Wednesday! Two more days and I’m off once again, this time to Lima, Peru. Please do let me know if you’d like me to bring any records to Peru. I will gladly do so so you can save on postage.
Not much news today (but do come back in two weeks exactly for new releases announcements) so I will go ahead and recommend 5 new bits of music I’ve found out on the web!
Love Dance: very excited about this news! Our friends at Kocliko are releasing the “Cul-de-sac” EP by Love Dance that I believe was available digitally in the past. As I love physical releases this is fantastic! Especially by this band that I saw live at Indietracks once and thought they were wonderful, whose discography I do own at home, and who I would have loved to work together too! There are 5 songs here that are just PERFECT. I do hope there will be new songs by them in the near future! Do run, this release is very limited!
Tullycraft: two more songs by the band, not new as they are from recording session of their previous album, “Lost in Light Rotation” but still new to my ears! “Touch Me, I’m Sick (over you)”, “Bad Connection” and “Lost in Light Rotation (demo)” are now available to stream on their Bandcamp. As a big fan of Tullycraft any new music by them makes me terribly happy!
Bridal Shower: the Scottish label Common Records are putting out a 6 song tape of this band. The EP is titled “Documentary Footage” and I’ve only been able to preview one of the tracks, “Mirror Maze”, a top lo-fi shoegaze track. This is their second ever release after their album “Negatives” on Gold Mold Records.
Castlebeat: “VHS” is the name of the album this New Yorker put out last March. I’ve only discovered them now. The record is available on vinyl, CD and even tape. There are 10 songs in total, 9 of which you can preview on Bandcamp. Jangly and chiming songs here that are quite a surprise to me. Does he play live? I’d love to go see him play.
En mi Mente: time for 8 songs (only 4 available to preview) by this Mexican shoegaze band. This digital mini-album is in the prolific label Stupid Decisions that in the last year has surprised us with many quality releases. If only they would come in physical format! Good stuff.
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Just found out about this 80s UK band on the Messthetics CDs that I got some months ago and also what I’ve heard online was really good. How come I’ve never heard them before?
Maybe they are pretty obscure. Or maybe indiepop fans haven’t really noticed them. Discogs lists them as a new wave band. Could that be it? They are listed with two records in the 80s. So why don’t you join me in finding out more details about them?
Their first 7″ dates from early in the 80s, from 1981. It was a 7″ with 2 songs, “No Next Time” on the A side and “Removal” on the B side. It was released by My Death Telephone Records (TEL 001). This might have been the band’s own label. Probably it was a self-release too. Both songs were recorded at RMS Studios in London. The recording was coordinated by David Trevor-Jones and engineered by Andy Le Vien. The art is credited to Ryan Baptiste and it came out as a fold-out sleeve that came in a plastic bag with sticker.
We also find the names of the band members.
Ian Sturgess – bass
Mike Barnes – drums
David Parker – guitar
Colin Parker – organ
Malcolm Harris – vocals, guitar
Their second record is a 12″ that came out 6 years later, in 1987. It included 4 songs, “Despatches” and “Black Point” on the A side and “Taking Off Again” and “When a Stranger Calls” on the B side. It was released by Primitive Records (Prime Cat. 14), the same label that put out some stuff by Mega City Four and The Trudy. The engineer was Julie-Ann Jones.
Their song “If I Could Turn the Clock Back” appears on a few compilations: in 1981’s LP comp “We Couldn’t Agree on the Title” which was later remastered and re-released as CDR in 2004 and on the 2006 “Messthetics #102” compilation that Hyped to Death put out. They also appear on another Messthetics comp, on the “Messthetics Greatest Hits” from 2006, the band had “No Next Time”.
There are two other Messthetics comps that are not easy to come by anymore. On the “Unreleased Messthetics Vol.1”, which looks like a bootleg, and unofficial release, the band has “Last Telegram (Demo)”. And then on the “Messthetics #4 UK ’78-81 DIY Punk/Postpunk Bands V-to-Z” that was released as CDR the band has “No Next Time” and “Removal”.
Lastly on the tape compilation “Seven Tiny Heads” that Acid Tapes (TAB 030) put out in 1988, the band appears twice with “Somebody Told Me” and “There’s Still Time to Go”.
I look for information about the members. Mike Barnes seems to be these days a music journalist, a regular contributor to The Wire and Mojo. He has published too a book called “Captain Beefheart, The Biography” in 2000. He has also been involved in bands like Lemon Kittens and played drums for Paul Goodwin. Ian Sturgess has also been in Lemon Kittens, played on some recordings of the Jazz Butcher, and Danielle Dax.
Time to check out what the Messthetics comps! The Walking Floors took shape in the punk-deprived climes of Basingstoke –originally as The Brothers K. The five of them first played together rehearsing Malcolm Harris’ songs at the home of David (guitar) and Colin (organ) Parker in 1978. In August of 1980 Mike Barnes (drums) and Ian Sturgess (bass) helped out the Lemon Kittens on their Cake Beast EP, and in payment they got a day to record their own songs including: “If I Could Turn The Clock Back” Within a matter of weeks the ‘Floors had their own 45 out as well (“No Next Time”). “Last Telegram” is from a December ’81 demo (unreleased). After the Floors split, Ian recorded with Danielle Dax, The Jazz Butcher and others, Mike wrote Captain Beefheart, a biography (Quartet Books, 2004), and David became a premier chronicler of the life and times of the late Syd Barrett with his Chapter 24 fanzine and Random Precision (Cherry Red Books, 2001). Harris, Barnes and Sturgess now play together as The Swinging Signs, whose double album is Lime (2007).
Last.fm has some interesting details on their bio. It tells that it was when Ian Sturgess joined the band that The Brothers K changed their name to The Walking Floors. Or that the band supported The Diagram Brothers and also supported The Lemon Kittens at Reading University in 1980. Malcolm Harris and Mike Barnes were lately recording as Lewis Lear and the Jets.
Something funny I found on the web is that The Walking Floors were heckled by U2 at their debut London gig in 1980. It seems there was an article written by Mike Barnes about it on Mojo but it seems that piece has been deleted or something. Can’t find it.
And that’s about all the information I could find. It is not little for sure. We know the names of the members, bands they’ve been involved with, where they came from, their releases, and more. But still would be great to get in touch, interview them, and fill in the blanks! Does anyone remember them?
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