Showing posts with label Elizabeth Fraser. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Fraser. Show all posts

Saturday, 1 March 2025

Decadance V: 1998


Side 1 of an imaginary 90s compilation cassette, spooling out in 1998.

This selection went through several last minute changes as I discovered that several songs, whilst listed as or appearing on albums in 1998, weren't released or charted as singles until 1999. You may see some of those tomorrow, but the short list was already rather long, so maybe not...

Not the substitutes were sloppy seconds and, in what I think is a record for this series, a third of the selection all hit the UK #1 spot. Mind you, this was at a time when new releases would crash into the Top 5 in the first week and promptly disappear without trace the next. I'm not even sure that the guaranteed Top Of The Pops appearance carried all that much weight by then.

This was the first time I struggled to fill the MAW slot in this series. In 1998, Andrew Weatherall and Keith Tenniswood's cuts as Two Lone Swordsmen tended to be glitchy, queasy electro numbers, either very short or very long and with little or no vocals. 

The only real contender for me was their epic remix of Come Together by Spiritualized. The only problems being that it was over fifteen and a half minutes long, with not the faintest trace of Jason Pierce to be found. 

My solution - Lord Sabre forgive me - was to create my own vocal edit. I found a bootleg MP3 of the filtered vocal of Come Together and with some painstaking cutting, editing and sequencing, ended up with a version that comes in at just over four and a half minutes. The sound quality is shonky. the editing amaterish, but it's not as awful as I thought. Please feel free to disagree, I will not argue!

Cornershop were one the surprise #1s, entirely thanks to Norman Cook who was everywhere at the time as Fatboy SlimBrimful Of Asha was a (very) modest hit in 1997, but Norman liked it, wanted to include it in his sets but needed to speed it up a bit. Cue the trademark big beats and carousel swirls and a chart topper was born. I still quite get over Tjinder Singh sounding like a member of Alvin & The Chipmunks and I will also prefer the original over the remix, but I'm happy that it gave Cornershop (and their album) a well-deserved boost.

A fair bit of rap here, from the masters Run-D.M.C. to new kids on the block Jurassic 5 and superb homegrown talent in Asian Dub Foundation

Roni Size Reprazent, er, represented my birthplace and, fresh off of winning the 1997 Mercury Music Prize, ploughed the prize money straight back into Bristol. Not the only Bristol artist though: Massive Attack return, this time with Elizabeth Fraser for Teardrop. Even the truncated promo edit featured here is phenomenal, and seeing it performed live last year was a real 'pinch me' moment.

Madonna returned with William Orbit at the controls for Frozen, with a Chris Cunningham-created video that had Madge looking her Gothic best. A slew of remixes accompanied the single as you might expect, though Stereo MC's version was head and shoulders above the rest.

Just outside the Top 30 was Don't Die Just Yet by David Holmes, sampling Serge Gainsbourg with aplomb. David remixed Failure by Skinny, label mates with Dido who also provided backing vocals on the song.

Speaking of samples, somehow Italian duo The Tamperer aka Alex Farolfi and Mario Fargetta managed to clear a hefty sample of The Jacksons' 1981 hit Can You Feel It? for their own song. 

Frankly, the sample does all the heavy lifting, but American singer and actor Maya Days gamely adapts lyrics from Urban Discharge's 1995 single Wanna Drop A House (On That Bitch), including the unforgettable line, "What's she gonna look like with a chimney on her?"  They don't write 'em like that anymore...

As a counter to all of the hits, 1998 closes with a 'flop' single from what proved to be one of my favourite albums of the year, by the wonderful Solex aka Elisabeth Esselink. Solex vs. The Hitmeister featured 12 songs, every single one featuring Solex in the title. I hadn't heard any of the music, but was so taken by the review I read that I tracked it down and bought the CD. A fabulously quirky album and a perfect way to round off the year.

Amazingly, sadly (for me at least), Sunday will see the final instalment of this alternative tour of the 1990s. Pre-millennium tension? Not 'arf!
 
1) 
Black White (Brendan Lynch Mix): Asian Dub Foundation
2) Concrete Schoolyard (Clean Radio Edit): Jurassic 5
3) Failure (Radio Mix): Skinny ft. Lee Stevens, Dido & Pauline Taylor
4) Watching Windows (Roni Size Vocal Remix): Roni Size Reprazent ft. Onallee
5) Brimful Of Asha (Brighton) (Norman Cook Remix Single Version): Cornershop
6) It's Like That (Drop The Break Radio Edit): Run-D.M.C. vs. Jason Nevins
7) Feel It (Blunt Edit): The Tamperer ft. Maya
8) Frozen (Stereo MC's Remix Edit): Madonna
9) Don't Die Just Yet (Radio Edit): David Holmes
10) Teardrop (Edit): Massive Attack ft. Elizabeth Fraser
11) Come Together (Two Lone Swordsmen Meet Khayem Downtown) (Vocal Edit): Spiritualized
12) Solex All Licketysplit (Album Version): Solex

4th January 1998: Don't Die Just Yet EP (#33): 9
22nd February 1998: Brimful Of Asha EP (#1): 5
1st March 1998: Frozen EP (#1): 8
8th March 1998: Watching Windows EP (#28): 4
15th March 1998: It's Like That EP (#1): 6
5th April 1998: Failure EP (#31): 3
12th April 1998: Solex vs. The Hitmeister (#n/a): 12
3rd May 1998: Teardrop EP (#10): 10
24th May 1998: Feel It EP (#1): 7
31st May 1998: The Abbey Road EP (#39): 11
28th June 1998: Black White EP (#52): 1
18th October 1998: Concrete Schoolyard EP (#35): 2

Side One (46:56) (KF) (Mega)

Monday, 2 September 2024

ACT 1.5

Massive Attack organised and headlined the ACT 1.5 climate action accelerator event up on The Downs in Bristol on Sunday 25th August. The last bank holiday of the summer and potentially Massive Attack's last ever hometown gig.
 
It promised to be a historic event for lots of reasons and it pretty much delivered on every single one of them. 
 
Last week, in a couple of unintentional cliffhanger posts, I reflected on the support shows from DJ Milo and Sam Morton (Thursday), Lankum and Killer Mike (Friday). 
 
I also mentioned that there were various interactive events and speakers at t'other end of the site. The main stage also included a number of guests in between performances, to the audible grumbles of some in the audience, questioning why Massive Attack had to do all this "political stuff" when they should just focus on the music. Well... duh. 
 
I think they were in the minority and hey, there was always the option of listening and exercising the right to disagree. Better still, there were the ridiculously long queues for the food stalls where you could bemoan the wait for a crepe instead of hearing what Dale Vince or Mick Lynch had to say. 
 
It's fair to say that those that are still smarting from the Tories' defeat at the General Election and found having to use the train and e-bus to get to this event will have found much to irk them throughout the day...

The last speaker, introduced by Massive Attack ahead of their set, was Motaz Azaiza. Motaz is a Palestinian photojournalist whose stark and heart rending images of the ongoing conflict can be found on Instagram and formed the backdrop of his brief but impassioned speech on stage. 
 
And then there was nothing left but the final gig of the day and arguably the main reason why thousands of people were here. I first - and last - saw Massive Attack perform in Bristol's harbourside ampitheatre on 2nd August 2004 and it was unfortunately a rather underwhelming experience.
 
Fate threatened more of the same as, for the first time all day, and right at the start of the set there were problems with the big screens on either side of the stage, requiring several reboots before being fixed some minutes later. After some gloomy but dry skies, we were also treated to one hell of a downpour. We'd come prepared and the sea of smart phones filming was replaced by an ocean of hoods as people suited up, determined not to let "a bit of wet" dampen their enthusiasm for what was happening on stage.
 
What I wasn't quite prepared for was that, being a specs wearer, pretty much all that happened for the next couple of hours was refracted though dozens of rain drops on my lenses. I got with it and embraced the DIY psychedelic experience, but it does mean that none of the photos here today are mine...!
 
The set opened with the brooding menace of Risingson before Horace Andy took to the stage for Girl I Love You, which turned out to be the only song from 2010's Heligoland to make the setlist. Fourth album 100th Window fared worse and was entirely absent from the show.
 
Mezzanine was unsurprisingly much better represented, not least because it features several songs with Elizabeth Fraser, who takes up position for Black Milk, the third song of the night. It was almost too much to bear...
 
...which was evidently the case for my friend's brother and his mate, as they decided to duck out at that point! Maybe it was the rain, maybe it was the munchies, I don't know, but it definitely wasn't because the collective onstage were not giving their all. We said our goodbyes and I turned back to the stage.
 
After a version of 2016 song Take It There (not, as far as I could tell, featuring a surprise appearance from Tricky), 3D introduced the third and final guests of the evening. 
 
Young Fathers performed three songs in a row. I think the first one was called Gone, though there's a track on their recent collaborative Ceasefire EP (which I haven't heard) called Give, so it might well have been that. The second, which according to t'internet is called Minipoppa is a brief couple of minutes that in the context of the set almost felt like an interlude or reprise, sitting between the songs either side.
 
 
The third song was Voodoo In My Blood, which I recognised from it's appearance (with Take It There) on the Ritual Spirit EP. I've not had the opportunity to see Young Fathers live until now, so this felt like a bit of a 'mini gig' treat and they did not disappoint.
 
How do you follow that? Well, with Elizabeth Fraser returning for a spine-tingling, spare version of Song To The Siren, the Tim Buckley song she originally covered with This Mortal Coil in 1984. Forty years later, her voice incredibly, impossibly surpasses all expectations. I never could have imagined that I'd be standing in an audience, immersed in a sonic hug of such immense proportions that I would swear I was literally uplifted at one point. There are no words to adequately describe the effect of Fraser's singing live.
 
Almost as a palette cleanser after this most nourishing of performances, Massive Attack got as close to a balls-out rock show as they could, with the pairing of Inertia Creeps and their take on John Foxx-era Ultravox, with a version of Rockwrok that's apparently been a set staple for several years now. Despite that, pretty much everyone, me included, fell for the false ending and started clapping and cheering enthusiastically before the song launched into it's frenetic final half.
 
Horace Andy was then back for his second and final song of the evening, what else but Angel. Horace celebrated his 73rd birthday in February and his is another voice that has lost none of it's power and effect over the decades. I'm biased because I think he's a superlative artist in his own right, but Horace is such an integral part of Massive Attack that it's impossible to think of them without him. The version of Angel here tonight only reinforced that fact. 
 
We were then into a couple of classics from 1991's ground breaking, genre smashing debut Blue Lines. As the opening rumbling bass of Safe From Harm kicked in, I wondered briefly if Horace Andy might remain on stage, as the song is covered on and inspired the title of his recent album, Midnight Rockers. 
 
It wasn't to be but with the accomplished performances of Safe From Harm and Unfinished Sympathy, it is clear that singer Deborah Miller has made the songs her own. I suspect that this brace of songs is the payoff that many in the audience have been waiting for and they really delivered the goods, with the expected reaction.
 
Against my desire but listening to my better judgement, I decided to leave at that point and head to the e-bus pick up point a 10-minute walk from the site. At the time, I think I'm being overly cautious but my car is parked about 10 miles away, itself another 10 miles or so from home, so if I don't make the train, I'm stuffed.
 
This seemed like an eminently good choice almost from the second I turned around and tried to make my way through the crowd. Lost in the moment, absorbed in the concert before me, I'd forgotten the reality that there were tens of thousands of people behind me. I tried to wind my way and gently push through in near darkness without stepping on toes. The added challenge was that the bars had been serving alcohol in cans all night (not the reusable, recyclable, deposit-paid glasses as advertised) so there was now also a carpet of crushed and shifting metal to navigate.
 
There was a momentary panic, when I became disoriented and seemed to be making no progress at all. I then spotted Oh Crepe! in the distance, made a beeline and followed the line of food stalls up the side of the site. I crossed over to what I thought was the exit, only to find it was the urinals! I corrected course and eventually found my way out, across The Downs and onto one of the two waiting e-buses. By way of compensation, my escape was soundtracked by Karmacoma and then, waiting for the bus to depart, the soaring voice of Elizabeth Fraser on Teardrop.
 
The only song I missed altogether, as the bus headed back to the train station, was the set closer and Fraser's third song from Mezzanine, Group Four. I would have loved to stay for the entire show, though hearing post-gig tales of trying to get out, onto buses and trains home, I don't think it would have been quite such a happy ending for me!
 

As the train left the station and for the rest of my journey home, I was buzzing. ACT 1.5 was a (excuse the pun) massive undertaking, yet proof that it can be done and should be a way forward for concerts and events now and in the future. Robert Del Naja and Grant Marshall, I salute you.
 
Even looked at purely for the lineup, sixty quid for nearly six hours of live music and DJing was worth every penny. But it delivered so, so much more.
 
I've recreated the ACT 1.5 set below which can't hope to replicate the atmosphere though it does indicate what a finely curated sequence of songs this was. In the absence of studio versions but in the interest of providing a full experience, I've included several live bootlegs from Massive Attack's show in Stockholm a few months ago. The sound quality inevitably dips on several of these, although Elizabeth Fraser's performance on Song To The Siren remains astonishing good.
  
1) Risingson (Underdog Mix By Trevor Jackson) (1997)
2) Girl I Love You (Album Version ft. Horace Andy) (2010) 
3) Black Milk (Album Version ft. Elizabeth Fraser) (1998)
4) Take It There (ft. Tricky) (2016)
5) Gone (Live @ Rosendals Tradgard, Stockholm, Sweden ft. Young Fathers) (2024)
6) Minipoppa (Live @ Rosendals Tradgard, Stockholm, Sweden ft. Young Fathers) (2024)
7) Voodoo In My Blood (Single Version ft. Young Fathers) (2016)
8) Song To The Siren (Live @ Rosendals Tradgard, Stockholm, Sweden ft. Elizabeth Fraser) (Cover of Tim Buckley) (2024)
9) Inertia Creeps (Manic Street Preachers Version) (1998)
10) Rockwrok (Live @ Rosendals Tradgard, Stockholm, Sweden) (Cover of Ultravox) (2024)
11) Angel (Blur Remix By Damon Albarn & Graham Coxon ft. Horace Andy) (1998)
12) Safe From Harm (12" Version by Massive Attack, Jonny Dollar & Nellee Hooper ft. Shara Nelson) (1991)
13) Unfinished Sympathy (Perfecto Mix By Paul Oakenfold & Steve Osborne ft. Shara Nelson) (1991)
14) Karmacoma (Portishead Experience - Remix By Geoff Barrow & Adrian Utley) (1994)
15) Teardrop (Mad Professor Mazaruni Vocal Mix ft. Elizabeth Fraser) (1998)
16) Group Four (Album Version ft. Elizabeth Fraser) (1998)
 
ACT 1.5 (1:20:13) (KF) (Mega)
 
I've also reactivated the recreation of Massive Attack's 2004 show in Bristol, which I previously posted in November 2021.
 
 
As mentioned, none of the photos in this post (except the train from Bristol) are mine. I attempted a couple of shots early in the set, but the rain and my inability to focus through my rain splattered specs rendered them completely unusable. So, a big thanks to those that did and posted them on Twitter!
 
Propetto Isso, "The rest is nuance": Elizabeth Fraser facing the audience
Jerry Hicks, local lad and "blacklisted TU activist": Ceasefire Now!
Rebecca, "you can take the girl out of Stockport, but...": Am I Unique? and Horace Andy
André Pattenden, photographer extraordinaire: Young Fathers (for NME)
Simon Parker, "UCU Member / Dad / Disgruntled": Elizabeth Fraser
Blue6oy, from "That there London": riseupagainstfascism
 
And a belated thank you to @oniktimreh ("No tolerance for narcissists"), who supplied the photo of Killer Mike and The Mighty Midnight Revival in Friday's post.

Monday, 4 September 2023

Always Your Cassette Pet!

Side 1 of a cassette compilation, recorded September 1991. 
 
My brother used to buy a lot of albums on cassette. Needs must: there was one family turntable in the lounge and both of us had cassette decks of varying quality in our bedrooms to soundtrack our teenage angst. My brother had gone to university, I'd just returned from a year in Australia, and this was a last opportunity to trawl through the boxes of tapes at our parents' house, before they were shipped off to join him or get stuck up in the loft for some undetermined period.

There was obviously some haste involved and/or a lack of blank cassettes as I didn't copy many albums in their entirety, but I did manage to pull together this compilation, a hybrid of my brother's tapes and the odd cassingle that I'd added to my collection. As with Side 2, posted last November, a varied and quite dark mix overall.
 
Laibach are, er, back with, er, Get Back. Clearly, they were were a big favourite at the time, with 3 out of the 21 songs in total. The previous selections were from Opus Dei, this one is the opener of their track-by-track cover of The Beatles' Let It Be. Both albums were available as a 'double play' cassette back in the day and I remember my brother blasting Laibach out of the car stereo, windows down, as we drove through the centre of Bristol, to the bemusement of most. Solid times.

It'll End In Tears by This Mortal Coil is also represented by 3 songs on this compilation. Fortunately, unlike Lisa Gerrard who was subject to a harsh edit on Side 2, both Howard Devoto and Elizabeth Fraser get to finish their songs. Covers of Big Star and Roy Harper, these were the first versions I heard and remain the definitive takes for me.

The The gets another excerpt from the unreleased album The Pornography Of Despair, one of 6 songs tacked on as a bonus side to the cassette version of the Soul Mining album. Like many of these songs, Waitin' For The Upturn was also released as a B-side.

In the mid-late 1980s, I had no idea really about Alison Statton, or her history with Young Marble Giants. To me, she was the voice of Weekend, who were kind of jazzy; they recorded an album with Keith Tippet live at Ronnie Scott's. Weekend were also capable of some really dark indie pop like Red Planes, featured here. I was inevitably drawn to the latter. Alison's voice still sends a shiver down my spine.

Troubling my sphincter was The Prisoner by Tears For Fears. The Hurting - which I still love - was a bleak, soul-searching debut that explored concepts that were completely over my head in 1983. The Prisoner was originally a B-side to second single Pale Shelter (a chart flop the first time around). Both were re-recorded for The Hurting to great effect, The Prisoner particularly benefiting from some screaming synth stabs.

Both Tears For Fears and The Icicle Works have covered Robert Wyatt's Sea Song. The latter is the better of the two, though neither really come close to the plaintive beauty of Wyatt's own version.

Lou Reed and John Cale reunited in 1990 for a tribute to departed friend Andy Warhol, a bit of a purple patch for both of them at the time. This is perhaps my favourite song from the Songs For Drella album.

Untitled by Marc & The Mambas is a real curio. The striking cover portrait of Marc Almond by Val Denham, the mix of original songs and covers, possibly my first introduction to Scott Walker and Jacques Brel. And then, on the cassette B-side, just three tracks: a Syd Barrett cover (Terrapin) and Twilights & Lowlifes in two eleven-and-a-half minute versions. I've gone for the first, vocal version here.

When I posted Side 2 last November, I mentioned that Side 1 could take a while due to the inclusion of a track from stalwarts of the 1980s Bristol live circuit, Renegade Flight. Your Cassette Pet! originally featured God Said, a track from one of their DIY cassettes that I picked up at a gig. As there's no immediate prospect of locating and digitising the tapes and God Said is currently unavailable online, I've opted for another song, Automation from roughly the same period. It's twice as long as God Said so the C90 running time is shot to pieces but I felt that Renegade Flight deserved a nod, sandwiched between Tears For Fears, Lou Reed and John Cale. Thanks, lads!
 
1) Get Back (Cover of The Beatles): Laibach (1988)
2) Holocaust (Cover of Big Star): This Mortal Coil ft. Howard Devoto (1984)
3) Red Planes (Album Version): Weekend (1982)
4) Sea Song (Cover of Robert Wyatt): The Icicle Works (1986)
5) The Prisoner (Album Version): Tears For Fears (1983)
6) Automation: Renegade Flight (1986)
7) It Wasn't Me: Lou Reed / John Cale (1990)
8) Waitin' For The Upturn: The The (1982)
9) Twilights & Lowlifes (Album Version): Marc & The Mambas (1982)
10) Another Day (Cover of Roy Harper): This Mortal Coil ft. Elizabeth Fraser (1984)
 
1982: La Varieté: 3 
1982: Untitled: 9
1983: The Hurting: 5
1983: Uncertain Smile EP / Soul Mining (cassette): 8
1984: It'll End In Tears: 2, 10
1986 (?): Renegade Flight (gig-only cassette): 6
1986: Up Here In The North Of England EP: 4
1988: Let It Be: 1 
1990: Songs For Drella: 7
 
Side One (48:08) (KF) (Mega)
Side Two here

Tuesday, 31 January 2023

The Sun Has Come Again To Hold You

Today's selection shines a spotlight on guest vocalists. All of the nine tracks have electronic leanings, veering from club to dub along the course of under an hour.

There will be some familiar names - Boy George, Texas, Elizabeth Fraser, Guy Garvey - and some less so, but they all add something unique to the song, even when put through the remix rinse.
 
Most of the artists will also be well known, with a couple of surprises tucked away. Cabana was a one-off collaboration between superstar DJ Sasha aka Alexander Coe and long-term producer Tom Frederikse. The former went on to global domination whilst the latter swapped music for law in 1999, specialising in Digital Media.
 
Battle Box was also a one-off project, this time for 3D aka Robert Del Naja, who pops up again with Massive Attack later in the selection.
 
The most unexpected pairing is perhaps Paul Weller and Boy George on One Tear in 2017. I haven't fact checked this at all, but was this their first time in the studio together since Band Aid in 1984? Whatever, it was worth the wait...!
 
1) Red Alert (Jaxx Radio Mix): Basement Jaxx ft. Blue James (1999)
2) Music Matters (Axwell Extended): Faithless ft. Cassandra Fox (2007)
3) Bailando Con Lobos (Goodmen Fresh Dub): Cabana ft. Sheila Schwok (1994)
4) Battle Box (Remix): Battle Box ft. Guy Garvey (2012)
5) The Hush (67% Mix): Rae & Christian ft. Texas (1998)
6) One Tear (Club Cut Alternative Version): Paul Weller ft. Boy George (2017)
7) Empire Ants (Miami Horror Remix): Gorillaz ft. Little Dragon (2010)
8) Group Four (Security Forces Dub) (Remix By Mad Professor): Massive Attack ft. Elizabeth Fraser (1998)
9) Strange Addiction (Bud Addiction) (Remix By Charlie May & Duncan Forbes): Spooky ft. Celestine Walcott-Gordon (2005)

The Sun Has Come Again To Hold You (58:22) (Box) (Mega)

Note: After yesterday's fiasco of accidentally leaving off Touch Me by The Doors from the Whatever Happened To Reg? selection, (running) order has been restored and you can now listen to/download the full playlist as intended. If you didn't notice the omission yesterday, please ignore this note and I may just get away with it...

Monday, 12 September 2022

Diving For More Pearls

Side 2 of a CD-R compiled by Atom Boy @ Metropolis Studios, Shizuoka, Japan, for me and Mrs. K in November 2004.
 
The second half of a rather brilliant compilation that we received as a gift in the winter of 2004. Six months later, Mrs. K and I spent a mind-blowing and unforgettable month in Japan, solely focused on the largest island Honshu, taking in Tokyo, Nara, Osaka, Kyoto and Hirsohima, amongst many other places. As part of the trip, we spent a week with Atom Boy and Atom Girl, who lived in Shizuoka not far from Mount Fuji. It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience for many reasons, packed with happy memories.

Side 2 of Diving For Pearls if anything ups the ante. Pink Industry's exhortation to throw "Morrissey in the bin" has appeared on one of my previous mixtapes, which I'm surprised to find I haven't yet posted here. I love Pink Industry's album New Beginnings, which features What I Wouldn't Give, and various tracks frequently populated my cassette compilations in the mid- to late-1980s.

Seamlessly flowing into The Smiths, the first album of theirs I bought was the Hatful Of Hollow compilation on cassette, so the radio sessions of several songs have remained the definitive versions for me. The version of Back To The Old House recorded for John Peel's show is sublime and a clear example of Johnny Marr's musical brilliance, coupled perfectly with the Manchester Racist's lyrical skill.

In an another obvious-but-it-works pairing, This Mortal Coil with Elizabeth Fraser covering Tim Buckley is followed by another song they covered on debut album It'll End In Tears, namely Another Day by Roy Harper. I don't think I'd heard the latter until receiving this compilation. Elizabeth Fraser's version is indelibly etched in my memory but Roy Harper's is beautiful and disturbing in it's own right. 

As for the final two songs, I'd be hard pressed to think of a better way to close this collection than with The Clash and Joy Division, whether in it's current incarnation as a two-sided compilation or in it's original 20-song, 80-minute mix as Atom Boy intended.

One of my favourite selections, full stop.
 
1) What I Wouldn't Give (Album Version): Pink Industry (1985)
2) Back To The Old House (John Peel Session): The Smiths (1983)
3) Gather All The Hours: Heidi Berry (1989)
4) Happiness Is Easy (Album Version): Talk Talk (1986)
5) Song To The Siren (Cover of Tim Buckley): This Mortal Coil ft. Elizabeth Fraser (1984)
6) Another Day (Album Version): Roy Harper (1970)
7) Maria: David Sylvian (1987)
8) Listening Wind: Talking Heads (1980)
9) Straight To Hell (Album Version): The Clash (1982)
10) Atmosphere (Sordide Sentimental Single Version): Joy Division (1979)
 

Thursday, 28 April 2022

Nothing More, Nothing Less, Love Is The Best

Today is a special day for a very special person. We've been to relatively few gigs together over the years, but they've always been special occasions.
 
Sometimes she didn't like the act (PJ Harvey), sometimes I haven't (Meat Loaf), sometimes the band have been damned awful on stage (Simple Minds), sometimes it's been possibly an emotional and brilliant experience (McAlmont & Butler, Green Gartside).
 
Regardless, it's always been all the better for the person at my side. 

This one's for you, Mrs. K.
 

Footnote: Today’s selection is made up of songs we heard at gigs between 2001 up to & including Madness, postponed from 2020 but hopefully going ahead in June. 

With the latter exception, all of the songs featured in the set lists and are presented here in the order that we (first) saw them live. Julian Cope’s the only act we’ve seen together multiple times. 

Stereo MC’s & Simple Minds were both unlikely headliners at the Bristol Community Festival aka Ashton Court Festival. The latter really were appallingly bad.

Roland Gift was the guest vocalist when we saw Jools Holland’s band at Westonbirt Arboretum in Gloucestershire. And bloody good he was too. 

Goldfrapp supported Duran Duran at the NEC in Birmingham for their first (only) reunion tour with the original line up including Andy Taylor. 


Saturday, 16 April 2022

Watching, Not Wanting

Side 2 of a mixtape, compiled 8th August 1998.
 
Some dirty, downtempo beats for you today, with a selection of tracks from the 1996-1998 period. Goodness knows how I managed to squeeze this onto a C90 cassette side, but...

Starting off with a superior demo of Blue Mug by GusGus, which subsequently appeared on their 1999 album This Is Normal and ending with a swampy remix of Massive Attack's Teardrop by Primal Scream, featuring the superlative vocals of Liz Fraser. In between, you get a couple of early 90s rappers - Justin Warfield and MC Tunes - in their respective new groups, One Inch Punch and Dust Junkys
 
Solex vs. The Hitmeister was one of my favourite albums of 1998 and Solex aka Elisabeth Esselink was a great live act, as was Laika, both of whom I saw at the time, to undeservedly modest audiences.
 
New Forms by Roni Size Reprazent was ubiquitous in 1998, yet more than lived up to the hype around it. The same can be said for When I Was Born For The 7th Time, Cornershop's 'surprise' hit on the back of a number 1 single with Brimful Of Asha.
 
I only have this one single by Rare and undoubtedly bought it for the Justin Robertson remix, not included here, but quite liked the other versions on the CD. As an added bonus for fact fans, Rare was a short-lived band from Derry, Northern Ireland, featuring none other than John O'Neill (credited as Seán Ó'Néill), formerly of The Undertones and That Petrol Emotion. The following year, Rare disbanded, The Undertones reformed without Feargal Sharkey, and continue to this day.
 
1) Blue Mug (Demo Version): GusGus (1998)
2) Metaphysics (ft. Mannish): One Inch Punch (1996)
3) Watching Windows (Album Version): Roni Size Reprazent ft. Onallee (1997)
4) Looking For The Jackalope (Single Version): Laika (1997)
5) The Foundation (Album Version): Thievery Corporation (1996)
6) Your Selfish Ways (Album Version By Mark Van Hoen): Locust ft. Zoe Niblett (1997)
7) What Is Happening: Cornershop (1997)
8) Solex In A Slipshod Style: Solex (1998)
9) Mind My Make-Up (Dust Junkys Remix): Finitribe ft. Katy Morrison (1998)
10) Seems Like (Bang Bang Mix By Xavier Jamaux): Rare (1998)
11) Teardrop (Scream Team Remix): Massive Attack ft. Elizabeth Fraser (1998)
 
Side Two (46:56) (Box) (Mega)

Friday, 25 June 2021

Der Trommelschlag Knackt Im Takt

A random selection for Friday, the only connection being that I haven't listened to any of these songs in far too long. The title is a German translation of 'the drum beat cracks in time', a line from The Anvil by Visage, although in the German version of the song the line becomes 'magisch schlagen die trommel' which translates into English as 'beat the drum magically'. 
 
1) Inner City Life (Rabbit In The Moon's Return To Vocalic City): Goldie ft. Diane Charlemagne (1996) 
2) Shining Bright Star (Zongamin Remix): Black Strobe (2007)
3) Kowalski (Automator Mix): Primal Scream (1997)
4) Runark (Jokers Of The Scene Remix): Congorock (2009)
5) Aqualung (Dub): Spooky (1994)
6) Der Amboss (Vocal) (Remix By Visage & John Luongo): Visage (1982)
7) Little Bit (Loving Hand Remix By Tim Goldsworthy): Lykke Li (2008)
8) Laugh (Vox-Reverse Tele) (Remix By DJ Vadim): Low (1998)
9) Teardrop (Scream Team Remix): Massive Attack ft. Elizabeth Fraser (1998)
10) Fast Forward The Future (Buckets & Bongs Mixture By The Orb) (Album Edit): Zodiac Youth (1991)