Side 2 of a mixtape, recorded 21st April 2000. It's 80s indie-not-indie disco time with eight, count 'em, eight twelve inch chart smashes. Well, UK top 95, at least.
The Armoury Show formed in 1984 and had an impressive pedigree: Richard Jobson and Russell Webb (Skids), John McGeogh and John Doyle (Magazine); the band were very squarely aimed at the emerging MTV generation and its taste for big drums, kick-ass anthemic rock. Whilst arguably better than many of their contemporaries, The Armoury Show never really took off. McGeoch and Doyle left in 1986 and the subsequent line-up called it a day in 1988, with a second album incomplete and unreleased.
By 1987, Gene Loves Jezebel had taken the first bus out of Porthcawl, North Wales, bounced around in London for a bit and then crossed the Atlantic for a bit of satin chic and California. The focal (and vocal) point of the band were twins Michael and Jay Aston (no, not that one) and perhaps an apt subject for the as-yet-unmade Channel 5 show When Sibling Music Acts Go Horribly Wrong. Currently, there are two versions of Gene Loves Jezebel: Michael owns the copyright in the US, Jay in the UK. Actually, considering how things turned out for the latter's namesake's band, maybe a word of advice to any up and coming bands: if you have a member called Jay Aston, ditch 'em. Now, before it's too late.
After last week's post following the tragic news about Julee Cruise, hearing Roam, one of my favourite singles by The B-52's, has a strange effect on me after reading that this was the song Julee was listening to as she left this life. A heartbreaking and untimely loss, yet I feel incredibly moved by Julee's decision to leave on her own terms and to her chosen soundtrack.
The Godfathers featured here last month and this is one of their rare forays into the twelve inch mix. Personally, I prefer Keith LeBlanc's remix to the original. The record buying public largely disagreed.
Blancmange (and the extended version of What's Your Problem?) appeared here in January in what's proving to be one of Dubhed's most visited posts so far this year. Neil Arthur continues to record as Blancmange and has released ten albums in the past ten years with a new one, Private View, due in September. I'm seeing Blancmange live in October with Dubhed regular Mike, so this one's dedicated to you.
The Psychedelic Furs and The Cure really need no introduction. One of these was a UK Top 10 hit, the other barely scraped the Top 100. No prizes for guessing which was which, but both great songs in my opinion.
Wrapping up the selection is Westworld, centred around the photogenic Elizabeth Westwood and securing a #11 hit with this song in 1987. They never achieved the same success again, but I really liked their look and sound at the time. Great fun.
1) Castles In Spain (Wubb Dug Mix By Nick Tauber): The Armoury Show (1984)
2)The Motion Of Love (Jezebel Mix By Julian Mendelsohn): Gene Loves Jezebel (1987)
3) House (Long Version By John Ashton & Laurence Diana): The Psychedelic Furs (1989)
4) The Lovecats (Extended Version By Phil Thornalley, Chris Parry & The Cure): The Cure (1983)
5) What's Your Problem? (Extended Version By Stewart Levine): Blancmange (1985)
6) She Gives Me Love (Keith LeBlanc Love Mix aka High Octane Mix): The Godfathers (1989)
7) Roam (12" Extended Mix By Nile Rodgers, Andres Levin & Tom Durack): The B-52's (1989)
8) Sonic Boom Boy (U.S. Remix By Mark Ferda & Danny Hyde): Westworld (1987)
...and of course, being the 1980s and the golden period of MTV, every one of these beauties has an official video to accompany it. A few I'm really familiar with, several I haven't seen for many years and a couple I don't think I've seen until researching this post. All of their time, with some real flashes of creative genius. Enjoy!
Really looking forward to the gig! Must admit not so familiar with this Blancmange song so need to check it out. Weirdly listening to 'The Furs' on the way into work today...
ReplyDeleteI think the Blancmange gig is going to be great, Mike. What's Your Problem? was their final UK Top 40 hit. I remember seeing it on TV, possibly Cheggers Plays Pop (was that still around in 1985?) and then buying the 12" and the double pack 7" single so I must have liked it a lot!
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