Showing posts with label Leila. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leila. Show all posts

Friday, 28 February 2025

Blue, Gene


Remembering Gene Hackman, 30th January 1930 to 26th February 2025.

Ernie Goggins at 27 Leggies posted Too Many RIPs on Thursday, noting the recent losses of Jerry Butler, Gwen McCrae, Ken Parker, Bill Fay and Roberta Flack (with Rick Buckler from The Jam also noted). "This has got to stop", pleaded Ernie.

Sadly, later the same day, news emerged that Gene Hackman, his wife Betsy Arakawa and one of the family dogs had all been discovered dead at the home on the Old Sunset Trail in Santa Fe County, New Mexico. 

I will add some words to this post at a later date, as there is a greater understanding of the tragic circumstances that led to this discovery, and to reflect on the impact of Gene's immense and varied acting career.

In the meantime, in time-honoured knee jerk tradition, I've responded by collating an hour-long Dubhed selection, all song titles drawn from Gene's film and TV career. With over 100 credits, there were no shortage of quality contenders, but I think the final 14 hit the spot.

No apologies for tracks 11 and 14, which shoehorn in the film via the subtitle, they were too good to ignore. Likewise, who will argue that the opening song drops the definite article when it's Joni Mitchell?

Farewell, Gene and Betsy.

1) Conversation: Joni Mitchell (1970)
2) Route 66 (Single Version) (Cover of Nat King Cole & The King Cole Trio): Depeche Mode (1987)
3) Bonnie And Clyde (Cover of Serge Gainsbourg & Brigitte Bardot): Mick Harvey ft. Anita Lane (1995)
4) Misunderstood (Album Version): Leila ft. Donna Paul (1998)
5) Two Of A Kind: Superstar (1998)
6) The Mexican (Short Version): Jellybean ft. Jenny Haan (1987)
7) Downhill Racer (Kenny Dope Remix): Everything But The Girl (2004)
8) The Quick & The Dead: Ladyhawke (2012)
9) Twilight (Album Version): Hifi Sean & David McAlmont (2025)
10) Superman (Album Version) (Cover of The Clique): R.E.M. (1986)
11) Wish You Were Here... (Postcards From The Edge) (Remix By Ashley Beedle): The Aloof (1996)
12) Another Woman (Album Version): Moby ft. Barbara Lynn (2000)
13) Crimson Tide: Destroyer (2020)
14) Plug Me In (The French Connection) (Remix By Rick Phylip-Jones): Scarlet Fantastic (1987)

Blue, Gene (1:01:08) (KF) (Mega)

Thursday, 26 December 2024

The Life And Times (Of A Man Called Terry)

 
Apologies for a typo in yesterday's post. When I wrote "be sure to drop by tomorrow for a Boxing Day special.", what I meant was "Boxing Day Specials". The Specials, that is, who top and tail today's selection.
 
More specifically, this is a nearly hour-long tribute to Terry Hall, who passed on 18th December 2022. It's hard to believe that two years have gone by.
 
Not that Terry's ever really away from my music playlists. Like the Imaginary Compilation Album that I created for The Vinyl Villain in 2021, this 13-song selection draws from Terry's rich history of bands, collaborations and solo releases, some that will be immediately familiar, other deeper cuts that you may not know. 
 
The common thread is Terry's wonderful voice, character and way with words. Every one a winner.

As an added Boxing Day treat, I've reactivated links to the aforementioned Imaginary Compilation Album, plus the companion ICA created by TVV mastermind JC following mine. I recreated the pair as four sides of faux vinyl and posted them as a tribute to Terry, on hearing the awful news of his death.

Terry, you are missed but never forgotten.
 
1) Stereotype: The Specials (1980)
2) Sugar Man (Album Version): Silent Poets ft. Terry Hall (1999)
3) Heart Of America: The Colourfield (1987)
4) Getting Over You (Album Version): Hiroshi Fujiwara ft. Terry Hall (1994)
5) Alone: Fun Boy Three ft. Bananarama (1982)
6) Love Will Keep Us Together: Terry, Blair & Anouchka (1990)
7) Sense (Album Version) (Cover of Lightning Seeds): Terry Hall (1994)
8) Problem Is (Album Version): Dub Pistols ft. Terry Hall (2001)
9) Why Should I?: Leila ft. Terry Hall & Martina Topley-Bird (2008)
10) Poems (Edit): Nearly God ft. Terry Hall & Martina Topley-Bird (1996)
11) Stand Together: Terry Hall & Mushtaq (2003)
12) Walk Into The Wind: Vegas ft. Siobahn Fahey (1992)
13) The Life And Times (Of A Man Called Depression): The Specials (2019)

1980: Stereotype EP: 1
1982: FB3: 5
1987: Deception: 3
1990: Ultra Modern Nursery Rhyme EP: 6 
1992: Walk Into The Wind EP: 12
1994: Home: 7
1994: Nothing Much Better To Do: 4 
1996: Poems EP: 10
1999: To Come...: 2
2001: Six Million Ways To Die: 8
2003: The Hour Of Two Lights: 11
2008: Blood, Looms & Blooms: 9
2019: Encore: 13

The Life And Times (Of A Man Called Terry) (56:36) (KF) (Mega)

Saturday, 29 June 2024

Saturday's Alright For Alighting

A bumper selection of train-themed/titled songs for you to steam into the weekend. It's been done before - and undoubtedly better - elsewhere in the blogosphere, but when I have ever let that stop me in the pursuit of an unoriginal idea?!

So, two volumes to neatly fill a C90 cassette, 25 songs across an hour and a half, criss-crossing the globe as we go and ignoring the logistics of traversing those pesky oceans, seas and rivers.

All aboard!
 
Volume One 
1) Rail On: Julian Cope (1989)
2) King Of The Track: Dennis Alcapone (1974)
3) Ur Train: Leila ft. Luca Santucci (2008)
4) Can't Catch The Train: Soulsavers ft. Mark Lanegan (2009)
5) Beside The Railway Tracks: The Divine Comedy (2010)
6) Mule Train (Cover of Buz Butler): Count Prince Miller (1970)
7) Roots Train (Album Version): Junior Murvin (1977)
8) The Last Train: Josh Rouse (2005)
9) Last Train To Lhasa (2k2 Mix): Banco De Gaia (2015)
10) Railroad Man: Eels (2005)
11) Train Of Thought (Remix 7" Version): a-ha (1986)
12) Last Train To Satansville (Satansville Revisited) (Album Version): Swervedriver (1993)

Volume Two
1) The Gravy Train (Nightmares On Wax Mix - Delayed Departure Edit By Khayem): Ian Brown (2002/2024)
2) No Train To Stockholm (Cover of Lee Hazlewood): Erlend Øye (2002)
3) Long Empty Train: The Gadgets (1983)
4) Night Train To Lichtenstien: Dawn Of The Replicants (1998)
5) Stop The Train: The Wailers (1970)
6) Blue Train: The Bluebells (2023)
7) Long Black Train: Richard Hawley (2001)
8) It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry: Bob Dylan (1965)
9) Railroad Blues: Beastie Boys (2000)
10) Dead Grammas On A Train: Thin White Rope (1985)
11) Victoria Train Station Massacre: The Fall (2017)
12) Train Is Coming: Iklan ft. Law Holt (2020)
13) Lame Train (Single Version): Flesh For Lulu (1983)
 
1965: Highway 61 Revisited: B8
1970: Mule Train EP: A6 
1970: Stop The Train EP: B5
1974: King Of The Track: A2 
1977: Police & Thieves: A7
1983: Blue Album: B3 
1983: Roman Candle EP: B13
1985: Exploring The Axis: B10
1986: Train Of Thought EP: A11
1989: China Doll EP: A1 
1993: Mezcal Head: A12 
1998: Hogwash Farm (The Diesel Hands E.P.): B4 
2000: Country Mike’s Greatest Hits: B9
2001: Late Night Final: B7
2002: Remixes Of The Spheres: B1*
2002: Total Lee! The Songs Of Lee Hazlewood: B2
2005: Bedroom Classics Vol. 2 EP: A8 
2005: Blinking Lights And Other Revelations: A10
2008: Blood, Looms & Blooms: A3
2009: Broken: A4
2015: Last Train To Lhasa EP: A9 
2017: New Facts Emerge: B11
2020: Album Number 1 Featuring Law Holt: B12
2020: Bang Goes The Knighthood/More Sordid Details (Expanded Edition): A5
2023: In The 21st Century: B6

* This is essentially the main vocal mix, with the first 90 seconds of the instrumental mix tacked onto the front to provide an extended intro.

Volume One (46:10) (KF) (Mega)
Volume Two (45:33) (KF) (Mega)
 
Today's cover photo is Queenstown Road Station in London, snapped and written about by 'Joe Blogs' in August 2010.

Tuesday, 28 February 2023

Still Watching, Yet Not Wanting

Side 1 of a cassette compilation, compiled 8th August 1998. If Side 2 stretched the C90 capacity to it's limit, Side 1 must surely have snapped the tape...

Your ride begins with Trust by Money Mark, from his 1998 album Push The Button. I knew of Money Mark from his association with Beastie Boys but this record saw him veering into - in my mind, at least - Elton John territory at times. Though thankfully by that I mean Elton's imperial 1970s phase, not the then-contemporary Something About The Way You Look Tonight/Candle in the Wind 1997, which remains the all-time best-selling single in the UK. Money Mark's track is building, rabble-rousing instrumental, much more in keeping with what follows.
 
Barry Adamson versus Skylab, Kid Loco taking on both Pulp and Saint Etienne. I previously described the mixtape as "dirty, downtempo beats" and this was very much the style du jour in the late 1990s.  
 
Theo Keating continues to release music as Fake Blood but when I recorded this cassette, he'd released a single called Ooh La La as The Wiseguys. It entered - and peaked - the UK chart at #55. The song's subsequent use in a Budweiser commercial saw it released a year later in June 1999, where it did rather better, entering at #2 and spending 5 weeks in the Top 30. His remix of Desire by Mulu is really good but had little positive impact on it's own chart placing, managing just 1 week at #84 in November 1997. 
 
My introduction to Trembling Blue Stars came by my jangly indie music-loving girlfriend, who was a big fan of The Field Mice and followed Bobby Wratten's subsequent band. I'm very glad she did. I'm only familiar with Trembling Blue Stars' two albums from the 1990s (there were two more before they disbanded in 2010) and they're both things of understated beauty. The Rainbow was released as a single and really shines in it's longer (album) version.
 
A small confession #1. The original cassette featured an alternative mix of A Little Soul by Pulp, from the CD single. I haven't unearthed and uploaded the shiny disc, so swapped it out for the Kid Loco. It's to blame for the ridiculous running time though I think the segue into Desire by Mulu works better than the original sequence.
 
A small confession #2. This is the second appearance of The Box (Part Four) by Orbital, following a previous appearance in my Boxing Day selection in December 2021. However, as the link for that one is long dead, I'm glad to represent the song here.

Also making a second appearance on this mixtape is Justin Warfield. On Side 1, he's hiding in plain sight as One Inch Punch; here, he's a guest of Cornershop

Moby ups the ante with a remix of Honey, his 'comeback' single in 1998 following his thrash metal phase. I've not counted, but I'm assuming the 118 in the mix title refers to the beats per minute. Try making a cup of tea whilst dancing to this one and not making a complete mess. Maybe that's not what Moby intended.

Bringing things to a close is Leila with a track from her astonishing debut Like Weather. It's typical of the album as a whole: beautiful, simple yet stirring chords and synth washes with moments that push the needle way into the red, just in case you were getting complacent.

I'll sign off with an apology to Walter at the excellent A Few Good Times In My Life blog. He left some very kind comments on my original post in April 2022, to which I replied, "I'll try not to leave it too long before posting Side One...!" I think at a little over ten months later, it's fair to say I tried and failed. Sorry, Walter, I hope it was worth the wait...
 
1) Trust: Money Mark (1998)
2) What It Means (Skylab A Smokin' Japanese We're Chicken In Moss Side Mix): Barry Adamson (1998)
3) A Little Soul (Lafayette Velvet Revisited Mix By Kid Loco): Pulp (1998)
4) Desire (Wiseguys Remix By DJ Touché aka Theo Keating): Mulu (1997)
5) 4.35 In The Morning (Talkin' Blues Mix By Kid Loco): Saint Etienne (1998)
6) The Rainbow (Long Version): Trembling Blue Stars (1998)
7) The Box (Part Four) (Vocal Reprise): Orbital ft. Grant Fulton & Alison Goldfrapp (1996)
8) Candyman: Cornershop ft. Justin Warfield (1997)
9) Honey (118 Mix): Moby (1998)
10) Piano-String: Leila (1998)
 
Side One (47:37) (Box) (Mega)
Side Two here

Friday, 29 July 2022

Alien Attack!

Side 2 of a cassette compilation, featuring some indie - and not-so-indie - tunes, recorded 22nd July 1998.
 
Tenuous link(s) time: 
 
1) Today's photo is a TV screen grab of a scene from 1982 film The Soldier, which grabbed my attention in a late-hours/should-have-gone-to-bed moment solely because the credits mentioned the soundtrack music was by Tangerine Dream. I sat through the film (I may have had a couple of micro sleeps in between) and coming to a realisation at the end that at least it was an hour and a half of my life I wouldn't have to repeat. The film's tenuous link to today's mixtape title is that whilst there clearly is an attack (one of many), there are zero aliens from start to finish. Putting aliens in the film may have actually helped.

2) Previous Friday selections have often tried to get the party started, with some upbeat music, daring some times with some actual disco (never a particularly popular choice, it seems). Today's tenuous link to Friday music is that the selection includes a song by Gavin Friday. I'm not expecting any comments that this selection has generated an uncontrollable urge to conga into the streets, banging a saucepan with a wooden spoon, whooping with delight and urging your neighbours to join the line.

For all that, much to enjoy, I hope. A couple of big hitters with Radiohead and The Smashing Pumpkins, a couple of off-shoot projects with The Sea Nymphs (Cardiacs) and Black Box Recorder (Luke Haines/The Auteurs), a couple from the 1980s with My Bloody Valentine and It's Immaterial and one 1970s alternative classic from Big Star.
 
Other than that, it's mid-late 1990s all the way with Stereolab, Leila, the aforementioned Gavin Friday, The High Llamas and The Wolfgang Press  
 
Now, excuse me whilst I go and find a saucepan and wooden spoon, I've got me some whooping and a-hollering and, er, conga-ing to do...
 
1) (Nice Dream) (Album Version): Radiohead (1995)
2) Monstre Sacre: Stereolab (1996)
3) No More Sorry: My Bloody Valentine (1988)
4) Eye: The Smashing Pumpkins (1996)
5) Misunderstood (Album Version): Leila ft. Donna Paul (1998)
6) Dolls: Gavin Friday (1995)
7) The Sweet Life: It's Immaterial (1986)
8) Christ Alive: The Sea Nymphs (1995)
9) Showstop Hip Hop (Edit): The High Llamas (1997)
10) Kanga Roo: Big Star (1975)
11) Ideal Home: Black Box Recorder (1998)
12) Chains (Album Version): The Wolfgang Press ft. Claudia Fontaine (1995)
 
1975: 3rd: 10
1986: Life's Hard And Then You Die: 7
1988: Isn't Anything: 3
1995: The Bends: 1
1995: Funky Little Demons: 12
1995: The Sea Nymphs: 8
1995: Shag Tobacco: 6
1996: Emperor Tomato Ketchup: 2 
1996: Lost Highway OST: 4
1998: England Made Me: 11
1998: In-Car Stereo (Melody Maker promo CD): 9
1998: Like Weather: 5
 
Side Two (46:43) (Box) (Mega)

Wednesday, 16 February 2022

Kinesthesia

Side 1 of a mixtape, compiled in 1998 for my brother and his wife, probably as a Christmas/New Year gift. 
 
The selection is essentially my 'favourites of 1998', with one or two in-year purchases thrown in for good measure. Two of the standout albums for 1998 were Like Weather and Solex vs. The Hitmeister, whilst UNKLE finally delivered their debut as an artist, Psyence Fiction, which had a impressive line-up of guests and almost - but didn't quite - live up to the hype. However, it delivered an outstanding video for Rabbit In Your Headlights and remix by 3D from Massive Attack.
 
Singles-wise, Cornershop's Sleep On The Left Side included a brace of great remixes from Ashley Beedle, plus the none-more-80s retrofit from Les Rythmes Digitales aka Stuart Price, back when he was masquerading as French DJ Jacques Lu Cont. 
 
Opening track To Ulrike M. appeared on a Select magazine promo CD; the single itself featured remixes by Zero 7 and Tosca (aka Richard Dorfmeister & Rupert Huber), which I've still yet to hear. Every time I hear this track I remind myself that I need to track down a copy, then promptly forget. This has been going on for over two decades now.
 
Likewise, the Jungle Brothers remix is another that popped up on a promo CD in 1998, this time Melody Maker, and may well have been the first music I'd heard by Midfield General aka Skint label head Damian Harris. The line-up of remixers for the single is a snapshot of 1998: Stereo MCs, Natural Born Chillers, Da Beatminerz, Hardknox, even The Fugees.
 
A couple of songs were criminally relegated to B-side/EP status, namely Barry Adamson's cinematic cover of Da Juice's 1991 club track Hear The Angels and another track tucked away on the multi-format release of Mansun's Being A Girl. I wasn't a particular fan of Mansun, although I liked the lead track, but I bought one of the two CD singles specifically for Railings, written by and featuring a guest vocal from Howard Devoto. You may not be surprised to read that, in my opinion, it's Mansun's finest song.
 
Today's photo was taken in St. John's Lane, a side street in Gloucester that leads from the main shopping area and in a roundabout way eventually connects to the cathedral and garden, where I'll often spend a lunch break, when I'm working in the city. The main grafitti quotes Martin Luther King from a speech he gave in St. Louis on 22nd March 1964. 
 
You'll have to zoom in to see it, but I was struck by the handwritten note stuck on the boarding to the left of it, which reads (sic) "If you are readin this, you and your vehicle? are being recorded on C.C.T.V." Judging by the hand prints and stains around the notice, this apparently was an irresistible invitation for some. I hope the C.C.T.V. captured their best side...
 
1) To Ulrike M. (Original Mix): Doris Days (1998)
2) Behind The Mask (The Orbital Remix): Yellow Magic Orchestra (1992)
3) Sleep On The Left Side (Paris) (Les Rythmes Digitales' Living By Numbers Mix By Stuart Price): Cornershop (1998)
4) Madam, Your Carriage Awaits: Bentley Rhythm Ace (1998)
5) Hear The Angels (Cover of Da Juice): Barry Adamson (1996)
6) Rabbit In Your Headlights (3D Mix-Reverse Light) (Remix By Robert Del Naja & Neil Davidge): UNKLE (1998)
7) Something: Leila ft. Luca Santucci (1998)
8) Brain (Midfield General Remix By Damian Harris): Jungle Brothers (1997)
9) There's A Solex On The Run: Solex (1998)
10) Railings: Mansun ft. Howard Devoto (1998)
 
1992: Hi-Tech / No Crime: 2
1997: Brain EP: 8 
1998: Being A Girl EP: 10
1998: Can't Get Loose EP: 5
1998: For Your Ears Only: 4 
1998: Like Weather: 7
1998: Rabbit In Your Headlights EP: 6
1998: Sleep On The Left Side EP: 3 
1998: Solex vs. The Hitmeister: 9
1998: To Ulrike M. EP: 1
 
 
Side One (46:14) (Box) (Mega)

Wednesday, 29 December 2021

Why Should I Worry?

Martina Topley-Bird's 4th album, Forever I Want, came out in September but I won't have a physical (CD) copy until January 2022. A default contender then for next year's 'best of', though Martina's music is arguably a winner in any year. 

Today's selection dips into Martina's musical history, including her solo albums, frequent collaborations with Tricky and guest spots with Massive Attack and Leila. It goes without saying that it's all wonderful.

Side One
1) Sandpaper Kisses (Acoustic Version By Martina Topley-Bird & Damon Albarn): Martina Topley-Bird (2010)
2) Carnies (Album Version By Danger Mouse & Kennie Takahashi): Martina Topley-Bird (2008) 
3) Suffocated Love (Album Version By Tricky & Mark Saunders): TrIcky ft. Martina Topley-Bird (1995)
4) Why Should I?: Leila ft. Terry Hall & Martina Topley-Bird (2008)
5) Hours Away: Martina Topley-Bird (2003)
 
Side Two
1) Makes Me Wanna Die (Single Version By Tricky & Ian Caple): Tricky ft. Martina Topley-Bird (1997)
2) Babel: Massive Attack ft. Martina Topley-Bird (2010)
3) When We Die: TrIcky ft. Martina Topley-Bird (2017)
4) Abbaon Fat Tracks (Album Version): Tricky ft. Martina Topley-Bird (1995)
5) Black Coffee: Nearly God ft. Martina Topley-Bird (1996)
 
1995: Maxinquaye: A3, B4
1996: Nearly God: B5
1997: Makes Me Wanna Die EP: B1
2003: Need One EP: A5
2008: The Blue God: A2
2008: Blood, Looms & Blooms: A4
2010: Some Place Simple: A1 
2010: Heligoland: B2
2017: ununiform: B3
 

Sunday, 10 October 2021

Resolutions

Mix CD circa 2000, featuring Leila, collecting rarities, remixes and bootlegs originally available as free downloads from the now defunct www.leilamusic.co.uk website. Many of these tracks are still available on Leila's Soundcloud page. You can also buy several of Leila's official album and single releases on her Bandcamp page.
 
1) Relax The Pleasuredome: Leila (1998)
2) Are You That Adult. (Aaliyah vs. Adult. mash-up): Leila (1999)
3) Heaven On Their Minds (Cover of Carl Anderson /Jesus Christ Superstar): Leila ft. Luca Santucci (1998)
4) Mood State: Leila (1998)
5) Intro-vert: Leila (1998)
6) Space Invaders Need A Resolution (Aaliyah vs. Space Invaders soundtrack mash-up): Headgirl On Top (1999)
7) Two: Leila (1999)
8) Bill Murray: Leila (1999) *
9) Do You Got Time (Cover of 'Let The Music Play' by Shannon): Leila (1998)
10) Summers Dub: Leila ft. Donna Paul (1998)
11) Have I Had You: Leila ft. Luca Santucci (1998)
12) Five: Leila (1999)
13) Track 4: Leila (1997)
14) Outro-vert (LWT Mix): Leila ft. Luca Santucci (1998)
15) Seashells: Leila ft. Luca Santucci (1999)
16) Misunderstood (After Eight Mix): Leila ft. Donna Paul (1998)
17) Shimmy, Shimmy, Shimmy, Rock My World (Michael Jackson vs. Ol' Dirty Bastard mash-up): Leila (1999)
18) One In A Million (One In A Loud Million Bootleg Remix By Leila): Aaliyah (1999)
 
1997: Don't Fall Asleep EP: 13
1998: Space, Love EP: 4, 16
1998: Heaven On Their Minds / Have I Had You EP (promo 12" & CDr, 25 copies): 3, 11
1998: Feeling EP: 5, 10, 14
1999: Soda Stream EP: 7, 12, 15
2000: Courtesy Of Choice (limited vinyl edition): 1
2000: Courtesy Of Choice - It's Only A Promo (withdrawn CD): 9
2000: www.leilamusic.co.uk exclusives: 2, 6, 8*, 17, 18 
(* track 8 has since been re-titled and re-posted on Leila's Soundcloud page as The Man Who Knew Tooo Little)
 

Sunday, 5 September 2021

Debutante

Björk's first album, inevitably titled Debut, remains one of my all-time favourite albums. It's both of the moment and timeless, capturing and resonating with a pivotal time in my life and finding new ways to entrance and motivate me, nearly three decades later. I was a big fan of The Sugarcubes, loved their remix album It's-It, and yet nothing prepared me for the sheer brilliance of Björk unleashed (released?). She would go on to create more and more groundbreaking music, but perhaps never as raw or energised as her debut solo album.

Tuesday, 8 December 2020

50@50, Part Three: 1990-1999

Side One (30:09)
21) Loaded (Andrew Weatherall Mix): Primal Scream (1990)
22) 101 (Sonic Shuffle) (Remix By Andrew Weatherall & Hugo Nicholson): Finitribe (1991)
23) Fallen (Nancy & Lee Mix By Andrew Weatherall & One Dove): One Dove (1992)
24) What Godzilla Said To God When His Name Wasn't Found In The Book Of Life (Home Demo): American Music Club (1993)
25) Becoming More Like God (Radio Edit): Jah Wobble's Invaders Of The Heart ft. Anneli Drecker (1994)

Side Two (25:11)
26) Planet Telex (Album Version): Radiohead (1995)
27) Les Yper-Sound (Album Version): Stereolab (1996)
28) Dry The Rain (Single Version): The Beta Band (1997)
29) Feelings: Leila ft. Donna Paul (1998)
30) Les Nuits (Album Version): Nightmares On Wax (1999)


This could have been a shorter Side One if I'd included the radio edits of Primal Scream and Finitribe, but it would have been a disservice to both tracks so in true K-Tel tradition, I went for the full half hour side of vinyl for this one, and be damned with the quality. I first heard Loaded on The Chart Show, but the full 12" version was like something transmitted from a parallel universe. And so began my lifelong love affair with the genius that is Andrew Weatherall. Finitribe had previously been an industrial dance act, but 101 took them to a whole new level and again Weatherall provided the extra push over the cliff, not quite chucking in the kitchen sink but slinging a clacking computer printer into the mix. As if that wasn't enough, he enabled Glasgow's One Dove to shine brightly although sadly all too briefly. American Music Club had some major label interest in the early-mid 1990s and I was lucky enough to see them live in concert around this time,  but one of my favourite songs (and song titles) is a scrappy home demo from their Mercury album. Jah Wobble is Jah Wobble. 'Nuff said. The Bends is my favourite Radiohead album and Emperor Tomato Ketchup is my favourite Stereolab album, who were also awesome live in concert. My friend Stu introduced me to The Beta Band via The Patty Patty Sound EP, but it was a defining moment to hear John Cusack drop this song in a pivotal moment in the film version of High Fidelity. Likewise, listening to Leila's Like Weather album in Stu's London bedsit in the wee hours after a night on the town was a defining moment. It was another friend, Dave (long departed, never forgotten), who educated me in all things Nightmares On Wax, including this pre-millenium gem. Our mutual love of electronica and dance music shimmied us into the 21st century, seeking newer and weirder beats. And we got them. And more. Much more.