Unknown Pleasures, Brian Epstein, John Stephen, David Mancuso, Arthur Lee… 

Unknown Pleasures exhibition, Macclesfield

Sorry for break in transmission, have been very busy with Joy Division “Unknown Pleasures” show in Macclesfield. (See pic) Links to a gallery of photos and a video tour will be posted on this site shortly.

Brian Epstein and Lonnie Trimble, 1965Other news is that the Arena “The Brian Epstein Story” is being shown again on BBC4 on the 24th August. (see pic of BE with his factotum Lonnie Trimble in 1965). In the meantime I’d like to mention a few pop culture books that have been recently published and that, given the shrunken review space almost everywhere, you might have missed. First up is Jeremy Reed’s “The King of Carnaby Street: The Life of John Stephen” – a fascinating biography of the young gay Glaswegian who revolutionised British youth fashions during the mid sixties. Researched with the full assent of Stephen’s long-time partner, Bill Franks, the book is full of fascinating detail about the fifties’ gay underground – in particular the ‘Vince’ shops and label run by pioneer Bill Green – and how that impacted upon the avant-garde of modernist fashion that went global in the mid sixties. Digressions include the importance of speed to the emerging mod movement and its philosophical implications, as well as the difficulties and pleasures of an underground gay subculture pre the partial legalisation of the 1967 SOA.

The Record Players, book coverI’d also recommend the latest from Djhistory.com, Bill Brewster and Frank Broughton’s “The Record Players: DJ Revolutionaries”: long interviews with 46 DJ’s, running from the 1940′s (Jimmy Savile) right into the 21st century. The cast includes Jeff Dexter, John Peel, Ian Levine, Tom Moulton, Nicky Siano, Kool Herc, Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaataa, Frankie Knuckles….. Check out the interview with David Mancuso from the Loft – ‘I had certain things I wanted to do to send a message, and it had more to do with social progress’ – and his amazing ‘Loft 100″ playlist and then hope that the two double cd “David Mancuso Presents The Loft” comps are reissued so you don’t have to pay crazy prices for them. Finally John Einarson’s “Forever Changes: Arthur Lee and the Book of Love” is the most thorough and solid Love book extant: much new information in this somewhat overtold story, and plenty of detail about the recording of those classic three mid sixties albums and the more varied but rarely dull ones that followed. Einarson has a real scoop: an unpublished Arthur Lee memoir from 2003 and onwards, extracts of which are presented throughout the book. Here’s Lee on Love in 1966: ‘we had the perfect band. There was nothing like it in the world. We had the sound, the look, the crowds and the songs that the youth, and the Hollywood scene, wanted. We were so unique and sounded, and looked, so good, it didn’t seem to matter what colour we were; and that is as good as it gets in this life’.

Disco, DJ Koze and the Cros 

Disco Files, book cover

Vince Aletti’s The Disco Files 1973-78 has just been published for the first time in the UK by DJhistory.com It’s an indispensable read, not just for Disco and dance addicts, but for anyone interested in music writing. Aletti was the first person to identify the trend that would, for a brief and heady period, take over the world in the late seventies. His September 1973 article for Rolling Stone, entitled Discotheque Rock ’73: Paaaaarty! spoke of a new underground where DJ’s were the stars, and the ‘hardcore dance crowd – blacks, Latins, gays’ would congregate in private lofts or one off events in hotel ballrooms. The new mix, lab-tested in David Mancuso’s legendary club the Loft, included classic mainstream Philly and Motown records from the period, the O’Jays’ Love Train and The Temptations’ Papa Was A Rolling Stone (check out the recent double CD of the Tempts’ late sixties/ early seventies reincarnation, Psychedelic Soul, esp the track Message from A Black Man) , weird Euro-records by Barabbas, as well as African breaks like Manu DiBango’s classic Soul Makossa and Cymande’s The Message. From late 1974 to the end of 1978, Aletti wrote what was pretty much a weekly column for Record World that charted the rise of what would soon be called Disco: from the social, racial and sexual underground to the top of the charts – albeit in a sanitised version, thanks to the Saturday Night Fever movie. Along the way there are fascinating diversions – the popularity of a b-side by the Glitter Band, Makes You Blind, the rise of Euro Disco, the recurrence of the Space theme (for more, see the playlist below) and of course the onset of Electronic Disco – the total futurism of Kraftwerk’s Trans Europe Express and Donna Summer’s I Feel Love, records that have not dated at all thirty years later. Quite apart from the musical content, Aletti’s columns are an object lesson in how to write regularly for a demanding readership: he is enthusiastic, engaged, informative, yet not afraid to pick up on a topic and run with it – like the sophistication of the music and its audience, or the impact of gay politics contained in records like Carl Bean’s I Was Born This Way.

Interview with Vince Aletti at DJHistory.com

Le Disco, CD artwork

DJhistory.com have also released an extremely entertaining double CD of totally instrumental French library disco from 1979, le disco: tele music remixed: with contemporary mixers upping the spaciness quotient, tracks like Funky Bass are futuristic, funky, sexy and psychedelic – what more do you need? Just let yourself go, you know it feels good. Some of the same impulse can be found on DJ Koze’s recent collection of remixes, reincarnations. Best-known for his multifarious releases on Kompakt – like the shifting, ambient, almost gamelan Zouzou on Kompakt Total 9 – this Hamburg native exercises his higly developed prankster side by announcing on the sleeve: ‘DJ Koze would like to announce that he is no longer DJ Koze. Since 01.01.2009 he is Swahimi (The Unenlightened)”. The fourteen tracks range from techno to cosmiche disco to ambient and back again: a highlight is the remix of Sascha Funke’s Mango Cookie, a deep house exploration that segues into a 1977 track by famed German actress / singer Hildegard Knef, Ich Liebe Euch. (Koze is playing Future Flash at London’s Cable Club on the 22nd of August 2009).

If I Could Only Remember My Name, CD artwork

Another psychedelic mood piece, which sounded great during the recent hot spell, is David Crosby’s first solo album If I Could Only Remember My Name… (1971) – recorded with a cast including Grace Slick, Jerry Garcia, Graham Nash and Neil Young (more on the Decades box soon). Long-regarded as a superstar indulgence, this drifting, relaxed, melodic album is remarkable for the way that it deals with grief and absence: by the last three tracks, this notoriously flamboyant sixties/seventies figure has almost disappeared into receding layers of pure sound. For those who want more, there are out-takes from the sessions floating around, collected together as Everybody Here Can Be In The Band, which include a haunting song with Jerry Garcia on vocals, Loser. Let’s hope that the heat comes back.

Space Disco playlist 1977-81

  • Magic Fly – Space
  • Moon Boots – Orlando Riva Sound (ORS)
  • Space Rock – The Rockets
  • Cosmic Traveller – Sumeria (Alec Costandinos)
  • (Do You Have) The Force – The Droids
  • I Lost My Heart To A Starship Trooper – Sarah Brightman and Hot Gossip
  • Star Wars Theme/Cantina Band – Meco
  • Spacer – Sheila B. Devotion
  • Tango In Space – Space
  • Space Bass – Slick
  • Stars (12″ version) – Sylvester
  • Cosmic Cars (7″ version) – Cybotron
  • Spacelab – Kraftwerk
  • Cosmic Raindance (7″ version) – Cybotron