Friday, 21 February 2025

Guys and Dolls: The Upsetters - Bucky Skank (9 April 1993)



I’m still in St Lucia, so I’m still skipping through my selections from Peel’s 9/4/93 show to pick out any Caribbean influenced tracks that he played that night.

In comparison to Man Beware by The Slickers, Bucky Skank, a 1973 Lee Perry production with The Upsetters, is a trickier listen. Unlike Man Beware, I wouldn’t put this on at a party, unless I was hoping to hurry people home. Although it has a narrative running through it - the scolding of a wannabe bank robber  (bucky meaning a home made gun in patois) - it’s really more of a mood piece than a sound system floor filler. The track seems afraid to draw attention to itself, almost afraid to blow its cover in the same way that its protagonist would be while preparing for a robbery. 
With its plangent guitar notes and strikingly, strange vocalisations, the listener is taken into the jittery, disturbed mind of the track’s protagonist. I’ll be honest and admit that this is a borderline inclusion, but what carries it through is precisely that strange, almost nocturnal atmosphere that pervades the track. 

I’m hoping to go to the weekly street party in Gros Islet tomorrow evening. I don’t expect to hear Bucky Skank played there, but I’ll let you know if it is.

Video courtesy of Rare Samples and Songs Oleg Tsoy.

Tuesday, 18 February 2025

Guys and Dolls: The Slickers - Man Beware (9 April 1993)

 


Buy this at Discogs

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)



 


Buy this at Discogs


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)

 


Buy this at Discogs

When I saw The Manfreds play at the Riviera Centre in Torquay in late-1992, one piece of between song patter always stayed with me. Singer Paul Jones explained to the audience that although they were known for their hits such as Do Wah DiddyPretty Flamingo or The Mighty Quinn, if people wanted to know what the band were really like or what their true sound was, they should listen to the b-sides, as they captured the band as they saw themselves musically. And with this they launched into a rendition of I’m Your Kingpin. Anyone interested in hearing what this duality sounded like - at least over the first half of their career - is advised to buy Manfred Mann at Abbey Road 1963 to 1966.

In the same vein, I feel that if you want to get an idea of what I’m like as a musical curator, skip past whichever tune I’ve put at Number 1 in either of the Festive Fifties that I’ve compiled for the blog - this and this respectively - and instead listen to the Number 49 choices: Black Metallic by Catherine Wheel and, most relevantly to this post, Music by The Safehouse.  Time hasn’t been kind to the former tune, if I had to choose which of the two to listen to on a loop, I’d go for Music everytime. It struck me as a tune that only I could love, it was warm and comforting, the aural equivalent of a cup of warm soup on a bitterly cold day.
But fast forward a year and The Safehouse turned up on Peel’s playlist with a track which sounded like they would now be more inclined to throw the cup into your face.  Given the gnarly, squally quality of most of the sound on this track, the hardcore child of the title track appears to be going through the terrible twos. Any attempt to soothe the listener, by throwing in bursts of electric sitar for instance between 0:48 to 1:04 is overridden by more audio grumbles/teething and there’s an especially epic tantrum thrown between 2:05 and 2:28, which is followed by a duet between the sitar and a set of beats which sound like the child is smashing anything it can get its hands on. Tellingly, the sitar quickly retreats, and by the end, of the track, the child is left lying amidst the debris it has created.

That description might sound like an unappealing listen, but The Safehouse haven’t entirely lost their gift for melody here, and it’s much less abrasive than a similar idea would have been in the hands of, say, 70 Gwen Party.
Hardcore Child was the final track on The Safehouse’s Funkatronics 12-inch. The A-side of that record includes Out of My Body, which sounds like a copper-bottomed mainstream hit track, but it wasn’t. Instead, Hardcore Child was paired on the B-side with Screamer ll and stands as a final, defiant stand by The Safehouse, whose members, Mark Hailwood and Tommy Trainor, wound the project up after this release.

Hardcore Child won’t get to Number 49 when I do the 1993 Festive Fifty, indeed it won’t feature at all. But I’ll take that troubled child into my arms and give it a loving home on the metaphorical mixtape. I hope you will too.

Video courtesy of Bob Murray, and my thanks to him for making the video shareable here.