Sunday, 29 June 2025

The Present Bee, Bee And Gee (Still No Bee Gees, But I Don't Mean To Be Mean)

Nearly three weeks ago (!), I had the pleasure of seeing Butler, Blake & Grant perform live in concert at St. George's in Bristol. 

Tucked away on a side street near the top of Park Street, the St. Geroge's website succinctly describes the venue as "580-seat concert hall was converted from a 200-year-old Georgian church, and [...] a truly special space". With the emphasis on "truly special".

Amazingly, it was the first time I had been inside St. George's full stop, let alone to see a concert, so I was already excited to be there. I was literally sitting in the back row, though in real terms, I was only a few dozen metres from the stage.

It wasn't long before support artist Charlie Noordewier took position at the microphone and started playing. I wasn't familiar with Charlie's music, though this was less of a surprise when he shared that he'd released his first single, Moonlight Hotel, a couple of weeks beforehand.

Charlie was previously in The Native, who also passed me by but produced a truckload of raucous, anthemic tunes. Charlie's one person, one guitar (at a time) and occasional harmonica set up was a different proposition altogether.

Steeped in folk - no surprise perhaps, given that Charlie has lived between Devon and Cornwall - what really made the set stand out were the interesting arrangements, some lovely playing and a voice full of character and emotion that the sympathetic acoustics of the venue allowed to take flight and soar.

Moonlight Hotel is a great song but honestly, it doesn't do him justice. Go see Charlie Noordewier performing live for the full experience, if you can.

A strong start, but even so, the best was yet to come. Entering from the left - Butler, Blake & Grant in that order - the three took their seats, twiddled their guitars and prepared to entertain. 

"We just heard the news that Brian Wilson has died," said James. "As a mark of respect, we are not going to play any of his songs".

And that kind of self-deprecating wit and easy humour with the audience and each other was evident throughout the night. But no mistake, these were three consummate artists playing together like they'd been doing so for decades. 

With the exception of one (instrumental) song, the debut album was performed in full, although not in sequence, starting with One And One Is Two and opener Bring An End reserved for the penultimate song of the night.

The rest of the 16-song set was made up of cover versions, of their own and other artists. Teenage Fanclub got just the one, Planets from 1997's Songs From Northern Britain, and a Norman Blake co-write. As a (very) latecomer to the TFC catalogue, I may be stating the obvious by saying it's one of their finest records,

That album includes a song called Winter, but it was it's namesake, a 1991 single by Love And Money, that was performed, one of two by James Grant's band. I didn't particularly follow them back in the 1980s but have come to appreciate them, particularly this song and it's parent album Dogs in The Traffic, thanks to it's re-release on Past Night From Glasgow. Winter has become a favourite since, so it was wonderful to hear it in a live setting.

Two songs also from Bernard Butler's ouevre: People Move On, the title track of his 1998 solo debut, and his UK Top 10 hit from thirty years ago, Yes. Bearing in mind that the original was sung by then-partner, the peerless David McAlmont, a daunting prospect, perhaps. If so, it didn't seem like it, Yes recast as a rootsy acoustic number with Bernard's earthy vocals facing down any suggestion of comparison.

The first wave of covers was rounded off with a surprise: Me And Magdelena, which appeared on The Monkees' 2016 swansong Good Times! and was written by Ben Gibbard of Death Cab For Cutie. I've never heard the original, but as a tribute to both the songwriter and the band, the trio pulled a blinder.

Which pretty much typified the night, an intimate setting with three incredible musicians, completely at ease with each other and exuding the sheer pleasure of performing music, amplified by the venue and the general joy felt by the audience (though sadly, not a full house, an indictment of the sad times we're living in).

Far too soon, we were at the final encore and, maybe less surprising, a cover of Cinnamon Girl by Neil Young & Crazy Horse. I would have been quite happy with an 18-minute version of the song. I think it was closer to the three minutes or so of the original, but a satisfying end to a truly wonderful show.

But it didn't end there. Post-show, James, Norman and Bernard were staffing the merch stall, so of course I joined the queue and bought the limited edition gold splatter vinyl, which I asked them to sign. When I unsealed the album at home, I realised that there was also a signed print inside...! 

We had a brief chat, I shared my appreciation of the incredible show I had just experienced and of course they were all lovely blokes. But, there was a queue behind me, more merch to sell and more chat and photo opps to satisfy and, as Bernard sang earlier, people move on. 

In my case, the five-minute walk back to the car park and subsequent drive home. I think most of it was levitating, and I've still not quite come down, nearly three weeks later.

If Butler, Blake & Grant are playing anywhere near you, then run, don't walk to get a ticket. Opportunities like this don't come around very often, so grab it while you can. In the meantime, buy the album from their website (vinyl & CD) or Bandcamp (vinyl & digital).

Photo credits (all from the Bristol show, apart from the LP, taken in my back garden):
1, 2, 3 & 7: Me!
4, 5: Paul Duckett
6: Richard Prescott

Saturday, 28 June 2025

The Original Bee, Bee And Gee (But No Bee Gees, If You Know What I Mean)

One of the highlights in a year of great albums has been the debut by Butler, Blake & Grant.

Their debut as a trio perhaps, but these are legends in their own right: 

Bernard Butler, Suede, McAlmont & Butler, über producer
Norman Blake, Teenage Fanclub, BMX Bandits
James Grant, Love And Money, Friends Again

...as well as numerous solo ventures and collaborations over the decades.

I'll come back to Butler, Blake & Grant as a recording and performing threesome another time. Today's selection plucks four gems from each artist's extensive catalogue to present 47 minutes of deep cuts and should-have-been smash hits.

What a talented trio. And lovely blokes, too. But that's a story for another time.

1) Let's Go Away: Bernard Butler (1999)
2) Groovy Good Luck Friend (Janice Long Session): BMX Bandits (1986)
3) Winter '89: Love And Money (1989)
4) A Change Of Heart (Single Version): Bernard Butler (1998)
5) God Knows It's True: Teenage Fanclub (1990)
6) State Of Art (The Spiral Tribe Edition): Friends Again (1995)
7) The Patron Saint Of The Lost Cause (Album Version): Catherine Anne Davies & Bernard Butler (2020)
8) Baby Lee: Teenage Fanclub (2010)
9) Hubcap To Blue Town: Love And Money (1991)
10) My Dark Star: Suede (1994)
11) Golden Shower: The Boy Hairdressers (1987)
12) Wanderlust II: Love And Money (1988)

1986: Janice Long Session, BBC Radio 1, 8th June 1986: 2
1987: Golden Shower EP: 11
1988: Halleluiah Man EP: 12
1990: God Knows It's True EP: 5
1991: Winter EP: 3
1991: Wishing Waters EP: 9
1994: Stay Together EP: 10
1995: Spiral Tribe Volume 1: 6
1998: A Change Of Heart EP: 4
1999: Friends And Lovers: 1
2010: Shadows: 8
2020: In Memory Of My Feelings: 7

The Original Bee, Bee And Gee (But No Bee Gees, If You Know What I Mean) (47:15) (Mega)

Friday, 27 June 2025

It's Party Time In Oblivion

Happy birthday to Lisa Germano, born 27th June 1958.

A supremely talented artist, whose music first came to me via the Inconsiderate Bitch EP on 4AD in 1994, then back to her previous and subsequent albums, up to No Elephants in 2013.

Criminally underrated as a storyteller and songwriter, her raw narratives can make for challenging and uncomfortable listening, whilst often wrapped up in the most delicate, beautiful melodies. 

The 4AD albums are essential listening but, if you start, don't stop there. Slush, Lisa's 1997 collaboration with OP8 aka Giant Sand aka Howe Gelb and Calexico, is wonderful and you can find her latter albums scattered but available on Bandcamp.

Sending love and best wishes, Lisa.

1) Dark Irie (1991)
2) The Prince Of Plati (2009)
3) Into Oblivion (ft. Johnny Marr) (2006)
4) We Suck (1996)
5) Cracklin' Water: OP8 ft. The Ilk Of Lisa Germano (1997)
6) Happiness (Remixed By Ivo Watts-Russell & John Fryer) (1994)
7) Tomorrowing (1998)
8) Puppet (US Album Version By Malcolm Burn & Wayne Lorenz) (1993)
9) Sexy Little Girl Princess (Album Version) (1994)
10) Apathy And The Devil (2013)
11) It's Party Time (2002) 

1991: On The Way Down From The Moon Palace: 1
1993: Happiness (USA): 8
1994: Inconsiderate Bitch EP: 6
1994: Geek The Girl: 9
1996: Excerpts From A Love Circus: 4
1997: Slush: 5
1998: Slide: 7
2002: Lullaby For Liquid Pig: 11
2006: In The Maybe World: 3
2009: Magic Neighbor: 2
2013: No Elephants: 10

It's Party Time In Oblivion (45:55) (Mega)

Thursday, 26 June 2025

Balearica Discodelica

For no other reason than it's Thursday when I thought it was Friday, a six-song selection of choice Cosmodelica cuts, courtesy of Colleen Murphy.

The half dozen versions span one of her earliest excursions in 2009 through to a red hot remix of a 70s classic, released a couple of weeks ago, touching on multiple points of excellence along the way. 

I haven't yet heard Colleen's take on The Cure from their recently released Mixes From A Lost World album, but I'm confident that it will have turned Robert Smith's frown upside down!

1) Stop Apologising (Cosmodelica Extended Mix): David Holmes ft. Raven Violet (2024)
2) God Gets A Little Busy Sometimes (Cosmodelica Remix): Izo FitzRoy (2023)
3) Holiday Romance (Cosmodelica Holiday Drama Mix): Detachments (2010)
4) I Wanna Get Over (Cosmodelica Remix): Street People (2025)
5) When The Rain Falls (Cosmodelica Remix): Horace Andy & Ashley Beedle (2009)
6) Berlin (Cosmodelica Remix): A Certain Ratio (2021)

Balearica Discodelica (45:14) (Mega)


The eagle-eyed amongst you will have noticed that the usual second link to KrakenFiles is absent. This is what happened when I tried to log in this morning:


I will look for an alternative: Box has been a pain in the arse previously and other blogging buddies seem to lean towards GoogleDrive or DropBox, so I will have a secondary link up and running from the weekend.

Wednesday, 25 June 2025

What Is It To Have Artistic Credibility?

As a palette cleanser after yesterday's thick A.I. milkshake, how about some SPRINTS?

Refreshing, isn't it?

Album All That Is Over and tour incoming.


Vanity is the curse of culture
A cyanide for the soul
Tip the tightrope delicately around ego
Don't let either side take hold

What is it to have artistic credibility
For am I not just a man?
I seek to take aim at commentary
I speak so therefore I understand

Descartes, Descartes, 
Discord, discard
How do you heal a tortured heart?
Descartes, Descartes, 
Discord, discard
We have love and we have art

Descartes, Descartes, 
Discord, discard
How do you heal a tortured heart?
Descartes, Descartes, 
Discord, discard
We have love and we have art

I count the dead leaves on the trees
I count the seconds between my breath
All's fair in love and war
But what if I've nothing more than war left?

Take my sanity
Take my sanctimony
Call me pious, call this holy matrimony
Call this anything you want from me

Descartes, Descartes, 
Discord, discard
How do you heal a tortured heart?
Descartes, Descartes, 
Discord, discard
We have love and we have art

Descartes, Descartes, 
Discord, discard
How do you heal a tortured heart?
Descartes, Descartes, 
Discord, discard
We have love and we have art

Disillusion, hate, anxiety
Pleasure, pain, ecstasy
Tell me lord, how can I be
Better than I was born to be?

Disillusion, hate, anxiety
Pleasure, pain, ecstasy
Tell me lord, how can I be
Better than I was born to be?

Disillusion, hate, anxiety
Pleasure, pain, ecstasy
Tell me lord, how can I be
Better than I was born to be?

Vanity is the curse of culture
Ignorance becomes the death of us
Privilege without acknowledgement is murder
The world is burning right in front of us

Tuesday, 24 June 2025

AI? AI? Oh!

Having dug up a couple of classics by M aka Robin Scott at the weekend, I was a little surprised that there was in fact a new single released a couple of weeks ago, in anticipation of an album, The FAQs Of Life, on 11th July.

Topically titled AI? Robin writes that "(t)he point of the song is to open up the conversation and controversy surrounding around Artificial Intelligence. 

In the creative world it could be a real asset. I know people are concerned about copyrights and so on but I think it’s basically because it’s in very early stages - I hope that all those questions can be answered to give artists security of mind.
 
I’m not advocating that it’s good or bad I just think it’s something that we ought to face up to because like it or not it’s here to stay."
 
Robin goes on to write that "(t)he video brilliantly uses the renaissance artwork we chose for the sleeve. I wanted the juxtaposition between that and the use of AI to be clear and thought provoking. Isn’t it incredible that we now view works of art with different eyes? I still marvel at the fact they were created by the human hand..!"

It's an interesting take, in as much as, of the 1,200 or so views (at the time of posting), I don't think there will be anyone experiencing the song or video and having a revelatory moment. I think it's fair to say that the conversation and controversy surrounding (or around) A.I. was well and truly open some years ago, so this song feels somewhat dated already.

And, having listened to the song a few times, I'd say that the meaning of the song as described in the promo blurb - A.I. is neither good nor bad, but it's here to stay so deal with it - is almost entirely lost in the lyrical narrative.

As for the video, yes, on one level it's impressive and I get Robin's point about the juxtaposition of human- and A.I.-created art. On the other hand, it (and the proliferation of A.I. music videos) feels somewhat bland and predictable. 

After a couple of views, I switched to audio only. And then started to question whether the music and lyrics were also A.I. assisted. Still, it could be much worse, as Martin from New Amusements has discovered and written about brilliantly.

So, it was nice to find that Robin is still creating M music nearly half a century after Pop Muzik - and his voice sounds great - but on the strength of AI? I'll pass on The FAQs Of Life.



Welcome to this world
From whence have you come?
We’re working on it 
But we’re still not done
Homo Sapiens are losing control
Destroying one another, mind, body and soul

We thought we were alone, drifting through space
Are you here to rescue a hopeless case?
Are you the answer to the human race?
AI 
Let me introduce you to
AI 
God doesn’t have a clue
AI 
Let the aliens through…
Let the aliens through!

I was knocking on my neighbours door
My new friend defies Newton’s law
Drag yourself away from the breaking news
This guy’s got the remedy for blues

We thought we were alone, drifting through space
Are you here to rescue a hopeless case?
Are you the answer to the human race?
AI 
Let me introduce you to
AI 
God doesn’t have a clue
AI 
Let the aliens through…
Let the aliens through!

We couldn’t see them, but they could see us
In the fourth dimension we’re a speck of dust
Tempted by the apple, I have sinned
I’ll be blown away by the solar wind

We thought we were alone, drifting through space
Are you here to rescue a hopeless case?
Are you the answer to the human race?
AI 
Let me introduce you to
AI 
God doesn’t have a clue
AI 
Let the aliens through…
Let the aliens through!

Given all the stars in our galaxy
Why would you pick on humanity?
Basically we’re flawed, we have to admit
Earth could be heaven, but now we’re in the shit

We thought we were alone, drifting through space
Are you here to rescue a hopeless case?
Are you the answer to the human race?
AI 
Let me introduce you to
AI 
God doesn’t have a clue
AI 
Let the aliens through…
Let the aliens through!

AI 
Let me introduce you to
AI 
God doesn’t have a clue
AI 
Let the aliens through…
Let the aliens through!

Monday, 23 June 2025

I'm Not Immune, I Love This Tune

Five Fathoms by Everything But The Girl appears on their 1999 album Temperamental and was the lead single, released a couple of weeks beforehand.

Tracey Thorn later reflected that recording Temperamental following the birth of their twin daughters, in some respects she "ended up being guest vocalist on someone else's album", 

And yet, the songwriting partnership is inextricably Tracey and Ben Watt, the combination of words, beats, voice and music that had continually evolved over many years and culminated in their tenth album. 

Temperamental often feels like an overlooked and under appreciated record and there was a near two-and-a-half decade gap between this and Everything But The Girl's unexpected and brilliant return in 2023 with Fuse.

I love Five Fathoms and this random shuffle is a reminder to go back to the source and give Temperamental a long overdue airing.

 

I walk the city late at night
Does everyone here do the same?
I want to be the things I see
Give every face and place my name

I cross the street, take a right
Pick up the pace, pass a fight
Did I grow up just to stay home?
I'm not immune, I love this tune

I wanna love more
I just wanna love more
I wanna love more
I just wanna love more

I wanna love more
I just wanna love more
I wanna love more
I just wanna love more

I drag the city late at night
It's in my mouth, it's in my hair
And the people fill the city
Because the city fills the people, oh yeah

I cross the street avoid the freeze
A city's warmer by a couple of degrees
The smell of food the smell of rain
I'm not immune, I love this tune

I wanna love more
(There's a river in my head)
I just wanna love more
(There's a river in my head)
I wanna love more
(There's a river in my head)
I just wanna love more
I wanna love more
(There's a river in my head)
I just wanna love more
(There's a river in my head)
I wanna love more
(There's a river in my head)
I just wanna love more

Only way out is down

Only way up is down

The day's roll by like thunder
Like a storm that's never breaking
All my time and space compressed
In the low pressure of proceedings

And they beat against the sides of my life
Like fist against inside, in my life
And the roads all lead behind me
So I wrap the wheel around me

And I go out
(There's a river in my head)
(There's a river in my head)
(There's a river in my head)

I'll take you home
(There's a river in my head)
And make it easy
(There's a river in my head)
I'll take you home
(There's a river in my head)
And make it easy

Sunday, 22 June 2025

Muzik For Hair Gel

Day 2 of the Eighties 12" Weekender with a new selection, based on an old idea.

Digging out archive Dubhed selections to include with yesterday's post, I'd planned to include Muzik For Hairspray, a mixtape I'd compiled circa 2000 and posted here in May 2021.

I was barely six months into the blog, Muzik For Hairspray was my 29th post and I had no expectation at the time that five years and over 1,500 posts later, I may want to re-post the selection...so I deleted it.

In recreating the original mixtape (again), I was inspired to create a companion set, inspiringly titled Muzik For Hair Gel.

The idea was simple enough: use exactly the same artists and sequence of the Muzik For Hairspray mixtape*, just different songs, and ideally ones that I hadn't used on a previous 12"/80s compilation. And it was that last bit that took the most time!

That said, I'm pretty happy with the end result. After the controversy of 1979's Pop Musik on the previous comp, today's song by M (aka Robin Scott) was genuinely released in the 1980s...just. 

Official Secrets was only released on 7" in the UK and many other countries, though the Spanish put the full length album version on theirs, and Mexico went one step further by putting it on a promo 12". Tick!

I've used the dub remix of Love Calling by Sir William of Idol in a previous Best of Billy selection, so I stuck with the album version. As with Mexico, it was Australia to the rescue this time, releasing this version on a promo 12" single. Double tick!

This is the fourth appearance on this blog of Boom! There She Was (Sonic Property Mix) by Scritti Politti. However, whilst the previous three selections all featured an edit included on the UK 12", this time it's the unexpurgated 9-minute version direct from the U.S.A. 

Divine makes a welcome reappearance, again teaming up with Bobby Orlando for Love Reaction. But what 1983 12" single could possibly have inspired their own dancefloor smash?

* With one exception.

Having recorded this selection first, I then revisited Muzik For Hairspray, only to discover too late that I've accidentally missed off the last song on Side 1 when I originally posted the tracklist. So, apologies to Belouis Some for missing out on Muzik For Hair Gel. Them's the showbiz breaks, I guess!

This weekend's selections are dedicated to Mike, his mates and anyone else making their way to the Milton Keynes Bowl for today's Forever Now festival, featuring several of today's artists and some unbelievably great headliners to boot. Have a fab day!

And a very happy birthday to Green Gartside, who is 70 today!

Side One
1) Official Secrets (Album Version By Robin Scott): M ft. Brigit Vinchon (1980)
2) Love Calling (Album Version By Keith Forsey): Billy Idol (1982)
3) Cccan't You See... (8:15 To Nowhere Mix By Tony Mansfield): Vicious Pink (1984)
4) Love Reaction (12" Version By Bobby Orlando): Divine (1983)
5) Junk (Remixed By Harvey Goldberg): Bronski Beat (1984)
6) Dissidents (The Search For Truth Part II) (Remix By François Kevorkian & Dominick Maita): Thomas Dolby (1984)
7) Where The Heart Is (12" Version By Mike Thorne & Harvey Goldberg): Soft Cell (1982)

Side Two
1) Boom! There She Was (Sonic Property Mix By Steve Thompson & Michael Barbiero) (Full Length): Scritti Politti ft. Roger Troutman (1988)
2) Channel Z (Rock Mix By Don Was & Michael Hutchinson): The B-52's (1989)
3) On Your Own (New York Mix By Steve Thompson & Michael Barbiero): Pete Shelley (1986)
4) Let's All Make A Bomb (New Version By B.E.F. & Greg Walsh): Heaven 17 (1983)
5) Shock (The Shep Pettibone Mix): The Psychedelic Furs (1987)
6) It's Called A Heart (Extended) (Remix By Depeche Mode & Daniel Miller): Depeche Mode (1985)
7) Without You (12" Mix By Tim Friese-Greene): Talk Talk (1984)

Side One (45:52) (KF) (Mega)
Side Two (46:19) (KF) (Mega)

You can find Muzik For Hairspray here

And, for your further 12/80s listening pleasure:

Saturday, 21 June 2025

The Fate Of The Eighties

Will I ever run out of 12" mixes from the 1980s to post? Probably not.

Five years into this blog, and I'm still pulling some big hitters out of the record bag that (I'm 99.9% sure) haven't previously featured in a Dubhed selection.

One from each year of the decade, not necessarily in that order, though the selection starts with 1980 and ends with 1989, so there's some order, at least. As well as some New Order.

I've cheated a little with the 1980 pick. The 12" version of Methods Of Dance is the same as the album version that appeared on Gentlemen Take Polaroids in 1980. However, the song didn't appear on a single until 1982, as the B-side to Nightporter. But hey, it's Japan, it's in!

The song that triggered the idea for this playlist a few days ago was a random shuffle of Dum Dum Girl (12" Mix) by Talk Talk. I love the mixes by the band, latterly with Tim Friese-Greene, though have a lot of love for the remixes by Steve Thompson & Richard Barbiero too. Dare I say it? I prefer this version of Dum Dum Girls to the original.

Sowing The Seeds Of Love by Tears For Fears closes out the selection. The 'Full Version' is lifted from the CD single I bought at the time (even though I hadn't yet bought a CD player!) If you bought Tears For Fears' Greatest Hits in the early 1990s, the one with the bonus CD of remixes, you will have found this labelled as Sowing The Seeds Of Love (Wen's Overnight Mix). It's a whopping thirty seconds longer than the album version, too!

In between, some cracking tunes by Depeche Mode, Howard Devoto, Icehouse, Information Society, Pet Shop Boys and Visage, extended to perfection by legends such as Daniel Mlller, 'Little' Louie Vega, The Latin Rascals and Shep Pettibone.

All guaranteed to bring some sunshine into your day...although as we're officially experiencing a heatwave in the UK, perhaps the last thing you may want...!

1) Methods Of Dance (12" Version by Japan & John Punter): Japan (1980)
2) Crazy (Manic Mix By David Lord & Michael H. Brauer): Icehouse (1987)
3) The Perfect Kiss (12" Version By New Order & Michael Johnson): New Order (1985)
4) What's On Your Mind (Pure Energy) (Club Mix By 'Little' Louie Vega, Roman Ricardo & The Latin Rascals): Information Society (1988)
5) We Move (Dance Mix By Midge Ure & Visage): Visage (1981)
6) Love Comes Quickly (Pettibone Mastermix By Shep Pettibone): Pet Shop Boys (1986)
7) Dum Dum Girl (12" Mix By Steve Thompson & Richard Barbiero): Talk Talk (1984)
8) Leave In Silence (Longer) (12" Version By Depeche Mode & Daniel Miller): Depeche Mode (1982)
9) Cold Imagination (Extended Version By Howard Devoto & Greg Walsh): Howard Devoto (1983)
10) Sowing The Seeds Of Love (Full Version By Tears For Fears & Dave Bascombe): Tears For Fears (1989)

The Fate Of The Eighties (1:08:33) (KF) (Mega)


If that's got you on a 12'/80s kick, I've reactivated links to some previous Dubhed excursions from the archives....

Kissing The Mix (Side One & Side Two) (2000)
Teenage Remix (Side One & Side Two) (2000)

Friday, 20 June 2025

Somerset Sider

History reinvented with Friday's slightly shaken selection, courtesy of Johnson Somerset.

I first discovered his work in 2016 via Paper Romance by Groove Armada (included here) and an entire album's worth of Duran Duran overhauls called Eiffel Tower.

Here's six crowd pleasers from a back catalogue that now runs into the hundreds, and continues to be added to YouTube on a regular basis.

1) Dance Hall Days (Johnson Somerset Remix): Wang Chung (2023)
2) Notorious (Johnson Somerset Remix): Duran Duran (2025)
3) Paper Romance (Johnson Somerset Remix): Groove Armada ft. Fenech-Soler & SaintSaviour (2013)
4) Summertime Sadness (Johnson Somerset Remix): Lana Del Rey (2020)
5) Self Control (Johnson Somerset Remix): Laura Branigan (2023)
6) The In Crowd (West End Wolf Remix): Bryan Ferry (2013)

 
 
 
 
 

Thursday, 19 June 2025

Everybody's Got To Learn Nine Times

Mute has released the third song from Mark Stewart's posthumous album, The Fateful Symmetry, out on 11th July. 

Not only is it a singular cover of The Korgis' signature song, Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime, but in the hands of Elijah Minnelli and Adrian Sherwood, it's been transformed into "a masterstroke of soundsystem militancy". 

And rest assured, despite the Bébe Durmiendo Cumbia Bootleg label, this is the version that you'll find on the album.

If you haven't already pre-ordered The Fateful Symmetry, you can do it now.

I have quite a few cover versions of the song already, including Beck (from 2004's Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind OST), Glasvegas (the B-side of 2007 single Geraldine) and The Dream Academy (the penultimate song of 1987's 2nd album Remembrance Days). 

However, I didn't realise quite how many more versions there are out there, so here's the three above, plus another four from Yazz, Army Of Lovers, Erasure and, sticking two fingers to her siblings*, Sharon Corr.

And, to end, it has to be the version that started it all in 1980, The Korgis and a video that looks like a complete health and safety nightmare.

All beautiful, in their own way.

1) Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime (Bébe Durmiendo Cumbia Bootleg): Mark Stewart (2025)
2) Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime: Army Of Lovers (2001)
3) Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime (Live @ Primavera Sound, São Paulo, Brazil): Beck (2023)
4) Everybody’s Got To Learn SometimeThe Dream Academy (1987)
5) Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime (Live @ The EIS Christmas Concert, Birmingham): Erasure (2002)
6) Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime: Glasvegas (2008)
7) Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime: Sharon Corr (2010)
8) Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime: Yazz (1994)
9) Everybody’s Got To Learn Sometime: The Korgis (1980)

* absolutely not true.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Wednesday, 18 June 2025

A Fistful Of Diamonds Or Just Shards Of Glass...?

No music to get excited about in 2025? Here are half a dozen replies to the contrary, released in the last week alone!


Click on the links to buy the above (and more) from Bandcamp.