Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Gene - Where Are They Now? (2001)

Gene's origins lie in a previous band which was first called The Go Hole, named after a fictional "Beat" club in John Clellon Holmes' novel 'Go', and formed in 1987 by by Lee Clark (vocals/guitar) and Darryl James Walton (bass). However, their collaboration was short-lived as Walton was soon replaced by John Mason on bass, with Matt James (Wrigley) joining soon afterwards on drums. Walton then took on the role of band manager, and their first single, 'Flight Of Angels', appeared on Walton's Big Pop Record label in 1987. A John Peel session fuelled their early success, where they mixed with Camberwell music and artistic community, mingling with members of The House of Love, My White Bedroom, and Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer. After 18 months, Clark, Mason and James invited John's brother Steve Mason to play lead/rhythm guitar, thereby freeing Clark to focus on vocals, and at this point they changed their name to Sp!n. The band released two singles, 'Scratches (In the Sand)' in 1990 and 'Let's Pretend' in 1991, both on The Foundations Label, and an album was recorded with Stephen Street as producer, titled 'In Motion'. However, their career was suddenly put in doubt then the band were involved in a car accident, with John Mason suffering a head injury which put him into an 11-day coma, while Walton was also hurt. The day prior to the accident, Clark had offered his resignation in a letter to the rest of the band, due to his dissatisfaction with the way that Walton and their record label were guiding its course. 
A final EP, titled 'Hot Blood', was released in late 1991, but the music press had ceased to portray the band as new and vibrant, instead concentrating on the car crash and their injuries, necessitating an overhaul of the band. John Mason left the band and became a writer, while Clark briefly recorded demos with Andrew "Snake" Newton, who had been the live sound engineer for Sp!n, but then gave up music to become a primary school teacher. Wanting to continue together in a band, Steve Mason and James recruited bass player Kevin Miles, who had a long association with the band, and after seeing Watford based Welshman Martin Rossiter cross the floor of a club, Mason approached him, and their meeting ended with Mason asking Rossiter if he would like to audition with the band. Rossiter appeared on Sp!n's last demos as "Martin T. Falls" (a nod to the Mancunian band The Fall) shortly before the band decided to adopt the name Gene. By the time NME journalists Keith Cameron and Roy Wilkinson encountered Gene, the band had already gained some live experience and had written several songs, and Cameron and Wilkinson were impressed enough to form an independent record label called Costermonger, with the sole purpose of promoting Gene to a wider audience. Their double A-sided debut single 'For The Dead'/'Child's Body' was released on Costermonger in May 1994, and it received a great deal of attention from the music press, with Select naming it "Single Of The Month". 
With Gene already developing a devoted fan following, a new single was planned to consolidate their popularity, and the triple A-side 'Be My Light Be My Guide'/'This Is Not My Crime'/'I Can't Help Myself' was released on 1 August 1994 via Costermonger. After achieving the top spot in the UK indie chart and number 54 in the UK Singles Chart, the band played their first UK headlining tour, including a sold out show at London's Paradise Club. The plaudits had not gone unnoticed by the big record companies, and Gene eventually signed a deal with Polydor Records, who released their third single 'Sleep Well Tonight' in late 1994. Featuring strongly in both critics and readers end of year polls, Gene were the recipients of the inaugural NME Brat Award for 'Best New Act', and as such played at the sold-out Brat Award ceremony at the London Astoria. Their fourth single, 'Haunted By You', became the band's second Top 40 hit, reaching number 32, whilst their 1995 debut LP 'Olympian' reached number 8 in the UK Albums Chart, and received a plethora of excellent reviews. Following a world tour and a well-received performance at Glastonbury Festival, the band entered the studio again at the end of the year for pre-production on their new album, scheduled for release the following year. 1996 began with a remixed 'For The Dead' which subsequently became their biggest hit, peaking at number 14 in the Top 40, and leading to their debut appearance on Top of the Pops. In anticipation of their second studio LP, October 1996 saw the release of 'Fighting Fit', an up-tempo rock song which reached number 22 in the UK singles chart, and the start of 1997 heralded the release of 'We Could Be Kings', another epic rock song which again proved to be popular, reaching number 18. 
The 'Drawn To The Deep End' album appeared in 1997, taking its name from a 'Fighting Fit' b-side, and it revealed a lavish production replete with strings, far more prominent guitar solos from Mason, and a rather warbling vocal affectation from Rossiter, while the the dominating themes of the album were loneliness and deep yearning. Indeed, Rossiter was in the depths of depression during the making of the album and the songs resulting from this period remain some of the band's most powerful work. 'Drawn To The Deep End' was another critical success, entering the top 10 of the album charts, and subsequent singles, 'Where Are They Now?' and 'Speak To Me Someone' both made the top 40. 1998 was used by the band to write new material, and no new music was released during that hear, meaning that on their return from relative wilderness, it appeared that they had lost a lot of their prestige, and were no longer the golden boys of the indie scene. Their next album, 'Revelations', was released in March 1999, along with a Jam-like political single called 'As Good As It Gets', which entered the charts at number 23 to lukewarm reviews.
'Revelations'  received very mixed reviews, charting disappointingly at number 23, although the second single from the album, 'Fill Her Up', still managed to crack the Top 40. Despite a successful and comprehensive tour around the country, again selling out many venues, as well as making a successful appearance at the Reading Festival of that year, Gene and Polydor parted ways. The band felt somewhat undermined by their label's lack of support and failure to market the album adequately, and they also felt that given more time by their label they could have made a better record. After signing with Contra Records, they released the 'Libertine' album in 2001, but despite further successful live shows in subsequent years, including a set at the Morrissey curated Royal Festival Hall Meltdown Festival in June 2004, Gene opted for an amicable split later that year, and their final live performance was on 16 December 2004 at the London Astoria. In their decade-long career Gene produced some great music, with a lot of it being hidden away on the b-sides of their singles, and so here are all the non-album tracks that the band released between 1994 and 2001. 



Track listing

Disc I - 1994-1995
01 For The Dead (single 1994)
02 Child's Body (b-side of 'For The Dead')
03 Be My Light, Be My Guide (single 1994)
04 This Is Not My Crime (b-side of 'Be My Light, Be My Guide')
05 I Can't Help Myself (b-side of 'Be My Light, Be My Guide')
06 Sleep Well Tonight (single 1994)
07 Sick, Sober And Sorry (b-side of 'Sleep Well Tonight')
08 Her Fifteen Years (b-side of 'Sleep Well Tonight')
09 Do You Want To Hear It From Me (b-side of 'Haunted By You' 1995)
10 How Much For Love? (b-side of 'Haunted By You' 1995)
11 I Can't Decide If She Really Loves Me (b-side of 'Olympian' 1995)
12 To See The Lights (b-side of 'Olympian' 1995)
13 Don't Let Me Down (b-side of 'Olympian' 1995)

Disc II - 1996-1999
01 Drawn To The Deep End (b-side of 'Fighting Fit' 1996)
02 Autumn Stone (b-side of 'Fighting Fit' 1996)
03 Dolce And Gabbana Or Nowt (b-side of 'We Could Be Kings' 1997)
04 Wasteland (b-side of 'We Could Be Kings' 1997)
05 Cast Out In The Seventies (b-side of 'Where Are They Now?' 1997)
06 Nightswimming (b-side of 'Where Are They Now?' 1997)
07 As The Bruises Fade (b-side of 'Speak To Me Someone' 1997)
08 The Ship Song (b-side of 'Speak To Me Someone' 1997)
09 To All Who Sail On Her (b-side of 'As Good As It Gets' 1999)
10 Toasting The Union (b-side of 'As Good As It Gets' 1999)
11 Man On Earth (b-side of 'As Good As It Gets' 1999)
12 Pass On To Me (b-side of 'Fill Her Up' 1999)
13 Touched By The Hand Of Havoc (b-side of 'Fill Her Up' 1999)

Disc III - 2001
01 Is It Over? (single 2001)
02 Supermarket Bombscare (b-side of 'Is It Over?')
03 Little Diamond (b-side of 'Is It Over?')
04 Who Said This Was The End? (b-side of 'Is It Over?')
05 Let Me Move On (single 2001)
06 If I'm A Friend (b-side of 'Let Me Move On')
07 Left For Dust (b-side of 'Let Me Move On')
08 From Georgia To Osaka (b-side of 'Does He Have A Name?' 2001)
09 Welcome To Dover (b-side of 'Does He Have A Name?' 2001)
10 With Love In Mind (b-side of 'Does He Have A Name?' 2001)
11 Love Lives Here (b-side of 'Spy In The Clubs' 2001)

Mike Stuart Span - Concerto Of Thoughts (1968)

Mike Stuart Span evolved out of the Brighton-based group The Mighty Atoms, which included vocalist Stuart Hobday and bassist Roger McCabe. By 1965, Hobday's early attempts at song-writing had secured a publishing contract with Lorna Music, and the Mike Stuart Span - a name created by reversing the singer's Christian names - was formed, with the addition of Nigel Langham on guitar, Ashley Potter on organ  and a teenage drummer Gary 'Roscoe' Murphy. A liaison with local promoter Mike Clayton resulted in the replacement of Potter with Jon Poulter, and the addition of a four piece horn section. For economy this was soon reduced to two (Gary Parsley on trumpet and Dave Plumb on saxophone) as the band concentrated their efforts on American-derived soul music. The band secured a recording contract with EMI, after recording the Hobday penned 'Work-Out', coupled with a cover of The Drifters' 'Follow Me', but it was another Drifters number, 'Come On Over To Our Place' that was selected as the A-side for the band's debut Columbia single in November 1966. A second single followed in June 1967, with their cover of Cat Stevens 'Dear' being backed by Mike d'Abo's 'Invitation', but it was as unsuccessful as their debut, and EMI dropped the band. 
This forced the band to dismiss the horn section, with keyboardist Poulter also departing shortly afterwards, and after recruiting guitarist Brian Bennett through an ad in Melody Maker, the revitalised band paid more attention to the importance of studio work, starting with an October 1967 session at Decca Records with Dave Paramor, who had produced their EMI singles. Three tracks were recorded, including the instrumental 'As Close As We Can Get It', which was titled after Paramor's insistence that the track should last two and a half minutes, but it actually only ran for 2 minutes 28 seconds. However, Decca decided that the recordings were insufficiently commercial and declined signing the band, so without record company support the group took matters into their own hands and privately funded a single that appeared in February 1968 on the Jewel label – a new Melodisc subsidiary run by Emil Shallit. The two tracks were recorded at R.G. Jones studio in Morden, and 500 copies of 'Children Of Tomorrow'/'Concerto Of Thoughts' were pressed, making it one of the most sought-after psychedelic 45's. Publicity both at home and abroad brought a cameo appearance in the film, 'Better A Widow', as well as successful tours of Germany and Belgium, and a support appearance with Cream in the UK. Following a session for the John Peel's Top Gear programme in May 1968, the band was chosen to feature in documentary film-maker Paul Watson's BBC TV series 'A Year In The Life'. 
The episode charted the band's progress over twelve months, and along the way they dismissed their manager and, thanks to a series of demo recordings reaching Clive Selwood, who was head of the UK branch of Elektra Records, the group was signed to the label early in 1969. In the United States, label boss Jac Holzman immediately commissioned an album, but insisted on a change of name for the group, and so they re-christened themselves Leviathan, and Elektra launched their recording career in April 1969, with the simultaneous issue of two singles. Three of the chosen tracks, 'Remember The Times', 'Second Production' and 'Time', had initially been conceived as Mike Stuart Span recordings, with the newly composed 'The War Machine' completing the quartet, and despite the commercial failure of both singles, work continued on the band's album at Trident Studios. One further old Mike Stuart Span track, 'Flames', was recorded as a single in the summer of 1969, although by the time that it surfaced in October Leviathan had split up. Although Mike Stuart Span recycled much of their unreleased material for the Leviathan project, the original recordings by the group have since surfaced, and if Elektra had allowed them to release an album under their original name then it could have sounded very much like this.   



Track listing

01 World In My Head
02 Flames
03 Concerto Of Thoughts
04 Baubles And Bangles
05 Children Of Tomorrow
06 Second Production
07 Time
08 Blue Day
09 Can You Understand Me
10 Remember The Times

Friday, May 16, 2025

Blue Aeroplanes - Staring At The Future (2024)

For anyone who enjoyed the recent post from The Blue Aeroplanes, here is a treat for you. In 2023 the band released the follow-up to 2017's 'Welcome Stranger!', with 'Culture Gun' making a belated appearance. It was written, and in part recorded, over three years, and was much delayed, mainly due to vocalist Gerard Langley being hospitalized with cancer. It was finally released on 28 April 2023 on the Art Star label, to almost universally positive reviews, and the following year the band surprised fans at a gig at Lafayette, London on 27th July 2024, by selling a specially pressed CDr of unreleased tracks from the 'Culture Gun' sessions. It included the track 'Tyger! Tyger!', which is poetry by William Blake and William Butler Yeats set to an arrangement of Mud's 'Tiger Feet', and was limited to just 100 copies. It came housed in a gatefold sleeve and a plain, white paper inner, with a resealable, clear, outer protective cover, and obviously has since become one of the band's most collectible items. In case you didn't manage to get your hands on a copy, here it is for your enjoyment.  



Track listing

01 Tyger! Tyger!
02 Inherit
03 Bad Angel
04 Loyalty Cards / Unreliable Narrator
05 Cops
06 Album Of The Year
07 Underground Rocketship
08 Better

Stacie Orrico - Say It Again (2002)

Stacie Joy Orrico was born on 3 March 1986 in Seattle, Washington, and grew up influenced by a wide range of musical styles, becoming a member in the church choir where she often accompanied on the piano as the family sang Christian hymns. She got her start in music at the age of 12, by attending a Christian music festival, Praise in the Rockies, held in her then-home state of Colorado. Orrico inadvertently entered a high-stakes talent competition, where she won, and a ForeFront Records executive was on hand and approached her for a record deal. She later signed with them, and in 2001 she toured with Destiny's Child as their opening act on select dates of their Survivor tour in the United States. She recorded her first album when she was just 14 years old, and 'Genuine' was released in 2000, selling over 13,000 copies in the first week, the highest debut week sales ever for a female Christian artist. The album produced the hit single 'Don't Look At Me', which topped Christian charts for ten consecutive weeks, and all five singles from it went top ten in the charts. In 2001 she released a Christmas EP, consisting of six tracks made up of a mix of Christmas songs and carols. In 2002 she started recording her next album, which was intended to be a more mainstream record, titled 'Say It Again'. A track listing was put together and promo CD's distributed, before it was decided to scrap the album and start again. The songs 'Truth', 'Until I Find You', the cover of Billy Preston's 'That's The Way (God Planned It)', and 'Star Of My Story' were dropped and replaced with new recordings, and the ones which were kept were significantly different. The spoken intro to 'Bounce Back' was removed from the single version, 'Maybe I Won't Look Back' has a slightly different track from what would eventually be released, including the bridge being performed as a rap verse by Orrico, and 'Security' contained a rap verse from an uncredited Mat Kearney that was omitted from the released version. A couple of the scrapped tracks were later included on some Japanese editions of her album, while others have remained unreleased. The revamped 'Stacie Orrico' album was released in 2003, and charted in the US, the UK, and Australia, and the first mainstream single from this album was 'Stuck', which became a worldwide hit, reaching the Top 5 on the majority of the world's charts, followed by '(There's Gotta Be) More To Life', which reached number 12 in the UK. For any fans who are interested in hearing the album as it was originally intended, then here is 2002's 'Say It Again', the precursor to 2003's 'Stacie Orrico'. 




Track listing

01 Tight
02 Hesitation
03 Bounce Back
04 That's What Love's About
05 Truth
06 Intil I Find You
07 Maybe I Won't Look Back
08 That's The Way (God Planned It)
09 Star Of My Story
10 Security (feat. Mat Kearney)

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

The Dodos - Music From The Funhouse (1967)

If 'Sgt. Pepper...' cracked the egg of psychedelic pop earlier this year, 'Music From The Funhouse' by The Dodos smashes it on the floor, paints a moustache on the yolk, and invites you to dance to its surreal ride through the acid-drenched annals of time. The album opens with 'The Big Parade', a brassy, clattering number that marches out of the gate like a ragtag circus. It’s a dizzying overture, complete with luscious strings, marching band drums, and cryptic lyrics. It's as much a declaration of artistic intent as it is a giddy sonic prank. 'Funhouse Mirrors' slows things down but doesn’t let up on the weird, with the layered vocals and psychedelic sounds giving it an otherworldly feel. 'Crystalline Ballroom' is a shimmering ballad with fairy-tale lyrics, which ends wit a cacophony of sound effects, while 'Cotton Candy Tears' is actually quite a jaunty number, with some nice guitar-work. 'Up In The Air' is a buoyant track that filters early Kinks through a trapeze act, with a playful tempo and rich harmonies, giving it a sense of wonder that's impossible to resist. 'Did I Forget' harks back to their earlier work, and is a welcome break from the rampant psychedelia on offer so far, but we're soon back to the strangeness with 'The Clowns Scare Me', which is a deceptively catchy piece with paranoid lyrics and a great backwards guitar solo. The album closes with 'Hypercolour Kaleidoscope Cavalcade', which is six and half minutes of layered drones, backwards guitar loops, and heavily flanged vocals dripping with echo. 'Music From The Funhouse' has the makings of a cult classic, and with half of the twelve tracks hovering around the six-minute mark, it also gives the boys the chance to experiment, and play around with new sounds. It’s unafraid to be bizarre, and yet it’s filled with real melodic beauty and emotional depth. The Dodo's may be extinct in the mainstream, but in the funhouse of rock history, their music echoes on.


Track listing

01 The Big Parade 
02 Funhouse Mirrors
03 I Bumped My Head 
04 Time Flows So Slow
05 Why Wake Me? 
06 Crystalline Ballroom
07 Walk Through The Midway
08 Cotton Candy Tears 
09 Up In The Air
10 Did I Forget?
11 The Clowns Scare Me
12 Hypercolour Kaleidoscope Cavalcade

Mike Solof - Off The Beatle Track - Episode 73 (2019)

I think its about time for another episode of Mike Solof's excellent Beatles-O-Rama radio show, and this one is a bit of a departure from the usual in depth exploration of the Fab Four, as it looks at the political history of the 60's, with choice musical interludes which help explain what was happening during this period, and what the musicians of the time though of it.
 


Track listing

01 Episode 73 - Off Track With Just 4 Guys

U2 - Songs Of Ascent (2010) **UPDATE **

Listening to this album once more, I noticed that the guitar intro to 'Mercy' seemed extremely loud compared to the rest of the song, so I've toned it down a bit to blend in with the rest of the track. Soulseek and Mega updated, and link to the track on its own is in the comments. 

pj

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Pink Floyd - Comfortably Numb (2023) **UPDATE**

Since discovering this epic track on Youtube, I've probably played it about once a week, and while I'm in awe at the seamless edits, one little thing that niggled was the slight change in the fullness of the sound on a couple of the solos. I've therefore extracted them and boosted the bass on them a touch so that they blend in more with the music on either side. Hopefully it fractionally improves your enjoyment of this superb piece of music. Soulseek/Mega updated.



Track listing

01 Comfortably Numb

Friday, May 9, 2025

Frank Zappa - Chalk Pie (1982)

'Chalk Pie' was a live album planned for release in 1982, featuring music recorded on Frank Zappa's  1981 tour. When it was delivered to the folks at his label it was not greeted enthusiastically, as the previous year Zappa had released two double albums and one triple, and so not wanting to overload his fans with product they asked for a single album instead. Zappa capitulated, and presented them with 'Ship Arriving Too Late To Save A Drowning Witch', which they released in 1982. Almost all of the material that makes up 'Chalk Pie' ended up being released on various Zappa albums throughout the 1980's, although there are quite a few things which you will only find on this version. Some fans have found it a much better album than '...Drowning Witch', as it contains some of Zappa's more enjoyable difficult compositions of the time, as opposed to the 'silly songs' that make up side one of that album. The first side of 'Chalk Pie' is the same as side two of '...Drowning Witch', but with a different mix of the title track, incorporating the group vocal section from a Santa Monica gig, Zappa's vocal section from the Chicago late show, the first guitar solo from The Ritz, and the second solo from the Chicago late show. As well as that, it all contains studio overdubs, some of which render the basic tracks almost unrecognizable. 
'Envelopes' and 'Teenage Prostitute' are also live with studio overdubs, while 'The Dangerous Kitchen' is the same recording as on 'The Man From Utopia' but mixed differently, giving more prominence to Steve Vai's guitar. 'Chalk Pie' is a different mix to that on the 'Guitar' album, and 'We're Turning Again' is a combination of recordings from Santa Monica and Salt Lake City. 'Alien Orifice' is an unreleased version from Salt Lake City, and 'The Jazz Discharge Party Hats' is the same mix as on 'The Man From Utopia'. 'The Torture Never Stops' guitar solo is a previously unreleased take, and 'What's New In Baltimore?' is a different mix to that on 'Frank Zappa Meets The Mothers Of Prevention', as the guitar solo is longer, and it has fewer studio overdubs. 'Moggio' is the same recording as used on 'The Man From Utopia', but a different mix, and it's followed by a previously unreleased take of the guitar solo from 'The Black Page #2'. 'Clownz on Velvet' is an unreleased recording from The Ritz in November 1981, with Al Di Meola guesting on lead guitar, and 'Frogs with Dirty Little Lips' features Zappa's son Ahmet. It's a shame that 'Chalk Pie' went unreleased, as the continuity is excellent, as is the track selection, and while this may not be for newcomers to Zappa's music, it's certainly an essential listen for fans of the great man. 



Track listing

01 Drowning Witch
02 Envelopes
03 Teen-Age Prostitute
04 The Dangerous Kitchen
05 Chalk Pie
06 We're Turning Again
07 Alien Orifice
08 The Jazz Discharge Party Hats
09 The Torture Never Stops - guitar solo 
10 What's New In Baltimore?
11 Moggio
12 The Black Page #2 - guitar solo 
13 Clownz On Velvet
14 Frogs With Dirty Little Lips

Sonny & Cher - This Good Earth (1970)

As 1967 became 1968, with two hit records and one flop movie, 'Good Times', representing Sonny & Cher's accomplishments for the year, Sonny Bono decided that movie stardom was the obvious future for Cher, with himself as auteur. As he threw himself into the film 'Chastity', recording output dwindled, with the duo cutting just two tracks in 1968. The first, 'Circus' was Bono's dump on psychedelic culture, with an atomic explosion for the record's finale, while the brassy 'You Gotta Have A Thing Of Your Own' was an improvement, but did no better in the charts than 'Circus'. As a business plan, there's some wisdom in diversifying into movies and general entertainment, and Bono was correct about Cher's potential as a superstar, but he bowdlerized the script of 'Chastity' to suit his opinions about modern girls, and despite some praise for Cher's acting, the resulting film was a flop. 1969 began tenuously, with Cher migrating to Atco as a solo artist with hopes of a musical revival, and she was taken to Muscle Shoals studios in Alabama, with an album green-lighted for an April release. Sonny & Cher's next single, the passably commercial duet 'You're A Friend Of Mine', failed to chart, and featured a solo Bono song on the flip, and to finalize their contract with Atco, Sonny & Cher once again reunited at Gold Star studios in early 1970 for 'Get It Together', which followed their last few singles in failing to bother the charts. Rumour has it that around this time Bono wanted to create an album which would repeat the success of 1965's 'Look At Us', and they decided to call it 'This Good Earth'. It was planned to be released after 1967's 'In Case You're In Love' album, maybe in 1970 or 1971, but their new record label Kapp Records issued 'Sonny & Cher Live' in 1971 instead, followed by 'All I Ever Need Is You' later the same year, and 'This Good Earth' was quietly forgotten. We know the names of six of the possible tracks, most of which were released as singles, and by adding a couple of stand-alone single releases from 1967, and some contemporary b-sides we have enough material to put together an approximation of what this album could have sounded like.   



Track listing

01 Circus  
02 You're A Friend Of Mine  
03 You Gotta Have A Thing Of Your Own  
04 Get It Together 
05 Hold You Tighter  
06 You And Me
07 Good Combination
08 I Would Marry You Today
09 She's No Better Than Me 
10 Just A Little
11 Gentle Foe
12 Plastic Man

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Bruce Springsteen - Electric Nebraska (1982) **FINAL UPGRADE **

I can't seem to leave this post alone, and although I was 95% happy with what I'd done, I still felt that 'My Father's House' could be better, and so I listened to every version that I could find on Youtube until I found one from East Rutherford in 1984 which not only had an introduction, but was also superb sound quality. So in what I hope is the final upgrade to this post, here is the definitive version of 'My Father's House' to slot into your album. As before, both Soulseek and the main download have been updated, and the link for the single track is in the comments.    
I was quite pleased with how the two live recordings from the recent U2 post turned out after I removed the crowd noise to make them sound more like studio recordings, and it occurred to me that Bruce Springsteen's 'Electric Nebraska' could do with the same attention. The original post was a perfectly valid idea, in making it sound like a complete live concert using the same running order as the original acoustic album, but what we really wanted to hear was a studio quality version of this legendary album. Once I'd updated the first track I was astounded at the difference that it made, as when the song fades at the end and there is no cheering it really does sound like a studio recording, and so the rest of the tracks soon followed, and we now have as close to a true electric 'Nebraska' as I think we'll ever get. I've used the same live recordings as the original post, apart from a cleaner version of 'My Father's House', as they are generally regarded as the best electric versions of the songs, and I've just tweaked a couple of them to improve introductions, or to EQ them to match the other tracks, so give this a try and see what a real electric version of 'Nebraska' could have sounded like. 



Track listing

01 Nebraska
02 Atlantic City
03 Mansion On The Hill
04 Johnny 99
05 Highway Patrolman
06 State Trooper
07 Used Cars
08 Open All Night
09 My Father's House
10 Reason To Believe

I've left the original post in the links and on Soulseek, but renamed it 'Electric Nebraska Live', so that you can still download that if you don't already have it. 

Tuesday, May 6, 2025

The Blue Aeroplanes - Kings Of The Soap Box (2010)

The genesis of The Blue Aeroplanes started with the band The Art Objects, who consisted of Gerard Langley, his brother John Langley, and dancer Wojtek Dmochowski, and who were active from 1978 to 1981. The Blue Aeroplanes first performed under that name at the King Street Art Gallery in Bristol in 1981, with the trio augmented by Nick Jacobs, former guitarist and vocalist of Southampton band the Exploding Seagulls. The same line-up played three or four concerts over the next couple of years, either at the gallery or for benefits, including a Karl Marx centenary performance at the Victoria Rooms, with the addition of trumpet and didgeridoo. The band released their first album 'Bop Art' on their own Party Records in 1984, and it was rapidly picked up by Abstract Records in the US and Fire Records in the UK. It contained material that had been considered as a follow-up to Art Objects' only album, 'Bagpipe Music', but which was abandoned when that group split up. Gerard Langley's largely spoken poetic lyrics were combined with a heavily guitar-centric sound, and the band went on to release 'Tolerance' in 1985 and 'Spitting Out Miracles' in 1987, alongside several singles and EPs. In 1990 they released their most critically acclaimed album, 'Swagger', this time on a major label Chrysalis/Ensign, and this was followed by 'Beatsongs' in 1991, which was recorded in the United States and produced by Larry Hirsch. 
This second album on the major label was their highest charting, reaching no. 33 in the UK Albums Chart. The follow-up to 'Beatsongs' was delayed until 1994 after a change of label, and 'Life Model' was eventually released on the Beggars Banquet label, followed the next year by 'Rough Music'. A long break and another label change to Art Star preceded the release of 'Cavaliers' in 2000, and following negotiations with EMI, who now owned the rights to 'Swagger' and 'Beatsongs', The Blue Aeroplanes then made a surprise return to the major label, with EMI re-releasing 'Swagger Deluxe' as a 2-CD version in January 2006. This was followed by an album of new material called 'Altitude' later that year, released on EMI's Harvest imprint, and this prompted the band to record the 'Harvester' album, which consisted of covers of classic tracks that were originally recorded by artists on the Harvest label. The Blue Aeroplanes are still active, releasing their 'Culture Gun' album in 2022, and in their long career they released numerous non-album tracks as b-sides to their singles and on their EPs. Despite releasing two collections of these tracks, titled 'FriendLoverPlane' and FriendLoverPlane2', there are still recordings that remain uncompiled, and so this post aims to correct that by including every non-album track that the band have released between 1985 and 2010.    



Track listing
 
Disc I - 1985-1987
01 Action Painting (from the 'Action Painting And Other Original Works Of...' EP 1985)
02 Le Petit Cadeau De Don Juan (from the 'Action Painting And Other Original Works Of...' EP 1985)
03 Ashtrays From Mt. Etna (from the 'Action Painting And Other Original Works Of...' EP 1985)
04 Police (38 Divinity) (from the 'Action Painting And Other Original Works Of...' EP 1985)
05 I Wanna Be Your Lover (from the 'C85' compilation album 2022, recorded 1985)
06 Who Built This Situation In The Midwest (from the 'Lover & Confidante' EP 1986)
07 Weird Heart (from the 'Lover & Confidante' EP 1986)
08 Breaking In My Heart (from the 'Lover & Confidante' EP 1986)
09 The Couple In The Next Room (from the 'Tolerance' EP 1986)
10 Complete Blessing (from the 'Tolerance' EP 1986)
11 King Of The Soapbox (b-side of 'Bury Your Love Like Treasure' 1987)
12 Vice King's Son (b-side of 'Bury Your Love Like Treasure' 1987)
13 Continually Torn Apart (b-side of 'Bury Your Love Like Treasure' 1987)
14 Days Of 49 (free flexi-disc with 'Spitting Out Miracles' 1987, sung by Rodney Allen)

Disc II - 1988-1991
01 Veils Of Colour (single 1988)
02 Shame (from the 'Janice Long Sessions' EP 1988)
03 You (Are Loved) (from the 'Loved' EP 1990)
04 You're Going To Need Somebody (from the 'Loved' EP 1990)
05 Sweet Jane (from the 'Loved' EP 1990)
06 ...And Stones (The Gangley Bootleg Mix - Part I) (12" single only 1990)
07 Razor Walk (b-side of 'Jacket Hangs' 1990)
08 Different Now (b-side of 'Jacket Hangs' 1990)
09 Big Sky (b-side of 'Jacket Hangs' 1990)
10 Pony Boy (b-side of 'Yr Own World' 1991)
11 Mis-Firing (b-side of 'Yr Own World' 1991)
12 Autumn Journal XXIV (b-side of 'Yr Own World' 1991)

Disc III - 1991-2010
01 Talkin' On The Otherphone (b-side of 'Boy In The Bubble' 1991)
02 Disney Head (b-side of 'Boy In The Bubble' 1991)
03 Stranger (from a flexi-disc given away at a Bristol gig 1992)
04 Trouble, Tell Me I'm Alive (from a flexi-disc given away at a Bristol gig 1992)
05 Bad Moon Rising (from the 'Ruby Trax' compilation album 1992) 
06 Love Is (b-side of 'Broken & Mended' 1993)
07 Jack Of All Hearts (b-side of 'Detective Song' 1994)
08 Jealous Town (b-side of 'Detective Song' 1994)
09 It's Alright (b-side of 'Detective Song' 1994)
10 Stars In Your Crown (from the 'Beautiful Is' EP 2007)
11 China Brilliance Automotive (single 2010)
12 My Good Self (b-side of 'China Brilliance Automotive')

Morrissey - Bonfire Of Teenagers (2023) **UPGRADE**

Following my upgrade of Bruce Springsteen's 'Electric Nebraska', another post that consisted of mostly live recordings was my reconstruction of Morrissey's abandoned 2023 album 'Bonfire Of Teenagers'. Since first posting this in August 2024, Morrissey has now performed another of the missing tracks from it in concert, so we now have eight of the proposed songs in some form or another, and as before, I've replace two of the missing songs with ones from his other unreleased album 'Without Music The World Dies'. The main difference between this upgrade and 'Electric Nebraska' is that I've been able to source much cleaner versions of the live performances, and so as this a real upgrade on the version I posted last year, I've replaced that version with this one, as no-one should need the old one when they can have this.   



Track listing

01 I Am Veronica  
02 Rebels Without Applause
03 Kerouac's Crack  
04 Without Music The World Dies  
05 I Live In Oblivion  
06 Bonfire Of Teenagers  
07 Notre Dame  
08 I Ex-Love You    
09 Sure Enough, The Telephone Rings  
10 Saint In A Stained Glass Window