Showing posts with label The Godfathers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Godfathers. Show all posts

Saturday, 31 August 2024

Decade IV: 1986


Side 1 of a cassette compilation, recorded 8th April 1990.

 
Okay, so we're back with the OG Decade tapes that I compiled in 1990, a new decade and the end of my teens ahead, ten years of life-shaping music behind me.

Time to address the elephant in the room. You may have noticed from the track listing below and in the previous fortnight that the selection leans heavily on alternative, guitar-based music, and very little in the way of club or pop music. 

Yes, I will admit that as well as receiving my first proper Valentine's card and the same person agreeing to be my first proper girlfriend, I was beginning to tap into my inner Goth. I think I bought my first pair of winkle picker boots with shiny buckles around age 15. And the shirts. Oh, the shirts. My local Boots was also doing quite well out of my regular custom for hair gel and hairspray. Yep, I was quite the catch. I don't know what she was thinking.

Anyway, for all that, the parallel story of my teens was also my propensity for a pop song. My nascent record collection happily included the likes of Heaven 17, Bronski Beat, Erasure, Giorgio Moroder with Phil Oakey, Pet Shop Boys, Cameo, Madonna, Propaganda and so on. 

The reason why you're seeing little of that here is that, when I had the idea in 1990 of recording a themed series of mixtapes covering the 1980s, I already had the overarching title, Decade. I also had the thought that there would be a second, parallel series of more club/pop-oriented songs, acknowledging my love of the 12" single and called Decadance (sic). I never got around to recording any of the latter series, but maybe an idea to revisit here one day...

I will also add that whilst I enjoyed a bit of gnarly guitar, I despised Bon Jovi with a passion. No surprise that at school, I was in the minority, as the bobbins hair metallers were especially popular with my female friends. Thankfully, my girlfriend was an exception, in many ways but crucially in her indifference to the hirsute charms of Jon and the lads.

Scene set, here’s the mixtape.

Frankie Goes To Hollywood open up, though a band very much on the downward slide by 1986. I bought the single but more out of a weakening sense of loyalty and I didn't even bother with the accompanying album, Liverpool, at the time. And I echoed the howls of protest when an interview with comic writing legend Alan Moore on Channel 4's The Tube was abruptly cut short to segue to the video of Warriors (Of The Wasteland). It wasn't Frankie's fault of course, but they bore the brunt of my disgruntlement.

John Lydon had made a triumphant return with Public Image Ltd. and the single Rise, ahead of an album that depending on the format you bought was titled 'Album', 'Cassette' or 'Compact Disc' or 'untitled', if you want to be contrary. Co-produced with Bill Laswell, it's big on percussion, like the musical equivalent of a left hook from Mike Tyson (who became the youngest heavyweight champion in history in November 1986, fact fans). I love 'Album' for lots of reasons, and follow up single Home is one of them.

The Godfathers are next in line, matching Tyson's left hook with a piledriver to the head. I bought I Want Everything on 12" and played it loud. My mum understandably hated it. Tick.

I'm not sure my parents were fans of Gene Loves Jezebel but for all their backcombing, lipstick and chiffon, Sweetest Thing was a brilliant pop song. This is one brotherly reunion that isn't likely to happen until hell freezes over, though there's much to love in their early 80s albums. Sweetest Thing only got to #75 in the UK yet Discover reached #32, the only UK Top 40 album in their career.

A perhaps surprising return for Wall Of Voodoo, after their first appearance in 1983. Mexican Radio had a least been a minor hit (#64). Far Side Of Crazy failed to make even that much of an impression, despite the added appeal of 12" B-side Dance You F***ers (the label's censorship, not mine!). I didn't buy this first time around though I acquired Far Side Of Crazy when it was itself included as a B-side to follow single, a cover of The Beach Boys' Do It Again, which fared equally poorly with record buyers in general. Andy Prieboy was now lead singer and it's worth mentioning that former frontman Stan Ridgway had a #4 hit with Camouflage in July 1986. That must have stung a little.

Also on the comeback trail was Iggy Pop, aided and abetted yet again by David Bowie, with a phenomenally successful album, Blah Blah Blah, to boot. Cry For Love was the opening salvo and whilst Iggy enjoyed greater success with the follow up cover of Real Wild Child, I prefer this.
 
I mentioned earlier that Bronski Beat didn't make it into this series, though Jimmy Somerville's next project does. I thought The Communards was a brilliant next step and the musical partnership with Richard Coles produced some fabulous music, politically charged pop, beautifully arranged and sung, with incisive, insightful lyrics. Disenchanted is perhaps the prime example of this. It could be taken as an update or reflection on Smalltown Boy, though it's many other things too. And that wonderful descending piano chord at the bridge. A shame that The Communards are generally remembered for their 80s revival of disco classics. All hits and all good, but they were so, so much more than that.

Depeche Mode began the second phase of their career in 1986, following the mega-selling Singles 81-85 compilation. Many of my classmates referred to them as 'Depress Mode', though my friend Ady and I were increasingly committed to this new direction. 1986 would bring the Black Celebration album and my first ever live gig, seeing Dave and the lads at the Colston Hall in Bristol. I loved lead single Stripped and I bought the 5-track 12" single without having heard a note of the song. I didn't need to. Still hits the spot, four decades on.

My first proper girlfriend and I shared a love of Talk Talk. The Colour Of Spring and it's attendant singles came out as our young romance was blossoming and so the music inevitably became very special for us both. To be truthful, Give It Up was 'our song' - sadly prescient, given that our relationship lasted mere months - yet I have had an enduring love for Living In Another World as it's arguably the least Talk Talk-like song that they ever recorded. And I love it for that.

After committing the crime of not including either E=MC² or Medicine Show in my 1985 mixtape - all the more unforgivable, as This Is Big Audio Dynamite was one of my favourite albums of that year - here they are at last. C'mon Every Beatbox was released to announce the arrival of second album, No. 10, Upping Street. It's a cracking single, from it's familiar riff on Eddie Cochran's C'mon Everybody, to Sam Sever's deft editing and scratching, to Mick Jones and Don Letts' superb trade offs. The 12" version is even better, even if my vinyl rip is sounding to my ragged ears like it might be running a tad too fast....

My second crime is the paucity of Julian Cope in this series. Apart from his appearance with The Teardrop Explodes in 1981, this side marks the first sample from Julian's solo career. Though what an example! World Shut Your Mouth had been demo'd but never finished before the Teardrops, er, imploded. It then provided the title of Julian's first album in 1984 though omitting the song itself.

World Shut Your Mouth finally saw the light of day at summer's end in 1986, the song beefed up by US producer Ed Stasium, famed for his work with Ramones, and with a remix 12" by fellow Americans Trouble Funk. This was a different Cope for sure: sexy, pouting, leather clad; though the climbing frame mike stand was a sure sign that he was still bonkers as ever. The Saint Julian album also proved to be a huge success (#11 in the UK) and for a brief moment, the world did shut its mouth and pay attention. 

Another hugely underrated and underappreciated act is It's Immaterial. Driving Away From Home had been a surprise Top 20 hit in April 1986 and the record label reasonably thought that Ed's Funky Diner, a flop single in 1985 yet an equally brilliant and quirky song, deserved another shot. 
 
As before, Ed's Funky Diner was given the full format treatment: 7", 7" double pack with an extra single, 12", limited edition remix 12". It did better than before, though by better I mean a peak of #65. Their debut album got a few places higher and that was the end of the band as a chart-troubling entity. Thankfully, despite a series of unfortunate events in the intervening decades, It's Immaterial are actively recording and releasing music in the 21st century and the world is a better place for it.
 
1) Warriors (Of The Wasteland) (Single Version): Frankie Goes To Hollywood
2) Home (Single Version): Public Image Ltd.
3) I Want Everything (Single Version): The Godfathers
4) Sweetest Thing (Album Version): Gene Loves Jezebel
5) Far Side Of Crazy (Remix): Wall Of Voodoo
6) Cry For Love (7 Inch Edit): Iggy Pop
7) Disenchanted (Album Version): The Communards
8) Stripped (Single Version): Depeche Mode
9) Living In Another World (Single Version): Talk Talk
10) C'mon Every Beatbox (Extended Vocal Version): Big Audio Dynamite
11) World Shut Your Mouth (Album Version): Julian Cope
12) Ed's Funky Diner (Album Version): It's Immaterial
 
Side One (46:19) (KF) (Mega)

Friday, 17 June 2022

Kissing The Mix

Side 2 of a mixtape, recorded 21st April 2000. It's 80s indie-not-indie disco time with eight, count 'em, eight twelve inch chart smashes. Well, UK top 95, at least.
 
The Armoury Show formed in 1984 and had an impressive pedigree: Richard Jobson and Russell Webb (Skids), John McGeogh and John Doyle (Magazine); the band were very squarely aimed at the emerging MTV generation and its taste for big drums, kick-ass anthemic rock. Whilst arguably better than many of their contemporaries, The Armoury Show never really took off. McGeoch and Doyle left in 1986 and the subsequent line-up called it a day in 1988, with a second album incomplete and unreleased.
 
By 1987, Gene Loves Jezebel had taken the first bus out of Porthcawl, North Wales, bounced around in London for a bit and then crossed the Atlantic for a bit of satin chic and California. The focal (and vocal) point of the band were twins Michael and Jay Aston (no, not that one) and perhaps an apt subject for the as-yet-unmade Channel 5 show When Sibling Music Acts Go Horribly Wrong. Currently, there are two versions of Gene Loves Jezebel: Michael owns the copyright in the US, Jay in the UK. Actually, considering how things turned out for the latter's namesake's band, maybe a word of advice to any up and coming bands: if you have a member called Jay Aston, ditch 'em. Now, before it's too late.
 
After last week's post following the tragic news about Julee Cruise, hearing Roam, one of my favourite singles by The B-52's, has a strange effect on me after reading that this was the song Julee was listening to as she left this life. A heartbreaking and untimely loss, yet I feel incredibly moved by Julee's decision to leave on her own terms and to her chosen soundtrack. 
 
The Godfathers featured here last month and this is one of their rare forays into the twelve inch mix. Personally, I prefer Keith LeBlanc's remix to the original. The record buying public largely disagreed.
 
Blancmange (and the extended version of What's Your Problem?) appeared here in January in what's proving to be one of Dubhed's most visited posts so far this year. Neil Arthur continues to record as Blancmange and has released ten albums in the past ten years with a new one, Private View, due in September. I'm seeing Blancmange live in October with Dubhed regular Mike, so this one's dedicated to you.
 
The Psychedelic Furs and The Cure really need no introduction. One of these was a UK Top 10 hit, the other barely scraped the Top 100. No prizes for guessing which was which, but both great songs in my opinion.
 
Wrapping up the selection is Westworld, centred around the photogenic Elizabeth Westwood and securing a #11 hit with this song in 1987. They never achieved the same success again, but I really liked their look and sound at the time. Great fun.
 
1) Castles In Spain (Wubb Dug Mix By Nick Tauber): The Armoury Show (1984)
2)The Motion Of Love (Jezebel Mix By Julian Mendelsohn): Gene Loves Jezebel (1987)
3) House (Long Version By John Ashton & Laurence Diana): The Psychedelic Furs (1989)
4) The Lovecats (Extended Version By Phil Thornalley, Chris Parry & The Cure): The Cure (1983)
5) What's Your Problem? (Extended Version By Stewart Levine): Blancmange (1985)
6) She Gives Me Love (Keith LeBlanc Love Mix aka High Octane Mix): The Godfathers (1989)
7) Roam (12" Extended Mix By Nile Rodgers, Andres Levin & Tom Durack): The B-52's (1989)
8) Sonic Boom Boy (U.S. Remix By Mark Ferda & Danny Hyde): Westworld (1987)

Side Two (46:08) (KF) (Mega)
 
...and of course, being the 1980s and the golden period of MTV, every one of these beauties has an official video to accompany it. A few I'm really familiar with, several I haven't seen for many years and a couple I don't think I've seen until researching this post. All of their time, with some real flashes of creative genius. Enjoy!


Wednesday, 11 May 2022

The Perfect Crime

Today's selection recorded sometime in the summer of 1990 features London rabble rousers The Godfathers.  My first exposure to them came via an appearance on ITV's The Chart Show, albeit the Indie Top 10 countdown, with their cover of Sun Arise by then-kids' TV favourite, now convicted paedophile Rolf Harris. 

Eight of the fourteen songs featured here appeared on their 1987 album Birth, School, Work, Death, officially their debut (and, by then, on a major label, Epic) although their former label Corporate Image had issued an album in 1986, Hit By Hit, compiling the first three 12" singles.
 
At the time of recording this compilation, I had the Birth, School, Work, Death album, plus a handful of 12" singles. The Godfathers were a band that I never saw live, but wished I had. They disbanded in 2000, reformed in 2008 and appear to have been going strong ever since, particularly on the live circuit. 
 
Only lead singer Peter Coyne remains from the line up featured in today's selection. Whilst putting this post together, I listened to The Godfathers live at Rockpalast in 2020. The band sound brilliant, pumped up and capturing the energy of songs that are now over three decades old. Unfortunately, Coyne's performing voice seems to have gone the way of Ian McCulloch. Given his limited range to begin with, some of the songs do seem a bit beyond his reach now and at times painful to listen to. A real shame.
 
I've no idea how I managed to cram all of these songs onto a side of a C90 cassette, I can only assume my turntable was running a bit fast at the time. Still, here's (a bit over) three quarters of an hour of The Godfathers at the peak of their powers..

1) Birth, School, Work, Death (Album Version By Vic Maile & Steve Brown) (1987)
2) If I Only Had Time (1988) 
3) Angela (1987)
4) It's So Hard (1988)
5) 'Cause I Said So (1988)
6) I'm Unsatisfied (1986)
7) The Strangest Boy (1988)
8) Love Is Dead (Valentine Day Massacre Mix By Vic Maile) (1987)
9) Gone To Texas (1987)
10) Obsession (1988)
11) Tell Me Why (1988)
12) Miss That Girl (1987)
13) I Want Everything (1986)
14) When Am I Coming Down (Album Version By Vic Maile & Steve Brown) (1988)
 
1986: Sun Arise / I Want Everything EP: 6, 13
1987: Birth, School, Work, Death EP: 1, 12
1987: Love Is Dead EP: 3, 8, 9
1988: Birth, School, Work, Death: 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 14

Tuesday, 4 January 2022

W.O.R.K. Is A Four Letter Word

After what simultaneously seems like a long time and no time at all at home, Christmas and New Year is well and truly over and I'm back at work. I've mixed feelings, but today's selection will get me through the commute, at least.

Sadly, I couldn't find a place for this stone cold classic.

1) Welcome To The Working Week: Elvis Costello (1977)
2) Julie's Been Working For The Drug Squad: The Clash (1978) 
3) Don't Work That Hard: Scritti Politti (1985)
4) Women Around The World At Work (Album Version): Martha & The Muffins (1981)
5) From Bed To Work: Pony Club (2004)
6) Hard Work: Teitur (2013)
7) Finest Worksong (Album Version): R.E.M. (1987)
8) Model Worker (Live @ The Santa Monica Civic, Santa Monica): Magazine (1980)
9) Barnaby, Hardly Working (Version): Yo La Tengo (1989)
10) All Work And No Play (Extended Mix): Hüsker Dü (1986)
11) I Work In A Health Spa: The Go-Betweens (1986)
12) Right To Work: Chelsea (1977)
13) Birth, School, Work, Death (Extended Mix): The Godfathers (1989)
14) This Woman's Work (Director's Cut Version): Kate Bush (2011)
15) How To Hate The Working Classes: Luke Haines (2001)
16) I Can't Wait To Get Off Work (And See My Baby On Montgomery Avenue): Tom Waits (1976)
17) Fit And Working Again: The Fall (1981)
18) Let's Work Together: Canned Heat (1969)
19) At Home, At Work, At Play: Sparks (1974)
 
1969: Let's Work Together 7": 18
1974: Propaganda: 19 
1976: Small Change: 16
1977: My Aim Is True: 1
1978: Give 'Em Enough Rope: 2 
1978: The Outrageous Soundtrack From The Motion Picture "Jubilee": 12
1981: Slates: 17
1981: This Is The Ice Age: 4 
1981: Urgh! A Music War: 8
1985: Cupid & Psyche 85: 3
1986: Don't Want To Know If You Are Lonely 12": 10
1987: Document: 7 
1989: Out On The Floor EP: 13
1989: President Yo La Tengo: 9
2001: Christie Malry's Own Double Entry. OST: 15
2004: Family Business: 5
2004: Liberty Belle And The Black Diamond Express (Expanded Edition): 11 
2011: Director's Cut: 14
2013: Story Music: 6

Saturday, 23 October 2021

7 To 10 Inches

Side 1 of a mixtape, originally recorded 4th October 1997, collecting tracks from various 7" and 10" vinyl records, pops and crackles intact on several. Sounds a bit like my take on an indie disco, though in reality the only songs I'm likely to have heard out in Bristol at places like the Kandi Klub or the PIG Club (an acronym for Punk Indie Goth, naturally) would have been the album version of Head Like A Hole and possibly Love Removal Machine. I saw Back To The Planet on the Lime Lizard stage at the first Phoenix Festival in 1993. I don't think we hung around for the whole set as we wanted to get back to the main stage for Faith No More, but they were one of the better crusty bands. The Food Christmas EP saw labelmates Jesus Jones, Crazyhead and Diesel Park West covering each other's songs. Mekons' Rock 'n' Roll and Birth School Work Death by The Godfathers remain firm favourite albums of the 1980s, whilst a production credit by Adrian Sherwood and Flood was a pretty safe bet for a purchase, back in the day. The limited edition double pack 7" single of April Skies is a typical example of how great The Jesus & Mary Chain are as a singles band. Bo Diddley Is Jesus is the last of four excellent songs on the single, but is a perfect opener here. There'll be more J&MC brilliance when I eventually get to posting Side 2...
 
Side One (45:07)
1) Bo Diddley Is Jesus: The Jesus & Mary Chain (April Skies 2x 7") (1987)
2) (I'm Gonna) Cry Myself Blind (Album Version): Primal Scream ft. Denise Johnson ((I'm Gonna) Cry Myself Blind 10") (1994)
3) It's So Hard: The Godfathers (Sounds Waves 2 promo 7") (1988)
4) Heaven And Back (Album Version): Mekons (The Dream And Lie Of... 10") (1989)
5) Montreal: The Wedding Present (Montreal 7") (1997)
6) Daydream (Dub Mix By Adrian Sherwood): Back To The Planet (Daydream 7") (1993)
7) 2001 Love (Part 1) (Single Version By Adrian Sherwood, Skip McDonald & Style Scott): Dub Syndicate ft. Allen Ginsberg (What Happened? 10") (1993)
8) Head Like A Hole (Copper) (Remix By Trent Reznor & Flood): Nine Inch Nails (Head Like A Hole 10") (1991)
9) Love Removal Machine (Album Version By Rick Rubin & George Drakoulias): The Cult (Love Removal Machine 2x 7") (1987)
10) I Don't Want That Kind Of Love (Cover of Crazyhead): Jesus Jones (The Food Christmas EP 7") (1989)
11) Ascend (Single Mix By Flood): Nitzer Ebb (Ascend 2x 10") (1992)

Sunday, 4 July 2021

I Want You (Again & Again & Again)

Four-nil. Wow, that was really something, wasn't it?

Anyway, it's Sunday, it's raining, it's time for the post that was originally planned for yesterday. Just under an hour of musicians repeatedly telling you that they want you for a variety of reasons. 

1) I Want You ('Feel So Sad' EP Version): Spiritualized (1991)
2) I Want You Back: Hoodoo Gurus (1984)
3) I Want You: The Godfathers (1985)
4) I Want You: Salad (1996)
5) I Want You (7" Remix By Mark Kamins): Animotion (1986)
6) I Want You Back (Medicine8 Mix): X-Press 2 ft. Dieter Meier (2002) 
7) I Want You Now (Alan Wilder Reconstruction Mix) (Re-Edit By Andy Dominatrix): Depeche Mode (2014)
8) I Want You: Tindersticks (2003)
9) (I Want You) More Than Ever: The Clientele (2000)
10) I Want You (Single Mix By Pascal Gabriel): Inspiral Carpets ft. Mark E. Smith (1994) 
11) I Want You (Edit): Utah Saints (1993)
12) I Want You (Album Version): Cabaret Voltaire (1985)
13) I Want You (Cover of Bob Dylan): Phosphorescent (2016)
14) I Want You (Album Version): Elvis Costello & The Attractions (1986)