Friday, May 1, 2026

Amorphous Androgynous & Noel Gallagher - Shoot A Hole Into The Sun (2015)

In 2009 the final Oasis single, the Noel Gallagher-sung 'Falling Down', was offered to various remixers to do what they wanted with it. Garry Cobain and Brian Dougans, also known as '90's dance superstars The Future Sound Of London, recorded an epic remix of the song, which they turned into a 22-minute mini-album. Despite doubts that perhaps the band only wanted a five-minute remix, Gallagher was so impressed that he released it on its own 12" format. When Noel finally pulled the plug on Oasis in 2009 and went solo, there was the suggestion that he was always itching to expand his musical horizons, and he launched his solo career with a press conference in July 2011, announcing that he'd already recorded his debut album 'Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds' with Dave Sardy, and that he'd also pretty much finished its follow-up, a collaboration with Amorphous Androgynous. Despite their previous success, the new project was almost immediately put in doubt, when industry insider Peter Cornish-Barlow reported that Noel's team weren’t keen on the collaboration, and that no-one other than Noel liked the reworked material that Amorphous Androgynous had done. Later that year, though, Noel was still talking up the record for a 2012 release, saying that the sound was similar to High Flying Birds, but more psychedelic and tripped out. A month on, he was dialling it back, but only a little, saying that he probably shouldn't have announced it, but he thought "It's finished, so fuck it, here's what I've been working on". The first we heard of the collaboration was 'Shoot A Hole In The Sun', a remix of 'If I Had A Gun', which was tacked on to the single 'Dream On' as a b-side, and meanwhile the album was still being spoken about, with Noel suggesting it would finally be ready for 2013. 
An Amorphous Androgynous remix of 'AKA... What A Life!' emerged as the b-side of 'Everybody's On The Run' in 2012, but a month later we got the first whispering from Noel that the album itself might be shelved altogether. Because he'd been busy with other things, he hadn't been involved in any of the mixing, and when he heard the mixes he wasn't happy with any of them. After that, everything went pretty quiet for a couple of years, but then Noel suddenly stirred the pot again in early 2015, complaining about the AA mixes of the album, saying that when they delivered the first mix, they'd managed to pull off the trick of recording the quietest CD of all time. Apart from the two remixes that came out as b-sides, the only things Noel salvaged from the sessions were 'The Mexican' and 'The Right Stuff', both of which he reworked for his second album 'Chasing Yesterday'. Having held their peace for most of Noel's various announcements, Amorphous Androgynous finally piped up, saying that "Gallagher still fascinated them, but the only thing holding him back was himself. It's like he became too afraid to be weird". They tried to force Gallagher to write new material, but he dragged his heels and failed to stretch himself, and so the collaboration fell apart. At one point he announced that there would never be a bootleg of the album, as he owns the master, and had destroyed it, but later, in an August 2018 interview, he said that he'd found a copy of the album in his sock drawer. Despite the fact that we'll almost certainly never get to hear the actual album that they recorded together, the tracks that have been released give us an idea of what it might have sounded like, and so by taking those five recordings and compiling them together, we have a 54-minute "album" from Amorphous Androgynous & Noel Gallagher to take the place of that shelved record. 


 
Track listing

01 AKA... What A Life!
02 The Right Stuff
03 Shoot A Hole Into The Sun
04 The Mexican
05 Falling Down (A Monstrous Psychedelic Bubble Exploding In Your Brain mix)

King Sunny Ade & His Green Spot Band - The Master Guitarist Vol. 1 (1971)

In 1982 Island Records released the album 'Juju Music' by King Sunny Ade And His African Beats, which introduced the music of this West African musician to a worldwide audience. For many, like me, it was the first that I heard of this joyous outpouring of rhythmic guitar-based music, and although it represented the first worldwide release for Adé, he was already established in his native Nigeria as its "biggest musical draw and juju music's reigning monarch". The album was a critical and commercial success, peaking at #111 on Billboard's "Pop Albums" chart, and The New York Times described it as "the year's freshest dance-music album", crediting it in 1990 with having launched the "World Beat movement in the United States". 1983's 'Synchro System' was more of the same, and these two records have made regular returns to the turntable in the intervening years. What I didn't realise until recently is that Ade had been releasing records in his native Nigeria for many years before we Westerners discovered him. Sunny Adé was born in Osogbo to a Nigerian royal family from Ondo and Akure, making him an Omoba of the Yoruba people. He left grammar school in Ondo City under the pretence of going to the University of Lagos, and it was there that his eclectic musical career began. It began with Moses Olaiya's Federal Rhythm Dandies, a highlife band, but he left them to form a new band, The Green Spots, in 1967. 
Over the years, for various reasons ranging from changes in his music to business concerns, the band changed its name several times, first to African Beats and then to Golden Mercury. His music is characterized by, among other instruments, the talking drum – an instrument indigenous to his Yoruba roots, and the guitar and uts peculiar application to jùjú music. He introduced the pedal steel guitar to Nigerian pop music, and has also included synthesizers, clarinet, vibraphone, and tenor guitar into the jùjú music repertoire. Over the past few months I have collected nearly thirty of his albums, released between 1971 and 1981, and as they are extremely hard to find, and all contain some great Afrobeat guitar-work, I'll be posting them not only for fans of the "Master Guitarist", but also as an introduction to a genre that you might not have heard before. Many of these album segue the songs together, so they only have two tracks, with each one consisting of four or five songs played one after the other. I'm starting with the 'Master Guitarist' series, then working my way through the rest of the releases chronologically, and I hope that you enjoy these posts, as I love this music and want to introduce it to a wider audience who weren't around in the 80's to hear those Island albums. 



Track listing

01 Sunny Ti De / Kolawole Bickersteth / Egbe Aburi / Ka Ma Gbagbe Atijo / Dele Davies
02 A Kunle A Tewo Adura
03 Prince Remi Aladesuru
04 Gbe Mi Debute Ogo
05 Tonni Ani
06 S. K. Dada