Showing posts with label Mike Hedges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike Hedges. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 March 2025

More Altered Perceptions


Side 2 of an 80s mixtape recorded 26th November 1999.

Another compilation that's taken me ages to return to, Side 1 making an appearance here in November 2023. Better late than never...!

In 1987, Get It On by T. Rex was re-released with a new remix by Tony Visconti. I don't remember why exactly, as the (rather excellent) Best Of The 20th Century Boy compilation had already been out for a couple of years and there was no jeans ad tie-in as far as I recall. There were two 12" singles with new extended versions: the Dawn Mix on yellow vinyl and the Dusk Mix on blue vinyl; I've got both, there's not a lot of difference between the two.

Propaganda's second single was Duel, a gorgeous slice of Germanic pop. On the flip side was its roughneck relation, Jewel, Claudia Brücken's sweet voice replaced by Susanne Freytag's shouty vocals. Similarly, their album A Secret Wish was mirrored with a remix companion, Wishful Thinking. It's a bit hit-and-mix, but the remix of Duel/Jewel is superb, creating a sublime duet between Susanne and Claudia.

Love Like Blood is arguably Killing Joke's defining song and originally came out in two extended 12" single formats. Not content with that, producer Zeus B. Held had a go at the song, providing the flip side to his other remix of 1986 single Adorations. This one adds a few contemporary remix touches, including some crowd noises for some reason, to firmly root the song in the mid-1980s.

I do have the 12" single of More by Doctor & The Medics, which features a remix by an up-and-coming artist called William Orbit. Unfortunately, I don't have a MP3 rip and couldn't find an alternative on t'internet. So, I've grabbed the intro from the video version and spliced it with a slight edit of the album version and Hey Presto! a DIY extended version to fill the void. Derivative it may be, but I like this song.

Derivative is not a word that could be used to describe Peek-A-Boo by Siouxsie & The Banshees. When I first heard it in 1988, I was thrilled by this change of direction for the band. Unfortunately, the rest of the album is less experimental and more familiar, but the impact of this song hasn't diminished. Peek-A-Boo was released on 7", 12" (two of 'em) and CD single. The eight minute Silver Dollar Mix which appeared on the limited edition 12" single is in fact an edit; the full length version appeared in the USA and runs for another two minutes.

Whilst Siouxsie and co were trying to push themselves in a new direction, by 1988 Iggy Pop had pretty much gone full hair metal. I like the album Instinct but it's dumb rock, even by Iggy's standards, though unapologetically so. I first heard this remix of Cold Metal on the Sounds Blasts! 1 EP, a freebie 7" single with music paper Sounds that also featured The Blue Aeroplanes (yay!), Fishbone (mmmm) and the Dan Reed Network (meh). 

Closing out this compilation is my favourite version of Two Tribes by Frankie Goes To Hollywood, the Carnage remix by Trevor Horn and Stephen Lipson following the standard ZTT format of instrumental first half and vocal second half. However, they also chuck in a few vocal snippets from Nash, Peds and Mark taken from throwaway B-side 'interviews', which add a bit of colour. 

As with my previous post, I've tracked down the videos for each song, or TV performances where these aren't available. The clip for Jewel by Propaganda is a real treat. The others run the range from so so serious (Killing Joke) to stunning (Siouxsie) to silly (Doctor & The Medics) to... well, you've just got to see Iggy Pop's video to wonder how many cans of hairspray the film crew got through for this one.

And then there's Two Tribes, possibly one of the greatest videos ever made. If a band tried to do that today, the pustulous orange turd would probably buy MTV, install himself as CEO and shut it down. That's if the barrel chested bareback rider hadn't already dealt with them permanently.
 
1) 
Get It On (Dusk Mix) (Tony Visconti 87 Remix): T. Rex (1987)
2) Jewelled (Remix By Robert Kraushaar & Paul Morley): Propaganda (1985)
3) Love Like Blood (The '86 Remix By Zeus B. Held): Killing Joke (1986)
4) More (Full Video Version By Doctor & The Medics & Graham Meek): Doctor & The Medics (1987)
5) Peek-A-Boo (Silver Dollar Mix By Mike Hedges) (Edit): Siouxsie & The Banshees (1988)
6) Cold Metal (Rock Version By Andy Wallace): Iggy Pop (1988)
7) Two Tribes (Carnage) (Remix By Trevor Horn & Stephen Lipson): Frankie Goes To Hollywood (1984)

Side Two (46:06) (KF) (Mega)
Side One here

 
 
 
 
 
 

Monday, 10 April 2023

Remember The Sound That Could Wake The Dead?

I don't care if Monday's blue or black and you can hold your head all you like, I don't have to wait until Friday to be in love with The Cure.

I love a remix and remixes of The Cure have always been worth the price of admission, so much so that Robert Smith endorsed a whole album of 'em with 1990's Mixed Up. 
 
When The Cure's back catalogue reissue campaign reached Mixed Up in 2018, not content with just including a bonus disc of previously released 12" versions, Robert Smith turned in a whole new album's worth of his own remixes called Torn Down.

Today's hour-long selection includes 12 x 12" mixes, spanning 1981 to 2018, none straying too far from The Cure's blueprint sound.

1) Primary (Extended) (12" Version By Mike Hedges & Robert Smith) (1981)
2) To The Sky (Resurrection Mix By John M. Pillin Jr.) (1990)
3) In Your House (Black Sand Extension) (2010)
4) Hello I Love You (Unreleased Psychedelic Mix) (Cover of The Doors) (1990)
5) Never Enough (Time To Kill Mix By Robert Smith) (2018)
6) Gone! (Critter Mix By Jeff Newell) (1996)
7) Just One Kiss (Remember Mix By Robert Smith) (2018)
8) Fascination Street (Extended Remix By Robert Smith & Mark Saunders) (1989)
9) Lost (Found Mix By Robert Smith) (2018)
10) This Is A Lie (Ambient Mix By Tim Palmer) (1996)
11) From The Edge Of The Deep Green Sea (Love In Vain Mix By Robert Smith) (2018)
12) In Between Days (Extended Version By Robert Smith & David M. Allen) (1985)

1981: Primary EP: 1
1985: In Between Days EP: 12
1989: Fascination Street EP: 8
1990: Art Of Compilation 5 (bootleg CD): 2
1996: Gone! EP: 6, 10
2004: Join The Dots: 4
2010: Black Sand Extensions Volume 1: 3
2018: Mixed Up/Extras/Torn Down (3x CD): 5, 7, 9, 11
 
Wake The Dead (1:04:07) (Box) (Mega)