Monday 4 July 2022

Bono On The Fourth Of July

Today's selection is a U2 mixtape, recorded 24th August 1997. Thanks to those of you who didn't click and close as soon as you saw the post title and opening sentence. 

Judging by the date, this compilation tape was most likely recorded in a slightly different form for my friend Stuart as a) his birthday was a few days prior to this and b) he is a lifelong fan of U2. It's a testament to how good a friend Stuart is, that he let me borrow his collection of U2 7" singles to take into school for a class presentation. We weren't even at the same school, let alone in the same class, yet he trusted me enough not to let him down. The look on his face when I told him I'd sold the lot to "Frankie" Stein for five quid and a mega bag of Wotsits was priceless...I'm joking, of course. Or am I?

Given that I wasn't particularly a U2 fan and knew much more about other music artists that I did like, made my choice of class presentation a little odd, to say the least. Maybe class 5M wasn't ready to be enlightened about Julian Cope, had little interest in The Sisters Of Mercy and would have raised an eyebrow at Prefab Sprout. This wasn't the oddest thing I did at school, but the reaction of the class to my 10 minute talk on Bono and chums is thankfully lost in the mists of time.

Whilst I was largely indifferent to the appeals of a U2 album, I'll admit that I did enjoy a U2 remix and as the late 1980s turned into the early 1990s, there were plenty to choose from. If nothing else, the band (or their team) got some decent DJs and producers in to increase the BPM and reduce the BS: Paul Oakenfold, Steve Osborne, Terry Farley, Pete Heller, Tim Simenon, David Morales, Trevor Jackson, Dave Dorrell, Stereo MC's, Apollo 440, DJ Muggs, Rollo, Rob Dougan, even Massive Attack.

In 1995, U2's fanzine Propaganda provided members with a special CD release called Melon, compiling nine of the band's best remixes. Melon was heavily bootlegged and I came across a copy in Revolver Records off Clifton Triangle in Bristol. Revolver was a brilliant record shop but an intimidating experience. I fully expected a disdainful stare when I took my clutch of purchases to owner Roger at the counter, the Melon bootleg tucked away between some more worthy purchases. I didn't; perhaps on this occasion he was just relieved to finally be shot of the thing.

This particular CD was a great quality bootleg, but soon a veritable feast of similarly-themed bootlegs began to appear: Kiwi, Orange, Mango, Banana, Grapes, Papaya, More Melon; with diminishing returns in terms of artwork and sound quality. I picked up the first three secondhand from Replay Records to round up some of the rare, promo-only mixes that I was interested in, but skipped the rest. Naming the mixtape Fruit Salad was a nod to the source material of the original compilation.
 
In 2002, U2 released The Best Of 1990-2000, a (not very) limited edition with a bonus disc of B-Sides that included some of the remixes from the bootlegs, albeit in truncated, early fade edits that are best avoided. The remix of Desire is the version from the UK 12" single, but there is a promo 12" out there featuring the full length Hollywood Remix, stretching to over nine minutes. You have been warned.

The original Fruit Salad mixtape closed out Side 2 with a snippet of the Momo's Reprise remix of Lemon by David Morales for no other reason than the tape was running a bit short. I've left it off of today's recreation. Little consolation if you hate Bono and friends' music with a passion (or Paul Oakenfold and Steve Osborne, for that matter, as there's a fair bit of them too). However, if you specifically dislike Larry Mullen Jr's drumming, you're in for a real treat. 
 
Normal service will resume tomorrow.
 
Side One
1) Zooropa (911 Mix By John M. Pillin Jr.) (1993)
2) Lemon (The Perfecto Mix By Paul Oakenfold & Steve Osborne) (1993)
3) Until The End Of The World (Short Life Mix By Ultra Hot Razor Crew) (1996)
4) Night And Day (Steel String Remix By Youth) (Cover of Fred Astaire) (1990)
5) Stay (Faraway So Close!) (Underdog Mix By Trevor Jackson) (1995)
6) Mysterious Ways (The Perfecto Mix By Paul Oakenfold & Steve Osborne) (1991)
7) God Part II (The Hard Metal Dance Club Mix By Louis Silas Jr. & David Bianco) (UK 12” Edit) (1988)

Side Two
1) Even Better Than The Real Thing (The Perfecto Mix By Paul Oakenfold & Steve Osborne) (1992)
2) In The Name Of The Father (Unidare Mix By Tim Simenon): Bono & Gavin Friday (1994)
3) Lady With The Spinning Head (Extended Dance Mix By Alan Moulder) (1992)
4) Desire (Hollywood Remix By Louis Silas Jr. & Taavi Mote) (UK 12" Edit) (1988)
5) Salomé (Zooromancer Remix By Terry Farley & Pete Heller) (Full Length) (1992)
6) Can't Help Falling In Love (Mystery Train Dub Edit By Dave Dorrell) (Cover of Elvis Presley) (1992)
7) Numb (Gimme Some More Dignity Mix By Rollo & Rob Dougan) (Full Length) (1995)

Kiwi: A4, A7, B3, B4
Mango: B2
Melon: A2, A5, A6, B1, B5, B7
Orange: A1, A3, B6

2 comments:

  1. Excellent stuff - like you I got more indifferent to U2 as I got older but like the remixes. It was the holy trinity of Revolver/Replay and Rival which made Saturday morning worth a visit to Park Street / The Triangle. I bought less in Revolver and more in the other two simply as they tended to have more at cheaper prices IMHO... One of the teenage delights i miss most is having decent record shops within walking distance of each other ..(sigh..)

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    1. Ah, Rival Records! I totally agree about the joy of being spoiled for choice with great record shops all around as a teenager. Decades later, the other major difference of course is that I can only imagine the luxury of having a whole day to spend just browsing in one shop then another and coming back with bags full of vinyl...

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