15
Jul

Day 125. Not much news still, waiting for our next release to come home from the pressing plant in this weird year. In the meantime here’s new music!

Blue Heron: a new album bu the Boston band. That is good news indeed. Titled “Forever Ending”, the 11-track album was recorded this year between February and July. It is indeed a beautiful pop album, totally worth your time.

The Reds, Pinks & Purples: Three new songs by the prolific San Francisco band. “All Night We Move”, “My Soul Unburdened” and “Brave and Cruel” come just in time for the summer. Something interesting, the first two songs contain lines from the poems of Rumi.

Star-Crossed Lovers: we stay in California and we find this band who released last month a digital single called “In the Shadows” with an accompanying track called “Not Everyone Has Friends”. Both are well crafted shoegaze/dreampop songs. Nice to meet you Star-Crossed Lovers.

Hiki: it is no surprise to find amazing music from Russia. This latest discovery is no exception. The album “A Trip to the Sea” is a swirling dreamy pop journey. There are 7 songs and it seems this is their 7th album! So yeah, I guess I will need to check previous releases!

For Not: the latest on Meritorio Records is the album “The Close is Open” by the Kungälv, Sweden, band Fort Not! The band consists of two friends Fredrik and Robert and they do make catchy pop songs. So this is very very good. I hope I get a copy when it comes out on September 18! Great find!

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Simon Coffey used to run an indie label in Aotearoa, New Zealand, called Onslaught Records in the 1980s. I checked a few of the bands on the label and they sound quite different to Guava Groove. How come?

It is a good question I think. But at the same time I don’t know much about the 80s in New Zealand, aside from what we know most, which is the Flying Nun releases. If we check other stuff it is always a surprise. Guava Groove then is quite a surprise.

The band only released one 7″ back in 1987 on Onslaught Records (CNT 002). This 7″ was more of an EP as it included four songs, two on each side. The A side had “Who’s that Girl?” and “Liquor Lover” while the B side had “Fight! (We Got to Use What We Got to Get What We Want)” and “Boot Girl”.

All four songs were recorded at Montage Studios on May 29 and 30 as well as June 20 and 21 of 1987. The band produced the tracks while Richard Hansen mixed them. The sleeve is quite interesting too because it tells us that the band WAS. Meaning that the record was released posthumously? Could be the case?

We know that the band was formed by:
Craig Bracken on vocals and harmonica
Darrin Kennedy on drums
Daniel Salmon on bass
Troy Shanks on guitar and vocals

The 7″ also includes some “Special Guavas”. I am guessing people that helped in the songs: Clare Bennet on vocals (she had been in the band Soul on Ice) and Nicky Bracken on vocals and sound.

But that is not all, there is Nathan Haines (he had been in bands like Freebass, Phoojun and Sci-Cione but whose solo album “Shift Left” was the biggest selling NZ recorded jazz album of all time) who played sax on tracks 1 and 3 and David Walker who also played sax on track 4. Peter Reid played trumpet on tracks 1 and 3. Then there are credits for Nicky Bracken for the photography on the sleeve, Tony Shanks & Thermostat for the sleeve and Paul Ullrich for the label design.

Other interesting credits come from the labels, “Who’s that Girl?” and “Fight!” were written by Troy Shanks while” Boot Girl” “Liquor Lover” and by Greaves and Turner meaning that the original was actually by 9 Below Zero, an English blues band,

Aside from Guava Groove we only know that Craig Bracken was later on in the band The Flaming Mudcats. And I couldn’t find any compilation appearances by the band!

After a bit of searching around the web for more info I find a website called There is No Cat. There is a comment on a blog post by Troy Shanks that tells a bit of the story of the band! This is just what I was looking for!

Here he mentions that the band formed in 1985 when he was 17 years old. They were based in the north shore of Auckland. In 1987 the band split as he moved to London. So yeah, the band only lasted 2 years and that would explain if the release came out after the band had already split.

The other band member found someone to replace him but I am not sure if they kept the name, though it seems they continued making music. He mentions that they didnt have enough money to press it as a 12″ 45rpm. That is why the four songs were in a 7″ at 33rpm. Other detail he mention is that his brother Kurt plays in a band called Stellar.

So the band was formed by Troy and Craig just a few months before leaving high school. They had a different drummer for their first gig (it was a talent competition at a bar). They came on third place it seems. Then their drummer was replaced as this original drummer was committed to an asylum. Then they got another drummer, Darrin. He also had been a classmate of his in school. Then they found their bass player, Dan, who was younger than the rest. With this lineup they played lots of gigs.

Something interesting that he mentions is that Flying Nun wouldn’t have been interested in their music as they were more like mods.

When I search Craig Bracken I find that he was also in a band called Los Diablos and run a label called Roots Music Aotearoa alongside Darcy Perry and Paul Merriott.

And that’s it! Whatever happened to them? Many questions, and not much information about this obscure New Zealand band!

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Listen
Guava Groove – Fight! (We Got to Use What We Got to Get What We Want)

13
Jul

Day 123.

More new music!

The Muldoons: finally the “Made for Each Other” album is available to preview on Bandcamp. The 10 songs are there and they are wonderful jangle pop. Among the best I’ve heard this year. Remember that the album is out now too. I need to get a copy myself of this superb Paisley, Scotland, band’s latest release!

Jaguar Sun: some very nice tunes coming from this project from Ontario, Canada. The latest is called “Keep You Warm” but in the past few months they have been putting out other tracks like “Next Year” or “Those Days”.

Films on Song: now we have to check out the “Too True” EP by this Charlottesville, Viriginia band. What do we discover? 4 songs of classic indiepop with chiming guitars, influenced by who? Flying Nun Records? Could be. They tag themselves as rock, indie and neosoul though. Anyone’s guess then. But the songs sound good especially the opening track “A Place I’d Rather Be”.

Jenny Genius: now we drive north, to New Haven, Connecticut. Here the band formed by Maggie, Chris and Dan have just released a cassette album. it is self-titled and has 7 songs. Okay, maybe a mini-album. The songs are raw, lo-fi, punkish indiepop. So yeah, pretty good.

The Wolfhounds: lastly the legendary band released “Electric Music” just like a week ago, on July 3rd. I missed the announcement so yeah I am probably late, even though many months ago I shared a link to the one song we could preview then. The limited edition 12″ is sold out. But there are other options, the non-limited 12″ and the CD. What matters in the end are the 10 songs that are included which are great. Lots of energy as always.

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Continuing with Australian discoveries here is another band from the great city of Perth, home of so many indiepop bands in the late 80s. I don’t know very much about them to be honest, but I am here to find out any details about them. Let’s start with what I know. They released just one record and then disappeared into obscurity.

This 7″ came out in 1987 on one of the most recognizable labels from that period, Easter Records (MR-7038). This label released bands of the quality of The Summer Suns, The Palisades or The Stolen Picassos among others!

The 7″ the band released came with two songs, “My Husband Beats Me” on the A side and “Coca-Cola is Coke” on the B side. Both songs were recorded at Northlake Studios, which was a recording studio located in the area of Myaree and where bands like Martha’s Vineyard and The Marigolds also  recorded.  They were engineered and mixed by James Hewgill.

We also know the band members names. And in parenthesis the nicknames they used.
Val Tarin (Pablo) – vocals and guitar
Craig Weighell  (John Boy) – vocals and drums
Dan Tarrant (Wally) – bass
Glen White (Tennessee) – lead guitar

Trumpet on the A side was played by Adrian Wood (aka. Huck Walton).

The cool art, the black and white illustration on the front cover, is credited to Fred Gilbert. The photo of the band on the back of the sleeve is credited to David Gerard.

Prior to this 7″ the band had included the A side, “My Husband Beats Me”, on a tape compilation called “The Attic Tapes”. This was actually a live recorded album, where I suppose all of the bands listed played that night. The venue was the Red Parrot and the date was Friday May 16th of 1986.

Then in 1989 the band would appear on an LP compilation called “Hometown Farewell Kiss” released by 6UVS-FM. This was a radio station based also in Perth. Nowadays it is called RTR FM. On this compilation the band contributed the song “Truck Drivin’ Man”. This looks like a terrific compilation, with many favourite bands of mine. I should try to get this record!

Lastly, many years later, in 2003, the band appeared on a CD compilation called “Off the Hip Fanzine 5” which as the name says came alongisde the fifth issue of the Off the Hip fanzine. Here the band contributed the song “Cherry”. Maybe it was an old recording? Or maybe they got together to record it?

Then I stumble upon something cool, The Waltons performing live at the Coronado Hotel in Perth! They are playing “My Husband Beats Me” and it seems this video dates from May 1991. Then there’s another clip of them playing the song “Quando” at the same venue. Then there’s another video of them playing the song “Cactus Jack” at the Shenton Park Hotel in Perth, January 1987. And lastly the song “Cherry” with an accompanying clip! Cool! It seems this song was to be the third single by the band. But then, which was the second?!

According to Last.fm there was a single with two songs, “Coast to Coast” and “We’re the Waltons”. And then that “Cherry” had a B side called “Crawly Man”. I need to find about these! “”Coast to Coast” was also released by Easter.

Then I find a blog called “Something Old, Something New“. Here they mention again that there were two singles. But what interests me is that they say that the songs were put together into a retrospective CD! I would love to find a copy of that. Another interesting detail is that it mentions that the band was active between 1985 and 1992.

It seems that this CD was remastered and compiled by someone called Trevor Hilton. He comments on the blog post. He says that the CD contained all 8 songs recorded in studio plus a gig from 1991 at the Coronado Hotel and a rare song called “Lost in Suburbia”. He also mentions that it was never properly released! What a shame! Would be great to hear these tracks, right?

Ok. So I found some more info about the 2nd single thanks to the blog “History of Australian Music from 1960 until 2010“. Here it mentions that James Hewgill again recorded them in Northlake Studios. This was 1987 and the single was released in March 1989. At this same time the band recorded the song “My Baby Left Me for a Truck Driving Man”. That seems to be the right song title for the song that was included in the radio station compilation LP. Then we know that “Cherry” was actually recorded somewhere else. It was recorded at Planet Studios in 1991 and were co-produced by the band and Dom Mariani from The Stems!

And there’s more. On Souncloud an account by Peter Morse (from Love Pump) has the A side of the first single for everyone to listen, and a rare song called “Superbird“.

Lastly the 5th issue of the Perth-based fanzine Party Fears has an interview with the band! Head to page 20 after clicking this link.

Then I keep googling and googling. I believe Dan Tarrant’s latest band was called Small Motors. Before that he had been in Josephine Killen. Val Tarin had been in Love Pump and Los Locos. Craig Weighell was also in Love Pump.

And that’s it. Quite a lot actually. I wasn’t expecting to find out that there was another single that I want to listen. And that there are more recordings that were once on a CD compilation. It is time to track all of this down. But definitely if you remember them and have extra details let me know. Would love to hear the whole story of the band!

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Listen
The Waltons – My Husband Beats Me

10
Jul

Day 120.

More new music from around the web!

Kammahav: our friends Christian Gustafsson and Tony Jenkins are back with a new song called “Thirty 4”. It is a bit rockier than previous efforts but I still like it. Are they working on an album or something? We should just wait.

Airhockey: the Miami band will be releasing a tape EP called “Walkthrough” on the 17th. It will have 6 songs and we can preview one of them, the opener track called “Try” which is a dreamy song.

Populardays: the Filipino band did a quarantine session for Shiny Happy Records, now four of the songs from the session are up on Bandcamp as part of the label’s digital club. These are terrific dreampop songs, so don’t miss them out.

Chavales: another digital single by this Spanish duo. “Ernesto” is the name of the song and no, it is not a cover of the classic Los Nikis song of the same name. Maybe it feels like a sequel to that song? I can see that.

“What You’ve Missed So Far” The First Hundred Releases of Blackbean and Placenta: remember the American label Blackbean and Placenta? Well here is a 21 song compilation on the Japanese Galaxy Train label. It is really cool as it includes songs by many classic bands like Boyracer, Orange Cake Mix, The Shermans, Aikagi, The Mondo Crescendo and a favourite of mine, The Ninjas.

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Jämna Plågor, the even plagues, was formed by Justus Björk on drums, Sam Carlshamre on guitar, Matilda Kihlberg on vocals and synth, Markus Amalthea Magnuson on organ and vocals and Philip Wigselius on bass. This was back in the mid 2000s. Some names do sound familiar, no?

When I wrote many years ago about Your Place or Mine, a terrific Stockholm based band, I got in touch with Sam Carlshamre who pointed me to this other band he had been involved with (he also was involved with Corduroy Utd.). He was the only Your Place or Mine person I got in touch but he wasn’t one of the original members, so he wasn’t keen on answering my questions for an interview. Would have loved to interview Matilda Kihlberg who was the vocalist of the band. Here in Jämna Plågor she sings too. And I notice another name that is familiar to me, that of Markus Amalthea Magnusson. He was in another top band from the period, The Fermats. I was actually in touch with him when I included them in the first volume of The Sound of Starke Adolf series that didn’t become a series (at least not yet!).

So we have some names. But we also have a website the band put together which is still up with links to 6 songs. 6 songs that made up their “Kapitalstaden EP”. 6 songs that were mixed and mastered by Mattias Valenca, I don’t know if this was released in a physical format (I hope there was a CDR – and if there was I’d kill for a copy). But here we have downloads for them all. The songs in the “Kapitalstaden EP” were “Kalla Kriget”, “Berlinlåten”, “Ungdomslåten”, “Konst och Vanliga Saker”, “Plankaren” and “Intro”.  Even cooler, there is a lyric sheet and also guitar chords for each song in PDF format. So if you want to practice your Swedish, take advantage!

It seems the band also had a Myspace back then. That is useless now of course. And that is all it seems. But we can also mention that the song “Plankaren” is actually an adaptation of the French writer Boris Vian’s “Le Déserteur”.

Not much more about them. Don’t even know if they played live. The good thing is that they left this amazing 6 songs that I urge you to discover (or rediscover) as time has passed by they sound still fresh to my ears!

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Listen
Jämna Plågor – Berlinlåten

08
Jul

Day 118.

Something for those looking for old Cloudberry zines, it seems Horowitz, the fantastic Stoke-on-Trent band who did a few releases with us have a bunch of copies for the first 7 fanzines that have been long sold out! So run before they disappear https://horowitz.bandcamp.com/merch

More new music from around the web!

The Bunbury: this Indonesian band has become a favourite. Now what is odd though is their shoes in Bandcamp, in Zaragoza and Mexico. I wonder if Bandcamp is listing Enrique Bunbury’s gigs there? Could be. Heroes del Silencio, the band Enrique was in the 80s and 90s hailed from Zaragoza and they are big in Mexico, the places where the gigs are to happen. In any case the Indonesian band who may or may not have taken their name from him have a wonderful new song called “Track 4”.

Tough Age: who are this Toronto/Vancouver band? They sound amazing to me! They will be releasing an album on August 6 called “Which Way Am I?”. It is going to be released by Mint Records and it will be available both on vinyl and CD. It seems the band has many other previous releases, but this is the first time (I think?!) that I’m enjoying these shambolic songs!

Bdrmm: the Hull’s band album “Bedroom”, released on July 3rd, seems to be sold out already. Both CD and vinyl versions are sold out. This is quite incredible I must say. How many copies were made? I am curious. Who sells out so fast? This shoegaze band must have the answer!

Caucus: so happy to see our Japanese friends making music again! Now on the great Galaxy Train label they have released a four song EP titled “Exploration of the Moon” and it is wonderful! Among these songs there is even a cover of the classic hit “You and Me Song” by the Wannadies. So cool!

122 North: Danny Provencher is back with another amazing song, “Drive”! I feel this is a special song for sure! Wow. I am speechless. It is part of a four song EP called “Drive” which includes the song “Better Stranger” and two mixes/remixes of Drive, Highway mix and Love Dance remix

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Another band I discovered doing my research for the series of compilations featuring Australian indiepop from the late 80s and early 90s was The Goddards. Prior to 2019 I had never heard of them.

I was lucky with them. I was to find a Soundcloud page that included lotsof songs. Even the A side, “From You For Now”, that was included in their only release they put out back in 1989. Sadly not the B side, “In Your Hands”, which I still hope to listen sometime soon! Maybe I’ll get a copy of the record. That might be easier as it seems the Soundcloud hasn’t been updated for 8 years.

The band released their 7″ in 1989 as I said. It came out on the label Lunchbox Spider (JDJ 100). It does look as if this label was the band’s own as there are no other releases listed. The front of the sleeve has a very cool illustration of a city, airplanes, a highway and men in hats. This illustration was created by T. Edwards.  The back of the sleeve has a photo of the band members and credits.

So thanks to that we know the band was formed by John Fitzgerald on drums and vocals, James Vidler on guitars and vocals and Richard Vidler on guitars and vocals. We know that both songs were recorded at Trackdown Studios in Sydney and were engineered by Tim Ryan. The band produced both tracks with help from Tim Ryan. Also Natassia Broofkisser played all strings on “From You For Now”.

And that’s it. No other releases are listed for them, not even compilation appearances.

But thanks to Soundcloud we know the band hailed from Newcastle in Australia. And that they recorded more songs like: “Thread”, “In My Mind”, “Invisible Blue”, “Best Friend”, “Skin Fest”, “Natasia”, “Fade Away Pretty”, “The Push”, “That’s How I love”, “Sea Shed”, “Randy”, “No Time” and “Hurt”.

Then I found an article on the Newscastle Star dating from April 2, 2016. Here I learn more about James Vidler, the guitarist and vocalist. There was a documentary in 2008 called “Rock I Gave You the Best Years of My Life” were four Newscastle bands were featured. The Goddards was one of them.

Something I learn from the article is that the band was originally formed by James, the youngest of the Vidler brothers. Then it mentions another Vidler brother that didn’t appear on the record it seems, Bob Vidler, who was a bassist.

Their first gig was at the Lass O’Gowrie Hotel in January 1988. At some point Richard got into a business relationship with the Troy Horse studio. This would lead to the creation of the Troy Horse label.

It seems they were recording an EP but they broke before they released it. Maybe many of the songs on Soundcloud were intended for that EP? That would make sense. After the breakup James was in bands like Bloodloop Beautiful and The Donkey Brothers.

Interesting.

Found quite some info and most importantly a bunch of music by The Goddards! That’s great! Now I’d love to hear the story directly from the band members. Will that ever happen?!

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Listen
The Goddards – From You For Now

06
Jul

Day 116. It has been a lazy long weekend for me. So not much news, but here are some good finds from this past weekend.

Pop Filter: Australia keeps putting out terrific guitar pop bands. The latest one I’ve discovered is Pop Filter from Melbourne. They actually will be releasing an album on August 21st and will be titled “Banksia”. Three of the songs from the 11-track record are available to preview, “Big Yellow Van”, “Laughing Falling” and “Romance at the Petrol Station”.

The Radio Dept.: The superb Swedish band is back with a 7″! This record has “You’re Lookin’ at My Guy” on the A side and “Could You be the One” on the B side. Both songs are really good! The vinyl is limited to 500 copies and there are even t-shirts if you like that as well!

Blue Tomorrows: this Portland band has been recommended in the blog before, so we know a bit what they are about. The three girls behind the band craft breezy and poppy tunes and their last effort, “Violet Shine”, is no exception. A nice summery single.

Dreams of Empire: the Brighton band is also back with a new digital single. It is a cover of the song “Reflection” originally written and recorded by Intermere, the side project of Andrew from Dreams of Empire.

Rosehip Teahouse: another digital single, it seems that’s the trend these days… and it is also a very good single of course. This Cardiff project has just unveiled in their Bandcamp the song “Regretting It”. A nice lo-fi bedroom pop song.

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Recorded at Boberg Studios in Hamburg, in December 1984, the “Love in the Afternoon” mini-album was the only release the band put out. And then, German friends tell me if I am wrong, they disappeared into oblivion.

The mini-album was actually released in 1985, with no label. It was probably a self release as it had that famous “SRT” as a label and catalog “SRT5KL406”. It included 7 songs, four on the A side: “Letting Go”, “Stand Back”, “Love in the Afternoon” and “Persuasion”, and three on the B side, “The Other Side of Midnight”, “The Feeling is Love” and “Rio Verde”.

The band was a duo, formed by Herbert Behrens on keyboards and Andrew Clark on vocals. Was it a German-British duo perhaps? I ask because of their names. Or American? The sleeve doesn’t give us any other details. The front cover has a photo of a woman (who is she?), and on the back a photo of the band.

Looking for more information, after really liking their track “Persuasion”, I find that Herbert Behrens, also called HerbieB, was born in Hamburg and actually started his music career as a drummer. Then he would move to the UK and there he toured and recorded with his band Java Jive. Does this mean there are other recordings by the band? Recordings made in the UK and not in Germany as the album?

He studied at the University of Buckingham and after finishing returned to Germany. Afterwards he would move to Mallorca in Spain where he would launch his solo career as HerbieB recording at least one demo CD I believe sometime around 2004.

And what about Andrew Clark? I couldn’t find any information about him. It looks like at some point they just disappeared from the face of the Earth. The record, I haven’t found a copy for myself yet. I think only 1,000 copies were pressed.

But did they play live a lot? It is mentioned they toured the UK. Who did they support? Or maybe who supported them? Would be good to find out. Who remembers them?!

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Listen
Java Jive – Love in the Afternoon

03
Jul

Day 113. How many more days of stay-at-home? We are considering going away for a month or so. A deserved sort of vacation. I know this may not be ideal for the label, as we won’t be able to send any orders for that time, but I feel a little break would be ok. I’ll keep you all updated. In the meantime, here are some good finds:

Sloppy Joe: our friend Hitoshi Oka is back with “Waiting for the Night Begins” a delightful jangle pop album with 11 tracks. At the moment you can check out 5 of them of this record that is available on vinyl and CD. The CD version also includes a CDR with four songs, two acoustic and two covers!

Münchhausen: this is quite a discovery. I have been a bit dismissive with bands from Colombia as it is very rare to find good indiepop coming from there. Well, now I have to accept that Münchhausen’s latest song, “Here Again”, is a true beauty! The Bogotá based combo has put together a fine post-punk/indiepop track which I am sure everyone will enjoy!

Mashmellow: the Russian duo formed by Masha and Egor is back with a wonderful new EP titled “Someday Club”. The track “Melt” is lovely, my favourite out of the 5 in this record, though it is hard to pick!

The Muldoons: the great Scottish band is going to be back very soon with an album titled “Made for Each Other”. It is really promising and will be out on vinyl by the Last Night label from Glasgow. In the meantime I urge you to head to Soundcloud and check the wonderful song “In Love Again”, a little taster of the album!

Sweetie Darling: lastly coming from Imperial, California, is this three-piece combo formed by Camden Aguilera, April Urrutia and Megan Moreno. They have an EP titled “Love/Lies” of lo-fi ramshackle pop that is very enjoyable!

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I am going through my extensive list of bands I would have wanted to include in my Australian indiepop compilations that never happened. Why? Well let’s say bands weren’t that keen to help, they weren’t that interested. The same thing that happened with the second volume of the Starke Adolf series. If bands don’t provide songs, bios or photos, really, there’s not much one can do. I tried. And will probably try again in the future.

Okay, so yes, I am going through this list because there are many bands I discovered while doing my research on who to include. A lot of them were tricky as I knew they were pop bands but couldn’t find any of their songs online. Mind you, I am not rich to buy all of the records I want. So no, I had the names but didn’t know how they sounded, if they were fit to be included. One of the bands I did find some music from was The Snorkels. And I thought immediately that they had to be part of my project!

The band released just one single as far as I know. I know very little of course. Writing this post might help me learn more. This 7″ single came out on Method Records (MR8) in 1983 and included “When I Say Go” on the A side and “95 Miles from Sydney” on the B side.

Method Records is an interesting label. I actually found out about The Snorkels by exploring their catalog. You see this label had released Skolars and Love Minus Zero among others. They are still going mind you.

On Discogs someone has commented that each copy of the 7″ was hand coloured. We also know that both songs were recorded at Silverwood Studios in Sydney, and that the B side, “95 Miles from Sydney” was composed and sung by the band’s bassist Jon Yuncken.

Then on the Sideroom blog Bruce mentions that The Snorkels might have included Fabian Byrne from the Fast Cars and the person behind Method Records. That explains a lot, doesn’t it?!

I found another blog, Wallaby Beat, that mentions that Doug Lees the drummer of the band Progression Cult would be part of The Snorkels. All is making sense now.

We have three names now. But that’s not all. Their song “When I Say Go” was also included on the compilation “Sound of Sydney – Volume 2” that was released by Method Records in 1984 (L 38263).

And that’s it. Not much more written about them on the web. No other information. Maybe it was a short-lived band. Maybe they only recorded a few songs? Maybe not many gigs? Who’d know. I definitely would like to know more about them

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Listen
The Snorkels – When I Say Go

02
Jul

Thanks so much to Paul and Iain once more! Just a week or so ago we did an interview about the fantastic Radio Ghosts, the band they were in back in the early 80s in Scotland. Then in the mid-80s they would move down to London and form A Tune A Day and released a 7″ record. I actually had written about A Tune A Day on the blog many years ago, so it was great to finally learn more about the band. It is time to find out more about them!

++ Hi Paul and Iain! Thanks so much for being up for another interview! How are you? Are there any plans for this summer, even in these strange times?

Iain: We are both busy working on new Radio Ghosts songs. (The Radio Ghost are dead: long live the Radio Ghosts). We have dozens and there are still more creeping in unbidden all the time. We are trying to burnish a selection of the brightest and shiniest to be released in the not too distant future.

Paul: I’m hoping to go for a short walk this summer, possibly round the block, or maybe the park. Don’t want to get my hopes up though.

++ Last time we talked about Radio Ghosts, so just to put this in context, the Radio Ghosts ended as a band in 1982 and when did A Tune A Day start as one? Were you involved with any music projects in between?

Iain: I moved down to Eastbourne, a little seaside town on the South coast of England to work for a publishing house down there. Paul visited a few times and decided to move down too. It took a couple of years or so to get the band up and running, so mid-eighties or thereabouts.

Paul: To rewind a wee bit, after Radio Ghosts split, Iain and I started dabbling with some new musical ideas, and enjoyed it enough to start a new band together. We even got a new drum machine (a little Boss DR-55 Dr Rhythm, gear trivia fans), which turned out to be marginally more programmable but somehow less fun than our original Radio Ghosts one. So we asked Craig, the Radio Ghosts drummer, if he wanted to join us, which he did. So for a while we were three-quarters of the Radio Ghosts, reunited, but without the main frontman and songwriter. Iain stepped up brilliantly with the songs and vocals, but there was a bit of an instrumental gap without Martin’s guitaring. So we spotted an advert in a music shop (or possibly in Melody Maker music paper?) from a local keyboard player looking for a band. This turned out to be Paul Piacentini, who was a bit of a keyboard wiz, if not particularly in the right kind of New Wave/post-punk vein as us at the time. But we made a good noise together, started rehearsing, recorded a rough demo and even played a gig at the local Doune Castle venue. Then Iain moved down to Eastbourne…

I carried on with Paul Piacentini in Glasgow, as Bamboo Shoots, for the next two or three years, making demos and doing a few gigs. I visited Iain in Eastbourne a number of times, and in early 1986 we made a demo at a local Sussex studio, and I liked it so much I decided to move South to start a band down there with Iain. That was A Tune A Day.

++ Who else was in A Tune A Day? And how did they end up playing with you?

Iain: I recruited a friend from work, Nick Fuller on guitar, and we went through one or two drumming candidates, including a machine and a psychotic chef, till we eventually found Martin Scott by advertising, when we moved to London.

Paul: I think Iain and Nick had done a couple of small local ‘acoustic’ gigs before I moved down, but when ATAD started properly we got a full PA and a drummer. We quickly became regulars at one of the town’s best small venues (there wasn’t a huge choice – of venues or bands), which was a pub called, this is true, ‘Bilbo Baggins’. The highlight of our brief Eastbourne period was probably playing at an open-air festival in the middle of a Napoleonic fortress. It was like a toy village version of Pink Floyd at Pompeii.

++ So you had moved to London and that’s where A Tune A Day starts as a band. What prompted your move? Was it because of music? Studies? A change of scenery perhaps?

Iain: Again, work made it possible for us to live, work and play in London. By day Nick and I worked for a big publishing house in central London and by night we played the London circuit.

Paul: I’d only been in Eastbourne a few months when those bastards announced that their sodding publishing jobs were moving to London. But I didn’t want the band to just fall apart – again – so I moved up to London too. And we went from strength to strength. Or at least from low-strength to medium strength.

++ Whereabouts in London did you settle at?  Did you both move at the same time? Were you flatmates? Or lived close by?

Iain: We were all relatively close in South London, near Clapham Junction, Balham and Tooting and able to easily meet up and play.

Paul: I slept on Iain’s couch for a few months, pushing the tolerance of him and his girlfriend, and then got a bedsit in Balham/Tooting Bec, just a train-stop away from Clapham Junction.

++ Were there any bands that you liked in town? Were there any good record stores? Or what about the pubs or venues to go check out up and coming bands?

Iain: Being in London gave us the chance to see loads of bands as well as all the other delights on offer there. It’s a great place to be when you are young and free and have a bit of money in your pocket. We were busy playing in all the places up and coming bands and those slightly more established played, the Rock Garden, Dingwalls, the Mean Fiddler, a place beside the Town and Country Club called the Timebox and many more.

Paul: It was a bit of a revelation, living and playing in London. When you grow up elsewhere, in Scotland for instance, you heard about these legendary London venues of the time – Dingwalls, The Rock Garden, the Mean Fiddler. And you imagine they must be, if not exactly lined with gold, at least big, plush and a cut above any of our local venues. But then you get to play there and you realise they’re just like any other small scabby ‘toilet’ venues anywhere, with dodgy equipment, watered-down beer and revolting toilets. And you never got paid anything – or very little. Sometimes bands even had to ‘pay to play’, to help cover a venue’s running costs. It was a bit of a racket. But we loved it all anyway. And we were in London, which enormously increased the chances of record label A&R people coming to see you play… more of which in a minute I’m sure.

++ What’s the story behind the band’s name? 

Iain:  I can’t remember how we came up with it but it’s the title of a series of music tuition books. The unprepossessing oddity of it appealed to us. We have always been suckers for quirky and odd.

Paul: It was, I think still is, the name of a series of instrument tutoring books. It only means something to people who know the books, and it would raise a rye smile, if we were lucky. Although I did once hand one of our demo tapes to Scottish actor Robbie Coltrane (Hagrid in the Harry Potter films – he’s not so tall in real life), and he belly-laughed and said, “A Tune A Day! Llovve it.”

We did find it very difficult to get the name across to anyone who didn’t know the books though – especially when we said it out loud. With our Scottish accent, apparently it sounded to English people like we were called ‘Tuna D’. We should probably have just changed the name to that.

++ How was the creative process for you? Where did you usually practice?

Iain: Anyone who plays in a band for more than a moment will discover that rehearsal rooms are mostly vile cesspits housing horrible sound equipment, designed to crush your spirit and leave you bleeding hope and creativity onto their sticky carpets. We were lucky in finding a nice clean rehearsal room with decent gear a stone’s throw from Millwall’s football ground where they brought you drinks and sandwiches and were nice to you.

Paul: Yes after months of trying all kinds of rehearsal dives around London (most of them under railway arches for some reason) we were lucky to find one that didn’t smell like a sewer or electrocute us. The Music Room in New Cross it was – they were very nice to us. Charged us a fortune, mind, but with a smile and lots of tea.

As for the creative process specifically, at that time it was mainly Iain writing the songs (I wrote the odd one too), and then he would show us what he’d written and Nick and I (and whoever the drummer was at the time – probably Chris by then) would create and add our parts to suit the song.

++ And who would you say were influences in the sound of the band?

Iain: Too many to mention

Paul: Here’s an odd story. The first time we played the Timebox at the Bull & Gate (a now-legendary indie venue in north London), which would probably have been late 1986/early 1987, someone in the audience said to us afterwards, “You must be REM fans?” And Iain and I looked at each other and said, ‘Who are REM?” They were apparently some American cult band that had made a couple of albums, but weren’t that well-known yet. So we were obviously a bit like REM, before most people knew what REM were like – including us.

We didn’t think we sounded like anyone, but I guess it was quite a clean-style jangly-guitar sound at the time, compared with some of the more raucous things we’ve done before and since.

Iain: It was around that time we bumped into Alan McGee at a London gig, the guy who discovered and managed Oasis. I had known him slightly in Glasgow. I went for a pint with him and some of Primal Scream and they were all banging on about REM; they had just seen them live. I went out and bought an album after that and finally found out what they sounded like.

++ Your label was The Clapham Omnibus. Was it your own label or was it someone else’s?

Iain: That was our own label.

Paul: Yes just us – with only one recorded release, as far as we know.

++ I was quite curious about the name of the label when I wrote about the 7″ some time ago. One thing that I was a mystery to me is that the address on the sleeve seemed to be more in the area of Tooting or Balham, not Clapham. Am I right? And the other mystery to me was the catalog number, FARE 37. I was told there was a 37 bus there. Was it a bus you usually took?

Iain: Both man and omnibus are theoretical. “The man on the Clapham omnibus” is a phrase used in court cases a hundred years ago as a guide to what the man on the street might think in a given situation.  “The accused was observed to propel his bicycle along the high street in a state of undress, balancing a hedgehog on his head whilst playing the banjo and singing Rule Britannia. I put it to you that the man on the Clapham Omnibus would consider this behaviour…odd.” (Yes, I made that up, but you get the idea). An omnibus can be a collection as well as a vehicle and the local connection made sense too.

Paul: So yes we lived near Clapham, and there was indeed a local 37 bus, so the label name and catalog number made us laugh. Laughs were in short supply, it was the 80s.

++ The only songs you released, “I Am Going Home” and “I’m Not Going to Get Out of Bed In the Morning” were recorded and mixed by Lance Philips. In which studio were they recorded? And how was working with Lance?

Iain: Lance was great. He was a friend of Nick’s who just happened to be a trainee engineer at George Martin’s extremely impressive Air Studios in central London. He had the freedom to use and thereby learn the studio in downtime and we made full use of that. When Mark Knoplfler and Elvis Costello, who were recording there at the time, amongst others, went home for their tea, we arrived and worked on our record into the night.

Paul: And this was when Air Studios was still at Oxford Circus, right in the middle of London, before they moved out to some leafy suburban church. Proper historical landmark it was – and you felt a real connection to musical history being there. We didn’t do the whole single there though, mainly just mixing and overdubs – the rest was done in a tiny studio in Hackney where the engineer slept in a sleeping bag on the control room floor. Not during the session, I don’t think.

++ The cover photo, taken  by Jane Skinner, where was it taken?  Which pier is this? who is the person that was photographed?

Iain: That is a picture taken by our friend Jane of my then girlfriend Isabel by Eastbourne pier. It seemed to reflect the bleak homesickness of the A-side.

Paul: A lot of that pier was later destroyed in a fire. We had nothing to do with that.

++ Aside from the 7″ released in 1989, were there demo tapes released? Maybe sold at gigs? Or compilation appearances? Or was the 7″ the only thing that went public?

Iain: We had a few demo tapes but did not release anything else to the public.

Paul: Yes we had three or four other demo tapes, which of course I’ve still got in some form, somewhere.

++ Speaking of the 7″, how many copies were made?

Iain: More than we needed.

Paul: Probably 1,000, I think. I had boxes of them stacked up a wardrobe in my bedsit for months. Maybe years.

++ And how come there were no more releases?

Iain: If the world had beaten a path to our door demanding more releases, they would have been forthcoming, but that path remained unbeaten and that door remained shut, never again to open.

Paul: It was quite expensive to make your own records, even then, and we were rubbish at asking people buy them, even at gigs – so we didn’t shift enough to cover the costs. We hoped we’d get signed and get an advance to make more, but that didn’t happen.

++ Are there more recordings by the band? Unreleased songs?

Iain: Yes, but not the recording standards of the single, which had five figures of studio time costs behind it (even though it actually cost us nothing)

Paul: Probably about another 10 songs that are decentish demo quality, but never released.

++ You said you were very nearly signed by Virgin Records. What happened? What’s the story with them?

Iain: You tell that story Paul

Paul: Well… We never had a manager or an agent so I was the one doing all the gig-booking and record label contacting, sending out demo tapes and singles. Most often we’d get a straight, standard rejection letter, occasionally with an extra, personalised comment added by hand if you were lucky (still saying no, but they quite liked something or other). Now and again an A&R person would say they’d come and see us play live. Sometimes they even turned up. So we were playing a Saturday night gig at the Clarendon Ballroom in Hammersmith – now demolished, but seemed semi-derelict even then. It was a good gig though, we played well, and just as we finished the last song, before we’d unplugged our guitars, this guy leapt onto the stage (a good two feet off the ground), rushed up to me with his hand out. Not in a threatening way, as you might expect, but enthusiastic-like. He said, as he shook my hand, “Ronnie Gurr, Virgin Records – call me on Monday morning.” And then he rushed off again. I was a bit in shock, and didn’t really sleep that weekend. This was it, I thought, we were about to arrive in the big time. Monday morning came, I was up early, and I’m thinking, how early do A&R guys get to work? Not 9am surely. Prob not even 10am. 11am seems too late though, like we’re not interested. I opted for 10.30, phoned Virgin, got through to Ronnie, and he says, “Sorry, who were you again?” Having to remind him, and re-sell ourselves on the phone from scratch on a Monday morning, to a probably hungover record exec with a hazy recollection of the weekend… It was never going to end well. We never heard from them again.

I was also phoned at home by the boss of GoDiscs records, a fairly successful 80s label – but that turned into a dead-end too.  We were destined just to be cults, with a capital L.

++ I think my favourite song of yours might as well be “I’m Not Going to Get Out of Bed in the Morning”,  so what’s the story behind it?

Iain: In my foolish and curious youth I studied philosophy. I neither enjoyed it nor covered myself in glory in that study and the only area that spoke to me was existentialism. The song is about that youthful search for the meaning of life, namechecking Albert Camus and Jean Paul Sartre in as non-po-faced way as I could manage.

Paul: Great song – Iain is a criminally under-appreciated songwriter. Even by us. No, we appreciate him. It’s the rest of the world that doesn’t know what it’s missing.

++ If you were to choose your favorite A Tune A Day song, which one would that be and why?

Iain: I suppose our signature song was My Friend. That is the one that got us gigs and attention and usually started or finished our sets. We would have released it at some point if we had gone the distance. We tried a couple of times but I am not sure we had a definitive recorded version though.

Paul: My Friend was always a classic. When we sent that out on an early demo tape, we were phoned up for an interview by a music journalist called Andy Darling, who worked at London mag City Limits at the time. In his review of My Friend he wrote something like “Music that makes you want to kick Coke cans down the street.” I think he meant in a feel-good way, not in blind fury. But I’ll take it either way.

There were some other great songs too – Run Round In Circles, from our first ever demo tape. One Man’s Ceiling, from a later demo. Enid Blyton Lied. Buster Keaton In A Polyester Suit (a title that even made John Peel smile.) No one but Iain could have come up with those songs.

++ What about gigs? Did you play many?

Iain: We played a lot of gigs around London, having already played quite a few on the South coast

Paul: Yes we did a lot of the ‘indie circuit’ gigs in the late 1980s – including the Mean Fiddler, Dingwalls, Rock Garden, Timebox, Hype, George Robey, Cricketers, so many I’ve forgotten most of them.

++ And what were the best gigs you remember? Any anecdotes you can share?

Iain: If I think back to those gigs it is details that I remember. There was a promoter called Jon Fat Beast (his choice of name) who booked us and introduced us, who would smear baked beans into his enormous naked belly and other such distasteful antics to get attention. Jason Bonham, John’s son and later replacement in Led Zeppelin wanted to jam with us at one gig. We said no. At a gig at the Mean Fiddler a young woman right at the front of the crowd where no-one could see, was making highly lascivious gestures at me as I tried to concentrate on singing and playing. But mostly I remember standing in the lights playing guitar and the brilliant feeling that being there making that music gave.  Unbeatable. Who needs success, approbation or sales when you have that feeling? Well they would have been nice but not everyone gets close to what we did have.

Paul: Jon Beast, the Timebox promoter, was very good to us – his public persona was of a chaotic self-destructive extrovert, but he was also a nice, hardworking, helpful guy, trying to give a leg-up to as many new bands as possible. An enigma. He died a few years back, way too young.

The Jason Bonham incident was weird – it was some naff nightclub we were playing in Eastbourne (might have been called Tuxedo Junction). After the gig these very drunk guys approached us and said their mate they were with was Jason Bonham (son of Led Zep drumming legend John), would we let him play drums? And I was thinking, hang on, first of all, how do we know it’s really Jason Bonham (this was probably 1987, and he wasn’t that well-known) – why would he even be in a club in Eastbourne? Why would he want to play with us? So I’m thinking chances are they’re just taking the piss. And besides, in the unlikely event that it really is Jason Bonham, he’s just going to show us up. So anyway, we said no. That’s a kind of claim to fame, I guess.

The best gig ATAD never did was on the day that a big hurricane hit southern England, in October 1987. We were due to support the great Wilko Johnson in Hastings that night. But the roads were blocked with fallen trees, and we couldn’t get there. Damn shame.

We did once support the Rainmakers (a popular American pop band of the era who’d just had a hit with Let My People GoGo) at a big concert hall in Folkestone – that was fun.

++ And were there any bad ones?

Iain: Oh yes.

Paul: I think I’ve blanked most of them out. I did turn up at completely the wrong venue once. Just the once. We played so many gigs in so many venues that they all began to kind of merge into one in your head. So when I walked in, with my bass case, there’s these other, unfamiliar musicians there, starting to set up their gear. And for a split-second I thought, what do these guys think they’re doing? Then I immediately realised my mistake, turned round and walked out without saying anything. I can kind of imagine what they were saying about me as I left. Fortunately the ‘proper’ venue wasn’t too far away…

I also lost a bass combo amp after a late-night gig once. Because my amp was so big and heavy, and I didn’t have a car at the time, I sometimes asked the drummer to take it to his house after a gig. Unfortunately this one night he was so knackered when he got home, when he’d brought his drums in from the car he just went straight to bed – forgetting that he’d left my bass amp sitting out in the street, on its own, all night. And it wasn’t there in the morning. I still wonder sometimes who on earth would just walk off with a large bass amp that they randomly found in the street in the middle of the night, but you know, it was London.

++ When and why did A Tune A Day stop making music? Were you involved in any other bands afterwards? I must say I am very curious to hear the Potato Underground someday…

Iain: Paul became the editor of a music magazine, Nick became a millionaire businessman, having meetings with Boris Johnson and other undesirables, Martin became a lawyer and one of Paul McCartney’s management team. And I had pencils to sharpen and other such pressing matters to attend to. Life gets in the way.

Paul: I started working at a musicians magazine called Making Music, and eventually became the editor – so writing about music ironically started taking up more time than actually doing it.

But the main reason ATAD stopped was that Iain decided to move – again – this time back to Glasgow. And I just thought, enough is enough, I can take a hint. Even though I clearly can’t.

(Once back in Glasgow Iain went on to form a band with his two brothers, called, intrepidly, The Bain Brothers – and they even recruited Martin on guitar for a while, in a semi-reunion situation. But he might not want to talk about that. Families, you know.)

Meanwhile, down in London, one of my colleagues at the music magazine, a guy called Jon Lewin, asked me to start a band with him and a couple of friends, and we did some gigs around London as The Potato Underground. We also briefly went under the name ‘Crap’ – but we decided that people might assume it was an ironic bluff name, and they would expect us to actually be shit hot virtuosi. It wasn’t, because we weren’t. Good songs though. We did some very weird distorted cover versions too, like thrash punk versions of Kraftwerk’s Model and Pet Shop Boy’s Left To My Own Devices… Very strange, but fun.

++ What about the rest of the band, had they been in other bands afterwards?

Iain: Nick has just re-emerged and got in touch this very day in a band called Cutwater.

Paul: I think Nick has been in that band, under various guises, pretty much ever since the ATAD days. We did have a couple of brief reunions with him, to play a couple of parties and even make a short demo in about 2000.

++ Did you get much attention from the radio?

Iain: We did the odd radio interview but I don’t think we got much if any airplay.

Paul: Yes I seem to remember we were interviewed by BBC Radio Sussex, but I have no memory of what was said. And we did stalk John Peel outside the BBC studios in London one night, so we could personally hand him a demo tape. He liked the song titles, don’t think he ever played it on air.

++ What about the press? Did they give you any attention?

Iain: No

Paul: Well apart from the Andy Darling stuff in City Limits, as mentioned above. And we had a short review piece in Time Out once too, can’t remember who wrote it. They came and took a photo of us in my scabby bedsit kitchen too, I recall.

++ What about from fanzines?

Iain: And no

Paul: Mmmm, don’t think so, but possibly, somewhere…

++ Looking back in retrospective, what would you say was the biggest highlight for the band?

Iain: I refer you to my earlier answer in regard to how it feels to do this thing.

Paul: Mostly the above – making a record, working at Air studios, doing some fun gigs, playing the London gig circuit, almost getting signed…

++ Lastly one non-music question, one about football. Do you support any teams? Do you think Scotland has a chance to qualify to the next World Cup?

Iain: I watch the odd international game but have never been a fan. Glasgow has this ridiculous Celtic/ Rangers divide and there was always too much accompanying nonsense for me.

Paul: I admit to being a bit hooked into that partisan nonsense when younger – I’m still a big Glasgow Celtic fan, but just in a footballing sense, sensibly.

As for your second question – it seems unlikely Scotland will ever qualify for anything ever again! Not sure how that happened. They had some of the greatest players in the 60s and 70s (Celtic were the first British team to win the European Champions Cup, in 1967, and Scotland regularly qualified for tournaments in the 70s and 80s – more often than England at one period.) But I guess they haven’t invested enough in training for young talent, or whatever, I don’t know. It’s frustrating anyway. So we might stick to the music – we have a bit more control over that.

++ Anything else you’d like to add?

What about you, Roque? Have you played in many bands, made your own records, as well as releasing other bands? And how come you’re interested in obscure bands from olden-days Scotland? :0)

Thanks for the invitation anyway – it’s been fun reminiscing. All the best to you.

PS – we like your list of ‘beliefs’ too:

Cloudberry believes in:
+ unrequited love
+ systems of resistance
+ sense of community
+ DIY ethics
+ international socialism

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Listen
A Tune A Day – Im Not Going To Get Out Of Bed In The Morning

01
Jul

Day 111. How is everyone? Not much news today, but as always I bring some great music!

Accent: remember I interviewed the band some time ago? It turns out the band has just released a CD album on the Portuguese label Different Class Records. This album is called “Live Kings Head Fulham 1984” and as you can guess it is a live album. It has 14 songs, 13 for the first time on CD.

Startropics: I really like the Chicago band a lot! They have a few new songs from their Stay Home Sessions which were filmed for DKFM’s DreamGaze Worldwide III this month. There is “Running Scared” and “The Test of Time“. It is hard to pick which one I like better. Maybe the latter? Maybe the first? Both are very good!

Parks, Squares and Alleys: this Russian band is totally unknown to me but has a terrific new song called “Друг (Friend) “. The song seems to feature another artist by the name САММЕР КОМА. I don’t even know if it is a proper band, it might also be a one-man project by Sergey Khavro. In any case this song is great!

The Reds, Pinks & Purples: Glenn Donaldson’s band has a new song on Bandcamp and it is a cover of the Monkees 2016 tune “Me & Magdalena” It is really nice. On top of that he updates us that he has recorded a 12″ EP for Tough Love in the UK and an album for Slumberland. Can’t wait for both of them!

Sweet Season: lastly this amazing discovery coming from Phoenix, Arizona. This three-piece formed by Monte Ewert, Mella Barnes and Dan Radel have just released their first two songs on Bandcamp. They are “Blue Girl” and “Never Been Before” and I am sure everyone that reads this blog will enjoy them! Jangly, bright, lush songs. Thumbs up!

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Back in 1978 in the Isle of Wight a band called Flirt was formed. They played original sons but also covers of bands like Blondie, The Pretenders, The Ramones and other punk and new wave bands. The people behind this band were Nigel Hayles on guitar, Debbie Barker on lead vocals, Eric Biggs on bass and Chris Lines on drums.

Then in 1979 they were to change their name to Cassie. Under this name the band signed a deal with the Portsmouth based label Video Records and a publishing deal with Wessex Music. Also Chris Lines, the original drummer, was replaced by Hugh Lewis.

With the new lineup the band would go to Porstmouth and record two songs, “No More Rock N’ Roll” and “Keep in Touch” at Telecomms Studios. Sadly these two songs were never pressed on vinyl as the label had financial trouble and folded.

That must have been a terrible thing for the band but they continued. In 1980 they entered Tim Marshall’s studio in the Isle of Wight to record demos for Wilf Pine who used to be Black Sabbath’s manager (!). The songs they recorded then were “Change of Image”, “She’s a Flirt” and “Model in a Magazine”. But still even though these were great songs, Wilf was unable to get them a record deal.

In 1982 the band would release a 7″ on A.K.A. Records (AKS 101). It may have been a self-release, I can’t say, but I would guess so. It included two songs, “Change My Image” on the A side and “Will You?” on the B side. I don’t own this record, but would love to of course. It may also have been a 7″ the band would send to labels, to make them known, as it doesn’t look as they invested in a sleeve for it. What we do know from this record, is that “Change My Image” was written by Debbie Barker while “Will You?” was written by Chris Line. Both were produced by Wilf Pine.

The band would continue playing live and trying to get a deal. They would get a six month residency at the Royal Sandrock Inn in Nilton. Then the band would break up and then reform in 1984 to write new songs for the Feet on the Street Project. It is at this time then that at The Rod Gammons Sound Studio in Brightstone they would record the songs “Hold Me”, “Driven by the Tide” and “The Light Shines On”. This songs would catch the attention of Dakota Records but nothing ended up released. Then in 1985 the band split.

Then I found a great find, all their recorded output is available on the Isle of Wight Music website! Wow! They could put it together as an album. I don’t think they are in chronological order but 12 songs are available in MP3 format to download and listen: “No More Rock N Roll”, “Change of Image”, “Find a Way”, “Falling”, “Boys will be Boys”, “Dimensions”, “She’s a Flirt”, “Hold Me”, “Driven by the Tide”, “The Light Shines On”, “Keep in Touch” and “Model in a Magazine”.  Some of these are not mentioned in their bio on this website, so I wonder when where they recorded, if in different demo sessions, or what?

And even better, this last find on the web. The 7″ has been reissued by Reminder Records (REM-01) this year. It includes both songs from the original record. It is available on their website! So don’t miss it!

So yeah, I know very little, but I find their songs fun and catchy. I’d definitely like to know more about this female-fronted band from the early 80s!

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Listen
Cassie – Change of Image