Friday, September 29, 2006

I thought you were ... dead

A list of people and bands that are definitely "past their sell buy date", these have played Manchester recently or have tour dates lined up. I'm amazed that there is a market for a lot of this stuff (It Bites).

I promise that I am not making this up, this list is genuine:

  1. Blue Oyster Cult
  2. Deacon Blue
  3. Y&T
  4. The Meteors
  5. Barclay James Harvest
  6. UFO
  7. It Bites
  8. Michael Schenker Group
  9. Northern Uproar
  10. The Men They Couldn't Hang
  11. Saxon
  12. Thunder
  13. The Anti Nowhere League
  14. Go West
  15. Shakin' Stevens

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

My most listened to ... during the day

With a bit of luck this image should update every now and again with help from my profile at lastFM.


Monday, September 18, 2006

Favorite record shops in the world

  1. Amoeba Records - 1855 Haight St, (415) 831-1200 San Francisco. Probably the best record shop in the world, and the largest independent record store in the US.
  2. Beatin' Rhythm - 42 Tib Street, Manchester M4 1LA. UK's premier store for soul, rock'n'roll, pop reissues, Funk, doo-wop, girl group, rare soul, NORTHERN SOUL, surf, psych, rhythm'n'blues. Better than that, the staff are amazingly knowledgeable, helpful and never patronising ... which is not always the case in record shops as you probably know.
  3. Piccadilly Records - 53 Oldham Street, Manchester M1 1JR
  4. Rough Trade - 16 Neal's Yard, Covent Garden, London WC2H 9Dp Slam City Skates Basement)
  5. Missing Link Records - Basement 405 Bourke Street, Melbourne, 3000. Australian indie institution - have their own record label too.
  6. Spin - 8 High Bridge, Newcastle upon Tyne, England, NE1 1EN. Not sure if Spin qualifies as a record shop but it is still excellent for less mainstream CDs
  7. Monorail Records - 12 Kings Court, King Street, Glasgow. Left-field stockist with Steven Pastel connections, good coffee too.

Friday, September 08, 2006

Unhealthy Obsessions

I have always had that "fanboy" collector mentality, which is fine. You acquire all the official releases and then pick up some bootlegs, then onto the solo albums ... but sometimes you just go too far.

ELO

c.1977 (aged 12) . I think it began with buying "A New World Record" released the previous year. It was the first proper LP that I bought with my own money (up until this point I had only owned compilation albums and singles). My assertion that they were the greatest band in the world was confirmed with the release of "Out of The Blue".

Unhealthy obsession - purchasing the Violinski - Clog Dance 45 by ELO violinist Mick Kaminski. The Clash released their Cost of Living EP at about the same time - I didn't buy it, shame.

Hawkwind

c. 1980 - 1983 (aged 15 - 18) . I think I blame Deek for this. He lent me PXR5 and I was hooked, and with lyrics like these who wouldn't be?

Robots call, but we don't answer to their wail
Computers hum and bright
lights flash to no avail
The course has been set for us to go in light years
past
Outlaws of time, visions of an ancient cast
And so we search until
we find
the answers that we left behind
and we go from star to star
to find the dream
And we will pursue the race
that made us outlaws
of this space
and led us to become a seed of life,PXR5, PXR5

Unhealthy obsession - not having learned my lesson after purchasing the woeful "Choose Your Masques" in 1982 - I went on to see the band in 1983 live (for the 4th time) at Dundee students union. Unfortunately the small stage could not fully accommodate the wind's "space totem" and Dave Brock was wearing a skin-tight body stocking. My mate Shaun and I "hung out" with them backstage - I was wearing a labcoat, shame.

The Monochrome Set

c. 1983 - 1987 (aged 18 -21) . I still love this band and would urge anyone who is even vaguely interested in clever post-punk to investigate Volume,Contrast, Brilliance; Strange Boutique, Eligible Bachelors and Love Zombies.

Unhealthy obsession - 1985, blagging my way into Fat Sams in Dundee with a friend on the pretext of working for the fictitious fanzine "Is it a fish". Unfortunately when it came to interviewing Bid the charismatic lead singer I was so starstruck I was pretty much struck dumb. Bid felt so sorry for me that he gave my his bowl of ice cream which I stared at in awe as if I had been given custody of the holy grail. I continued to buy Monochrome Set records out of loyalty long after my obsession ended including 1993's Charade (which was very poor indeed).

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Monday, September 04, 2006

Tear to a glass eye

Top ten (11) guarenteed to melt even the hardest heart:

  1. Walter Jackson - My Ship Is Comin' In
  2. George Jones - He Stopped Loving Her Today
  3. Gram Parsons - $1000 Wedding
  4. Fairport Convention - Farewell Farewell
  5. Chris Woods - One In A Million
  6. OV Wright - A Fool Can See The Light
  7. Joy Division - New Dawn Fades
  8. Bobby Bland - Ask Me ' Bout Nothing (But The Blues)
  9. Hank Williams - My Son Calls Another Man Daddy
  10. Elvis Costello - I Wan't You
  11. Hüsker Dü - Hardly Getting Over It

List #10 Current Buns

  1. Fujiya Miyagi - Transparent Things
  2. Ethiopiques: Ethio Jazz and Musique Instrumentals 1969-1974 - Various
  3. Sonic Youth - Rather Ripped
  4. Tunng - Comments of the Inner Chorus
  5. Miles Davis - Filles Die Kilimanjaro
  6. The Go-Betweens - 16 Lovers Lane
  7. Tortoise and Bonnie Prince Billy - The Brave and The Bold
  8. Keith Jarrett - Expectations
  9. Miles Davis - Miles in the Sky
  10. The Best of Sun Records Volume 1 and 2 - Various