Friday Night Music Club Vol 55

Friday night is upon us again, and that can only mean one thing: a new mix of tip-top tunes from yours truly. (Well, actually, it can mean a lot of things: a Friday night takeaway, a couple of post-work pints, you get the gist. What I’m saying is: there’s room in your hectic playboy/girl lifestyle for this too).

This week’s mix has been picked from the debris of the one I mentioned having jetisoned last time out, but don’t let that put you off. I’ve over-run the usual 60 minutes mark, mostly because I was enjoying this one so much I kept lobbing in extra tracks until I decided to rest back, fully satisfied and fit to burst.

What we have this week, is a load of songs which mostly fall into the following categories: quiet build up; wicked bassline; who are these/I’ve forgotten about these/where are they now?; absolute stone cold classic. I’ll let you decide which falls into which box.

So welcome one and all, to this week’s mix for which I’ve done some sleeve notes, and included links so you can stream the individual song or album it comes from (don’t get used to this level of customer service, by the way), so I won’t waste any more time with my attempts to fashion a new introduction, let’s crack straight on shall we?

Friday Night Music Club Vol 55

  1. Kevin McDermott Orchestra – Mother Nature’s Kitchen

This is from 1989, but ignore the ever-so-slightly egotostical grandeur of the mention of Orchestra in the title. This is good old fashioned acoustic-driven folk/rock, like Mumford & Sons could have been if they weren’t insistent on being awful.

2. World Party – Ship Of Fools

I was very sad to hear of the passing of World Party main man, and ex-Waterboy, Karl Wallinger recently. I’ve been meaning to write something about how much I love their first album, Private Revolution, from which this is lifted, for a while, as a kind of eulogy, but time pressures blahblahblah. Maybe I’ll do something for SWC’s continually excellent Nearly Perfect Albums series over at No Badger Required. We’ll see.

3. The Charlatans – Forever

If you’ve ever been to see The Charlatans play live – and if you haven’t that’s something you should rectify as soon as possible – you’ll know that often – not always – they kick things off with this. It’s a near-perfect intro tune, the opening track on their 1999 Us and Us Only album, one of their finest in my opinion, and lawd knows they’ve been around for a goodly while, so it’s up against some stiff competition.

4. We Have Band – Hear It In The Cans

This lot should have been huge. I mean, listen to this: bouncy bass, spiky guitars, boy/girl shared vocals – I’m probably doing them a dis-service here, but I can imagine early B-52’s doing this, and I totally mean that as a compliment. This is from their debut album from 2010, WHB, a moniker under which they released further stuff, but, according to their wiki page, nothing since 2014, which is disappointing, because this is, well, just ace.

5. Metronomy – The Bay (Erol Alkan’s Extended Rework)

More boy/girl vocals and harmonies, more bouncing basslines, stretched out by DJ hero of mine, Erol Alkan. The original can be found on their 2011 album The English Riviera.

All these irresistable basslines mean I can’t resist, and nor can Alan…

Smooth.

6. Saint Etienne – Sylvie

Classic kitsch from Sarah, Bob and Pete. You don’t need me to tell you how ace they are/this is. It’s Saint Etienne, therefore….From their 1998 Good Humor album.

7. EMF – I Believe

It always struck me as amusing that their follow-up to the massive was Unbelieveable was a song called I Believe. If only they’d called the next one Now You Mention It, That’s a Thinker. From 1991’s Schubert Dip album.

8. Jesus Jones – Bring It On Down

Look, I know that time and history may not look favourably upon the likes of Jesus Jones. But what I think is often over-looked is how, with their blend of guitars and samples, bands like this very much laid the groundwork for devoted guitar obsessed indie kids, as I was back in 1989 (on their Liquidizer album) to like dance music. This was precursor for what was to follow: baggy, Madchester, indie/dance crossover, Screamadelica. It may have taken hold eventually, but it was because of the stuff that Jones’ and their likes released that blinkered idiots like me we were more receptive.

9. Pop Will Eat Itself – Def Con One

Ditto.

I bought this on 7″ single at college. with the specific intention of dropping it at the Indie Night I was DJ’ing at. Imagine my disappointment, and embarrasment having not listened to it before I played it out, that I’d bought the BBC-friendly version, where the integral “Big Mac” line had been changed to “Milk Shake”. How I ever managed to recover any credibility I’ll never know. You’ll find this of-it’s-time belter on 16 Different Flavours of Hell.

10. The Wonder Stuff – Don’t Let Me Down, Gently

Since we’re in the Black Country, an absolute banger from popular rhyming slang Miles Hunt and the boys, this, the first single from their 1989 second album Hup!, reached #19 in the UK charts, and deserved to have got a lot higher.

11. Crazyhead – What Gives You the Idea That You’re so Amazing Baby?

I’m not going to pretend this is a fine moment, let alone this Leicester band’s finest moment, but it does have one of the greatest titles of a single ever. This lot played the Students Union in my first year, before I was involved in the Ents side of things. I went to see them, liked them, but recall a conversation in the gents afterwards with a random which went pretty much like this:

Random: What did you think of them that, mate?

Me: Thought they were alright. Not sure about some of the song titles, though. I mean “I Don’t Want That Pint of Blood”? C’mon….

The song in question is actually I Don’t Want That Kind of Love and I was an idiot. Listen to their Desert Orchid album and tell me I’m a fool to have misheard.

12. The Jesus & Mary Chain – Taste of Cindy

There are three reasons this is here:

i) it’s ace

ii) it works at this point in the mix

iii) It provides a handy link to the next record, which you won’t know

13. John Moore & The Expressway – Something About You Girl

John Moore was, briefly, in The Jesus & Mary Chain. He took over from Bobby Gillespie on his very taxing drum duties, later moving to guitar, but left the band in 1988. He’s probably better know now for his involvement in Black Box Recorder, but this is what he did in between.

14. Westworld – Sonic Boom Boy

Whenever I hear this record, I immediately think of my old mate Tony, sadly no longer with us. Back in 2016, on what would have been his 50th birthday, I wrote this:

He sidled up to me once in the Sixth Form Common Room; a mixtape I had made was playing, and suddenly I was aware that Tony was standing by my side.

“This should be number one, shouldn’t it, mate?” he whispered to me.

In an ideal world, Tony, yes, it should have been. (It got to Number 11.)

And he was right, it should have been Number One because it’s bloody great, far better than most of the old tosh that was cluttering up the UK Singles Charts at the time. Who cares that they released nothing else of any note? That is a great record. Westworld were The Ting Tings of the 80s, only without the number one hit record.

I stand by that.

On a related note: I’m going to see The Wedding Present play in Cambridge in a couple of weeks (May 3rd). Tony would have loved to have been there, but for fairly obvious reasons, can’t be. As it happens, a mate who was supposed to be joining me and my old mate Richie has dropped out, so if you know anyone in the area who fancies joining us, let them know I have a spare, and to contact me via the Comments or by email.

15. Cliff Bennett & The Rebel Rousers – Got to Get You Into My Life

A Northern Soul-esque version of what is probably one of my favourite Beatles songs.

16. The Webb Brothers – I Can’t Believe You’re Gone

One of the tunes salvaged from the wreckage of that mix I mentioned last week. The Webb Brothers are the sons of Jimmy Webb, and that discarded mix ended with a run of Webb-related songs; this (from 2000’s wonderful Maroon album), the next song in this mix, and, sandwiched in-between, actor Richard Harris’ version of the Jimmy Webb MacArthur Park, which, much as I love it, I decided you probably don’t need to hear.

16. Glenn Campbell – Witchita Lineman

Written by Jimmy Webb, this is just one of the greatest records ever made. Fact.

That’s yer lot. ‘Til next time…

More soon.

Friday Night Music Club Vol 31

Hello! Nice to see you! Thanks for dropping by!

Your reward for bothering to visit my little corner of t’internet is yet another playlisty-mixy-thing I threw together last weekend, and which I rather like so it has been bumped up the queue in the ones I’ve previously prepared.

I shan’t bang on for too long now, but there are two things to note here: firstly, this mix picks up on an orchestral/strings theme, so that it sits well with the ending of last week’s mix, and secondly, there’s a tune by Peaches in this one, so, predictably we need one of these:

Right. You’ve been warned. Here we go.

Friday Night Music Club Vol 31

And here’s your tracklisting and – gosh! – I’ve actually bothered to do sleeve notes this time.

  1. The Jam – Smithers-Jones

Picking up where I left off last week, this is the orchestral/strings version which appears on the Setting Sons album. (I don’t just throw these together, you know!) This is a good marker of anyone who claims to be a Jam fan: ask them which version they prefer and if they flounder, then you know.

2. Elton John – I Guess That’s Why They Call It The Blues

OK, so now the dust has settled on his Sunday night Glastonbury appearance, here’s what I thought:

Firstly: I was relieved that he didn’t sound like this (for most of the set):

…although Twitter was most amusing when he played I’m Still Standing which was met by a resounding chorus of tweets along the lines of “Dill Danding!! I love this one!!”

Secondly: whilst his desire to promote new artists is admirable, his guests were disappointing to say the least.

Elton: “My next guest: Stephen Sanchez!!!”

The UK:

WHERE WAS BRITNEY???

Thirdly: not one mention of Bernie Taupin, the man who wrote the lyrics to most of his succesful songs, and without whom Elton would still be Reg the session musician. You ungrateful bastard.

All that said, I had a whale of a time watching him from the comfort of my sofa, engaged in text/WhatsApp messages with friends about what was unfolding in front of us, much of which is unrepeatable here (as a base level to the filthy jokes made: when he came onto the stage, hobbling in his gold suit, one friend (who shall remain nameless) said he looked: “…like he’s either just shat himself or he’s just been bummed.” “Or both,” I added to my shame.)

Anyway, I was delighted that he played this one, which is probably my favouite tune by Reg. As I was throughout his set: loved it, wished I was there.

3. She & Him – This Is Not a Test

Well, it’s not. We’re doing this right here right now baybee, and who better to confirm it than the Zooey Deschanel, lead actor from rubbish American sit-com New Girl, the Summer from 500 Days of Summer and all round US indie-schmindie pin-up? Nobody, that’s who.

4. Metronomy – Everything Goes My Way

I wish I could say something more intelligent or cool than this: it just sounded right in between the two records it finds itself sandwiched between. And it’s a great record, of course.

5. Happy Mondays – Kinky Afro

Oh, here they are, a week late. Thanks guys, nice of you to show up.

6. Kelis – Fish Fry

Well, it is Friday after all, although I suspect this may not be about a fish supper. It certainly sounds filthier than a cod, chips and mushy peas usually does.

I adore Kelis. If you’ve not yet watched her Glastonbury set on the BBC iPlayer, I’d recommend you do whilst you still can. Although, for most of it, I found myself thinking: if that rumour is true, Jamie Theakston is a lucky, lucky man.

7. Two Wounded Birds – My Lonesome

I needed something with that twangy surf-guitar sound. This fits and, crucially, it isn’t Chris Isaak. This is magnificent, though.

8. Saint Etienne – You’re In A Bad Way

Dated, but when you’re already being kitsch, that’s just fine and dandy. Late to the parade as always, this was the first Etienne single I bought, I think inspired by an appearance on The Word.

9. S’Express – Hey Music Lover

Look! I can post an S’Express record that isn’t Theme from S’Express!

Weirdly, I’ve been told on more than one occasion that I look like Mark Moore, the driving force behind S’Express. I don’t. S’all in the eyes, apparently. I’ll let you Google Image search him on your own time. Not that you know what I look like, so it will be an utter waste of your time.

10. Cola Boy – 7 Ways To Love (Original Mix)

During Cat Stevens/Yusuf’s performance in the Legends slot at Glastonbury on the Sunday afternoon, I texted my old mate Richie to tell him that Peterborough’s finest was doing well. This caused some confusion, as Richie didn’t know Cat/Yusuf used to live in Peterborough, but he did, around the time he changed his name from Cat Stevens to Yusuf: The Artist Formerly Known as Cat Stevens, and also started saying that the fatwa on Salman Rushdie’s head was justified.

Anyway: had I said: “Used to work in the passport office in Peterborough”, which was the national conversation at the time, then there could be no other candidate than Cola Boy. I hope he didn’t give up the day job.

11. De’Lacy – Hideaway (Deep Dish Radio Edit)

A banger. That is all.

12. Jenny Wilson – Let My Shoes Lead Me Forward (The Knife Remix)

You can tell this is a Knife remix just by listening to it. It’s magnificent.

13. Tiga – You Gonna Want Me

Tiga’s records, whether he has enticed someone famous to perform vocals or not (I’m looking at you, Jake Shears) are reliably brilliant, this being a case in point.

14. Peaches – Shake Yer Dix (Tiga’s Where Were You In ’92 Remix)

Ooopsies, Tiga has associations here. I live for the day when a politician, desperate for the youth vote, pretends to like Peaches (the artist, not The Stranglers tune or the fruit) in the same way that Gordon Brown loved Artic Monkeys, and David Cameron claimed to love The Smiths (and if he did (which he didn’t), then you kinda missed the point, Davey). So should Rishi Sunak sign off from a speech with the words “I bloody love drill!”? Of course not, because he doesn’t know what it is. Unless it’s the same as fracking. We should neither expect nor desire our politicians to be down with the kids, so stop pretending to like something your SPADs have told you is cool, because literally nobody believes you.

14. Futureshock – Late At Night (Tomcraft Mix)

A rather fine way to call tonight’s proceedings to a close, even if I may say so myself. An absolute choon my old mate Dum Dum gave me on a CD he’d burned off at some point. Trust me, trust Dum Dum, this is a belter.

And that’s yer lot.

More soon,

Late Night Stargazing

The recent return of Sharon Horgan and Rob Delaney’s excellent sitcom Catastrophe regularly features tonight’s tune, which I’ve been meaning to post for absolutely ages but never quite got round to.

From 2011’s marvellous The English Riviera, it’s just the right side of dreamy twee eletro-pop (I’ve never been any good at naming genres, before anyone corrects me) to totally float my boat:

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Metronomy – Everything Goes My Way

More soon