Aliens (2007)
5) The Eye Of The Needle: The Kingfishers (2023)
6) Alone: Scanner & Anni Hogan ft. Thomas Lang (2016)
7) Fools Gold (7" Version By John Leckie): The Stone Roses (1989)
8) Heaven Help Us (Try) (Manyanamegamix): Zeke Manyika ft. Sylvia & The Sapphires (1984)
9) Ask The Dust: The Porch Song Anthology (2006)
10) Kelly's Heroes (Album Version): Black Grape (1995)
11) The Great Train Robbery (Dance Mix By Arthur Baker): Black Uhuru (1986) 
12) Cloudbusting (Cover of Kate Bush): Neil Halstead (2010)
13) Thee Eagle Has Landed: Genesis P-Orridge & Psychic TV (1994)
14) Summer (Klute's Weird Winter Remix By Tom Withers): Mogwai (1998)
15) Time To Kill (Album Version): Ultravox (1986)
16) Ordinary People: Neil Young (2007)

1974: Country Life: 2
1982: Fiction: 1
1984: Heaven Help Us (Try) EP: 8 
1986: The Great Train Robbery EP: 11
1986: U-Vox: 15
1988: Instinct: 3
1989: Fools Gold EP: 7 
1994: Ultradrug: 13
1995: It's Great When You're Straight...Yeah: 10 
1998: Kicking A Dead Pig: Mogwai Songs Remixed: 14
2006: Spell Of The Trembling Earth: 9
2007: Chrome Dreams II: 16
2007: Setting Sun EP: 4
2010: Sing Me To Sleep, Indie Lullabies: 12
2016: Scanni: 6
2023: Reflections In A Silver Sound: 5

A Different Donald (1:30:03) (KF) (Mega)

Saturday, 13 January 2024

Saturday's Not Alright For Fighting, Elton

How about some love, peace and harmony instead?
 
1) Love, Peace And Harmony (Remixed By Kurt Munkacsi & Ivan Ivan): Bow Wow Wow (1983)
2) Sweet Harmony (Album Version): The Beloved (1992)
3) Our Love Is God: The Impossibles (1991)
4) Harmony (Cover of Elton John): Jesse Malin (2008)
5) Peace In Our Time (Cover of The Imposter): Carter The Unstoppable Sex Machine (1993)
6) Harmony 5 (Accordion): Spiritualized (2008)
7) One Love (Remix By Adrian Sherwood) (7" Version): The Stone Roses (1992)
8) Only Love Can Break Your Heart (Remixed By Flowered Up) (Cover of Neil Young): Saint Etienne ft. Moira Lambert (1990)
9) We Come In Peace: Bobby Conn & The Glass Gypsies (2004)
10) Peace And Love: Flesh For Lulu (1984)
11) Harmony 1 (Mellotron): Spiritualized (2008)
12) Peace (SixToes Remix): Depeche Mode (2009)
13) Peace And Love: Sylvia Tella (1986)
 
1983: Love, Peace And Harmony EP: 1
1984: Flesh For Lulu: 10 
1986: Will You Still Want Me: 13
1990: It's On/Only Love Can Break Your Heart (The Catalogue magazine promo flexi 7"): 8
1991: The Drum EP: 3 
1992: Waterfall EP: 7
1993: Conscience: 2 
1993: Peace Together: 5 
2004: The Homeland: 9
2008: On Your Sleeve: 4
2008: Songs In A&E: 6, 11
2009: Peace EP: 12

Saturday's Not Alright For Fighting, Elton (46:11) (KF) (Mega)

Saturday, 16 September 2023

A Heart Of Fool's Gold

Back with a selection of 1980s alternative/indie 12" versions to enliven your weekend.

Earlier this year, I included Peter Hook's original mix of Elephant Stone by The Stone Roses in the last of my Six Degrees Of Kevin Bacon posts. Here's the more familiar 12" mix by John Leckie. Can it really be 35 years old?! I never got into The Stone Roses in a big way at the time, though with the benefit of hindsight it's hard to deny that their debut album and singles like Elephant Stone were pretty amazing.

And this is where my timeline memory gets very confused. As The Stone Roses were paving the way to the future, All About Eve were just about to make it big, presaged by the single Our Summer. Hard to imagine now that the two bands were contemporaneous. This 12" version was produced by their mates from The Mission, Wayne Hussey and Simon Hinkler, who were also enjoying a bit of commercial success - and Smash Hits interviews - themselves. 
 
Cat-House by Danielle Dax was a staple of the alternative clubs I frequented in the late 80s/early 90s. I didn't own the 12" single but I did have CD88: The Vinyl, one of the quality and reasonably priced Indie Top 20 series that were great for penniless students like me at the time. The album included Our Summer and Cat-House, albeit in their single versions. Extended mixes of the latter popped up on a US-only 12" in 1989.

Earlier this week, SWC at the ever-excellent No Badger Required wrote about the race to be the first person to be 'into a band' when growing up. Big Audio Dynamite were 'my' band when I was at secondary school. A few kids had The Clash scrawled on their school bags or jackets but, let's be honest, we were all a bit late for that and had only heard of them by nicking borrowing our older sibling's records. Nobody had heard of Big Audio Dynamite, though, so buying those early 12" singles and the debut album was a moment. It helped that they were bloody brilliant, not least Medicine Show with it's Sergio Morricone samples and dub-inflected extended version.

A.C. Marias was essentially a duo of Angela Conway and Wire's Bruce Gilbert. I first heard a song (Give Me) on a Mute compilation and bought the single One Of Our Girls Has Gone Missing on 3" CD with a lengthy cover version of Vicious by Lou Reed as the B-side. There was no extended version of One Of Our Girls Has Gone Missing on either the 12" or CD single but the album version is about a minute and a half longer, so that's good enough for me.

Love And Rockets were born from the ashes of Bauhaus in 1985 and arguably found greater commercial success in the USA than the UK. I liked their earlier singles, including Yin And Yang (The Flowerpot Man) featured here, which has a rockabilly vibe yet can still be traced back to their earlier goth/post-punk roots. 

I resisted The Blue Nile for too long. The constant music press gushing in the late 1980s, telling me that I must like The Blue Nile because they ploughed a similar furrow of organic musical exploration and experimentation as one of my favourite bands, Talk Talk, actually made me less not more inclined to check them out. I learned the error of my ways years later and whilst they've never quite hit the spot that Mark Hollis and co. achieved, I shouldn't have let the journos put me off all those years ago!
 
The first time I heard the 12" version of Soul Mining by The The was when I bought the 12" double pack of Infected in 1986. Labelled as a "previously unreleased" version, it also popped up on the cassette format of the Infected single, the CD single re-release of Sweet Bird Of Truth (1987) and on the limited edition 2nd CD single of The Beat(en) Generation (1989). The B-side of the Uncertain Smile 12" single in 1983 contains Soul Mining (Definitive Version) which to these amateur ears sounds identical to the "unreleased" version. Either way, it's a great version, as all The The's 12" singles were throughout the 1980s. No surprise then that the song provides the title for this selection and an apt closure.

Happy weekend everyone, wherever you find yourself and whatever you may be doing.

More nonsense here tomorrow, more or less same time.
 
1) Elephant Stone (12" Version By John Leckie): The Stone Roses (1988)
2) Our Summer (Extended Mix By Simon Hinkler & Wayne Hussey): All About Eve (1987)
3) Cat-House (Overnight Mix By Danielle Dax & Renny Hill): Danielle Dax (1989)
4) Medicine Show (12-Inch Remix By Paul 'Groucho' Smykle): Big Audio Dynamite (1985)
5) One Of Our Girls Has Gone Missing (Album Version By Bruce Gilbert, Gareth Jones, John Fryer & Paul Kendall): A.C. Marias (1989)
6) Yin And Yang (The Flowerpot Man) (Remix By John A. Rivers): Love And Rockets (1986)
7) Tinseltown In The Rain (Album Version By Paul Buchanan & Robert Bell): The Blue Nile (1983)
8) Soul Mining (Definitive Version By Matt Johnson & Paul Hardiman): The The (1983) 
 
1983: A Walk Across The Rooftops: 7
1983: Uncertain Smile EP: 8
1985: Medicine Show EP: 4 
1986: Yin And Yang (The Flowerpot Man) EP: 6
1987: Our Summer EP: 2
1988: Elephant Stone EP: 1 
1989: Cat-House EP: 3
1989: One Of Our Girls (Has Gone Missing): 5
 
A Heart Of Fool's Gold (45:16) (KF) (Mega)