Burn It Up – The Rise Of British Dance Music 1986-1991 4 CD review

11 10 2025

Burn It Up – The Rise Of British Dance Music 1986-1991 is a new 4 CD collection from Cherry Red, covering the explosion in dance music in the late 1980s and early 90s. The collection is released on 21 November 2025, and includes The KLF, S-Express, Coldcut, Bomb The Bass, 808 State, Adamski, Electribe 101 and many more.

The eras heady mix of electro, house and techno was built on the burgeoning sampling technology that brought recording out of the expensive studios and into the bedrooms and the minds of a younger generation, keen to make their mark on the charts.

This compilation reawakened my love of the late 80s acid / house, sample driven era. I bought many a sample CD to use with my Emax sampling keyboard and later on my Akai S950 12 bit sampler, and the music on this compilation transported me back to those heady days.

The early years

Coldcut feat. Floormaster Squeeze and Beats + Pieces (Mo Bass Remix) is a perfect introduction to the era, with breakbeats, drops and samples, including some deliciously lo-fi guitar licks, thrown into the mix. Listen to the music of the wonderful Australian band Confidence Man and you can see how breakbeat propelled bands such as Coldcut are an influence on current artists.

The Stock Aitken Waterman produced Mel & Kim make an appearance, with the mostly instrumental System (House Mix). House Arrest (The Beat Is The Law) by Krush was one of the early UK House hits in 1987, with featured vocals from Ruth Joy and its still a delight to listen to, with its endearing simplicity and clarity.

Hearing Bass (how low can you go) from Simon Harris with its Public Enemy and ubiquitous Funky Drummer sample sends me hurling back in time to 1988. The love song to the North of England, Us and their track Born In The North closes the first disc.

The big hitters

Disc 2 contains many of the big-hitters from the era, opening with Beat Dis (Extended Dis) from Bomb The Bass. My favourite Bomb The Bass song is the heavenly Winter In July, that is sadly not a part of this compilation, but Beat Dis was such an influential track, having the bravado to sneak in a cheeky Prince vocal sample along with snatches from Dragnet & Thunderbirds.

Bomb The Bass - Beat Dis cover (from compilation booklet)

What Time Is Love? (Pure Trance 1) from The KLF is still an absolute monster of a track. If this banger doesn’t get you up on your feet and waving your hands in the air (like you just don’t care), then you are probably dead.

The bass heavy Stakker Humanoid laid the foundations for the soon to arrive Future Sound of London. Theme from S-Express is an absolute titan from the era, and still sounds amazing today, with it samples from Rose Royce’s Is It Love You’re After and The Stepford Wives, along with an amazing widescreen, technicolour production from Mark Moore & Pascal Gabriel.

“Oh that’s bad,
no, that’s good”

Doctorin’ The House from Coldcut, their second track on this collection, this time introduces us to Yazz & The Plastic Population (soon to be known for the no1 single The Only Way Is Up). D-Mob feat. Gary Haisman deliver a bit of a novelty song with We Call It Acieeed – get on one matey indeed, whatever could they mean!

Samantha Fox and Love House (The Black Pyramid Mix) is one of many examples of a great use of the Roland TB-303 acid house synth, with an intelligent and well-crafted arrangement from techno legend Kevin Saunderson (Inner City). Paul Rutherford (former Frankie Goes To Hollywood co-vocalist) and his Get Real (Happy House Mix) is also driven by a delicious TB-303 acid synth line, with production from Martin Fry and Mark White from pop titans ABC.

Disc three opens with the still intoxicating Talking With Myself from Electribe 101, featuring vocalist Billie Ray Martin. Tired of Getting Pushed Around by Two Men, a Drum Machine and a Trumpet (Andy Cox
and David Steele from Fine Young Cannibals) is a piece of high tempo, but minimal in its arrangement, house music.

Special & Golden (Parts I and II) is a surprise but welcome inclusion from S-Express. Street Tuff (Longsy D’Mix) from Double Trouble & Rebel MC is a playful breakbeat driven reggae /house mashup.

“Jam the nightclub, rock the disco”

The Sun Rising from the much-missed The Beloved is the perfect comedown tune, and along with the afore-mentioned Winter In July (Bomb The Bass), is one of the most beautiful songs from the late 80s / early 90s.

Beloved - Sun Rising cover - from Compilation booklet

The sun setting… on the era

The 4th and final CD opens with the anthemic Pacific-202 from 808 State, a wonderful warm production with clipped percussion and smooth synth sequences, topped by “that” sax riff. N-R-G is the debut single from Adamski, with an infectious house piano motif, whilst Orbital are represented with Chime (Edit).

If You Love Somebody (12” Mix) by Professor Supercool – aka The Blow Monkeys’ Dr. Robert, sneaks in from the mainstream, and is a close cousin to the bands late 80s singles such as Choice? and Wait.

Sheffield’s Cabaret Voltaire are represented with the addictive Easy Life, whilst The Cure’s Lullaby (Extended Remix) is a bit of a mis-step on this compilation. Its a great song and an interesting mix but is only really linked to the scene by some of the keyboard treatments, so feels a little out of place.

Whilst some of the tracks on Burn It Up – The Rise Of British Dance Music 1986-1991 sound very much of their time, this is an excellent trip back in time to an exciting, colourful and inventive time in music. The 4 CD set also comes with informative sleeve notes by Bill Brewster (Last Night A DJ Saved My Life).

“Enjoy this trip
And it is a trip”


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DISC ONE
Coldcut feat. Floormaster Squeeze – Beats + Pieces (Mo Bass Remix)
Mel & Kim – System (House Mix)
Midnight Sunrise With Nellie “Mixmaster” Rush feat. Jackie Rawes – On The House (Chicago Mix)
John Rocca – I Want It To Be Real (Farley’s Hot House Piano Mix)
Rick & Lisa – When You Gonna (Home Boy Mix)
Krush – House Arrest (The Beat Is The Law)
T-Coy – Cariño
The Cookie Crew – Females (Get On Up) (Pile Up)
Judge Dread – Jerk Your Body (Edit)
Simon Harris – Bass (How Low Can You Go) (Bomb The House Mix)
M.E.S.H. (Jack The Tab) – Meet Every Situation Head On
The Beatmasters feat. The Cookie Crew – Rok Da House
Us – Born In The North

DISC TWO
Bomb The Bass – Beat Dis (Extended Dis)
The KLF – What Time Is Love? (Pure Trance 1)
Humanoid – Stakker Humanoid
S-Express – Theme From S-Express
Coldcut feat. Yazz & The Plastic Population – Doctorin’ The House
Baby Ford – Oochy Koochy (F.U. Baby Yeh Yeh)
D-Mob feat. Gary Haisman – We Call It Acieeed (The Radio Edit)
The Wee Papa Girl Rappers feat. 2 Men And A Drum Machine – Heat It Up (Acid House Mix)
The Beatmasters feat. P P Arnold – Burn It Up (7″ Version)
The Moody Boys – Acid Rappin
Samantha Fox – Love House (The Black Pyramid Mix)
Paul Rutherford – Get Real (Happy House Mix)

DISC THREE
Electribe 101 – Talking With Myself
Anne Clarke – Our Darkness (Remix)
2 Men, A Drum Machine & A Trumpet – Tired Of Getting Pushed Around (The Mayhem Rhythm Mix)
Julian Jonah – Jealousy And Lies
Chapter And The Verse – All This And Heaven Too (Club Mix)
Shades Of Rhythm – Just Feel It
S-Express – Special & Golden (Parts I and II)
Monie Love – Grandpa’s Party (Love II Love Remix)
Double Trouble & Rebel MC – Street Tuff (Longsy D’Mix)
Richie Rich – Salsa House
The Beloved – The Sun Rising
Dina Carroll – Me Sienta Sola (We Are One) (Funky Z-Bar Mix)

DISC FOUR
808 State – Pacific-202
Adamski – N-R-G
Nightmares On Wax – Let It Roll
NAD – Distant Drums
Orbital – Chime (Edit)
Professor Supercool – If You Love Somebody (12” Mix)
N-Joi – Techno Gangsters
Pop Will Eat Itself – Touched By The Hand Of Cicciolina (The 9 Renegade Soundwave Mix (Smoothneck))
Ubik – Techno Prisoners
Cabaret Voltaire – Easy Life
The Cure – Lullaby (Extended Remix)
Urban Hype – Teknologi (R.J. Flip Mix)
Circuit – Shelter Me (Helter Skelter Mix)

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Danny Wilson – The Complete Danny Wilson 5 CD box-set review

16 01 2025

Complete Danny Wilson is a 5CD boxset, released by Cherry Red on 28/02/2025, bringing together the group’s two albums as well as their b-sides, mixes and a complete live show (some of which has never been heard before).

Complete Danny Wilson box-set coverart

The new 5 cd set was mastered by Andy Pearce. The band were involved in all aspects of the release and have been interviewed extensively for the booklet, that features revealing and often humorous band member comments on the studio tracks along with background to the live recordings.

The band’s debut Meet Danny Wilson is on disc 1 of the 5 disc set. Davy is the story of a journey to the bright (or maybe quite faded) lights of London. The song really sticks in your head after hearing it again.

“But remember, money is nothing alone
Remember, if you want to come home
I won’t throw the first stone, Davy”

Davy is a delightful opener and an early indication of the improvement with the mastering. Comparing to my Sweet Danny Wilson CD version from the early 90s, the songs are louder (but not brick-walled) with so much more clarity and punch. All of the tracks sound improved, not just the two studio albums.

Aberdeen fully utilises the studio equipment of the era, including the Fairlight. The sleeve-notes explain that the band went “a wee bit mental” throwing everything at the track, and the more stripped down version on disc 4 is my favourite take, using less electronics to populate the arrangement.

Meet Danny Wilson coverart

Mary’s Prayer is simply one of my favourite songs of all time. This punchy, crisp mix makes it feel like you are discovering the song for the very first time, and that’s a wonderful feeling.

“So when you find somebody you keep
Think of me and celebrate
I made such a big mistake
When I was Mary’s prayer”

The performances, arrangement and heart-wrenching lyrics make this a timeless classic, that still hits hard on every single listen.

Lorraine Parade showcases the band at their best, with space and restraint in the performance, and features one of Gary Clark’s finest vocals. Broken China has a fairly sparse arrangement, using an addictive marimba line to push the song along at a relaxed pace, before a jagged middle section turns the mood darker. An album highlight for me.

Steamtrains To The Milky Way features a mesmerising bassline and wonderful trumpet from Roddy Lorimer, the star of many 80s recordings, that adds a Burt Bacharach touch to the mix. Ruby’s Golden Wedding is a brass and accordion driven piece, unlike any other track on the album. Musical surprises pop up throughout the duration of the track, which sounds stunning on this 2024 master.

A Girl I Used to Know has always been a favourite of mine. I bought this as a CD single at the time of release, from Our Price, UK readers might remember this shop. A rare up-tempo piece, with excellent percussion underpinning sections of the song. Five Friendly Aliens also utilises marimba, and is so well produced that it does not feel like it has dated. Shades of Mr Bacharach also haunt I Won’t Be Here When You Get Home, a wide-screen production that delivers a fitting end to the album, with its delicious chorus.

Bebop Moptop album coverart

1989’s Bebop Moptop is the subject of the second disc. Imaginary Girl always reminds me of Francis Ford Coppola’s One From The Heart, with its colourful, imaginative soundscape. I love how the lead guitar feels like it is about to scream, but is rained back in and never moves to centre stage, which would have been an obvious move to make. Danny Wilson did not do obvious.

The Second Summer Of Love was the bands second and final top 30 hit in the UK, and unlike the “musical movement” of the second summer of love, this track has not dated. “Acid on the radio…”

If You Really Love Me (Let Me, Go) dials down the pace quite a few notches. The space in this song lets it really breathe, and the soulful backing vocals add to the unique flavour served up. Loneliness has a haunted vibe to add to the very dark lyrics, as disembodied voices and snatches of broadcasts swim in and out of earshot, with the song ending on vinyl static. Turn the record over!

Charlie Boy is stamped throughout with an 80s sound, including lovely, warm guitar lines that wash over a tale of addiction. The percussion on this song is a star, its a roll call of iconic drum machines. Why has no-one picked up on Never Gonna Be The Same for the myriad of Christmas compilations? Those bell synth lines and sleigh-bells need to be heard in December, although it is obviously not a Christmas song.

It was lovely seeing the Alesis HR16 sequencer (I owned a second hand HR16 in the late 80s) getting a mention in the sleeve-notes for Desert Hearts. Gotta love Alesis. The song showcases some interesting production techniques and a rare Danny Wilson guitar solo.

N.Y.C. Shanty is a Kit Clark lead vocal, and has a bold swagger that conjours up the ramshackle older New York City vibe.

Goodbye Shanty Town is a return to the sound of the bands debut album. I love the guitar production and the way that the song really springs into life for the chorus. A real hidden gem…

Bebop Moptop comes to its conclusion with The Ballad of Me and Shirley Maclaine, a short, sharp and sweet ending.

“I guess because
It was December in May
We had to sleep on the hay
And as we counted the stars”

I hope the band let the kidnapped Burt Bacharach out of the studio after recording this song, as he had certainly left his mark. Don’t believe the band if they deny the kidnapping, just because it’s not on Wikipedia doesn’t mean it didn’t happen. Sadly Bebop Moptop was the end of Danny Wilson as a recording band.

The 3rd CD contains B-Sides / Edits / Mixes. Highlights from this disc include I Won’t Forget (what a chorus) and the slow-burning Pleasure To Pleasure that stretches far beyond their usual 3 minutes, and is one of the bands finest songs, one that I first loved many moons ago as it appeared on the A Girl I Used to Know CD single. It remains as powerful and raw as when I first heard the song.

“I will change my key from minor to major”

Mary’s Prairie is a tasteful country-tinged take on, well you know what song! Kooks is an affectionate cover of the David Bowie classic from Hunky Dory. Growing Emotional is a rare occurrence, Danny Wilson being influenced by current artists, in this case, with the drum sounds, guitar, synth stabs and vocal styling of Prince. This shouldn’t work, but it highlights that even when the band went well off-piste, they were still able to deliver zingers.

I’ll Be Waiting is a highlight of this b-sides disc, with its Thin Lizzy / Queen dual guitar riff coming out of nowhere to deliver a shock.

A Girl I Used To Know (Single Mix) is my favourite take on this song (it’s that damn 80s CD single I keep mentioning). I never tire of hearing this track, I just wish I could find my CD single. Where did I put it?

CD 4 is mainly edits and mixes, including the wonderful Paul Staveley O’Duffy remix of Mary’s Prayer and the reverb heavy New York Mix of If You Really Love Me (Let Me, Go).

The 4th disc ends with a series of demos and portastudio recordings. The demos are high quality, and show Danny Wilson as they start to crystalise into the band we knew.

Steamtrains To The Milky Way (Original Demo) is a wonderful 8 track demo, utilising the Ensoniq Mirage (a mid-80s synth / sampler).

St. Jude (Portastudio) offers a less sumptuous sound from the band, but gives a tantalising glimpse of what was just around the corner. The disc closes with The Second Summer Of Love (The Dundee Demo), which is a shorter take on the eventually released version.

The 5th and final disc is a live concert from the London Town & Country Club, recorded in October 1990. This is an excellent quality recording and the highlights for me include Broken China and an absolutely spell-binding cover of Abba’s Knowing Me Knowing You (aha!). The song is performed with passion and obvious love. Plus a well-received by the very vocal audience (and slightly pacier than normal) performance of Mary’s Prayer.

The final disc ends with a raucous The Second Summer Of Love live from Caird Hall, Dundee, from September 1989 and Don’t Know Who I Am (which musically reminds me a little of the decadence and pomp of Bertolt Brecht / Kurt Weill’s Alabama Song) recorded live in Studio 5, Tyne Tees Television.

Complete Danny Wilson has been put together with love and affection from the former band members and project designers / Matt Phillips (sleeve-notes) and Andy Pearce with the audio mastering. Well done Cherry Red, this is how to curate a back catalogue.

The box-set is a must-have for anyone who appreciates well-crafted pop music from the late 80s, and the collection offers so many more highlights than just the two well-known hit singles.


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Buy Complete Danny Wilson 5 CD set from Amazon

DISC ONE

Meet Danny Wilson
Davy
Aberdeen
Mary’s Prayer
Lorraine Parade
Nothing Ever Goes to Plan
Broken China
Steamtrains to the Milky Way
Spencer Tracey
You Remain an Angel
Ruby’s Golden Wedding
A Girl I Used to Know
Five Friendly Aliens
I Won’t Be Here When You Get Home

DISC TWO

Bebop Moptop
Imaginary Girl
The Second Summer of Love
I Can’t Wait
If You Really Love Me (Let Me, Go)
If Everything You Said Was True
Loneliness
I Was Wrong
Charlie Boy
Never Gonna Be the Same
Desert Hearts
N.Y.C. Shanty
Goodbye Shanty Town
The Ballad of Me and Shirley Maclaine

DISC THREE

B-Sides / Edits / Mixes

I Won’t Forget
Pleasure To Pleasure
Monkey’s Shiny Day
Mary’s Prairie
Kathleen (House Mix)
Living To Learn
Kooks
Get Happy
Growing Emotional
I’ll Be Waiting
The Lonesome Road
A Girl I Used to Know – Single Mix
If Everything You Said Was True – Radio Edit

DISC FOUR

B-Sides / Edits / Mixes
A Girl I Used to Know – US Remix with Guitar Solo
Mary’s Prayer – Paul Staveley O’Duffy Remix
Nothing Ever Goes to Plan – Blix Mix ’86
Aberdeen (The way it should have been – The Strepzil Logic EP)
I Can’t Wait – Remix
If You Really Love Me (Let Me, Go) – New York Mix
From A Boy to A Man – Sweet Danny Wilson Comp
Monkey’s Shiny Day – Original Demo Version
Steam Trains to The Milky Way – Original Demo
Broken China – Original Demo
A Fragile World – Portastudio
St. Jude – Portastudio
The Second Summer of Love – The Dundee Demo

DISC FIVE

Live at the London Town & Country Club, 1 October 1990
Never Gonna Be the Same
Broken China
Davy
I Was Wrong
Lorraine Parade
Steamtrains To the Milky Way
Charlie Boy
Knowing Me Knowing You
Imaginary Girl – Everything You Said
Aberdeen
I Can’t Wait
Mary’s Prayer
Loneliness

BONUS TRACKS
The Second Summer of Love – Caird Hall, Dundee, 16th September 1989
Don’t Know Who I Am – live, Studio 5, Tyne Tees Television





News: Climie Fisher – Coming In For The Kill 4 CD set

12 02 2024

Cherry Red Records are releasing a 4 CD edition of the second (and final) Climie Fisher album, Coming In For The Kill, on 23 February 2024.

Climie Fisher - Coming In For The Kill artwork

The 4 CD set includes the ten songs that appeared on the original album alongside 38 bonus tracks featuring singles, B-sides, remixes, edits, alternate versions, demo recordings and instrumentals.

Climie Fisher were a British pop duo consisting of vocalist Simon Climie and former Naked Eyes keyboardist Rob Fisher. In 1987 Climie Fisher had a hip-hop styled remix of their self-penned hit Rise To The Occasion (UK #10, Germany #14, The Netherlands #1, South Africa) by PWL producers Phil Harding and Ian Curnow. Coming In For The Kill was the follow-up to their debut album Everything, and was released in 1989.

Highlights from the extra tracks include Haunted House, that draws inspiration from the sample heavy Rise To The Occasion remix from a couple of years earlier, and the Go-Go beat driven Fire On The Ocean (12″ mix).

Climie Fisher - Coming In For The Kill inside cover-art

The album has production credits for Bob Clearmountain, Neil Dorfsman, Stewart Levine, Stephen Hague and Julian Mendelsohn assisting Climie Fisher.

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Buy Climie Fisher – Coming In For The Kill 4 CD set from Amazon

Disc One
Original Album

Facts Of Love
Fire On The Ocean
It’s Not Supposed To Be That Way
Hold On Through The Night
Buried Treasure
Power Of The Dream World
The Best Part Of Living Is Loving You
Coming In For The Kill
Don’t Mess Around
You Keep Coming Back For More

Disc Two
Bonus Tracks – Singles

Love Like A River (7 Inch Mix) *
Facts Of Love (7” Version)
Fire On The Ocean (7” Mix)
It’s Not Supposed To Be That Way (7” Version)
Bonus Tracks – B-Sides
Haunted House
Memories (If I Could Relive Your Love)
Cold Light Of Day
Gypsy (Instrumental)
Godsend
You’re Not Alone In This World
Rhythm Of The World
The Way It Should Be
Bonus Tracks – Demo Recordings
You’re Not Alone In This World (Demo #1) †
You’re Not Alone In This World (Demo #2) †

Disc Three
Bonus Tracks – Singles: Remixes, Edits & Alternate Versions

Love Like A River (Edit)
Fire On The Ocean (Alternate 7” Version) †
It’s Not Supposed To Be That Way (The Nomad Soul Mix)
Power Of The Dream World (7” Edit) †
It’s Not Supposed To Be That Way (Us 7” Version) †
Bonus Tracks – Remixes, Extended Versions, Alternate Versions & Dubs
Fire On The Ocean (Club Mix Edit)
You’re Not Alone In This World (Full Length Version) †
Love Like A River (Dance Mix)
Fire On The Ocean (12” Special Mix)
Love Like A River (Extended Dance Mix) †
Fire On The Ocean (Club Mix) *
It’s Not Supposed To Be That Way (12” Nomad Soul Remix) *
Facts Of Love (Extended Version)

Disc Four
Bonus Tracks – More Remixes, Extended Versions, Alternate Versions & Dubs

Fire On The Ocean (12” Special Mix Edit) †
Love Like A River (Bonus Beats) †
It’s Not Supposed To Be That Way (Bonus Beats) †
Love Like A River (Dub Mix) †
Bonus Tracks – Instrumentals
Facts Of Love (Instrumental) †
Fire On The Ocean (Club Mix Instrumental) †
It’s Not Supposed To Be That Way (12” Nomad Soul Instrumental) *
Don’t Mess Around (Instrumental) †
You Keep Coming Back For More (Instrumental) †
It’s Not Supposed To Be That Way (Instrumental) †

Bonus Track – Megamix
Music Factory Megamix *

* Previously Unavailable On CD
† Previously Unreleased





News: Tears For Fears ‘The Seeds of Love’ reissue (CD, deluxe box-set and vinyl)

19 08 2020

The long-awaited reissue of Tears For Fears‘ 1989 album The Seeds of Love is now available.

The reissue is available in a number of formats, including a deluxe double CD, remastered vinyl and the most interesting version, a CD / Bluray box-set.

The boxset edition (which like the previous TFF box-sets, is likely to sell-out at some point down the line) includes a Steven Wilson 5.1 surround sound mix on the bluray, whilst the other 4 CDs in the boxset contain a remaster of the album, a CD of b-sides, remixes and edits plus two CD’s of unreleased audio (including alt mixes and demos).

The booklet for the box-set includes interviews and notes by Paul Sinclair who runs the excellent Super Deluxe Edition website.

Available now:

The Seeds Of Love [5 disc Boxset] from Amazon

The Seeds Of Love (2 CD Deluxe) from Amazon

The Seeds Of Love [Remastered Vinyl] from Amazon