Tuesday 30 November 2021

Return To Concussive State Mixes

Side 1 of a mixtape, compiled 25th April 1999, featuring Slam singles, remixes and rarities, 1991-1997.
 
1) Intensities In-Ten-Cities: Slam (1993)
2) Pacific Dance (Slam Remix): State Of House (1993)
3) Tokyo Stealth Fighter (Slam Conflicting Beats Mix): Dave Angel (1997)
4) White Love (Slam Mix) (Dub Half Edit By Khayem): One Dove (1993)
5) Soul Power: Slam (1997)
6) Chronologie Part 6 (Slam Mix 1) (Edit By Khayem): Jean-Michel Jarre (1994)

 
Get Side Two here  

Monday 29 November 2021

Now That's What I Call Jangly

Side 1 of a mixtape, originally compiled for me by my girlfriend, sometime around 1996. Despite the title, it's not entirely jangly but it is resolutely indie. She was a big fan of The Wedding Present, The House Of Love and James and I was immersed in their music for a few years. I haven't heard many of these songs in over a decade: I'd completely forgotten about Bedflowers; there's a lovely post about them on the Cloudberry Cake Proselytism blog, which provides some backstory. The Bowie track closing side 1 feels like a bit of an anachronism, though it may have been added because I loved the song so much. We didn't part on the best of terms, but this is a reminder of happier times and some great music.
 
1) Ceremony (1st Version By Martin Hannett): New Order (1981)
2) Road: The House Of Love (1988)
3) My Ex-Lover's Address: Bedflowers (1991)
4) Suck: The Wedding Present (1991)
5) Sensitive: The Field Mice (1989)
6) Push: The Cure (1985)
7) Pink Glove: Pulp (1994)
8) Five-O (Album Version By Brian Eno): James (1993)
9) The Old Main Drag (Album Version By Elvis Costello): The Pogues (1985)
10) Jesus Says: That Petrol Emotion (1986)
11) In The Heat Of The Morning (Mono Single Version): David Bowie (1967)
 

Sunday 28 November 2021

The Girl Who Fell Through The Ice

We had our first snow of the winter on Saturday morning. This is a photo from last year, yesterday's flurry wasn't that heavy and was replaced after 15 minutes with torrential rain and high winds. Storm Arwen's gift to us and a reminder after some warm and sunny days that we're actually in winter. 

Later that afternoon, I was on a step ladder trying to attach a new washing line to two metal poles, the previous line having snapped with a full load the previous day, dropping the newly laundered items into the gloppy, muddy garden below. As my fingers rapidly froze and I fumbled with the line, the Jon Kennedy remix of this song popped into my headphones:

 
I don't actually own a copy of Hinterland, the Aim album that features the original full length version of this song, but it appears with the Jon Kennedy remix on the excellent Kate Rogers vs Grand Central compilation from 2003. The original single release also included a great remix from Andy Votel.
 
Kate Rogers' website was last updated in February 2014 and there's a free download of track Grey Green Sky from January of that year still available on her Bandcamp page. 
 
Andy Turner aka Aim has his own label, ATIC Records, which is currently promoting the release of Aim collaborator Niko's third album (and first for 9 years), Electric Union. It's described as a "dance lounge sound" which is perfect, as that's where most of my dancing happens these days.
 

Saturday 27 November 2021

We'll Find A New Way Of Living

Farewell, Stephen Sondheim, one of the greatest songwriters of all time. A quick look and I found I have surprisingly few of his songs - all cover versions, no original cast recordings - but his songs have resonated through so many decades of my life.
 
Of my paltry collection, including Grace Jones' discofied version of Send In The Clowns, several mixes of Losing My Mind by Liza Minnelli and Little Richard's 1990s take on I Feel Pretty, there was really only one choice.
 
Somewhere (From "West Side Story"): Tom Waits (1978)

I've also got the Pet Shop Boys' version of Somewhere, but only the frenetic Trouser Enthusiasts' Single Mix and I think I need to wake up a bit more before I'm ready for that...
 
The lyrics from the original 1957 Broadway production:
 
There's a place for us,
Somewhere a place for us.
Peace and quiet and open air
Wait for us, somewhere.

There's a time for us,
Some day a time for us,
Time together with time to spare,
Time to learn, time to care.

Some day,
Somewhere,
We'll find a new way of living,
We'll find a way of forgiving.
Somewhere,
Somewhere . . .

There's a place for us,
A time and place for us.
Hold my hand and we're halfway there.
Hold my hand and I'll take you there
Somehow,
Some day,
Somewhere! 

Friday 26 November 2021

We Came Here To Rock The Microphone

I had to double check, as I couldn't believe that I haven't posted about The Go! Team previously. It's true, this is their first appearance on this blog. I was also surprised to find, on checking my digital collection, that I  either haven't uploaded or along the way have lost debut album Thunder, Lightning, Strike. The same fate seems to have befallen follow up, Proof Of Youth, although I do have the bonus disc that came with initial copies of the CD. Apart from that, my playlist is currently limited to contemporary B-sides and remixes purchased from their Bandcamp page earlier this year. Oh, and the only CD single by The Go! Team that I own. But what a corker it is. Here's what I had to say about it in Jukebox Juicebox #11 on my old blog, way back on Saturday 25tb March 2006:
 
The latest in a long line of collectives combining a dizzying number of samples with enthusiastic live vocals and instruments, The Go! Team may be this year's Avalanches (whatever happened to them?), but they bring a fun and frenetic activity that's a welcome counter to the static barstool crooning of mainstream pop acts these days. Culling elements from The Supremes' "Come See About Me", "I Can't Rest" by Fontella Bass and Davy DMX's "The DMX Will Rock You", "Ladyflash" is a gloriously upbeat mash up. Originally released in late 2004, but seems to have made more impact this time around. Accompanying track "The Wrath Of Mikey" is fun, but the remixes will fill out this EP are perhaps of greater interest. Kevin Shield's "Huddle Flash", which combines the lead track with another Go! Team song "Huddle Formation" is a surprise. I'd been expecting something along the lines of his previous cacaphonic wall-of-noise reworks. Instead, this barely tampers with the Go! Team formula and is all the better for that. Likewise, the "Simian Mobile Disco Mix" removes most of the rapping and incorporates further electro sounds, but works equally well. It's difficult to say whether the Go! Team will still be making an impact, even in two years' time. However, if this their own one-hit wonder, they could have done a lot worse.
 
I smile a little when reading those last couple of sentences as, 15 years on, The Go! Team are still very a going concern. Sixth album Get Up Sequences Part One came out in July 2021 on Memphis Industries, the band's record label since 2003. It's perhaps a less frenetic, everything-but-the-kitchen-sink wall of sound these days, replaced with a more organic, band feel and the vocals much more to the fore, but that's really not meant as a criticism. The current album's title is spot on: the urge to get up, bounce around to the music and generally just enjoy the moment is strong. Doing it at 6.00am in the lounge, with a startled cat and family sleeping elsewhere is perhaps not the ideal setting. Especially if you have wired headphones plugged into your PC. The cord is not as long as I thought it is was...

Whilst I assess the physical and emotional damage, here are videos for the 4 tracks on my Ladyflash CD single. 
 

The Wrath Of Mikey here is a different, live version from Coachella in 2006; the original single version was reworked and renamed The Wrath Of Marcie for second album Proof Of Youth.

The 2006 re-release of Ladyflash/Huddle Formation included further remixes from Hot Chip and RJD2 but neither beat the Kevin Shields or Simian Mobile Disco versions here.

Get Up Sequences Part One was preceded by the single Cookie Scene in July 2020.

Several more singles and videos from the album appeared in 2021, including Pow and A Bee Without Its Sting.
 

But honestly, just buy the whole album. It's described on The Go! Team website as "soda fountain soul, a handclap happening, a drumstick bulletin, a meteor shower in mixed media". What more do you need?!

Thursday 25 November 2021

Skimming Not Swimming

Is it really 25 years since Two Lone Swordsmen released remix album/EP Swimming Not Skimming? Apparently so. On 25th November 1996, Andrew Weatherall and Keith Tenniswood shared a clutch of new songs and remixes on 2x 12" and CD with slightly different tracks and running orders on each format. I bought it on shiny disc a couple of years later and it's one of Weatherall's best, in any of his various guises and incarnations.

Today's selection is a 5-track sampler, skimming some choice tracks (do you see what I did there?). In The Nursery's remix is exclusive to the CD version and the Musique Tropique remix of Rico's Helly only appeared on the vinyl version.

1) In The Nursery Visit Glenn Street [Glenn Street Assault Squad] (1996)
2) Rico's Helly (Retailored By Nourizadeh & Teasdale aka Omid Nourizadeh & Anthony Teasdale) (1996)
3) Glide By Shooting (Remix By Andrew Weatherall & Keith Tenniswood) (1996)
4) Rico's Helly (Musique Tropique Remix By Andy Carrick & Kevin McKay) (1996)
5) Flossie Wears Paco And Ralph (Remix By Andrew Weatherall & Keith Tenniswood) (1996)
 
 
A couple of other records released on the same day in 1996 and worth a mention:

Wednesday 24 November 2021

From Above

Tonarunur is an alias for Icelandic DJ and producer Björn Gauti Björnsson and there's a new EP, From Above, out this Friday (26th). Paris From Above is paired with Quebec From Above, with a remix of each to round out the package. 
 
The only track I've heard so far is Paris From Above, as remixed by Coyote aka Nottingham DJs and producers Timm Sure and Richard Hampson. Shimmering French vocals, a bubbling Balearic undercurrent, before a stomping beat kicks in at 2:21, eventually descending just past the 5 minute mark into a cascading final 45 seconds. Superb stuff.

Tuesday 23 November 2021

From Fantasy To Reality

My inspirational teacher was Jackie Barrow, who taught English in my last couple of years of secondary school. If I had to pick one thing that opened my mind up to the possibilities of a bigger world beyond our predominantly white working- & middle-class suburban bubble, it would be introducing me to the poetry of Benjamin Zephaniah and Linton Kwesi Johnson. It's fair to say that a fair chunk of the class were unmoved by their poems, but it made a huge impact on me, beginning a lifelong interest in their work. So  when I discovered that both had released albums, setting their poetry to music, of course it was a win-win.
 
Both continue to write, perform, challenge and inspire today. 

Side One
1) Fantasy Poem (Single Version By Mad Professor): Benjamin Zephaniah (1982)
2) Wat About Di Working Claas? (Album Version By Linton Kwesi Johnson & Dennis Bovell): Linton Kwesi Johnson (1984)
3) I Am A Revolutionary (Album Version By The Sea aka Corin Pennington): Benjamin Zephaniah ft. Logic aka Declan Davids (2017)
4) If I Waz A Tap Natch Poet (Album Version By Linton Kwesi Johnson & Dennis Bovell): Linton Kwesi Johnson (1998)
5) Rong Radio Station (Album Version By Trevor Morais): Benjamin Zephaniah ft. Dennis Bovell (2005)

Side Two
1) Di Black Petty Booshwah (12" Version By Dennis Bovell): Linton Kwesi Johnson (1980)
2) Dis Policeman Keeps On Kicking Me To Death (Lord Scarman Dub): Benjamin Zephaniah (1983)
3) Reggae Fi Peach (Album Version By Linton Kwesi Johnson & Black Beard aka Dennis Bovell): Linton Kwesi Johnson (1980)
4) I Have A Dream (Album Version By Luke Slater): L.B. Dub Corp ft. Benjamin Zephaniah (2013)
5) Reality Poem (Album Version By Linton Kwesi Johnson & Dennis Bovell): Linton Kwesi Johnson (1979)
 
1979: Forces Of Victory: B5
1980: Bass Culture: B3
1980: De Black Petty Booshwah 12": B1
1982: Dub Ranting EP: A1
1983: Rasta: B2
1984: Making History: A2
1998: More Time: A4 
2005: Naked: A5
2013: Unknown Origin: B4
2017: Revolutionary Minds: A3

Side One (22:09) (KF) (Mega)
Side Two (22:17) (KF) (Mega)

Monday 22 November 2021

Let The Cultural Vibe Flow Through Your Mind

An Aswad selection to welcome the week. Formed in 1974, Aswad are still going strong, albeit reduced to the core duo of Drummie Zeb (Angus Gaye to his family) and keyboard player Tony 'Gad' Robinson. This playlist covers the period 1976 to 1983 and includes a couple of tracks from Live And Direct, one of the greatest live albums, full stop. Aswad went a bit pop in the late 1980s and 1990s and whilst I enjoy that period, their earlier albums and versions are unbeatable.
 
1) African Children (David Jensen Session, 17 November 1983)
2) It's Not Our Wish (Disco Mix) (1981)
3) Drum And Bass Line (Album Version) (1982)
4) Warrior Charge (Disco Mix) (1981)
5) Your Recipe (Live @ Meanwhile Gardens, Notting Hill Carnival, 26 August 1983)
6) Judgement Day (1979)
7) Back To Africa (Album Version) (1976)
8) Rainbow Culture (Disco Mix) (1981)
9) Not Guilty (Live @ Meanwhile Gardens, Notting Hill Carnival, 26 August 1983)
10) Pass The Cup (12" Version) (1982)

Sunday 21 November 2021

If You Can Call That Progress, Then We're Riding Different Bikes

Two months since my last Julian Cope selection? Unforgivable! Here's a selection of radio sessions, remixes, raw versions and rarities, from 1982-1984. Ten songs, just over half an hour. For the real heads.
 
1) Crazy Farm Animal (Janice Long Session, 12 December 1984)
2) Laughing Boy (David 'Kid' Jensen Session, 05 January 1984)
3) I Need Someone (1983)
4) Pussyface (Remixed By Stephen Lovell) (1984)
5) Kolly Kibber's Birthday (Demo) (1982)
6) I Went On A Chourney (1984)
7) Strasbourg (Demo 1) (1982)
8) Disaster (Janice Long Session, 12 December 1984)*
9) Jesus Christ & The Mysterons (Demo) (1982)
10) Land Of Fear (Single Version By Stephen Lovell) (1984)
 
1984: The Greatness And Perfection Of Love (12" single): 4 
1984: Sunspots (limited edition 2x 7" single): 6, 10
1993: Floored Genius 2: Best Of The BBC Sessions 1983-1991: 1, 2 
2000: Floored Genius 3: Julian Cope's Oddicon Of Lost Rarities & Versions 1978-98: 3
2007: Christ Versus Warhol 1982-83: Julian Cope At Steve Adams' Recording Studio: 5, 7, 9 
2010: Floored Genius 2: Best Of The BBC Sessions 1983-1991 (Expanded Edition): 8  
 
* note: track 8 is the broadcast version not the remastered CD version

Saturday 20 November 2021

Bevans Above!

Another 12"/80s selection for the weekend, the common thread being that all of the songs have been remixed by legendary DJ Bert Bevans. This one is dedicated to Echorich, whose comment on a previous post inspired this and who is currently moving home... fingers crossed it's going as well as expected and best wishes in your new place!

The remix of Space by It's Immaterial is my favourite version of the song, and arguably the same goes for the Pete Wylie, Paul Weller and Depeche Mode selections. Even those that aren't the definitive versions (for me) - Big Audio Dynamite and Vicious Pink - are still pretty good. As for the rest, these are pretty much the only versions of the songs that I know.

Today's selection comes with a health warning as tracks 4 & 5 feature former members of The Beatles and Queen. The latter also apparently featured in the 1986 film Biggles and the video is notable only for featuring Peter Cushing's last on-screen appearance. It's Immaterial's Space video is much, much better.

You can also find a clutch of uplifting Bert Bevans DJ sets on his Soundcloud page. Highly recommended.

1) Roses (Extended U.S. Remix): Haywoode (1986)
2) Money-Go-Round (Dance Mix): The Style Council (1983)
3) Diamond Girl Oh! Diamond Girl (Super Solitaire Sublime Mix): Pete Wylie ft. The Fabulous Josie Jones (1986)
4) Press (Bevans & Forward Dub Mix): Paul McCartney (1986)
5) No Turning Back (The Joy-Stick Mix): The Immortals (1986)
6) Soul Deep (Club Mix): The Council Collective (1984)
7) Flexible (Pre-Deportation Mix): Depeche Mode (1985)
8) Cccan't You See... (Exxxx-tended Re-mixxx): Vicious Pink (1985)
9) Sinful! (The Wickedest Mix In Town): Pete Wylie ft. The Oedipus Wrecks (1986)
10) E=MC² (70mm Wide Screen Mix): Big Audio Dynamite (1985)
11) Dominoes (The Dance Mix): Robbie Nevil (1986)
12) Space, He Called From The Kitchen.... (12" Remix): It's Immaterial (1986) 
 

Friday 19 November 2021

Jumping On The Bandwagon

Spoiler warning: today's Dry Cleaning post is entirely indebted to The Vinyl Villain and Bagging Area's posts on Wednesday and Thursday respectively. Until then, I'd never even heard of Dry Cleaning; since then, I've been hooked. JC and Swiss Adam describe the band and sound brilliantly. I won't try to echo that here, other than to say that sorry, JC, I can't wait for Christimas to get the debut album New Long Leg. I'd better get a wiggle on, though: their Bandcamp page has already sold out the album on all formats and there's currently little left on their official website too so I (and you) may need to look a little further afield, such as the 4AD store.

My usual next step when being introduced to a new band is to check out YouTube for sessions, a default being KEXP and it doesn't disappoint, offering up two 4-song sessions from the past 12 months.

The first, posted exactly a year ago today, was recorded in Seattle in March 2020, a few weeks into the first UK lockdown. The standard format includes between-song interviews with host Cheryl Waters and I love the band even more after watching this. They are endearing and honest about their formation, getting Florence to join the band and their plans for global domination, kicked off with "The Wimpy Meeting". There's also a hilarious snippet about bassist Lewis' mum's influence on the band through food and snacks and how differently things could have turned out.

The second KEXP set is at "at home" performance from April this year. They're an accomplished and engaging band, even more amazing given the lengthy early debates about whether or not they would even perform live. Dry Cleaning are currently on tour in the UK and - even better for me, given that I unlikely to get to a gig before early next year - will be in Bristol in February 2022. I have to be there...!

Thursday 18 November 2021

I Did It All For Me

Following on from Saturday's Creation Records selection, label mate Idha released a couple of albums and a handful of singles on the label between 1993 and 1997. I first heard her on Secret Tracks 2, a freebie cassette with music magazine Select, which featured her cover version of Primal Scream's I'm Losing More Than I'll Ever Have. The previous track on the compilation was by Ride, which included her then-husband, Andy Bell. Bell performed on her records, along with a variety of guest musicians, from Edward Ball and Ian McLagan to Stephen Duffy, Sally Herbert and Debsey Wykes from Dolly Mixture (the latter also guesting on Saint Etienne's cover of Who Do You Think You Are around the same time). According to Wikipedia, Idha Övelius retired from the music industry in 2000 and since 2009 has been working as a structural engineer in Stockholm.
 
Trawling YouTube for the Primal Scream cover, I discovered a snippet from The Graveyard Shift, a late night BBC Radio 1 show presented by Mark & Lard aka Mark Radcliffe and Marc Riley. This apparently dates from 1994 and features Mark speaking to Idha and guitarist Jason King as well as a couple of songs. The first is a cover of Ooh La La by Faces, a studio version of which featured as the lead track on Idha's A Woman In A Man's World EP, released in October 1994. The second is a then-as-yet-untitled song, which was subsequently released on her second album as Me And Johnny in August 1997. Wonderful stuff.
 
A special mention to the Idha Övelius fan site, which for obvious reasons hasn't been updated in many years, but contains a bio, discography and some great photos and magazine snippets in the gallery.
 

Wednesday 17 November 2021

Remember Your Scheme Is Your Only Dream

What more can I say? It's Curtis Mayfield, mixing up sunshine sounds, social commentary, soul and disco. A random selection, covering 1971 to 1978.
 
Side One 
1) Give Me Your Love (1972)
2) Do It All Night (Edit By Jim Burgess) (1978)
3) Move On Up (Single Edit) (1971)
4) Back To The World (Single Edit) (1973)
5) So In Love (Album Version) (1975)
 
Side Two
1) Party Night (1976)
2) You Are, You Are (1978)
3) Future Shock (Album Version) (1973)
4) Kung Fu (Single Edit) (1974)
5) No Goodbyes (Single Edit By Jim Burgess) (1978)

1971: Move On Up (7" single): A3
1972: Super Fly (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack): A1
1973: Back To The World: B3
1973: Back To The World (7" single): A4
1974: Kung Fu (7" single): B4
1975: There's No Place Like America Today: A5
1976: Give, Get, Take And Have: B1
1978: Do It All Night: B2
1978: Do It All Night (USA, 7" single): A2
1978: No Goodbyes (7" single): B5

Tuesday 16 November 2021

All Wrapped Up

Side 2 of an Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark mixtape, compiled 4th to 5th June 1990. I clearly had nothing better to do on a Monday and Tuesday night, back then...! I was a massive fan of O.M.D. as a teenager, having been introduced to the first four albums by my older brother and of course seeing and hearing them regularly on TV and BBC Radio 1. They were the second band I saw live (on 27th October 1986, a more productive Tuesday night!) and, to date, the last-but-one gig I've been to full stop (on 8th November 2019, a more respectable Friday night gig). 

All Wrapped Up - title nicked from an Undertones compilation and also the title of a track from O.M.D.'s 1984 album Junk Culture - was split across two volumes/C90 cassettes. The first, and arguably, best covers the years 1980-1983 so you get the aforementioned unbeatable quartet of albums, along with a selection of B-sides. Gravity Never Failed is an outtake from the Architecture & Morality sessions and was eventually released as a B-side to 1988 flop single Dreaming. To these ears, it sounds like the song was given a 1980s buff and remix, but it's a great song nevertheless.
 
O.M.D. were pretty unfashionable by the time I started buying their records for myself. I don't think their videos particularly helped, especially Talking Loud And Clear, but I and my mate Stuart loved them. Listening to this mixtape brings it all back. Sounds even better, if possible.
 
1) Radio Prague (1983)
2) Telegraph (Album Version) (1983)
3) VCL XI (1980)
4) Navigation (1981)
5) Annex (Single Version) (1980)
6) Julia's Song (Album Version) (1980)
7) Red Frame / White Light (Album Version) (1980)
8) Sacred Heart (1981)
9) Georgia (Album Version) (1981)
10) The Romance Of The Telescope (Unfinished) (Single Version) (1981)
11) Motion And Heart (Album Version) (1980)
12) Gravity Never Failed (1981)
13) This Is Helena (1983)
14) The Beginning And The End (1981) 
 
1980: Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark: 6, 7
1980: Enola Gay EP: 5
1980: Organisation: 3, 11
1981: Architecture & Morality: 9, 14
1981: Souvenir EP: 8
1981: Joan Of Arc EP: 10
1982: Joan Of Arc (Maid Of Orleans) EP: 4
1983: Dazzle Ships: 1, 2, 13
1988: Dreaming EP: 12
 
Side Two (45:30) (Box) (Mega)

Monday 15 November 2021

You Can't Stop Me

Sometimes I Might Be Introvert, the fifth album by Little Simz is proving to be one of the runaway successes of 2021. A standout track, released as a single back in September, is Point And Kill, featuring Obongjayar. The videos for all of the singles to date have been stunning, and this is no exception, incorporating follow-up album track Fear No Man at the end.
 
Little Simz and Obongjayar performed a great version of Point And Kill on BBC 1 Xtra's Live Lounge a couple of weeks after the single release.

Vienna DJ duo mindtrixmusic have also put out a club-friendly remix of Point And Kill / Fear No Man, which I really like.

Finally, Little Simz and band delivered a rousing 5-song set for KEXP. Point And Kill isn't included, but you really won't care as the other songs are so strong. Sometimes I Might Be Introvert might not be my favourite album of 2021 (no spoilers), but it is way, way up there.
 

Meanwhile, Obongjayar dropped a new song in October. The video features Obongjayar as a driver for a gangster, played by Kivanc Sezen. It doesn't end well...
 

Sunday 14 November 2021

Celebrate The Drum

I'll confess straight up that I remember very little about this night, other than I had a really, really good time. It was my second and last Megadog gig, with Drum Club and Finitribe headlining. My first was in Derby, around March 1994 and fronted by Transglobal Underground and Banco De Gaia. 

Drum Club were on fire at this point, having just dropped second album Drums Are Dangerous, following debut Everything Is Now and seminal single Sound System. Finitribe had released An Unexpected Groovy Treat in 1992 and I'm guessing will have been showcasing tracks from their follow-up Sheigra, which followed in 1995; I recall lead single Brand New getting an airing. 
 
Setlist has been unfortunately unable to fill in the blanks on this occasion, so I've instead opted for a handful of tracks from Drum Club and Finitribe, circa 1993-1994. I've intentionally left off the Underworld mix of Sound System for a future post and the Andrew Weatherall mixes of 101 as they've featured here previously. In between, you get a clutch of remixes that appeared on singles and electronica/dance compilations. Not your typical Sunday fare, but a good way to dispel the November gloom (on this island, at least).

1) Brand New (Tip-Top Tune): Finitribe (1994)
2) Sound System (Dub Me Crazy): Drum Club ft. Wonder (1993)
3) Drums Are Dangerous (Stand And Fight Mix): Drum Club ft. Maxine Harvey (1994)
4) Monster In The House (Monster Mutley Medley): Finitribe ft. Mutley & The Gang (1993)
5) De-Lushed (Stars Above The Campfire Mix): Drum Club (1994)
6) Follow The Sun (Remix): Drum Club ft. Kate Holmes & Wonder (1993)
7) 101.93: Finitribe (1993)
 
1993: Sound System EP: 2 
1994: Brand New EP: 1 
1994: Survival 2000: 5