Friday, 21 February 2025
Guys and Dolls: The Upsetters - Bucky Skank (9 April 1993)
Tuesday, 18 February 2025
Guys and Dolls: The Slickers - Man Beware (9 April 1993)
I’m writing this while on holiday in St Lucia, so posting a rocksteady reggae track feels entirely appropriate. Man Beware was released in 1969 and was produced by Joe Gibbs. On this show, Peel dedicated the airing of Man Beware to John Downey of Lolworth, who had written in to assure Peel that the 1988 compilation album, Joe Gibbs & Friends - The Reggae Train 1968 - 1971 issued by Trojan Records was still available as he himself had recently bought a copy at Daddy Kool Records in London. That compilation not only featured Man Beware but other Peel show favourites such as Kimble and People Grudgeful.
Video courtesy of weaverine.
Thursday, 13 February 2025
Guys and Dolls: The Fall - High Tension Line (9 April 1993)
Clocking in at Number 24 on the Phantom Fifty, I couldn’t understand how this track hadn’t secured a similar placing on the mainstream UK singles chart in late 1990/early 1991, given how terrific it was. Granted, it’s not the smoothest production in the world, falling three quarters of the way towards Hit the North, but it’s tight as a drum, catchy as hell and features Mark E. Smith’s ruminations on both the march of technology into people’s lives and the first stirrings of the property bubble, a phenomenon which led to our current cultural hellscape where seemingly every second television programme is either about converting properties or moving to new ones. High Tension Line is so good, I rate it as that rarest of beasts, at least to my ears, the repeatable Fall song. I could listen to it on a loop 4 or 5 times, I reckon.
It should have been a nailed on Top 40 hit at least, but it got nowhere near the charts. I suspect that its prospects were harmed by the dickish decision that the band made to film a video for the song in which they sat around in SS uniforms while ripping up magazines and newspapers. Book burning on a Woolworths budget was never likely to tickle the interest of Top of the Pops or The Chart Show. Smith attempted to brush off the controversy at the time, by claiming that the Fall were taking the piss out of “controversial” bands who played it safe. Remember, children, being a Northern contrarian means never having to admit when you’ve acted like a twat. Ultimately, a distracted record buying public and poor decision making meant that a splendid song fell down the cracks. It wasn’t even featured on the vinyl version of the Shift-Work album. Instead, if you had missed the single release, you had to buy the CD or cassette versions.
For more information on High Tension Line, including the avant-garde classical piece that inspired its title, I can only direct you to the recently deleted Annotated Fall website and hope, along with every other blogger out there, that The Internet Archive continues to hold that most precious of content safe.
Video courtesy of The Fall
Saturday, 8 February 2025
Guys and Dolls: The Safehouse - Hardcore Child (9 April 1993)
Friday, 31 January 2025
Guys and Dolls: Wild Jimmy Spruill - Scratchin’ (9 April 1993)
Monday, 27 January 2025
Guys and Dolls: Voodoo Queens - Supermodel-Superficial (9 April 1993)
Coming on as a stroppy hybrid of Huggy Bear and Mambo Taxi, Voodoo Queens were quite a fancy of Peel’s around this time. They recorded three sessions for him between January 1993 and February 1994. Peel may well have been taken both by their music and the fact that one of their guitarists shared a name with a track from one of Peel’s favourite albums.
The resemblance to Mambo Taxi isn’t a huge shock as both Ella Guru and Anjali Bhatia left that group in order to form Voodoo Queens. I have to compare Supermodel-Superficial to Mambo Taxi’s song, Prom Queen, which both Bhatia and Guru played on, and which I changed my mind on including on the metaphorical mixtape when making selections from Peel’s show from 30/1/93. Supermodel-Superficial is an improvement on Prom Queen, because its ire is better directed. While not being a direct attack on supermodels themselves, it instead tears to shreds the lifestyle orthodoxy that was forming around the cult of the supermodel and which was being pushed on to young girls as a desirable way of looking and living.
This all slightly predates the size zero controversies - indeed my principal memory of 1990s supermodels is that they were slim rather than thin, though Kate Moss veered dangerously close - but Voodoo Queens can see the direction of travel that things are moving in and they call bullshit on it here.
It all makes me wish that Voodoo Queens had lived long enough to take on some of the things which that journey brought into our lives in subsequent years such as It girls, reality TV stars, influencers and OnlyFans.
Wednesday, 22 January 2025
Guys and Dolls: Bajja Jedd - Dollars (9 April 1993)
I think that this may be the best song about money ever written. I’d wager that it isn’t the first track anyone would think of when asked to name a cash centred song, but, to use a Peelism, in a decently ordered society, Dollars by Bajja Jedd (Dwane Jarvis) would be a global anthem.
Some of the sentiments here are not new, Money (That’s What I Want), recorded 34 years before Dollars made it clear that without money, love and community were not enough. But whereas Money always seemed like a tantrum track about not having enough and wanting more, RIGHT NOW, Dollars manages to be empathetic and aspirational. I suspect that first adjective is why no political party would ever go near it for use as a campaign song.
Video courtesy of Robbreggsounds.
Thursday, 16 January 2025
Guys and Dolls: The Werefrogs - Potvan (9 April 1993)
Saturday, 11 January 2025
Guys and Dolls: Milk Cult - Tuesday (9 April 1993)
Formed as a side project by members of Steel Pole Bath Tub, Milk Cult released four albums of electronic-rock-avant garde music between 1992 and 2000. Peel approached their debut album, Love God with a degree of distance regarding it as strange as anything I’ve ever heard. He felt that Tuesday was the most accessible track on the album and given that most of it seems to take place within a Formula 1 pit lane, I can see why it appealed to him.
Tuesday will give you a flavour of what to expect from the Love God album: plenty of found sound, genuine industrial noise (engines starting etc), short bursts of rock and excursions into more atmospheric soundscapes. I’m thinking in particular of the two minute ghostly piano/melodica duet which starts at 1:20 and sounds like it’s being played in an abandoned factory. It’s all a bit of a hodge-podge but it hangs together surprisingly well.
Peel gave his listeners something of a potted review of the Love God album, talking in particular about its centrepiece: There’s a 38 minute track on there which I seriously doubt anyone will ever listen to in its entirety. He was was talking about the six-track suite called Clown Party which makes up the second half of the album. I took him up on the challenge and listened to the LP yesterday. I disagree with him that Tuesday was the most accessible track on the album, I think that the title track would be worth an airing, despite its near 11 minute running time. However, Peel was spot on about Clown Party, a title which conjures disturbing images of Pennywise and friends causing havoc, but which ends up being six tracks of repetitive tedium, albeit there are several moments where it sounds like the band are about to start playing Eye of the Tiger. Overall, on Love God, there’s nothing to frighten the horses, but there isn’t much to exhilarate anyone either.
Video courtesy of Milk Cult - Topic
Wednesday, 8 January 2025
Guys and Dolls: Elements of Trance - A Taste of Your Own Medicine [C-Level Mix] (9 April 1993)
Elements of Trance were a Los Angeles based techno duo made up of Justin King and Ian Rich. The C-Level mix of A Taste of Your Own Medicine puts me in mind of Date M by The Traveller, especially the street percussion. However, I think that the Flammable 6AM and Midi-Evil mixes are both better.
Video courtesy of sbradyman.
Thursday, 2 January 2025
Guys and Dolls: The International Submarine Band - Sum Up Broke (9 April 1993)
Up to now, all of the productions that this blog has soundtracked took place either in a school or college setting. The next year or two will see the soundtracking of the first production I did with a local amateur dramatics group.
Staging their first production in 1982, Falmouth’s Young Generation were formed as a youth-orientated offshoot of Falmouth Amateur Operatic Society - now known as Falmouth Theatre Company. They always staged one major musical in August of each year, though occasionally staged other productions at Christmas time and were open for any young person to join if they were aged between 10 & 20.
Video courtesy of Estradas Flamejantes