Friday 31 August 2012

The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore by Keane


So far i've written about the first vinyl single that i ever bought and the first one that i ever owned. Now, it's time to tell you about the last single that i acquired and one that i've never played.
I say acquired because i didn't actually buy it. It comes under that category of free singles that are given away by bands for their fans, or by record labels for promotional purposes.
I have several vinyl singles like this and may well talk about some others over time.

"The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore" by Keane is, as i'm sure many people are already aware, a cover version.
The song, written by Bob Crewe and Bob Gaudio, was originally a solo hit for Frankie Valli in 1965. Crewe and Gaudio wrote many songs for both Frankie Valli and The Four Seasons.
Although "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore" has been recorded by many artists, including Cher. Probably the most famous version is the one by The Walker Brothers, which was number one in the UK in 1966.

The version by Keane was recorded in 2004 and was originally meant as a download only release. Quite a revolutionary idea back then. It was then given to the War Child foundation, of whom Keane are patrons, so that it could be downloaded from the War Child website. This was in 2005.


The 7" vinyl single version that i own, was given away to some fans of the band in 2005 and was limited to only 1,000 copies, all individually numbered. It was done as a thank you to early fans of the band who had helped them with their initial success.You can see from the photo above, that my copy is number '0814'.
The vinyl single came with a copy of a hand written note, written and signed by the band members. The note starts with the words "Thanks for all your love and support during the last year".

So, how did i come to get my hands on such a limited edition single?
Well, Keane come from the town of Battle, scene of the Battle of Hastings in 1066. Battle is only 7 miles from where i live. So, i knew a bit about the band from a fairly early stage. Although they never played locally, concentrating their efforts instead on London. A strategy that proved to be a good one.

Strangely, seeing as how new a band Keane are, i do actually have some more vinyl 7" 45's by them. Some of their single releases also came out in numbered limited edition vinyl as well. I have a copy of "Somewhere Only We Know" (Number 1635) and, for some unknown reason, 2 copies of "Everybody's Changing" (Numbers 1033 and 2606). Both singles were released in 2004.

I do also have some other rarities by them. I have a copy, on CD, of the first ever release of their song "This Is The Last Time". Which was originally released in 2003 on the Fierce Panda record label.

I also have a 6 track promo sampler CD of Keane's first album, Hopes And Fears. It was sent to me by the record company, prior to the album release and has the serial number '0005' on both the CD and the cover. It also came with a note saying that the CD was copy protected, water marked and that my name had been logged for security reasons!

I have only seen Keane live twice. The second time was in June 2005 at a local music festival, a gig i ended up reviewing for the local paper. It was very much a homecoming gig for a band who had had a huge amount of success over the past year. I remember that the gig was only a couple of days before Keane's appearence, in front of a worldwide audience of many millions, at Live 8.

The first time i saw them was in rather different circumstances and was just before their breakthrough single, "Somewhere Only We Know", was released in February 2004. The gig was on 7th February.
The venue was the "Underground Theatre" in Eastbourne, just 15 miles from Hastings and i still have my ticket. I doubt that there were more than 50 people in the small theatre and i got the impression that most of them were family and friends anyway.
Something that sticks in my mind from the gig was that i was right at the front, actually leaning on the stage, during the whole gig. Not knowing that Keane were just about to come on, i'd wandered down to the front to have a look at the gear that the band were going to use. It was at that moment that Keane walked on stage, so i thought i'd stay right where i was. A very good decision on my part i think.

Well, Keane have certainly come a long way since that day, selling over 10 million albums so far.
Their fifth album, Strangeland, was released in  May 2012 and in common with all of their previous 4 albums, it went to number one in the UK album charts.
Apparently, only one other band have ever managed that same feat....... The Beatles.
I think that fact proves that this is definitely a case of local lads making good.

Postscript:
Guess what? I've now remembered that i have actually seen Keane a third time.
This third occasion was between the two gigs mentioned above. I have no idea how i came to forget this third gig, as it was a good one, just like the other two.
The gig, once again, took place in Eastbourne. This time though it was at the Winter Garden on 8th May 2004. I don't remember a huge amount about the gig except that it took place just at the time that "Hopes And Fears" was released and that it was a standing only gig. There were certainly far more people there than at the previous Eastbourne gig, just a few months before.
The one thing that does stick in mind is walking down a road, near to the venue, prior to the gig and walking right past Tim Rice-Oxley, of Keane. I wish i'd said "hello" now.



Wednesday 29 August 2012

Life On Mars? by David Bowie


Seeing as the last post in this blog was about Neil Armstrong and the Apollo 11 moon landing, i thought it might be appropriate to continue with the space theme.
For me, it was very easy to decide which space themed song to choose. Especially in the light of NASA's current Curiosity mission.

"Life On Mars" by David Bowie was released on 22nd June, 1973 and reached number 3 in the UK charts. The song first appeared on Bowie's album Hunky Dory, which came out in December 1971.
"Life On Mars?" features piano by Rick Wakeman, of the band Yes. Rick Wakeman was a well known session musician and also played on the David Bowie songs "Changes" and "Oh! You Pretty Things", both from the same Hunky Dory album.

At that time, single releases from David Bowie didn't seem to follow any sensible, or logical pattern. The previous few single releases had all been from Bowie's album Aladdin Sane, which came out in April 1973, prior to the release of "Life On Mars?'.
In fact another album, the classic The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (1973), had come out between Hunky Dory and Aladdin Sane.
To further add to the confusion, the B Side of "Life On Mars?" is the title track from David Bowie's 3rd album "The Man Who Sold The World". Which was also released, in the UK, in 1971.
As to why tracks were released in this seemingly haphazard way, i have no idea. But, this is David Bowie we're talking about here, so maybe all this confusion shouldn't surprise us too much?

I can still remember seeing David Bowie for the very first time. He was appearing on the UK tv show Top Of The Pops, playing his single "Starman". This would have been in July of 1972.
I used to watch Top Of The Pops avidly at that time. I remember it being on a Thursday evening and it was a real highlight of the week for me and for many of my school friends too.

For some reason, i often associate Top Of The Pops and Thursday evenings from that time, with fish and chips and haircuts.
Why?
Well, Thursday was the evening that a mobile fish and chip van used to come around my area and it used to stop just outside my house. We often used to go out to the van and get our dinner from it. I seem to remember that it was very popular with other local residents too and there was often a queue.

As for the haircuts. Well, a very reasonably priced barber used to set up shop at a local social club, near to my home, also on a Thursday evening. So, i was sent up there every few weeks, by my father, to have my hair cut. Every time trying desperately to get as little cut off, as i felt i could safely get away with.
But, my walk to get my hair cut never happened until after Top Of The Pops had finished. Yes, it was that important to a teenager of 14 years old.

Seeing David Bowie perform "Starman" that evening, made a real impression on me. Maybe it was the fact that the song is a little different to most of the songs around at that time? It is a largely acoustic song, which did set it apart. It is, of course, yet another song about space travel and astronauts. I'm sure that must have had something to do with it as well?

I think i can safely say that "Life On Mars?" and "Starman" are still my favourite two David Bowie tracks. That period is certainly his best, in my humble opinion.
Having said that, as you can see from the date written on the front cover of "Life On Mars?" above, i didn't actually get around to buying the single until 24th August, 1974. And i never did buy the single of "Starman".
Don't worry, i have an explanation.

As i mentioned in the very first post in this Vinyl Junkie blog, i was a big fan of the band T. Rex at this time. I was also still at school and therefore had very little money at my disposal. So, any money available to buy records would have gone on those favoured T. Rex singles. Of which there were a steady stream back in 1972/3.

I left school and started work in July of 1974.
As mentioned above, i bought "Life On Mars?" in August of 1974, just at the time when my first pay packets were starting to roll in. I may not have been earning a huge amount of money at that time. But, a fair proportion of that money would have been spent on records. Especially, some of those singles that i'd not been able to buy in the past, through lack of money.
How i came to get my hands on some of these older singles is a story in itself and will be covered in a future post.

Other David Bowie vinyl singles that i still own from that period are, "The Jean Genie" (1972), "Rebel Rebel" (Which i have as an American import from 1973) and "Rock And Roll Suicide" (1974).
All of these were also bought after i had started work, regardless of when they had been released.

David Bowie is one of those artists that i regularly listen to, especially his music from this period. I can't pretend to have liked everything that he's done. But, "Ziggy Stardust" is still one of my favourite albums of all time and "Life On Mars?" itself, is right up there amongst my favourite ever singles.

Like so much of the music of this era, it's not just the music itself that i care about, as good as it is. But, also the memories that it stirs and brings back again. After all, our teenage years are often some of our most eventful aren't they?

Music has a way of doing that to most people. It can instantly transport us back to bygone days and conjure up long forgotten images and maybe not always good ones either?
But "Life On Mars?" brings back only memories of good times, for me at least. That's probably why it gets played so often?

Monday 27 August 2012

Man On The Moon


Due to the recent sad death of Apollo astronaut Neil Armstrong, i though i'd take a little sidetrack with this trawl through my vinyl singles.

This is indeed a 45rpm single release, but it is obviously a little different to "normal" releases. For a start it contains no music whatsoever, just speech.

As you may already have guessed, this single was a souvenir release. Pressed exclusively for the, now extinct, News Of The World newspaper here in the UK.
It came out on the Philips label, with a serial number of '88457 DE' and is from 1969, the year of the Apollo 11 moon landing.

As i have mentioned in a YouTube video that i recorded yesterday, i was 11 years old at the time of the Apollo 11 mission. So, it had a profound effect on me, as indeed did the whole of the NASA space program.
For my personal memories of the Apollo 11 moon landing please watch the aforementioned video.

I suspect that this souvenir single was bought for me by my parents, as i was an avid watcher of all things NASA and Apollo back in 1969.
But, it wasn't just any ordinary single, as you can see from this photo of some of what elsecame with it:



Apart from the actual single itself, which was double sided and played at 45rpm, there were two fold out inserts. You can see the one that includes a photo of the Apollo 11 Saturn 5 rocket launch, above. The other included the front cover shot, the photo of the three Apollo 11 astronauts seen above and also a picture of "Eagle", the Apollo 11 Lunar Module.

Also seen above, is the fold out insert that had the complete transcript of the contents of the single printed onto it. The single was basically edited recordings of the Apollo 11 mission.
It starts with a recording of part of U.S President John F Kennedy's famous speech committing the USA to go to the moon in the 1960's

Other contents include the launch of Apollo 11, the lunar landing and then coverage of that historic first ever moon walk by Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. This is done by using the audio commentary from Mission Control at the time and also communication between them and the astronauts themselves. It even includes audio of the phone call made by President Richard Nixon to Armstrong and Aldrin during their moon walk.

As an added bonus, the other side of the fold out inserts includes more information about the mission. Including this diagram of the trajectory of the Apollo 11 space craft, on its way to the moon and back.


I can remember playing this single many, many times and used to be able to recite much of the dialogue included on it. I could still, quite probably, do that now.
Whenever i hear, or see footage of that historic mission i sometimes find myself reciting the dialogue in my head.
Well, it was one of those once in a lifetime experiences wasn't it? One that i'm very pleased to have lived through and also to have watched live, as it actually happened.

I have no idea what, if anything, this single might be worth, especially in the light of Neil Armstrong's death. But, i do know that it is something that i would never want to part with.
It holds far too many treasured memories for me to do that.
It really is a little slice of history, imprinted onto vinyl.

Sunday 26 August 2012

Gangsters by The Special A.K.A




As mentioned in a previous post in this blog, the Punk and New Wave years unleashed a whole new group of Do It Yourself record companies. '2 Tone' were just one of those labels.

'2 Tone' was the creation of Jerry Dammers, the founder member of the Coventry based ska revival band best known as The Specials.

"Gangsters" was the first single on the '2 Tone' record label and was released in March of 1979, getting to number 6 in the UK charts.
As you can see from the photo above, the band were credited as 'The Special A.K.A' at this time. But, they had changed their name to the more widely known 'The Specials' by the time of their second single release, "A Message To You, Rudy", which was also released in 1979.

The release of "Gangsters" had a big impact on UK music at the time of its release and sparked off a whole revival of Ska music, a genre often referred to as 'Two Tone'. It also helped to kickstart the formation of many other UK based Ska bands such as Madness, The Selecter and The Beat, all of whose first singles were released on the '2 Tone' label.

The song "Gangsters" is often thought to be at least partly about 'The Specials' early manager and also manager of The Clash, Bernie Rhodes. The song starts with the lyrics, "Why must you record my phone calls? Are you planning a bootleg LP?"

The Specials, who originally formed in 1977 at the height of the Punk era, were given their first big break by Joe Strummer. Who, in typical Joe Strummer fashion, invited the band to open for The Clash on one of their UK tours. Hence the brief association with The Clash's manager.

As was the case with many of the early Two Tone era releases, "Gangsters" was a reworking of an old Jamaican ska tune, this time Prince Buster's "Al Capone".
The B Side of the single was not credited to The Special A.K.A, or even The Specials. It is instead a track called "The Selecter" by The Selecter. The song is credited to John Bradbury, the drummer with The Specials and Noel Davis.
"The Selecter" is even credited as being the second '2 Tone' release, having the serial number 'TT2' on the record itself. "Gangsters" is 'TT1'.
Confusing isn't it?

The complete single is in fact basically a Double A Side. Effectively splitting the record between The Special A.K.A and The Selecter. It's just that "Gangsters" was always the most popular track and the one that got all of the attention and radio play, at the time.
After the success of the single, Noel Davis then formed the previously mentioned band, The Selecter. They went on to have several hit singles in their own right over the coming years, many of them on the '2 Tone' label.

The "Gangsters" single featured the first outing of a fictional character called 'Walt Jabsco', who can be seen in the artwork gracing the records label itself. The design of 'Walt Jabsco' was loosely based on an old image of Peter Tosh, an early member of Bob Marley's band The Wailers.
'Walt' was to feature on many of the record sleeves and labels of the '2 Tone' record releases, as well as appearing on countless t.shirts, posters etc.

The 'Walt Jabsco' character fitted in perfectly with the whole ethos of '2 Tone' records. The black and white colouring and '2 Tone' name was meant to signify the bands aim of bringing people of different colours together, peacefully and through music.
This was at a time when the whole Rock Against Racism movement was very active in the UK. A cause that The Specials were very supportive of.

As if to emphasise this, in 1984 The Specials released a single called "Free Nelson Mandela". That song became something of an unofficial anthem for all those people across the world, campaigning for the release of Nelson Mandela.

The Specials split up, or were effectively dissolved by founder member Jerry Dammers, in 1984, not long after the "Free Nelson Mandela" single. They have since reformed, minus Jerry Dammers himself, and are still touring to much acclaim in 2012.

The influence of The Specials and of the '2 Tone' record label is still felt today and not just because the band are still touring either. Their music stands the test of time, both lyrically and musically, even after 30 years.
Their 1981 chart topping single "Ghost Town" regularly features in lists of the best UK singles ever. Something that i certainly wouldn't disagree with.

I loved the music of the Two Tone movement and bought many of the singles and albums of the bands from that era. I still have most of those vinyl singles, especially those by The Specials, who along with The Beat were probably my favourite of the bands to emerge at that time.
I'm sure many young people in the late 1970's were introduced and exposed to Ska music for the very first time because of bands like The Specials. That cannot be a bad thing.
Although i can remember reggae and ska music from the old Trojan record label, back in the late 1960's. I was still a bit too young to really appreciate it fully and certainly too young to buy any of the records at the time.

The 'Two Tone' movement that The Specials helped to start and the whole ethos that went with it, all those years ago, is still very relevant today.
The '2 Tone' record label itself has also influenced musicians and music makers, from that day to this, by showing them that they can bypass those major record labels and just do it themselves.
The fact that i've chosen to talk about the band and their music here and also to end up writing far more than i ever anticipated, maybe goes to prove that?

Saturday 25 August 2012

Urban Guerrilla by Hawkwind






"Urban Guerrilla" by Hawkwind was released on 27th July 1973 and reached number 39 in the UK charts. It would quite probably have reached a higher position, as the single was selling very well, but the single was withdrawn after only 3 weeks.

Why?

Well, the opening lyrics of "Urban Guerrilla" are 'I'm an urban guerrilla, i make bombs in my cellar" and Hawkwind had the misfortune to release the single just as the IRA started a bombing campaign in London. The lyrics and subject matter were felt to be in bad taste and the BBC refused to play the song on the radio.

Apparently, it was considered trying to promote the singles B Side, "Brainbox Pollution" instead, as a way of getting around the problem. But, possibly, because "Brainbox Pollution" is a song about drug abuse, "Urban Guerrilla" was withdrawn from sale.

Ironically, the lyrics of  "Urban Guerrilla" were written by band member Bob Calvert a couple of years prior to the songs release.

So, "Urban Guerrilla" joins that long and illustrious list of records that have been banned, or effectively  banned. Either because somebody decides that the content is offensive (think "Relax" by Frankie Goes To Hollywood), or for being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

I can still remember there being a list of songs not suitable to be played on the radio during the first Gulf War in 1990/91. That list included songs such as "Give Peace A Chance" by Plastic Ono Band, with John Lennon and, possibly not suprisingly, "Killing An Arab" by The Cure.
There have of course been many other situations like this, but this is the one that sticks in my mind.

The main reason that i included "Urban Guerrilla" in this series of blog posts, was because of the controversary surrounding the song. That and also because it may well have some value as a rarity, because of its withdrawal from sale.

'Urban Guerrilla" can now be found on the re-issued version of the Hawkwind album "Doremi Fasol Latido" and on various compilations of the bands work.

Looking at the scribbling, that i did at the time, on the record sleeve i can tell you that i bought "Urban Guerrilla" on 19th September 1974. So, i didn't buy it at the time of its original release.
I did own at least one Hawkwind album by this time, so would have known about the song. I can only presume that i couldn't find the record, due to its being deleted so quickly?

It is not the only vinyl single that i still own by Hawkwind. I have three more, including the obligatory "Silver Machine". Which was the bands only real hit single and got to number 3 in the UK charts in 1972. My version, from 1972, even has a nice picture sleeve and i would probably have written about that record instead, if not for the aforementioned controversary.

The other two singles i still have are "Psychedelic Warlords (Disappear In Smoke)" from 1974 and "Kings of Speed" from 1975. "Kings Of Speed" has, as its B Side, the original version of the song "Motorhead". "Motorhead" was written by then bass player Ian "Lemmy" Kilminster, who went on to form the band "Motorhead", after being sacked from Hawkwind in 1975.


Even if you know nothing about Hawkwind, apart from what you've read here, the bands song titles may well give you some idea of what the band, who are still going, are all about. They have been called a "space rock" band, amongst other things and have their origins in the hippie era of the late 1960's.

I vividly remember seeing Hawkwind live a few times in the mid 1970's.
There is a track on their classic 1973 live album, "Space Ritual", called "Sonic Attack" written by the science fiction and fantasy author Michael Moorcock, who was a friend of the band. The title of that song sums up very well what a Hawkwind gig was like, especially back in those days.

For a young man, who was attending one of his first ever gigs, my first Hawwind concert was quite an initiation into the world of live music.
Hawkwind had a pretty revolutionary light show back then. They were also sometimes joined by a rather buxom young female dancer called Stacia. Stacia was renowned for taking all of her clothes off and dancing around the stage in a kind of musically induced trance. For some strange reason, this is something i remember very well!
Couple all of that with the wall of sound coming from the band on stage, in a small venue and it really was a complete audio/visual experience.

Hawkwind are one of those bands that command an almost fanatical following amongst their many fans, i know several myself. Forming in 1969 and still gigging and recording in 2012 means that they have now accumulated many legions of dedicated fans across the years.
Long may that continue.

Friday 24 August 2012

The Day The World Turned Day-Glo by X-Ray Spex


"Some people say little girls should be seen and not heard. But I think, Oh Bondage Up Yours! 1-2-3-4!"

And so starts the first ever single from the punk band X-Ray Spex, "Oh Bondage Up Yours!".
Not a bad opening is it, especially as the final part was virtually screamed down the microphone by the bands singer Poly Styrene.
This is something that had a profound effect back in 1977, as young girls just weren't supposed to act like that. It could be argued that this was the start of what became known as "Girl Power".
Punk Rock opened up doors for many people, especially for women, who were at the forefront of that movement and have not looked back since.

By the time of their 2nd single "The Day The World Turned Dayglo", X-Ray Spex were well established within the UK Punk Rock scene. The single was released in March of 1978 and got to number 23 in the UK charts.
The B Side was a track called "I Am A Poseur", which contained the lyrics, "I am a poseur and i don't care. I like to make people stare". There certainly were a few poseurs around in those days and especially in 1978.

X-Ray Spex were formed after Poly Styrene (Real name Marianne Elliott) saw the Sex Pistols on Hastings Pier on 3rd July 1976, supporting the Welsh rock band Budgie would you believe? A day that just happened to be her 18th birthday. Like many people who saw the Sex Pistols in those early days, it changed her life.
X-Ray Spex quickly established themselves on the London Punk Rock scene, playing at the legendary Roxy club and appearing on the "Live At The Roxy" album released in July 1977.

The main reason that "The Day The World Turned Dayglo" has been included here though, is because of the colour of the actual vinyl itself.


As you can see, it is indeed Dayglo!

In my mind, one of the great things about this period in British music is the revival of the 45rpm single.
Yes, they'd been popular for many years, but the Punk era kick-started a revolution in cover art and coloured vinyl. The whole singles market was revitalised and new, independent record labels started springing up everywhere. Partly because the mainstream labels weren't interested in a lot of the new music being created, a whole new Do It Yourself culture was started.
Singles became collectors items, with limited edition releases containing many shades of coloured vinyl, or special picture sleeves. Apart from the new record labels, new artists and designers were emerging to produce all that new and exciting cover art. Once again, the ripples from that era are still being felt today.
There will be more coloured vinyl, cover art and new record labels featured in future blog posts.

X-Ray Spex only released one album Germ Free Adolescents, which came out in 1978 and the band split up in 1979. They did reform, albeit briefly, several times, most notably in 2008 when they performed a sell out gig at the Roundhouse, in London. But, no new music was ever released.

Poly Styrene settled in my home town of St Leonards On Sea and lived, literally, just around the corner from my house. She, very sadly, died of breast cancer in a local Hospice on 25th April 2011.
I wrote a blog post, "Oh Cancer, Up Yours!" about her death at the time.

I think it can be safely said, that without the emergence of the Punk Rock movement in the mid 1970's, bands such as X-Ray Spex would never have been given the opportunity to record and release their music to a wider record buying public.
And what a lesser place this world would be without that music.

Thursday 23 August 2012

Bohemian Rhapsody by Queen




"Bohemian Rhapsody" by Queen, is one of the most successful single releases in UK chart history and from one the UK's most successful bands too.
It has been number 1 twice and has sold very nearly 6 million copies overall. On both occasions it was number 1 at Christmas time. A feat that nobody else has managed.

"Bohemian Rhapsody", written by Freddie Mercury, was first released on 31st October 1975 and was number 1 for nine weeks. This is the version you see in the photo above.
It also featured on Queen's 4th studio album "A Night At The Opera", also released in 1975, just after "Bohemian Rhapsody".
The album "A Night At The Opera" was number in the UK for 4 weeks.

The B Side of "Bohemian Rhapsody" has also become well known in its own right. Written and sung by drummer Roger Taylor, "I'm In Love With My Car" was also a track from the "A Night At The Opera" album and has become a bit of a favourite amongst dedicated Queen fans.
Don't forget that the B Side of a single received the same amount of royalties as the A Side, so Roger Taylor has done well out of the sales of this original version.

The re-release of "Bohemian Rhapsody" in 1991, to commemorate the death of Freddie Mercury, had the track "These Are The Days Of Our Lives" coupled with it to make a double A sided single.
"These Are The Days Of Our Life" was credited to Queen, thereby sharing the royalties this time around.

Apparently, "Bohemian Rhapsody" was very nearly not released as a single at all back in 1975. Running at nearly 6 minutes, it was considered by EMI label executives to be too long for radio play and consequently was unlikely to be a hit. But, radio DJ Kenny Everett got hold of a copy and started playing it, getting a huge reaction from listeners. After that, it was only a matter of time before an official release happened.

The famous video of "Bohemian Rhapsody" was, i'm sure, a big factor in the success of the song. A pretty revolutionary idea at the time and one that is thought to have help kick start the whole video promo idea. It certainly had an effect on me and many other people at the time, as we'd not seen anything like it before.
Apparently the video was only made because the band realised that they wouldn't be able to appear on the tv show Top Of The Pops. They also weren't happy with having to mime such a complicated song either.
Give me that video over a band miming in a tv studio anyday.

"Bohemian Rhapsody" was not the first Queen single that i bought. I already had and still have, previous singles "Now I'm Here" and "Killer Queen". I remember hearing Queen's very first single "Keep Yourself Alive" on the radio back in 1973 and had followed their progress since then. Both via the radio and the weekly music press. For me, that was easily their best period, but i know that many might disagree with that?
I did buy several of their future singles releases, but not their albums. I don't think i've ever owned an album by Queen, i'm not sure why?
I think it may be due to the fact that Queen have never been a favourite band of mine. I have friends who rave about them, but they just never had the same effect on me. Don't get me wrong, they've released some great music, especially in those earlier days. But, for me, Queen have never quite touched the parts that other bands have managed to reach.

Although, on this occasion, i don't actually remember buying "Bohemian Rhapsody", i did get to see Queen live at a free concert in Hyde Park in the September of 1976. Only 9 months after it was number 1 in the charts.
I remember "Bohemian Rhapsody" being played at that gig, but seem to recall Queen playing it in parts throughout the show, rather than as a complete song. One thing i do remember though is Brian May's guitar playing on "Brighton Rock".
It was the only time i ever saw Queen live.
Amazingly enough, i have just come across video footage of that entire 1976 gig! The wonders of the Internet eh? The quality isn't very good, but what do you expect?

As for other personal memories of the band Queen?
Well, for those of us who were lucky enough to see it, who can forget their appearance at Live Aid in July 1985? As i've said elsewhere, i wasn't a huge fan of the band, but what an epic performance that was. It still looks good today and could serve as a lesson in crowd control and participation to any aspiring frontman, or woman out there today.

Then, of course, there's that scene in the movie Wayne's World, which i'm sure brought "Bohemian Rhapsody" to the attention of a whole new group of potential fans.

There aren't that many songs that have managed to span the decades and have the same effect as "Bohemian Rhapsody, has. Like so many of those songs from the 1970's, it still sounds great today.

Not bad for a song that was thought to be too long to be a single, or a hit.
What do "the suits" know eh?






Wednesday 22 August 2012

Trampled Under Foot by Led Zeppelin





Rock bands don't come much bigger than Led Zeppelin and at the time that this single came out they were easily the biggest band in the world.

As many people may well know, Led Zeppelin didn't release any official singles in the UK. They did release some in the USA and elsewhere, but not in the UK.
So, where did this one come from then?

"Trampled Under Foot" is taken from the bands 6th album "Physical Graffiti", which was released in 1975. The B Side of this single, "Black Country Woman", is also taken from the same album.
The single was released on Led Zeppelin's own "Swan Song" record label.

This piece from Wikipedia gives a clue as to how the "Trampled Under Foot" single came to be released in the UK.
"There were several pressings made of "Trampled Under Foot" as a single in 1975 in time for the band's Earls Court concerts (in May of 1975), but they were all shelved before being released"
As you can see from the photo above, it says "Special Limited Edition" on the record sleeve, which tends to back this up.

Those gigs at Earls Court were part of the tour celebrating the release of the "Physical Graffiti" album.
I was lucky enough to go to one of those dates at Earls Court. I don't know which night it was now, but i do remember that it was a great gig. As it happens, one of the songs that stood out for me on the night and that i can still remember it being played, was "Trampled Under Foot". For the record, others include "Kashmir" and "In My Time Of Dying", all tracks from "Physical Graffiti".

I was also lucky enough to see Led Zeppelin again, at one of their shows at Knebworth in 1979.
I thought the Earls Court gig was better by the way.
Age does have its benefits sometimes you know.

Once again, i can remember where i bought my copy of "Trampled Under Foot". This time it was in a dedicated record shop called "Whites". Another shop which has now, sadly,  bitten the dust. "Whites" will, however, feature in some more of these blog posts in the future.

I was a regular customer there around this time and knew the owners well. Hence the fact that i got to buy this single in the first place.
I remember going into the shop and one of the owners showing me a copy of "Trampled Under Foot'. Being a big fan of the band, i asked if i could buy it. I was told that, as it was rare and really just a promotional single, he could only sell it to me if i bought a Led Zeppelin album.
I don't recall what i bought, but i got my copy of "Trampled Under Foot" and if memory serves me correct, it only cost me 50 pence?

Looking on the back of the record sleeve, i can tell you that i bought "Trampled Under Foot' on 31st May 1975, which was after the Earls Court gigs. I can also tell you that it was the 221st single that i bought.
Back in those days i used to write certain dates and facts on the record sleeves and i'm now very glad that i did.

Led Zeppelin have always been one of my favourite bands and i still play their music regularly, both at home and on the radio. Although it all tends to be on CD, or even an mp3 these days.

The "Trampled Under Foot" single is the only music by Led Zeppelin that i still have on vinyl. I used to have most of their albums and even a couple of U.S singles on vinyl. But, in common with many other people, i sold much of my vinyl collection, especially my LP's, some years ago now.
A major cause for regret, but....

For me, Led Zeppelin's music still stands the test of time and sounds as good as just about anything that has been produced since.
I don't see my opinion about that changing anytime soon.

Tuesday 21 August 2012

Anarchy In The UK by Sex Pistols


After my post yesterday which talked about a day that changed my life in some ways. Here is a record that changed many people's lives and could even be argued to have changed the face of music and much else besides.

"Anarchy In The UK" wasn't the first Punk Rock single to be released, in the UK, back in those heady days of 1976 and 1977, but it was certainly the most influential.
The honour of being the first Punk Rock single probably goes to The Damned and their first release "New Rose", which came out about a month earlier. I will more than likely talk about "New Rose" at a later date, as it's still a big favourite of mine.

"Anarchy In The UK' was released on the EMI label on 26th November 1976 and reached number 38 in the UK charts. It was produced by Chris Thomas. But, the B Side of the single "I Wanna Be Me" was produced by Dave Goodman. I don't think that happened very often?
Both songs are credited to, in my mind anyway, the classic line up of Sex Pistols: Rotten, Jones, Matlock and Cook.
To be honest, i was never much of a fan of Sid Vicious, who joined after Matlock left the band in 1977 and i do get a little annoyed when Sid is mentioned above Glen Matlock most of the time. Especially when it was Glen Matlock who wrote most of the early and classic music that Sex Pistols produced.

Once again, i can remember buying "Anarchy In The UK" and once again, it was from 'Standens' in Tonbridge high street.
For some reason i didn't buy the single when it was first released. I'm not sure why, as i was well aware of the band and their music at that time. I was a voracious reader of the weekly music papers, especially Sounds and the NME. So, i knew all about this new musical movement called Punk Rock. In fact the NME is even mentioned in the lyrics of "Anarchy In The UK".
What i do know though is that i bought the single for only 40pence. It had been reduced in price, probably because of it's low chart position and was in a bargain bin!
It certainly was a bargain, as the single was deleted not long afterwards (see below for the reasons) and is now worth some money because of its rarity. I don't know how much it's worth, as i have no intention of selling it anyway.
At one time i thought i had lost my copy of "Anarchy In The UK", as i couldn't find it in my big box of vinyl singles. But, thankfully, it turned up recently in another box with some other of my rarer vinyl 45's. Phew!

Sex Pistols were dropped from EMI records in early 1977, after the all the "Filth and the fury" and the aftermath of the now infamous Bill Grundy interview on Thames TV on 1st December 1976.
I remember that interview well, although i didn't actually see it at the time.
I was at work and in another section of the building where i worked, when a young work colleague, who had seen the interview, rushed up and told me all about it. He obviously knew i'd be interested, which i was.

I think it can safely be said, that if you didn't know about this new thing called Punk Rock before 1st December 1976, you most certainly did on 2nd December 1976.

The rest, as they say, is history and what a history it is.

That period certainly changed my life, possibly because of my age? I was 18 in 1976.
Music was a huge part of that change, as it was a time when i probably bought more records than i have ever done since. Most of those records were 45rpm vinyl singles, like "Anarchy In The UK".
I even paid full price for most of them too.

Monday 20 August 2012

Hot Love by T. Rex






What better place to start than with the very first single that i ever bought.

I was a big fan of T. Rex and they were the first band that i really got into. In fact their previous single "Ride A White Swan" is one of the first songs that had a real effect on me. I can still remember hearing "Ride A White Swan" for the first time in a youth club, probably the local YMCA.
I even made a YouTube video about the song a couple of years ago.
As i said in that video, when "Ride A White Swan" came out i could't afford to buy it.

If you look at the photo of "Hot Love" at the top of this page, the cover has a date on it, 13.3.71. That was the day that i bought that single.
I can still remember the name of the shop that i bought that single in too. It was called "Standens" and was an ordinary electrical retailer, that just happened to have a small record counter at the back of the store. As so many did back in those days.
I was a regular record buying customer there for several years and i suspect that many of the vinyl singles that will appear in this blog were bought there.

That date on the cover, 13th March 1971, was a pretty significant one for me, as it was actually my 13th birthday.
So, one of the first things that i did as a teenager was to go out and buy my very first record. My life changed in more than one way on that momentous day.

"Hot Love" was T.Rex's very first number one single. The first of many over the coming few years.
It was number one in the UK charts for 6 weeks between March and April of 1971. A fact also written onto the record cover by myself, all those years ago.

"Hot Love" was released on the Fly record label, as were many of their singles and albums. The catalogue number is "Bug 6".
The B Side of the single contained the songs: "Woodland Rock" and "The King Of The Mountain Cometh". All tracks were written by Marc Bolan, who sadly died in 1977, just short of his 30th birthday.

As well as "Hot Love', i bought all of T. Rex's subsequent releases until 1973, when their hot streak of classic single releases stopped, or at least slowed down. Unfortunately, "Hot Love" is the only one that i still own. For some long forgotten reason, i got rid of all of the others. Something i very much regret now.
If only....

Rather ironically, "Hot Love" is now my least favourite of all those classic T. Rex singles.
For me at least it hasn't aged as well as all those other subsequent number one singles. That bit at the end just goes on for far too long in my opinion. Even the earlier "Ride A White Swan" sounds better to me in 2012 than "Hot Love". Mind you, 1971 was a long time ago now and tastes change over the years don't they?

As if to emphasise the impact that T. Rex had on my young life, my first ever album purchase was also a T. Rex album. Albeit a cheap compilation album of earlier material, the name of which i have forgotten. Most of it recorded under the name of 'Tyrannosaurus Rex'. That album is yet another record that i no longer own.

And so begins a personal musical journey.
Where to next i wonder? 






Why Vinyl Junkie?

Why indeed.
Well, this is an idea i've been meaning to get around to doing something about for some time now.

I've had a love of music for as long as i can remember and "back in the day" i used to spend a lot of my money on buying vinyl records. Both albums and singles. Didn't we all?
That, of course, has since turned into buying CD's and mp3's. But, as many of us now realise, there is something about vinyl that just can't be replicated by a CD, mp3, cassette, or even an 8 track cartridge. Remember them?

Back in 2009 i made a series of 8 videos (since extended to 9) on YouTube called Vinyl Junkie
In those videos i went through a big box of 45rpm vinyl singles that i still have. During those videos i told stories based around some of the 45's, or about the memories that a particular single brought back to me.
Since then i've been meaning to do something similar, but taking it a single at a time.

Now is that time and this is the result.

So, what do i intend to be doing on this blog?
Well, as mentioned the idea is to take a vinyl 45 single, show a photo, or two of the single and talk a little bit about it. That might be a personal memory, or maybe something about the record label, or band concerned.
I shan't be writing about every single 45 in that box, but just about the more interesting ones. That interest might be regarding the cover art, the colour of the vinyl itself, or the actual purchase of the single.

It will almost be like taking a musical journey back in time. Both for me and maybe for you as well?

One of the great ironies of this journey though, is that i no longer have anything to play all of these wonderful vinyl 45s on. Like many people nowadays, i don't have a turntable.
Maybe this journey will inspire me to change that?

So, where to begin?
At the beginning of course.