Showing posts with label Sting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sting. Show all posts

Saturday, 18 January 2025

When I'm By Myself...


Side 1 of a cassette compilation, recorded May 1992.
 
A bit of an oddity in my collection, this one, as it was never recorded by me or for me, but by my brother's then-fiancée. Both the relationship and the cassette were subsequently discarded and, if memory serves, I rescued this and a few other tapes that my brother had binned and intended for landfill.

I think I was curious about this collection in particular because it contains lots of singer/songwriter heavyweights that I recognised by name but was largely ignorant of. So, it was a good opportunity to dip my toe into the waters.

I'd like to say that this was my springboard into the worlds of Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell and Jackson Browne. It wasn't, but it opened my eyes and ears and eventually I started dipping into Bob, Joni and Jackson's respective back catalogues. Although I've yet to own a Sting album and I'm in no particular rush to do so.
 
The collection opens with 80s Dylan, but it's okay, it's one of the good ones. I'm not familiar enough with Joni Mitchell's vast body of work to know if there are similarly certain periods and/or album that should come with their own "enter at your own risk" warning, but Hejira presents no such threat.

On paper, The Cure's debut B-side seems the errant choice, nestled between Sting and Sinéad, but it fits right in and still hits the same sweet spot as it did when I first heard on the double play greatest hits cassette, Standing On A Beach: The Singles (And Unavailable B-Sides), in 1986.
 
My Special Child was a standalone single by Sinéad O'Connor, peaking at #42 in the UK in June 1991. I was still travelling around Australia at the time, which probably explains why I had no recollection of the song. It's an okay song, though with that voice, Sinéad's 'okay' is still way above many other artist's 'excellent'.

The original compilation featured the album version of Airwaves by Thomas Dolby from his 1982 debut, The Golden Age Of Wireless. I've swapped it out here for the earlier demo version, which appeared on the 1980 cassette From Brussels With Love, on the now-legendary label Les Disques Du Crépuscule. I love this pared down, less tech-y version, which sits better with the warmer, organic sounds infusing this collection.

I know The Beautiful South were big back in the day, and had lots of hit records. Even so, I still don't think Paul Heaton gets the level of recognition and appreciation he should, as one of the finest singers and songwriters to emerge in the 1980s. I don't listen to his music as often as I should. Hearing a song like Let Love Speak Up Itself makes me question why.

I heard Cowboy Junkies' cover of Powderfinger before I heard the song as written and recorded by Neil Young. it followed the achingly slow template of the Trinity Sessions album and remains the definitive version for me. 
 
The same month that my brother's girlfriend put I'd Rather Go Blind by Chicken Shack, I also acquired the song via Vox magazine's cover mounted cassette freebie, Radio Daze (The John Peel Sessions). The fact that the opening song was 10.15 Saturday Night makes me think that she included both songs from the very same compilation. 
 
I'd Rather Go Blind is another example where I was deeply immersed in the cover long before I heard the original version, in this case Etta James in 1967. The song has been covered many, many times since by the likes of Rod Stewart, Ruby Turner, Janet Kay, Paul Weller, Beyoncé and Dua Lipa. Chicken Shack's version is hard to beat, not least for the sublime vocals by Christine Perfect aka the much-missed Christine McVie.

The Road by Jackson Browne is a bit of an oddity. Taken from his 1977 album Running On Empty, according to Iffypedia, "the entire album was recorded on tour, either live on stage, or in locations associated with touring, such as backstage, on tour buses, or in hotel rooms".

The song itself is a prime example. The first half was recorded in room 301 of the Cross Keys Inn in Columbia, Maryland on 27th August 1977. The second half switches to a live recording at the Garden State Arts Center in Holmdel, New Jersey on 7th September 1977. The latter pretty much sounds like an entirely different song to the sparse acoustic section that preceded it.

Rounding off the collection is The Manish Boys featuring one David Jones who, like Christine Perfect, changed their name and enjoyed slightly more success as... David Bowie. The session guitar player also went on to greater things, a young whippersnapper by the name of Jimmy Page.

Today's headline photo, nicked from t'internet, is a contemporary photo (April 1992) of the Redcliffe flyover and the George Railway Hotel near Temple Meads station in Bristol. The flyover was a narrow, single-track curved bridge opened as a temporary measure in 1968...which ended up staying there until 1998. As a kid sitting in the back seat of my parents' car, a journey into the city centre via the flyover was the equivalent of a free rollercoaster. Without seat belts. Fearless times, eh?

1) Man In The Long Black Coat: Bob Dylan (1989)  
2) Mad About You: Sting (1991) 
3) 10:15 Saturday Night (Single Version): The Cure (1978)
4) My Special Child: Sinéad O'Connor (1991)
5) Airwaves (Demo): Thomas Dolby (1980)
6) Let Love Speak Up Itself (Album Version): The Beautiful South (1990)
7) Powderfinger (Cover of Neil Young): Cowboy Junkies (1990)
8) Coyote: Joni Mitchell (1976)
9) I'd Rather Go Blind (Cover of Etta James): Chicken Shack (1969)
10) The Road (Cover of Danny O'Keefe): Jackson Browne (1977)
11) I Pity The Fool (Cover of Bobby 'Blue' Bland): The Manish Boys (1965)

1965: I Pity The Fool EP: 11
1969: I'd Rather Go Blind EP: 9
1976: Hejira: 8
1977: Running On Empty: 10
1978: Killing An Arab EP: 3
1980: From Brussels With Love (Les Disques Du Crépuscule): 5
1989: Oh Mercy: 1
1990: Choke: 6 
1990: The Caution Horses: 7
1991: My Special Child EP: 4
1991: The Soul Cages: 2

Side 1 (46:56) (KF) (Mega)

Sunday, 8 October 2023

Further Adventures In Success / mass Music For The Masses

Down another rabbit hole, all started by recently revisiting Adventures In Success by Will Powers
 
The single version/video featured in my #SynthPopSeptember pick of 30 songs over at Musk's Megalomania Media (or X, if that's a bit of a mouthful) last month. The absorbing dub version also closed out my Dub '83 selection a few weeks ago (and still available a little while longer for download). I originally posted about the song in May 2021, having discovered a re-edit by mass Thomas, which I'll come back to shortly.
 
Looking for the Adventures In Success video to include with my tweet, I discovered an additional "testimonials" video also produced in 1983 which I had never seen before. It's simultaneously hammy and a hoot. Introduced by "Famous Ligger" Lynn Goldsmith (aka Will Powers), the testimonials include

Tom Bailey ("Famous Twin")
Eric Clapton ("Famous Domino")
Brinsley Forde ("Famous Rasta")
Holly Johnson ("Famous Singer")
Meat Loaf (not uncredited)
David Joseph ("Famous Singer")
Tony Woodcock & Graham Rix ("Famous Arsenal & England Footballers")
Steve Winwood ("Famous Recluse" and "Famous Record Producer") 
Jack Lynch ("Not A Famous Person...Yet!") (I recognise the face but can't for the life of me remember who this person really is. Any ideas?)
Brinsley (Forde), Tony (Robinson), Drummie (Zeb) ("Famous As Aswad")

There's also an interesting interview with Lynn Goldsmith from 2015 available online at The Vinyl Factory, although the link to obtaining the Dancing For Mental Health album is long since dead.

Back in December 2020, when the Dubhed blog was just starting out, I was also exploring Bandcamp which is where I subsequently chanced upon mass Thomas and his epic re-edit of Adventures In Success. Splicing together the vocal and dub mixes from the 12" singles, it's a (nearly) 13 minute monster of a song. 

In my May 2021 post, I also referenced a shorter re-rub which was under 4 minutes. Sadly, that one no longer seems available and I didn't purchase it at the time. The full length re-edit however is still available as a name your price/free download.

 
And this is where I re-entered the rabbit hole for today's post. This probably should be a separate post in it's own right but what the heck.
 
Discovering that the original link/mass Thomas Bandcamp page no longer existed, I re-discovered that it had re-located. Not the only re-location, it turns out: in December 2020, mass gave his location as Belarus; now it's Ukraine which I'm hazarding a guess is mass Thomas' birthplace.
 
I cannot begin to imagine what a "typical day" for mass currently looks like but his output of re-edits has been eye wateringly prolific. Many of these, including Adventures In Success, have been uploaded on the re-established Bandcamp site in the past 18 months. When I started writing this post, the tally stood at 702 tracks; when I finished, it had already bumped up to 705.
 
Some are name your price/free, others are priced anything between 1.20 and 2.10 Euros, though I can't work out the reasoning for the difference. Genre- and artist-wise, there are clearly some favourites, but it's also pretty broad: Donna Summer rubs shoulders with The Beatles; Primal Scream sits with Ben E. King and Grace Jones; It's Immaterial share notes with Kid Creole & The Coconuts; Malcolm X stands with Sade and Warren Zevon.

Not all of them work, some have great ideas that don't quite pay off across the entire track, others sound inspired and provide a fresh perspective on a familiar song.

Here's a half dozen that probably cover all of the above bases, though I think they all edge into the 'like' category for me. In no particular order, I present Zero 7 ft. Sophie Barker, The La's, Bah Samba, Marti Caine and - brace yourself - Cliff Richard. Relax, the last one is a dub edit with very little trace of Sir Cliff's vocals remaining.
 
All available (at the time of this post) as a name your price download or you can click on the links below to try before you buy.

 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 

Friday, 14 May 2021

Adventures In Success

 
I first discovered this song via the "Dub Copy" remix on the 12" single. In the UK, Will Powers was a one-hit wonder act, Kissing With Confidence reaching a peak of no. 17 in September 1983.
 
Will Powers was an alias for celebrity photographer Lynn Goldsmith and both of these singles formed part of an album, Dancing For Mental Health, which parodied the growing market for self-help books, audio & videos. 
 
The dub version reminded me of Talking Heads, circa Speaking in Tongues, and the list of collaborators on the album includes Nile Rodgers, Steve Winwood and Todd Rundgren. Adventures In Success was co-written with Robert Palmer and Sting, of all people.
 
Fast forward to December 2020 and I happened across Mass Thomas from Belarus, whose has amassed (excuse the pun) hundreds of re-edits and re-rubs on Bandcamp, a mind-bogglingly vast selection of artists and growing at an exponential rate. 

I love this re-edit, which takes the original 12" version and stretches it even further to nearly 13 minutes, without ever feeling like it's overstaying its welcome. Last week (May 8), Mass uploaded a "Re-Rub" which effectively edits the original "Dub Copy" to a bite-sized <5 minute chunk of funk. Bizarrely, the super epic re-edit is the cheaper of the two, but both are worth a listen.

Meanwhile, here are the original video, dub version & lyrics:
 

 
It's you, only you
It's you, only you
It's you, only you

You are an important person, a rare individual
A unique creature
There has never been anyone just like you
And never will be
You have talents and abilities no one else has
In some ways, you're superior to any other living person
The power to do anything you can imagine is within you
When you discover your real self
By practicing a few simple laws of success
First law of success
Take inventory of your assets
Don't be modest or critical
Be open and objective
Get a pencil and paper
Write down every good thing about yourself you can think of

It's you
Make it habit, make it happen
Only you
Make it habit, make it happen
It's you
Make it habit, make it happen
Only you
Make it habit, make it happen
It's you
Make it habit, make it happen
Only you
Make it habit, make it happen
 
Second law of success
Write a description of the person you'd like to be
Describe your personal dress, your home, your automobile
Your desired occupation and income, be honest
Now, go even deeper
Describe the inner person you'd like to be
Let your mind run wild
Assume you can be anything that you desire
The fact is, you will become the person you honestly describe
You can't avoid it

It's you
Make it habit, make it happen
Only you
Make it habit, make it happen
It's you
Make it habit, make it happen
Only you
Make it habit, make it happen
It's you
Make it habit, make it happen
Only you
Make it habit, make it happen
 
Third law of success
Concentrate on a mental image of the person you'd like to be
Paint a picture in your imagination of who you want to become
Constantly hold this visual in your mind's eye
See yourself performing and responding like a champion
Feel the confidence and courage that radiate from this type of person

It's you, only you
It's you, only you
It's you, only you
These three laws are powerful and effective in changing lives
They'll work for you without fail if you're persistent in applying them

Make it habit, make it happen
Make it habit, make it happen
Make it habit, make it happen
Make it habit, make it happen

It's you
Make it habit, make it happen
Only you
Make it habit, make it happen
It's you
Make it habit, make it happen
Only you