Unforgettable Live Performances of the Late 70s and Early 80s

10 11 2024

I was having a sort out of old paperwork recently and stumbled across some stuff I had kept from the late 1970’s. Along with flyers, cassette tapes and loads of other material gathering dust, I found a list of the gigs I attended from April 1979 to February 1983. I was scratching my head as to why the list ended in 1983, and then I realised why I stopped cataloguing my trips to concerts. I was a year into my student psychiatric nurse training in 1983, and clearly around this time I discovered women!

Looking at the list, it contained many bands who probably never made it past the support slots at my local venue, The Tramshed in Woolwich, South-East London. So this will probably be the only mention online for some of these bands. If you have memories of your own early gigs, or of gigs you attended for artists mentioned in this post, please add them to the comments.

My list starts in April 1979. It does not count my actual first gigs, that I went to with my parents – such as Val Doonican and other family forays into the cultural wasteland that is light entertainment, but my list started with the gigs I chose to attend.


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1979

APRIL 1979

So first off – what a debut, with Kate Bush at The London Palladium. Like a lot of these early gigs, I went to this concert on my own. I knew a lot of the songs, but didn’t actually own any Kate Bush albums at this point, as I was still at school and was living off the fumes of my pocket money and Saturday job. I could barely afford to pay for concert tickets, and remember, this was all pre-internet, so if you wanted tickets, you would have to queue outside venues when the tickets went on sale, in the cold, early hours.

Kate Bush "Tour of Life" 1979 concert programme

This was the perfect way to start my history of live performances – with a mixture of dance, theatre, complex choreography and story-telling. There is no video footage (that I am aware of) from the tour, so I am left with my memories of a breath-taking show. This is the setlist from the day I “think” I went to the show (there were 5 dates at the London Palladium, and sadly, I cannot find my original ticket to confirm). I remember travelling from my parents house in Woolwich to the venue, probably by bus to save on costs, and eagerly discussing my experience the next day back in school.

Luckily I still have the ticket for my second gig, which was Thin Lizzy (supported by the Belfast band XDreamists) at the Hammersmith Odeon on Sunday 22 April 1979. This is the setlist. The tour was promoting the Black Rose album, with the line-up of Philip Lynott, Brian Downey, Scott Gorham and Gary Moore.

Thin Lizzy live at Hammersmith Odeon

Looking online it says that the support for the tour was The Vipers but my notes from the time say XDreamists, so who knows? This will not be the first time my handwritten notes are contradicted.

The Lizzy gig was loud and entertaining. It included one of my favourite Thin Lizzy songs, Waiting for an Alibi, and live staples such as The Rocker, Don’t Believe a Word, Jailbreak, The Boys Are Back in Town and Bob Seger’s Rosalie. I had great seats for this show, and for once I wasn’t alone, going with (I think) my friends Gary and Ian. I remember us trying to piece together the set-list afterwards and disagreeing on some of the songs performed. We did not have setlistFM to help us in those days.

Thin Lizzy 1979 tour programme

MAY 1979

I don’t remember much about Status Quo at Wembley Arena, in their If You Can’t Stand the Heat tour. I remember it was loud and people were standing on their seats, and there was a sea of denim all around us.

Looking at the setlists for the time, Quo played classics such as Caroline, Roll Over Lay Down, Backwater, Rockin’ All Over the World and Dirty Water.

JUNE 1979

The first smaller gig I attended was London Zoo (supported by Traveller) at the Woolwich Tramshed, my local venue. I remember really enjoying this gig and listening out for them for a couple of years. I heard a Radio 1 session, I think in 1980, with the songs Receiving End (I still have the 7″ single) and Who’s Driving This Car? but I was unaware of what happened to the band for many years. I wish more music had been released, as the band had a real pop sensibility.

London Zoo included Robert Sandall and David Sinclair, and they formed out of the ashes of a previous band, Blunt Instrument. Robert Sandall remained in the music industry and was a well-known music journalist and radio presenter, and sadly died aged 54 of prostate cancer.

I emailed Robert Sandall in the early 2000’s, telling him how much I enjoyed the bands music back in 1979, and I offered to build a small web-presence for the band, maybe sharing a few unreleased songs, as I could find so little information online about London Zoo. Robert replied that he had passed on my crazy idea to the former bandmate that he was still in touch with, but then the communication stopped as I presume his health issues understandably became his priority.

David Sinclair joined TV Smith’s Explorers and wrote for The Times, and currently performs and records as the David Sinclair Four.

Jackie Lynton’s H.D. Band (supported by Japanese Toy / Rebel) was next in my gig calendar at the Woolwich Tramshed (my notes say June or July 1979).

AUGUST 1979

The Who and friends roar in

The Who, with special guests Nils Lofgren, AC/DC and The Stranglers played at Wembley Stadium (then called The Empire Stadium) on 18th August 1979. The Stranglers were my favourite band, and this was the first time I was able to see them live (my parents made sure I didn’t see them in 1977 or 1978). I was under a parental banning order with regards to the Meninblack and all their offshoots.

I remember seeing the gig mentioned on Nicky Horne’s slot on a weekly TV music news show he presented, I think on ITV. I liked The Who as well so this was an exciting gig to attend, and it was also my first Stadium show. I was seated on the side of the stadium, quite high up and I think the “seating” was uncomfortable concrete benches, miles away from the more corporate Wembley Stadium experience of today.

Nils Lofgren opened the evening, and I knew none of his material at the time, but he kept us entertained by occasionally jumping on a trampoline whilst playing guitar. AC/DC were next. This was the original Bon Scott line-up, and the 9 song set included Highway to Hell, Whole Lotta Rosie and If You Want Blood (You’ve Got It). The set was marred a little by PA problems (which did not stop the band performing) but it was a good, loud rock set.

Who are the meninblack Wembley 1979

The Stranglers setlist shows that the band avoided the hits for this guest spot, and showcased their forthcoming album The Raven. Opening with the live debut of Nuclear Device (The Wizard of Aus), the set included some of their more acidic, progressive songs such as Genetix and Down in the Sewer. The then recently released single Duchess went down well and The Stranglers closed their thirteen song set with Toiler on the Sea accompanied by an impressive fireworks display, that revealed The Raven logo.

A similar fireworks display (filmed at an earlier gig, I think at the Loch Lomond Festival) was featured on Tomorrow’s World.

My mind was blown by my first Stranglers live experience, and it wouldn’t take me long to see them again, in fact it was my next gig!

The Who were on good form at this gig. Mixing songs from the previous years Who Are You album (the final Who album to feature drummer Keith Moon, and my favourite from the band) with classics such as the timeless Baba O’Riley, Behind Blue Eyes, My Generation and Won’t Get Fooled Again.

The Who programme from 1979

The Who’s audience was mostly rockers at this gig, with their following soon to mutate somewhat with the release of Quadrophenia the same week as this gig, and the burgeoning UK Mod revival. Getting home from Wembley to South-East London was hair-raising, as the Tube station was shut and we had to jump the barriers due to over-crowding.

NOVEMBER 1979

My first full headline gig from The Stranglers was on 1 November at The Rainbow, with the band supported by Curves. Here is the setlist.

I recall the Hugh Cornwell & Robert Williams White Room single being played on the PA pre-gig, a rare chance to hear the recently released single, as it received so little airplay.

The Stranglers set leaned heavily into songs from their current album The Raven, along with gems such as 1978’s brutal 5 Minutes single. As I mentioned earlier, I never got to see the band in 1977 or 1978, so 1979 to 1981 gave me some of my most memorable gigs from the band.

DECEMBER 1979

The Police Reggatta de Tour programme

My final gig of 1979 was another historic one, with The Police and their special guests Squeeze at Lewisham Odeon on 22 December 1979. It was a Capital Radio Help A London Child gig, with the bands introduced by Capital Radio’s Roger Scott, if my memory services me correctly. 

Squeeze were on first and this line-up included Jools Holland, who left the band the following August. A rare local gig during their first taste of success, the band played songs from their debut album and Cool for Cats. I have seen the band four more times since, and they now have such a vast catalogue to draw from, that their shows are even more enjoyable now.

Looking for setlists online, some people mentioned Joe Jackson appeared at the end of the Police set. I was far back in the balcony, so must have missed this, as I have no recollection of him appearing. Also, apparently Debbie Harry was in the audience. I can confirm that she wasn’t sitting in the balcony with me and my friends.

This was the first of two Police gigs I attended, as I also saw them at Wembley Arena after the release of Synchronicity. The 1979 gig was a few months after the release of their second album, Reggatta de Blanc, and featured songs from their first two albums. They may also have played their debut single Fall Out, but sadly no setlists seem to be online to confirm this.


1980

April 3 1980

The Stranglers and Friends, supported by The Monochrome Set, Hazel O’Connor, Fashion and Blood Donor was my next live gig (setlist). This was one of two shows from The Stranglers celebrating The Rainbow Theatres 50th anniversary. Unfortunately, Hugh Cornwell was unavailable due to a spell in Pentonville following a drugs possession conviction, so he was “replaced” by a cast of musicians from the era, including:

  • Robert Fripp
  • John Ellis
  • Toyah Willcox
  • Peter Hammill
  • Hazel O’Connor
  • Robert Smith
  • Matthieu Hartley
  • Phil Daniels
  • Basil Gabbidon
  • Wilko Johnson
  • Nicky Tesco
  • Nik Turner
  • Richard Jobson
  • John Turnbull
  • Davey Payne
  • Ian Dury
  • Larry Wallis
  • Jake Burns
  • Steve Hillage

The performances were ramshackle at times but it was an enjoyable gig, with artists from across musical genres chipping in to support Hugh and the band.

The Stranglers at The Rainbow April 3 1980

Now this is where my notes let me down. I thought I went to the first gig on the 3rd as I still have the ticket for this date, and my notes say April 3rd with Blood Donor, Fashion and Hazel O’Connor as support. By the way, this was the Luke Sky led, post-punk line-up of Fashion, not the De Harriss / Fabrique version of the band that followed in late 1981 / early 1982.

I distinctly remember Do the European being performed on the night (a JJ Burnel solo song) and that appears to have been performed only on the second show on the 4th. And its an old memory, from pre-internet, so very little information exists online, and details of the support acts also varies across different posts about the gig. Which means I likely went to the 2nd night on the 4th and so I got to see one of the last Joy Division gigs (which I have a vague memory of).

So did I go to both gigs or are my notes and my ticket wrong? I lost my tour programme and replaced it via eBay many years later, so it is possible the ticket came with the programme, but my notes? It is also possible that I could have enjoyed the first night and returned for the second gig, which I don’t think was sold out. I will never know and no-one else in the world will care…

June 1980

I caught my first Nine Below Zero gig, with the band supported by Reptiles, at The Tramshed, Woolwich, on June 1st. This was a couple of weeks before the band recorded their classic debut album, Live at the Marquee, and was shortly before the release of their single Homework. I was aware of the band by reading about them in the music press, and I remember it was a packed and lively gig. The first of many I attended by the band, and I have also seen the reformed line-up many times in recent years.

The rest of the year

I saw three more Nine Below Zero gigs in 1980. Firstly a return to The Tramshed on 7 August 1980. I must have been knackered that day, as I did not make a note of the support band. Such poor behaviour. My excuse was that I had arrived back in the UK that afternoon after an overnight train journey from a school trip to Engelberg, Switzerland, and I headed straight to the gig on my return. To paraphrase Motörhead, no sleep ‘til Woolwich!

I also saw the band (supported by the Pick-Ups) at The Tramshed for the final time on October 2nd and at a larger venue, Thames Polytechnic (supported by The Rookies) at an un-recorded date later in October 1980.

Next up was a gig I have no memories of, The Vibrators supported by the Gerry Scales Band in September 1980 at The Tramshed. I also saw the Nicky Moore Band supported by The Fool, sometime in the summer of 1980, again, no memories of this, its just in my notes, not in my brain. The Tramshed was a short bus ride or 45 minute walk from where I lived, so I would often pop in to see bands I did not know.

I saw out the year with further gigs at The Tramshed in Woolwich. I saw Idiot Dancers supported by the very 70s named Cheap Perfume in June or July, Deaf-Aids supported by Pick-Ups and Lightning Raiders (November 1980) and finally Pick-Ups supported by Idiot Dancers and Always Calling on December 28th.

1981

1980 through to 1981 saw a gradual shift away from new wave being my main musical diet, with a transition to post-punk and new pop creeping into my musical palette, and this is referenced in the gigs I was attending from now on.

Clearly the Pick-Ups were a popular band with whoever booked gigs at Woolwich’s Tramshed venue, as 15 February saw me back at the venue to see Pick-Ups with A Bigger Splash and Strictly Business.

The Who 1981 tour programme

On 9 February 1981 I saw Nine Below Zero for the final time before they split, supporting The Who at Lewisham Odeon, with NBZ promoting their Don’t Point Your Finger album.

The Who setlist is here, and this was also my final time seeing The Who live. My main memory of The Who gig is that Daltrey and Townshend seemed to be a little tetchy on stage.

February to May

This was a busy period for gigs, clearly I was spending all of my Saturday job money on live music. My first of four Stranglers gigs this year was up next, with the band supported by Modern Eon at the Hammersmith Odeon on 15 February. The Stranglers setlist is here, with a healthy number of songs from The Gospel According to the Meninblack and The Raven albums.

Modern Eon were my favourite Stranglers support act. For at least one of the gigs, their drummer (Cliff Hewitt) had an arm injury and so the drums were on tape, instead of performed live.

I recommend their debut album, Fiction tales, its as good as many releases from the era by bands such as Teardrop Explodes, Siouxsie & The Banshees, The Comsat Angels, early Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark and Wah! Heat. It has a consistent sound, and contains one of my favourite songs of the early 80s, Child’s Play.

On 21 Feb 1981, myself and two friends (Andy and Laurie) decided to make a last minute trip to The Rainbow to see Toyah, supported by Wasted Youth and Huang Chung at The Rainbow. This was around the time of the band’s first major success with It’s A Mystery from the Four from Toyah EP, although we were already fans of the Sheep Farming in Barnet and The Blue Meaning albums. Huang Chung were a post-punk band who soon became Wang Chung and had major hits later in the 80s.

My second The Stranglers gig from 1981 was at The Rainbow on 7 March (setlist here), with support from Dirty Strangers and Modern Eon (my final time seeing the band, who split at the end of this year).

On 19 March I was back at The Tramshed for a further run of gigs, starting with Reluctant Stereotypes, supported by Pick-Ups (them again!) and Tranzista. Reluctant Stereotypes were a Coventry band who delivered arty new wave / ska influenced pop, with vocals from Paul King who later found success in the mid 80s with the band King before moving into presenting / producing on MTV / VH1.

On 7 April I saw Strictly Business, The Business and Everest The Hard Way at The Tramshed. I remember enjoying Everest The Hard Way, and listening to their only single on Spotify, I can see why I liked them, with Tightrope‘s early Simple Minds influenced bass-line.

April 3 saw me going to see Reluctant Stereotypes again, this time supported by Bumble & The Beez. Bumble & The Beez were as enjoyable as the headliners. I went on to buy Bumble & The Beez’s 1982 single The Room Above. The band featured Mykaell Riley, a founding member of Steel Pulse, who went on to form the influential Reggae Philharmonic Orchestra in the late 80s.

On April 28 I saw Carpettes, OK Jive and Airstrip One at The Tramshed. Airstrip One released the single Social Fools in 1982, and it was one of my favourite singles from that year, the 12″ still sounds amazing.

On May 14th I saw Tenpole Tudor, supported by The Business and Bad Actors at The Tramshed. Swords of a Thousand Men had reached the UK top 10 a few weeks before, so this was a packed gig, with the band dressed in full medieval outfits. As you do.

July to December

I saw Siouxsie & The Banshees supported by John Cooper Clarke at the Woolwich Odeon on 23 July. This gig was part of the JuJu tour, and the set-list is here.

I am so glad that I got to see my favourite Banshees line-up, that included the (sadly missed) John McGeoch on guitar and the mighty Budgie on drums and percussion, joining mainstays Steven Severin and the iconic Siouxsie Sioux.

Spellbound and Arabian Knights remain two of my favourite singles by the band, with album track Into The Light an ice-cold post-punk classic.

Siouxsie & The Banshees 1981 programme

My final two gigs of 1981 were The Stranglers (supported by French band Taxi-Girl) at the Hammersmith Palais on 17 November (set-list), with the London City Ballet dancing to the opening Waltzinblack and at The Rainbow on 4 December (supported by Taxi Girl and Mr Spratt’s 20th Century Popular Motets) – the La Folie heavy set-list is here.


1982

1982 started as 1981 finished, with The Stranglers, this time at Hammersmith Odeon on 8 Feb (set-list), with support from Boys in Darkness and Mr Spratt’s 20th Century Popular Motets.

Gigs for the next few years were harder to get to, as I had started working in the NHS as a trainee psychiatric nurse, living on-site and training away from major public transport links in a Kent hospital. Shift work definitely got in the way of getting to London.

1 May saw myself and a couple of friends heading to the Hammersmith Odeon to catch The Cure (set-list) plus support from Irish band Zerra 1, a few days before the release of Pornography. This meant that we did not know a good chunk of the material, and so the concert was hard work, and it was brutally loud and so we did not stay for the encore. If I could travel back in time, I would stay to the very end (with ear-plugs in place) and I would enjoy the gig more.

May 24th saw a much lighter gig, Judie Tzuke supported by Bloomsbury Set at Hammersmith Odeon. I remember the concert opened with Heaven Can Wait, the opening track from her current album, my personal favourite from Judie Tzuke, Shoot the Moon.

Judie Tzuke ticket - front
Judie Tzuke ticket - back

On 27th July I saw Bumble & The Beez again, this time supported by Escorts. I also saw Escorts again on 21 October at The Tramshed, supporting Frankie & The Flames.

The remainder of my 1982 gigs were dedicated to Dennis Greave’s post Nine Below Zero band, The Truth. The first was at The Tramshed on 23 September, with Escorts (them again!), followed by gigs at Hammersmith Palais on 7 November (as support to George Thorogood & the Destroyers), 11 November back at The Tramshed and then ending the year at The Marquee on 20 November.


1983

My notes are sparse for this year, so unfortunately lots of gigs are missing. This is what I do have…

On 4 Feb I saw The Truth at The Marquee.

On 15 February I saw The Stranglers at Hammersmith Odeon, with the band promoting their recently released Feline album. The set-list is here. I got on the train to meet friends at Charing Cross for the second night at Hammersmith Odeon on the 16 Feb, but my friends never arrived, so I thought I had been abandoned. Woe is me.

On ringing one of my pals to find out what was happening, they told me it was on the (radio) news that the show had been cancelled due to some fans ripping up seats in the front row on the previous night. Stranglers fans in seat horror / shock! This was pre-internet, so news travelled slowly and I was forced to trudge home, gig less and alone. Woe is me once again.

My last listed gig is for The Truth + Escorts at the Tramshed on 24 Feb, my final time seeing the band.

The Police Synchronicity 83

I can add one more to the list, as I still have the concert programme. I saw The Police at Wembley Arena in late December 1983, towards the end of their Synchronicity tour. I don’t have the ticket anymore, so I cannot tell exactly which show I attended.

This was The Police at the height of their initial success, and it was a stadium rock show, a million miles away from when I saw them in 1979 at the much smaller and more intimate surroundings of Lewisham Odeon. Their final show (before their 2007–2008 reunion tour) took place in March of 1984, so I saw one of their final original UK shows.


I hope you enjoyed reading my early gig memories. My gigs didn’t stop in 1983, I’ve been to (and still continue to attend) many shows each year, its just that my list stopped here.

Not having physical tickets has also made it more difficult to catalogue gigs I have attended. Searching through thousands of emails to find e-tickets is not the same as looking at printed tickets, so a follow-up to this post (stop cheering) is unlikely.

If you want to add your own memories of early gigs, or have information about some of the more obscure bands I have mentioned, please add your thoughts in the comments section of this article. Thanks for reading…





Rediscovering 1980s Music: Bill Nelson’s Quit Dreaming and Get on the Beam Box Set reviewed

7 11 2024

Bill Nelson’s Quit Dreaming and Get on the Beam receives a lavish box-set treatment from Cherry Red in December 2024. The album was originally going to be a Red Noise record, and a follow-up to their Sound on Sound release, but EMI passed on the album and it was finally released by Mercury Records in May 1981.

Bill Nelson Quit Dreaming and Get on the Beam coverart

This new 3CD / 1 blu-ray set features a newly remastered version of the original album mix plus new 2024 stereo & 5.1 Surround Sound mixes by Stephen W Tayler and includes all the surviving recording sessions from 1979, a previously unreleased radio session from March 1981, a BBC John Peel session from June 1981 and a collection of rare single tracks from the era. Also included is the rare promotional film of Do You Dream in Colour.

Disc one is a 2024 remaster. If you know and love the original album, this will bring back memories of Bill Nelson’s highest charting release.

The fun really starts with discs 2 to 4 in this box-set. The second disc collects single tracks and a collection of sessions, all remastered. Ideal Homes, Instantly Yours and Atom Man Loves Radium Girl are from the 1980 Do You Dream in Colour EP and are a delightful throwback to the Red Noise sound.

Dada Guitare is a 1980 release. Nelson was so productive during this era that many gems like this exist outside of the main album track listing. Dada Guitare is a wonderful piece of sparse electronica, topped with trademark Nelson guitar lines.

Turn to Fiction, Hers Is A Lush Situation, and Mr. Magnetism Himself were released on the Banal 12″ single in 1981, with the extended mix of Banal also included on disc two. All rarely heard tracks, they are a welcome peek into the late 70s / early 80s music scene.

Youth of Nation on Fire is a catchy single and the other tracks from the 12” are also included here. Be My Dynamo is a fast paced experimental song and Rooms With Brittle Views is a twisted piece of new wave pop, recorded on 8 track. All My Wives Were Iron is a dystopian tale with an interesting arrangement, delicious chorused guitar and a shorter than short song length.

Birds of Tin and Love in the Abstract are from the Living in My Limousine 12″ single, and showcase the glitchy, more experimental side of Nelson’s work from this era.

The radio session tracks are interesting for historic purposes but sound like they were maybe sourced from cassette, so they stand out a little from the other tracks. Although there is a slight drop in quality, I’m still glad that the sessions have been included. The highlight of the sessions for me is the Red Noise Sound On Sound song, the mighty Stay Young. And keep in touch! Skids vocalist Richard Jobson guests on the final radio session track Jazz.

My favourite part of the collection is disc three, with new 2024 stereo remixes by Stephen W Tayler. All tracks were mixed from the original master tapes by Tayler at Chimera Arts, Real World, Box, Wiltshire between December 2023 and March 2024.

Do You Dream In Colour 7" single sleeve

The new mixes are crystal clear and so much more powerful for it. Banal jumps out of the speakers, and the drums on Living in My Limousine cut through with more clarity.

The key track Do You Dream In Colour still holds its charm but again, packs more punch, especially the wonderful Bowie like end section, when the Solina synth arrives. It depends how you remember the album, but I am finding that I play these new Stephen W Tayler 2024 stereo mixes more than the original mix.

The sleevenotes state that Red Noise make a guest appearance on Disposable, in the form of Steve Peer (Drums), Rick ‘Pinky’ Ford (Fretless Bass) and Andy Clark (Keyboards). They also appear on a couple of the single tracks.

Youth of Nation on Fire and the albums title track (and what a gem of a track it is) particularly shine in these new 2024 stereo mixes. The bonus track The World And His Wife (released on an EP in 1983 along with the Red Noise sounding Dancing Music) is a welcome addition, and is a very commercial, memorable slice of alternative pop.

The 5.1 Blur-Ray was not provided for review, so I cannot comment on how the album transfers to surround sound, but I am looking forward to receiving my physical copy of the box-set to experience the album in this format.

The sleevenotes from Mark Powell offer a welcome insight into the albums creation, and the booklet includes press articles, shots of some of the single covers (which inspired me to rummage through my vinyl crates to find my Do You Dream in Colour 7″ to play), plus master tape photos and studio shots provided by producer John Leckie and album lyrics.

It was a pleasure revisiting and re-appraising this wonderful album from 1981. Quit dreaming and dive back in time to the early 80s, using this box-set as your soundtrack. You may never want to return.


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Buy Bill Nelson’s Quit Dreaming and Get on the Beam boxset from Amazon

TRACK LISTING

DISC ONE

QUIT DREAMING & GET ON THE BEAM THE ORIGINAL STEREO MIX

Banal
Living in My Limousine
Vertical Games
Disposable
False Alarms
Decline and Fall
White Sound
Life Runs Out Like Sand
A Kind of Loving
Do You Dream in Colour
U.H.F.
Youth of Nation on Fire
Quit Dreaming and Get on the Beam

DISC TWO

SINGLES & RADIO SESSIONS 1980 – 1981

Ideal Homes (original single mix)
Instantly Yours (original single mix)
Atom Man Loves Radium Girl
Dada Guitare
Banal (extended mix)
Turn to Fiction
Hers is a Lush Situation
Mr. Magnetism Himself
Youth of Nation on Fire (extended mix)
Be My Dynamo
Rooms With Brittle Views
All My Wives Were Iron
Living in My Limousine (remix)
Birds of Tin
Love in the Abstract
Konny Buys a Kodak (radio session 1981)
After Life (radio session 1981)
Boom Year Ahead (radio session 1981)
Art of Vision (radio session 1981)
Rooms With Brittle Views (radio session 1981)
Stay Young (radio session 1981)
Sleep Cycle (radio session 1981)
Jazz (radio session 1981)

DISC THREE

QUIT DREAMING & GET ON THE BEAM SESSIONS – NEW STEREO MIXES BY STEPHEN W TAYLER

Banal
Living in My Limousine
Vertical Games
Disposable
False Alarms
Decline and Fall
White Sound
Life Runs Out Like Sand
A Kind of Loving
Do You Dream in Colour
U.H.F.
Youth of Nation on Fire
Quit Dreaming and Get on the Beam

Bonus tracks
The World and His Wife
Dancing Music

DISC FOUR

QUIT DREAMING & GET ON THE BEAM SESSIONS – HIGH RESOLUTION 5.1 SURROUND SOUND & NEW STEREO MIXES BY STEPHEN W TAYLER – BLU-RAY

Banal
Living in My Limousine
Vertical Games
Disposable
False Alarms
Decline and Fall
White Sound
Life Runs Out Like Sand
A Kind of Loving
Do You Dream in Colour
U.H.F.
Youth of Nation on Fire
Quit Dreaming and Get on the Beam

Bonus tracks
The World and His Wife
Dancing Music

Buy Bill Nelson’s Quit Dreaming and Get on the Beam boxset from Amazon





The Producers (Trevor Horn / Lol Creme) 5-CD Set: A Detailed Review of the ‘Made in Basing Street’ Album

25 06 2024

The Producers were formed in 2006. They include record producers Trevor Horn (The Buggles, Yes, ABC, Seal), Steve Lipson (Frankie Goes to Hollywood, Propaganda), songwriter/producer Chris Braide (Downes Braide Association) and musicians Lol Creme (10cc, Godley & Creme)) and Ash Soan (Del Amitri / Squeeze).

Producers cover=art

This new 5-CD set was compiled in conjunction with the band and includes the original album (Made in Basing Street) as well as an alternate version, re-mixes, out-takes and instrumentals all overseen by Steve Lipson.

The extensive booklet features a new interview with the band by Record Collectors Daryl Easlea who details the process of the making of the album.

The original album, released in 2012, still sounds amazing, and is included on disc three in this collection. The 2023 mix is a sympathetic re-imagining. Freeway is more than two minutes longer, with a different drum intro and a lighter mix.

Your Life is also longer in its 2023 incarnation, with a lovely, spacey intro, and a more organic arrangement that lets the song really flow.

The new versions do not detract from the songs if you are already familiar with the album. Man on the Moon has a warm new mix. Every Single Night In Jamaica is a reminder that I am desperate for a Trevor Horn album (either solo or from The Buggles) that features Horn on lead vocals throughout.

Stay Elaine has replaced Ryan Molloy’s lead vocal with a Chris Braide take, which gives the album more continuity. Barking Up The Right Tree remains a highlight of the album, featuring a wonderful contribution from the always wonderful Lol Creme.

The Producers - Barking Up The Right Tree

Garden of Flowers is another longer take, and a less “bombastic” mix, closer in spirit to Trevor’s work with The Buggles. A heart-breaking lyric and vocal from Horn ensures that this became my favourite track on the album back on it’s original release, and the 2023 mix is now my favourite version of the song.

Watching You Out There is similar in arrangement to the original, whilst album closer You and I is a slightly longer version, with a brighter, more punchy mix and with further processing added to the lead vocal line.

The copious amount of extra material includes a selection of unreleased songs and some extended versions and alt-takes. Looking For Love (2023 Mix) is another fine Trevor Horn vocal, and could easily have fitted on the main album.

There’s Only So Much You Can Do is a mostly instrumental piece, apart from Braides’s vocals on the chorus. Extended versions of Freeway and Your Life are welcome additions to disc two, but the two alt-mixes of Garden Of Flowers offer the most value, with an almost Born To Run era Springsteen sounding arrangement driving the alternative edit.

The version of Two Tribes that ends disc two is a live instrumental version. Disc three contains the original album mix of Made In Basing Street from 2012.

Disc four adds further unreleased cuts from the long album sessions. Broadway is a funky little instrumental piece, with some fine interplay between Horn and Soan, and a go-go / Slave To The Rhythm like percussion track. Come In Elektra is a song about Amelia Earhart.

Give Us A Clue is a laid-back Chris Braide vocal piece, with a lazy summer groove. Home has a Beatles / John Lennon inspired arrangement, and the simplicity and space is a real change for the usual material from the band. As you would expect, the production is sumptuous.

Music From Bel Air is another Trevor Horn vocal. It is lovely to hear his vocals set against a very acoustic backing, away from his usual heavily electronic backdrop. The nostalgic lyrics are a delight.

Summer Rain is a surprising omission from the released album. Breezy guitars and a leisurely beat give the track a unique charm. The Path Of Sydney Arthur is a leftover from the original concept album idea that fed into the early sessions, and would have likely been the opening piece to this discarded alternative album sequence. This is definitely one for fans of the more electronic, synth-heavy side of Horn’s oeuvre. It’s a simple but effective piece.

Disc four has a set of fully realised and produced songs that give a tantalising glimpse into an alternative Producers album, that sadly we will never hear as this release appears to be the final word in the Producers story.

Fans of Trevor Horn / Lol Creme and Chris Braide will find plenty to love with this deep dive, expanded re-issue of Made In Basing Street.


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CHRIS BRAIDE – vocals, keyboards, acoustic guitar, glockenspiel, producer.
LOL CREME – guitars, marimba, bass, vocals, backing vocals, keyboards, percussion, producer.
TREVOR HORN – bass, backing vocals, vocals, acoustic guitar, vocoder, marimba, producer.
STEPHEN LIPSON – guitars, mandolin, percussion, programming, backing vocals

TRACK LISTING

DISC ONE

MADE IN BASING STREET
2023 mix

Freeway
Waiting For The Right Time
Your Life
Man On The Moon
Every Single Night In Jamaica
Stay Elaine
Barking Up The Right Tree
Garden Of Flowers
Watching You Out There
You And I

DISC TWO

Looking For Love (2023 Mix)
There’s Only So Much You Can Do (2023 Mix)
Freeway (Extended)
Your Life (Extended)
Garden Of Flowers (Alternative Edit)
Garden Of Flowers (Radio Edit With Guitars)
Two Tribes

DISC THREE

MADE IN BASING STREET

Original album mix

Freeway
Waiting For The Right Time
Your Life
Man On The Moon
Every Single Night In Jamaica
Stay Elaine
Barking Up The Right Tree
Garden Of Flowers
Watching You Out There
You And I

DISC FOUR

EXTRAS

Broadway
Come In Elektra
You And I (Dada Mix)
Give Us A Clue
Home
Music For Bel Air
Summer Rain
The Path Of Sydney Arthur
Your Life (End Intro Idea)

DISC FIVE

MADE IN BASING STREET

Instrumental – 2023 backing track

Freeway
Waiting For The Right Time
Your Life
Man On The Moon
Stay Elaine
Barking Up The Right Tree
Garden Of Flowers
Watching You Out There
You And I
Looking For Love

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Regan & Bricheno – APPARITIONS track-by-track album review

6 05 2024

The Regan & Bricheno bandcamp page sets the scene for this album:

“With Julianne Regan as a green-eyed Elizabeth Taylor to Tim Bricheno’s temperant Richard Burton, All About Eve rides again – in spirit if not in name.”

Regan & Bricheno - APPARITIONS artwork

This is a great scene setter, as APPARITIONS is clearly not just a continuation of the All About Eve songbook, but an expansion of Julianne and Tim’s songwriting and arrangement skills. It would have probably been very easy to rehash past glories, and tread a safe path, but any fears of this being the case are smashed to pieces within a couple of songs.

The album opens with the only “old” track, RAINDROPS, which was released on the now out-of-print 2006 Keepsakes All About Eve compilation, and at the time was one of the first tracks to feature Tim Bricheno playing on an All About Eve song since 1989.

RAINDROPS deserves to be heard again away from the compilation, and is a lovely pop song, underpinned by jagged guitar lines.

Out with the old and in with the new. PALE BLUE EARTH feels like it is referencing Bowie at several points in the lyrics, and again with the affectionate musical nod to Heroes towards the end of the track. The playful, widescreen production is what I hoped to hear, after soaking up the sneak previews we were treated to prior to the albums release on the duos social channels.

PALE BLUE EARTH is the first song on the album to draw its inspiration from the past – with late 50s / 60s space race references indicating the endless possibilities of the future. The experimentation in performance and production is a clear step-up from Julianne’s and Tim’s past collaborations.

SÉANCE widens the musical palette further, with a psychedelic, trippy soundscape, and Twin Peaks referencing keyboard lines. Before the drum machine kicks in, I get hints of early John Foxx in the use of space and minimalism.

“Is there anyone there?
Silk echoes, electric, on paper thin air
A soft phosphorescence, a liminal presence,
The scrape of a chair”

There is a real maturity in the arrangement on SÉANCE, with the track twisting and changing pace, but it never feels forced or un-natural. Throughout the whole album, the guitar is a natural part of the equation, used sparingly so when it appears, it cuts through to maximum effect.

With LUXURY OF REFLECTION, nostalgia seeps through every single note of this beautiful track. Falling snow (referenced in several songs), wistful strings, bells and an icy, Goldfrapp Felt Mountain melody are key ingredients that will surely tug at your emotions.

The memories are warm and sepia-tinged, apart from the quite sharp line towards the end.

“Of all the songs I’ve written for you
Here’s the one you’ll never hear”

RADIUM already seems to be an early fan favourite from reading the comments on social media. An unconventional love song spraying its deep longing amongst the mushroom clouds, sadly RADIUM was released a little too late to be included in the soundtrack to Wes Anderson’s Asteroid City, as it would have been a perfect fit.

AMERICA is perfectly placed in the running order next to RADIUM. Both are similarly paced and are both paeans to the culture and idealism of the ghost of America. Amongst the beautiful, delicate arrangements on AMERICA comes a discordant guitar line that jars and jolts you, before quickly giving way to mellotrons and atmospheric, spacey guitars.

The love and endless exploration that has gone into the production on this song makes it a pure joy to listen to. Real hairs on the back of your neck stuff, as instruments pan back and forth across the rich soundscape.

At the time of writing, this is my personal favourite from the album.

“And I’d have liked to have found
Wild blueberries after the first frost
And I’d have dressed warmly
Brought my camera along”

Regan & Bricheno - photographer unknown

ROSES ROUND THE DOOR, with guitars set to stun, has all the ingredients of a classic All About Eve song of old. Sad songs say so much and boy, is this a sad song. A key takeaway from ROSES… is to always tell the ones you love how you feel about them. Before it’s too late…

“Won’t you promise me that you won’t make the same mistakes
And that you honestly
Won’t forget to tell your darling you adore them
And get to smell the roses round the door”

DEAR LONELY HEART is a song that appeals to my inner goth and my dark, twisted heart, grabbing the All About Eve template to simply rip it up and start again. Featuring some of Mr Bricheno’s finest guitar lines, and a chorus to die for from Julianne, it is an instant classic.

Just as the song hits its peak, it’s over, leaving you wondering if the scars were ever healed? A heart-breaker.

“Someday a girl will come who doesn’t love guitars”

HONEY’S OCEAN is built from sparse acoustic guitar, mellotron and an 80s drumbeat that gives way to a sumptuous chorus, and Ray Bradbury referencing sci-fi lyrics.

The ghost of David Bowie haunts several tracks on APPARITIONS, and his influence on Julianne and Tim feels strong on HONEY’S OCEAN. As throughout the whole album, the production and the arrangement is as much of a star as the two artists themselves.

WHAT TO WEAR TO A FUNERAL closes APPARITIONS. Any song that mentions the sublime Wichita Lineman is instantly a friend of mine.

The reference to funeral playlists in WHAT TO WEAR TO A FUNERAL reminds me that I need to write my own funeral playlist down. I was discussing mine recently with my better half, and mentioned that Follow You, Follow Me was one of my requests for when I shuffle off my mortal coil. On discussing at a later date, I was presented with “you wanted a Genesis song, I can’t remember which one”, so I’ll probably get something horrific like Jesus He Knows Me. A haunting, I must go.

Sorry, I digress. Back to WHAT TO WEAR TO A FUNERAL, it rounds off a perfect album. So much attention has gone into the sequencing of the album, with 5 or 6 second gaps between tracks, giving you the time to recover and reflect before the journey continues.

Julianne has one of the most unique and recognisable voices in pop. Add to this her production, bass / keyboard / programming and arranging skills that work so well alongside her rekindled musical partnership with Tim, it helps the duo deliver a perfectly crafted album, that is lyrically strong and builds on their significant past history, whilst laying strong foundations for an exciting future.

APPARITIONS is available to purchase now as a download via Bandcamp, with a physical release to follow, hopefully later this year.

Buy APPARITIONS on Bandcamp

Tracklisting

RAINDROPS
PALE BLUE EARTH
SÉANCE
LUXURY OF REFLECTION
RADIUM
AMERICA
ROSES ROUND THE DOOR
DEAR LONELY HEART
HONEY’S OCEAN
WHAT TO WEAR TO A FUNERAL

Recorded by Tim Bricheno and Julianne Regan at Shabbey Road Studios, London, and Little Box Studios, Somerset.

Singing by Julianne Regan.
Electric and acoustic guitars by Tim Bricheno.
Bass guitar by Tim Bricheno & Julianne Regan.
Keyboards and programming by Julianne Regan & Tim Bricheno.
Co-produced by Julianne Regan & Tim Bricheno.
Mixed and mastered by Tim Bricheno.

Artwork:
Lana Bricheno – Cover art photo collage
Julianne Regan – Design and lyric booklet artwork

Additional contributions:

Toby Bricheno:
Co-mixing on Roses Round The Door and Pale Blue Earth
Co-arrangement of strings on Luxury of Reflection
Kevan Gallagher:
Acoustic Guitar tone on Honey’s Ocean
Tony Kiley:
Drums on Roses Round the Door and Dear Lonely Heart