I posted two sides of separate Cabaret Voltaire mixtapes in fairly quick succession (for me) in early 2022 and haven't revisited either of them since so here's my first attempt to make amends.
Bad Self (Part 1) was originally the B-side of 1984 single James Brown and was one of the tracks from their years on the Virgin label that Cabaret Voltaire revisited and reworked for the 1992 album Technology. Despite the title, I don't think there ever was a Part 2.
Big Funk was one of four songs released on the Drinking Gasoline double 12" single in 1985 and one of two which were tacked on as bonus tracks for the CD edition of The Covenant, The Sword And The Arm Of The Lord.
Here To Go was the second single from their eighth studio album, Code, released in 1987. Cabaret Voltaire had moved from Virgin to Parlophone and were shifting towards a more commercial - if not entirely radio-friendly - sound. Adrian Sherwood produced the album and a remix of Here To Go; the one featured here is by another remix/production/DJ legend, François Kevorkian.
Hypnotised saw Stephen Mallinder and Richard H. Kirk saw step fully into club culture, drafting in Fon Force to remix and Ten City to provide backing vocals. It provided Cabaret Voltaire with their biggest UK single to date - #66 in November 1989 - and although the subsequent two singles did slightly better - parent album Groovy, Laidback And Nasty didn't trouble the Top 100. Many saw this album as the Cabs going from innovating and inspiring to jumping on the bandwagon. Taken as itself, I think it's a good album and Hypnotised is a cracking single, in all it's various versions.
Tough then to place the song next to Sensoria, which is one of the examples of Mallinder and Kirk leading the way. The 12" mashes up the single with Do Right, another track from the Micro-Phonies album, and it really is about as good as Eighties club music could get. Always a popular choice when played at some of the alternative clubs I went to in the late Eighties and early Nineties and still holds up today.
The original cassette features the second of two remixes that John Robie made for 1983 single Yashar. I decided to tweak today's selection as featuring it would have meant the third appearance of that particular mix on this blog (albeit one accidentally as I should have included mix #1). In the early 2000s, Richard H. Kirk revisited and reworked several Cabaret Voltaire classics for 12" singles and promotion for various back catalogue compilations. Just Fascination and Nag Nag Nag got the remix treatment, as did Yashar. The latter came out as a 12" single on 9th June 2003, as few days after I'd recorded this very cassette. Along with remixes from The All Seeing I and Alter Ego, RHK delivered his own update, which I've included here.
The selection closes with one of my favourite tracks from 1983 album The Crackdown, which was pretty much my first exposure to Cabaret Voltaire, via my brother's copy on cassette. In a blip on their usual UK chart trajectory, the album crashed in at #31 in August 1983, managing a total of five weeks in the Top 100.
Seven songs, spanning 1983 to 2003, revisited two decades on. Damn, that makes me feel old!
1) Bad Self (Part 1) (Western Re-Work 1992 By Cabaret Voltaire) (1992)
2) Big Funk (Single Version By Cabaret Voltaire) (1985)
3) Here To Go (Extended Mix By François Kevorkian) (1987)
4) Hypnotised (The Fon Force Mix By Mark Brydon & Robert Gordon) (ft. Ten City) (1990)
5) Sensoria (12" Remix By Cabaret Voltaire & John 'Tokes' Potoker) (1984)
6) Yashar (Man From Basra Rmx By Richard H. Kirk) (2003)
7) Animation (Album Version By Cabaret Voltaire & Flood) (1983)
1983: The Crackdown: 7
1984: Sensoria EP: 5
1985: Drinking Gasoline EP: 2
1987: Here To Go EP: 3
1989: Hypnotised EP: 4
1992: Technology: Western Re-Works 1992: 1
2003: Yashar EP: 6
Side Two here
You can also find Side One of a previous Cabaret Voltaire mixtape here
cool, thanks!
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked it, blureu!
DeleteThe Cabs between 1983 & 1987 with their 4 albums are an incredible experience and are another piece of the puzzle for my musical path, the next step after OMD, Depeche Mode & Heaven 17 and an equal partner for the early New Order. And probably the fervor for acid house……NO released Technique, and the Cabs “Groovy, Laidback & Nasty”. I think everyone felt like they hated it...I loved it, despite the Cabs' fantastic singles before, "G,L & N" felt right and fitting. I loved it, like “Technique” , Jesus Loves you’s “Martyr Mantras” , Beloved’s “Happiness” or Candy Flip’s “Madstock”. They were fantastic times...& for me, after the fall of the Berlin Wall, there were simply an incredible number of opportunities that opened up to discover so many things, whether books, films or the incredible music of the late 80s / early 90s Years….today, looking back, it actually had to be too much to take it all in….but this treasure lives in me, even if it will never be experienced in the same way again……but I can and will happily go there again and again to return. Greetings Alex/EAR
ReplyDeleteThanks, Alex. As you say, the links between the music and what was happening in our lives and the world in general are strong. All of the Virgin & Parlophone Cabs albums marked significant personal moments for me and the sounds always take me back there.
DeleteI've reactivated the Mega links for both sides of this mixtape for your further listening pleasure!
Thx Khayem ! & happy Holyday !
ReplyDelete