First off, three current youtube favourites:

The Poets, from Shindig, doing Now We’re Thru – one of the very strangest records to hit the Top 30, in an era of strange records: dig those ruffles.

For more, read George Gallagher in the second volume of Andrew Loog Oldham’s excellent biography, 2 Stoned.

John Lennon, who knew a thing or two about oddity, pronounced Now We’re Thru fucking weird. The clip also reminds us of a period when real-life hard men were not afraid to dress up like ponces, pansies and such estimable members of society. The next clip is vintage Buddy Holly, from a US TV show called Arthur Murray Dance Party, December 29th 1957. I’ve been immersing myself in the brand new, career-spanning Not Fade Away 6xCD box – which is totally riveting – and so it’s great to see one of the very few clips of Holly and the three man Crickets in action. Despite his tux and bow-tie, Holly can hardly restrain himself, in stark contrast to the stiff teens behind him:

The introduction is rather sweet, and Holly is perfectly poised between charm, unrestrained motion, and a tiny hint of menace – if not actual punk attitude in such a setting. The final cut is from 1968, and it’s the Easybeats on German TV, Beat Club, nailing what should have been the follow-up to Friday On My Mind, Good Times. A great song – the primal R’N R spirit updated – and a beyond committed performance from singer Stevie Wright (and it is Steve Marriott you can hear on backing vocals, on the original record):

NV Groep '65, record cover

Rock’n roll: it makes you do the chicken, it makes you do the stroll. OK some 45’s now, as I like nothing better than to play these out: all these are from the 1960s, found at the Utrecht Record Fair. The first is by Dutch gods N.V.Groep 65, who released two deranged singles in 1966. This is their first, Dank Zij De Heer (thanks to the Lord) – a bizarre and scandalous Gregorian chant – backed with Tanger, a simple ode to the pleasures of ‘wietjies’ (joints). The band split up in 1966, partly due to escalating drug use of singer and writer Warnar Landkroon (a/k/a Jesus). The full story can be found in the recent Grey Past 10” EP that contains everything the group recorded.

Q65, World of Birds, record cover

Another find was a 1967 single by Q65 who, in their original incarnation, released a string of tough freakbeat/ punk 45’s and a terrific album (Revolution) during 1966. It Came To Me is a monstrous rocker, constructed around a driving riff, that builds and builds. It’s on their recent RPM compilation, The Complete Collection.

 

Fortunes, The Idol, record cover

Also from 1967 is the first single by the revamped and relaunched Fortunes. The Idol was heavily promoted on Radio Caroline that summer, and with its spacey introduction, ear-catching hooks and breathy finale, adds extra spice to a lyric about the loneliness of the long-distance pop star: ‘I can walk on fitted carpets, I can swim down at my pool, I can throw expensive parties, yes afford to be the fool’. Fitted carpets?

Syl Johnson, Different Strokes, record cover

A fantastic break that was also released in 1967 is Syl Johnson’s Different Strokes. A staple of various breaks albums (Ultimate Breaks and Beats, Super Breaks), it begins with a brilliant James Brown style grunt interspersed with the high moans of an ecstatic female. With a nod to the shing-a-ling and the funky broadway, Syl makes ‘so many ways to play’ sound like fantastic fun.

 

Edgar Broughton, Out Demons Out, record cover

The last single is an epic by the Edgar Broughton Band from 1970. There were quite a few tribal rock beats at that time – beginning with Give Peace A Chance – but Out Demons Out is one of the greatest, with multiple applications. For its use in the 21st century, go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sUxUsRuaXDo for a recent performance featuring Linder Sterling, dozens of local musicians and a very nervous dog, live at the Tate Gallery St Ives.

For some modern music, we go to CD’s still. No great complexity here, mostly electronica. More Kompakt, including Giu Boratto’s Take My Breath Away and the Total 10 2xCD compilation, featuring Boratto’s great re-mix of the Sam Taylor-Wood/ Pet Shop Boys’ version of I’m In Love With A German Film Star (in fact Roadent, but that’s another story) and DJ Koze’s latest wheeze, a track constructed around a tough tennis point, replete with the bonk bonk of the ball and female grunts, 40 Love. A couple of nu disco comps: Hibernation Vol. 1 on Bearfunk is really terrific, with a fake fur CD sleeve and plenty of those updated, high spacey disco sounds – including Greg Wilson’s version of Social Disco Club & Maia’s, The Way You Move. I heard Wilson’s own CD, Credit To The Edit Vol 2, playing in Les Hart’s Kingbee Records – quite possibly the best record store in the UK – and snapped it up. It has excellent extended versions of Love Is The Drug, Voodoo Ray and Dirty Talk in a very agreeable mix. Also recommended: the Feelies’ unregarded second album, 1986’s The Good Earth (reissued on Domino), songs that begin quietly and build to a surge; and most of all, to my surprise, the Jazzman collection of Lloyd Miller’s self-released music from the fifties and sixties, A Lifetime In Oriental Jazz – which becomes more and more oriental as you go through. Impressions of Bhairavi Raga indeed! Finally, Rick Tomlinson has morphed into Voice of the Seven Thunders, and, on tunes like Kommune and The Burning Mountain his forthcoming LP is liberally dosed with some great acid rock guitar. It’s out in February and is highly recommended.

There have been 7 comments.:

  1. m.mitchell Says:

    Hi Jon,hope you observed a reasonably warm festive period!At the moment trying to pretend it is summer by playing dub lps on headphones-Leggo Dub and Pick a Dub are in rotation frequently.That Feelies second lp is what I think the second Television lp could have led to,if they hadnt spit-Slipping into Something is transcendental.Watched that wonderful BBC 4 doc on Duffy last night-unbeleivably witty and loveable character despite his belligerent persona-his final comments on ‘’society” were priceless.Hope he is well-we need more people like him in the world.I wanted to ask you if you could put up your interview with Donald Cammell(referred to in the article in Time Travel on 60’s film?)I would love to read this,Performance is my favourite ever film.Rave of the moment for me is the Psych Funk 101 compilation -Kim Sun+”The Man Who must Leave”-Wow Baby!

  2. keith Says:

    Oh the guilt/luxury of a fitted carpet instead of a carpet square with lino around the edges/recesses.
    The sixties with still the rationing/going without /not wasting still on the minds/lips of many. Fitted carpet !! All that waste!!

  3. m.mitchell Says:

    Great Eno documentary the other night-the Full House Roxy footage was priceless,but someone should really tell Bari Neon that Quincy Jones was the producer of State of Independence,not The Moroder One!Jon,sorry to bother you again,but I wondered if you knew if the lp that Dino Valenti recorded prior to his debut(with Jack Nitzsche I think?)has ever surfaced?I know hes not your fave member of Quicksilver,but I thought you might know about it(I love Nitzsches arrangements and productions).Thanks.

  4. jon Says:

    Hi yes partially agree re Eno doc. It’s always great to see and hear him but I thought it wasn’t very well put together for rhythm, flow and storyline. The repeated ‘postman’ motif was a bore and the intellectual guests under-used. Also, love Morley as I do, even I found his narration of Eno’s musical clips a little too much. But it was better than watching “Road Wars” or whatever. best js

  5. jon Says:

    Hi Keith yes that really stood out. The sixties are both very near and very far away. Some of the records still sound very contemporary, and then you get lines like that one. best js

  6. m.mitchell Says:

    Hi Jon,I do agree with your comments about the structure of the Eno doc-almost like they threw a pack of Oblique Strategies in the air and didnt bother to read any of the suggestions!I had been really looking forward to seeing it,but was aware that it would probably not be as music based as I would have liked-there was almost no narrative thrust there,almost like a pick n mix”you know Eno anyway” so choose your watching strategy accordingly.
    Most of all loved the Roxy clips,which showed how extreme their live shows were-theres a tape floating around from Munich 1973-The version of Bogus Man segues into Ladytron,and is just awesome in its intensity.Manzanera’s guitar sounds like its taking the roof off the venue!
    I did enjoy the Eno doc,but having just re-read Revolution in the Head by I Mac, I cant help concur that this doc provides evidence of the loss of narrative in culture.Every time I look at this book I swoon with wonder at his thoughts and the way he expresses them.Such a great loss.
    That said…mmmmn Morley!Used to love his NME stuff,went off his style drastically when I bought Words and Music,which infuriated me immensely with its flagrant egoist spewings-all that ,if you like Godspeed youll like Slade stuff was excruciatingly painful-since then I winced at his interview on Elvis on Richard and Judy and tried to avoid anything he’s on-I do like him,its just that his style is so monotonous and annoying,but I do agree with a lot of his ideas.
    I still find it extremely hard to find anything of note in U2,and as for Coldplay…….ssssszz=Best MM

  7. m.mitchell Says:

    Hi Jon,just been reading that fascinating article on The Moodies in The Wire-did you ever see them at the time they were playing?They look so incredible-very Dollsy -incidentally been re-reading the Bob Gruen book on the Dolls too.I still cant believe some of the photos in there-jeez these guys were brave!I was thinking that if anybody looked remotely like that now theyd be carted away for disturbing the peace!Theres a great pic of Thunders with Sable Starr where he looks really happy(not usually a word you would apply to him).When you hear that cd interview in Nina Antonio’s book it seems he is aware of his impending fate-very heartbreaking(no.really!
    Hope some of that Moodies archive tv stuff gets released eventually-Polly Eltes does some great vocals on Eno’s Mother Whale Eyeless.Oh these were the days!Regards MM

Leave a Reply

Speak your brains:

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>