19
Jan

Lenoir is a city in and the county seat of Caldwell County, North Carolina, United States. The population was 18,263 at the 2020 census. Lenoir is located in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. To the northeast are the Brushy Mountains, a spur of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Hibriten Mountain, located just east of the city limits, marks the western end of the Brushy Mountains range.

Didn’t know about this town to be honest but that’s where today’s band comes from.

The Jones! Active in the 80s and probably not known outside their town or their state, though I’d be happy if that I am wrong. The cool thing is that the band had some activity on the web about ten years ago when they set up a Facebook page, a Soundcloud and a Bandcamp too.

The Bandcamp is actually a compilation of their recorded output. Possibly not all of it though. The “Don’t You Said” digital compilation has the subtitle “Some of the Best of The Jones”. That probably means that it is not a full retrospective but a selection of their tracks. In any case they are a lot of tracks. There are 26 in total! These are “”Carpet Made of Hair”, “Pretending to Be You”, “Everybody’s on Vacation”, “Music Without Numbers”, “Mary No”, “How to Get What She Wants”, “Wordless Industry”, “Smell the Coffee”, “Precious Little Head”, “Bingo on my Breath”, “You’re Gonna Die Soon”, “Never Melissa”, “Gern Blanston: Marine Biologist”, “Pretty Albatross”, “The Natural Beauty of Wood as Soon Through Plastic Eyes”, “To See the World”, “Congratulations”, “What is the Frequency Kenneth?”, “Nowhere”, “You Can’t Break Steel Anchors”, “Supply and Demand”, “This One Could be the One”, “All I Want”, “Wait for Me on the Moon”, “Its Alright” and “Kiss Me Kate”.

We know that the band was formed by Chris Church on guitar and vocals, Mike Church on drums and John Green on bass and vocals. Safe to assume Chris and Mike were family?

There are lyrics for all the songs on all of their websites.

Going through their Facebook. I see some images of posters. I see the words Granite Falls and Morganton. I want to think Granite Falls was a support band and the band played in Morganton which is a quick 30 minute car ride from Lenoir. Or it could also be that Granite Falls is a location of another gig. There is a town of that name 20 minutes away from Lenoir.

Then there is  a piece of paper that contains 3 sets, 52 songs and within them about a dozen of cover songs. It is a huge list but here it is:
Set 1: “The Only Thing”, “Just My Imagination”, “Supply & Demand”, “To See the World”, “Kiss Me Kate”, “Like Wow Wipeout”, “If Only I”, “Wishing Well”, “How to Get Wot She Wants”, “Shake Rattle & Roll”, “Araby”, “Lesson #1”, “Cinnamon Girl”, “R U Trying to Kill Me”, “Crutch”, “That Box”, “Badge” and “Smell the Coffee”
Set 2: “Figure of 8”, “I Left”, “Teenland”, “Mary No”, “Flat Top Beach Bowl”, “Him of Me”, “The Cost of Possibly”, “Bing on My Breath”, “Crusin 4 Contusions”, “Congratulations”, “My Fall”, “Message in a Bottle”, “Precious Little Head”, “Music W/Out #’s”, “Billionaire Bach”, “Stupid Girl” and “Let it Be Me”
Set 3: “Midnite Hour”, “Carpet Mock”, “Everybodys On Vacation”, “Nowhere”, “Pretending to B U”, “Veronica”, “Better Be Home Sane”, “Dream”, “Flags of All Nations”, “2 Little Tlitlers”, “This I Could B”, “Go!”, “All I Want” and some more. The image is not clear for this set. There are a few songs I’m missing.

John Green also has a Bandcamp, there he has uploaded “Pretty Albatross”, but it is a different one, it is not The Jones one. It is a demo from that time though, and it says that John still isn’t sure he even presented this track to the rest of the band. I follow this thread and find his own website (last updated 2015). I see that he describes himself as a husband, father, singer/songwriter, performing musician, web developer and scouter. Very cool!

Another nice little detail I found was that there were band t-shirts. There was one that was available with the band on an aeroplane for their Wicked Aviation Tour from 1989 and 1990.

And then a trove. Chris Church has uploaded on Bandcamp a compilation called “It’s Our Own Vault” that includes a whopping 65 tracks! There is also a bit of story about the band. We learn that sadly Mike Church, his brother, passed away. But the band was always them three. They were active between 1987 and 1990. In 1989 the band entered a regional battle of the bands and they won. The 65 tracks were recorded mostly on Chris’ portable Tascam 4 track, a few others in a studio and at least one in the production room of the radio station where John and Chris worked.

It also mentions that Chris and John reconvened in 1993 and released a tape called “Ample”. It was released by a label called Wee-Knee Records from Boone, North Carolina. Not sure what the tracklist was for it.

In any case, I’ll close this post with all 65 tracks!!!!
“How To Get What She Wants”, “Pretending To Be You”, “Burn The Big Top Down”, “Carpet Made Of Hair”, “To SEE The World”, “Congratulations (live)”, “Pretty Albatross”, “All I Want”, “Never Melissa”, “1,000”, “Music Without Numbers (live)”, “Wordless Industry”, “Alright”, “You Can’t Break Steel Anchors”, “Supply And Demand”, “Go”, “Nowhere”, “This One Could Be The One (live)”, “Wait For Me On The Moon”, “You’re Gonna Die Soon”, “Bingo On My Breath (live)”, “Gern Blanston: Marine Biologist”, “The Ballad Of Most Likely A Figment”, “The Natural Beauty Of Wood (As Seen Through Plastic Eyes)”, “Mary No”, “What Is The Frequency, Kenneth?”, “Everybody’s On Vacation”, “What’s Coming Down”, “The Present Presence Presents”, “War Is Heck”, “Crutch”, “The Hurting War”, “Umbrella”, “Like You Are Today”, “The Coast Of Possibly (live)”, “Steve Loves Dawn”, “Down”, “Precious Little Head (live)”, “Dodging Bullets”, “Eight Arms To Hold Me”, “Paper Train (live)”, “Mrs. Ostentation”, “Pretty Ugly”, “Billionaire Bachelor”, “Strange How You Won’t Come Down”, “It Will Never Last”, “Moodflag”, “Better Get It”, “Monica Vs. The Good Humor Man”, “Giggle Box”, “Cruising For Contusion (live)”, “Love Elbow”, “Here It Comes Again”, “Credit”, “If You Favor One, Never Fall Down”, “Apparent Apparel”, “News, Blah, Gran & Ollie”, “Dream (live)”, “Smell The Coffee”, “I Love Your Mouth”, “Pretending To Be You (live)”, “Blind Ears”, “Decisions, etc.”, “How I Became A Devout Vegetarian (For 15 Or 20 Seconds)”, “Kiss Me Kate (live)”

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Listen
The Jones – Carpet Made of Hair

15
Jan

Thanks so much to Ahenk for the interview! I had written some time ago about the Ottawa 80s band The Crowd Theory on the blog and then suddenly last November, Chris Robinson from the band got in touch! He then put me in touch with Ahenk who was the vocalist and bassist of the band and he was keen to answer my questions! So yeah, very excited to know more details about the band!

++ Hi Ahenk! Thanks so much for being up for this interview! How are you? Are you still involved with music?

Hi. Thanks for the opportunity to reminisce. Nostalgic times for me and, I’m sure, the rest of the band.

I haven’t really been active musically since 2016. By not active I mean not even writing or recording originals; missing the muse for the last ten years.

++ Let’s go back in time. What are your first music memories? Do you remember what your first instrument was? How did you learn to play it? What sort of music did you listen to at home while growing up?

My first instrument was the trumpet. I chose that in Grade 7. Enjoyed playing right through high school in the jazz band and orchestra. Kinda fizzled out after high school; was more interested in playing pop/rock instruments and writing songs.

I didn’t start listening to music really until I was 14. Missed those days listening to Ottawa’s CHEZ 106 all through the 80s before they became a classic rock station. They used to have a Friday night Top 30 album countdown of the top-selling albums from Ottawa record stores. The full list was printed in the Ottawa Citizien newspaper so you could follow along. The style didn’t matter. They would play up to 3 songs per album. I would hear U2 followed by Tina Turner, then Judas Priest.  Other great albums as well: from Tears For Fears, Midnight Oil. The albums I ended up buying and listening to start to finish over and over were Men At Work (Cargo), Culture Club (Colour By Numbers), Duran Duran (Union Of The Snake) and, yeah, that Judas Priest one (Defenders Of The Faith). It wasn’t until I was 16 when I heard How Soon Is Now by The Smiths on the radio. Johnny Marr’s semi-tone slide that held over the next couple of bars introduced me to dischordant notes in chords which was a new thing to me, as well as Morrissey’s unconventional vocal melodies. The Smiths made a big impact on me, music and lyrics both.  Listened to a lot of early-mid R.E.M. as well. The other group that had a big impact on me was Prefab Sprout. Just couldn’t get enough of Paddy McAloon’s amazing songwriting. Two Wheels Good is still a repeat listen for me to this day. Their first abum, Swoon, just full of chords and progressions you still never hear in pop music to this day.

++ Had you been in other bands before The Crowd Theory? What about the other band members?

I bought a bass and joined my first band in high school called Moral Rage. Played a couple of gigs, most notably at One Step Beyond, a really cool all-ages club that only hosted original alternative indie bands.  Chris Robinson, Crowd Theory guitarist, had a band called Ten Miles High before he joined.

++ Where were you from originally?

I was born in Istanbul, Turkiye. We immigrated here to Canada as a family in the early 70s when I was 4. Been living in Ottawa since.

++ How was Ottawa at the time of The Crowd Theory? Were there any bands that you liked? Were there any good record stores? Or what about the pubs or venues to go check out up and coming bands?

Ottawa always had a good original band scene. Barrymore’s and  Downstairs Club were always the go-to clubs to see good original bands  Soon after came Zaphod Beeblebrox which became an iconic venue for independent indie bands for quite some time. As for record stores, Record Runner was a great one, downtown on Rideau St. Great selection if you were looking for alternative pop/rock records. Stuff you wouldn’t find at the bigger name stores. Record Runner on Bank St. was a good one as well. That’s where I bought The Smiths’ Hatful of Hollow. Probably the album I spent most time on, listening and singing along with the lyric sheet over and over … (kind of the reason I ended up sounding like Morrissey when I sang our songs …)

++ Were there any other good bands in your area?

There were quite a few good original bands during our time. I’m only referring to alternative indie bands. We had The Whirleygigs and Furnaceface to name a couple.

++ How was the band put together? How was the recruiting process?

We actually formed after a chance meeting with guitarist Chris Robinson at CKCU. I was putting up a guitarist wanted ad on the radio station bulletin board: “Looking for gutarist for original band – influences: Smiths/R.E.M.” Chris just happened to be leaving the booth after an interview for his then band Ten Miles High. He turned to me and said, “I’d be interested.” We exchanged numbers and I was at his house with my bass a few days later. Chris played some chords and riffs and I improvised some bass lines to them. We already had the beginnings of a couple of songs by the end of the visit. I  went home and came up with a melody and lyrics and we had our first song, “Colour”. Our drummer was my high school buddy Nick Wyard. We got together with Chris and jammed a 4-song set to play our first show later that evening at the Live Band Night at Sir Robert Borden High School. We later had a back-up singer to do harmonies, another high school friend, Chantelle Wilson. We then started doing gigs, playing at the afore-mentioned Downstairs Club and a few Barrymore’s shows as the opening act, our standout show being the opener for Grapes of Wrath.

++ Speaking of CKCU radio station, how important was it to music fans then? 

CKCU, Carleton University’s radio station was great for us and a lot of other indie bands. They were good with taking and playing requests for songs off demo tapes even. Our demo tape, recorded by J.P. MacDonald who I think did a great job with just a 4-track reel to reel, actually made it to CKCU’s top ten list at one point.

++ Was there any lineup changes in the band?

Nick eventually left the band in ’89 and we did jam with another drummer named Jordan. Can’t recall his last name and I don’t even think we played a show … He left for university in Vancouver. The band fizzled after that.

++ What instruments did each of you play in the band?

Myself, Ahenk Ozakpinar played bass and sang, Chris Robinson was the guitarist, Nick Wyard was on drums and Chantelle Wilson sang harmony back-up vocals.

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

A lot of songs came about as mentioned above by Chris jangling some guitar parts and myself adding bass parts and then choosing from lyrics I had previously written and working them into a melody that suited the parts we had. We usually jammed at  either Nick’s  or Chris’s basement.

++ What about influences?

Chris and I were clearly influenced by early R.E.M. with the jangly guitar parts and sometimes melodic bass parts. Chris lists Pete Townshend as a guitar influence as well. My vocals were clearly Smiths-influenced. Nick was into Level 42.

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

It’s not that mind-blowing actually. We had a foyer at our high school where everybody would crowd together and hang out. I just looked at everybody one day and imagined them 30 years from then, all to be in different parts of the world, doing their own thing and yet at one moment in time (well, that moment in time) they were all together in one room or foyer. If you put the life film in reverse now, we would all come from the separate parts of the world we inhabit and squeeze all back into that one high school for that one moment in time. Same with any crowd obviously. So, hmmm, not really a theory but just a fleeting thought, I guess. Sounded cool for a band name I thought.

++ As far as I know you only recorded one demo tape with four songs, “Colour”, “Young Adult Novel”, “Great Barrier” and “Beau Tie”. Tell me a bit more about this tape. Where was it recorded? Did you work with a producer?

As mentioned earlier, we recorded with J.P. MacDonald at what he called Studio Nine Time with just a 4-track reel to reel. It was on the top floor of what is now the Spaceman (then Songbird) second-hand music store on Gladstone near Bank St. I commend him still on what I think was a good job for just a demo tape.

++ Was it your first experience at a recording studio?

Well, no. I had played trumpet on another of our high school’s bands recording at another Ottawa studio. I also also did a couple of demo tapes with my first band, Moral Rage, where I played bass.

++ How many tapes were made? Were they distributed in any way? Sold at gigs? Or mainly used as a vehicle for promoting the band?

We did do a second demo tape with Nick’s brother Greg in their basement. It was a spur of the moment thing. We recorded a song of ours called “Everything” and we got a bit of play on CKCU with that as well. We never distributed or sold the demo tapes. We just gave it to CKCU and constantly phoned in requests for the songs … kinda cheeky, huh?

++ I suppose “Great Barrier” is a song inspired by the Great Barrier Reef. I wonder if you’re into diving? Or even had the chance to see that natural wonder?

Actually, it’s a negative to all that. Although I was and still am a geography buff, I was simply referring to a perceived social or psychological barrier in a potential relationship and using the thought of the Great Barrier as a metaphor.

++ Then on Soundcloud there are two live recordings from 1988 for the songs “Greatest Passion Inside” and “Evergreen with Envy”. Do you remember where these were recorded?

I’ll have to ask Chris. His then girlfriend apparently recorded us at a lot of shows and shared them with us recently. Greatest Passion was at one of the local bar gigs and Evergreen With Envy was from the Sir Robert Borden High School show I’m pretty sure.

++ Are there more songs from these gigs?

Again, thanks to Chris’ then girlfriend (Kathryn was her name), Chris was able to transfer those cassette recordings to MP3s. So we do have them, yeah. Maybe we should post them as well, huh? Why not? That’ll be our homework.

++ How come you didn’t record these songs properly? Was there any intention to do so at any point? There were no other demo tapes, right?

The Crowd Theory’s existence was short-lived. Maybe two, two and a half years? We concentrated more on doing live shows and got a couple of demo tapes recorded. But, no, we never got to that next level where of course we would have recorded a proper album had the band stayed together.

++ And was there any interest from labels to put your records out? 

Nah. We really never got to that stage as the lifespan of The Crowd Theory was kind of short.

++ My favourite song of yours is “Colour”, wondering if you could tell me what inspired this song? What’s the story behind it?

I used to write lyrics in mostly a stream-of-thought process. Half of them or more written during English class while the teacher was going on about some novel we were supposed to have read. A lot of my lyrics were not really literally “about” something but rather were me trying to poeticize thoughts about that something. Hmmm, did that make sense? So in “Colour”, I’m trying to poeticize my thoughts of my future self feeling left behind when I used to be a creative soul chasing after my youth-inspired goals. “I can swing higher than you can and you just sit there” turns into future me saying “Everything’s just colour great! The only faded thing around is me”.  It’s kind of eerie to me upon reflection that a lot of my lyrics (even ones I’ve written post Crowd Theory) were in that similar vein, almost like a self-fulfilling prophecy … You know what? I think we need to get together and bang out a good EP recording of our songs … break this long-ago predicted musical rut that (I’ll speak for myself) I’ve been in for years now. There we go. Back to happy 🙂

++ If you were to choose your favorite The Crowd Theory song, which one would that be and why?

I kind of liked all of them for different reasons. I could say though,  I always looked forward to playing Evergreen With Envy at our shows because I loved playing the octave disco bass part in the middle.

++ What were the best gigs that you remember? Any anecdotes you can share?

Opening for Grapes Of Wrath at Barrymore’s was a treat. We would do some quirky things at some shows. The Grapes Of Wrath opener, we had a high school friend of mine jump on stage and sit cross-legged in the middle of the stage reading a big dictionary for the first couple of songs. Just a whimsical idea. Another Barrymore’s show, we asked for an extra mic stand and pulled the mic down in front of an empty cola bottle right at front stage-left where a second guitarist might have otherwise stood. And one other Barrymore’s show, we put a keyboard on a stand on stage and had another high school friend sit behind it. The keyboard was intentionally and obviously not plugged into anything. Our “keyboardist” for the show just sat there, hands on his lap, with a grin for the entire show. None of these were statements really. Just quirky fun. The most fun show for all of us, I think, was, ironically enough, our last one at Downstairs Club that we played knowing it was our last one since our drummer Nick had expressed his intention to leave the band which lead to our subsequent breakup soon after. We actually had a good crowd at the show. We were more relaxed than we had ever been at any previous show. We incorporated a few extra fun covers and had Chantelle sing lead on a couple of them: The Bangles’ “In Your Room”‘and “Downtown” by Petula Clark. We did a little bit to poke fun at ourselves regarding our R.E.M. influence. We pretended to play a cover of Orange Crush which had just come out around then. We started the song normally with Nick doing the 16th-note snare hits but he kept playing the snare intro right through half of the first verse while Chris and I were playing our normal parts as if nothing was amiss. Nick then broke into a 4/4 beat completely out of time and tempo. We stopped the song a few bars later and laughed it up with the audience. It was a pre-planned joke. Not poking fun at the song itself at all; I think it’s a great song. Just thought it funny to pretend to be serious about a cover we would otherwise be expected to play.

++ And were there any bad ones?

I guess it wasn’t really a gig, but before we started the local club scene, we somehow arranged a show at a bar called The Swiss Inn way at the south end of Bank St.  where it became Highway 31. It was just an excuse to play live on some stage. No sound system or anything, except for the vocal mic and speaker. We just showed up with dry drums and our amps not even miked up. The only audience was one table right in front with two ladies and a guy wearing a cowboy hat and boots. We opened with “Behind Winter Coats”, a good hard-driving song of ours. The one-table audience did not have a hint of appreciation on either of their faces. I remember one of the ladies,  after out first song was finished, commenting verbatim, “Don’t they know they’re awful?” We may have gotten one more song in before the fellow in the cowboy hat chimed in, “You guys don’t know any country or anything? Do you guys know ‘My Hometown’?” It was evident we didn’t so he offered to show us. We shrugged and looked at each other and decided, hey, if hijacking our show will make the “audience” happy, then so be it. We left the stage, sat down at a table and watched this fellow play Chris’s guitar and sing Bruce Springsteen’s “My Hometown” as the third and final song of OUR show 🙂 He actually did a good job.

++ When and why did The Crowd Theory stop making music? Were any of you involved in any other projects afterwards?

We broke up soon after Nick left the band. Ironically, Nick and I, still best buddies, ended up joining a cover band with some other high school friends; myself on bass and Nick drumming again. We did the cover band circuit for years afterwards. Yeah , it was fun times and memories but I do regret not staying in the original music scene. I’ve written and recorded a bunch of songs on my own at home from the time of the Crowd Theory breakup till about 10 years ago when the muse kind of left. I never released them or started a band to play them anywhere though.

++ Was there any interest from the radio? TV?

We never really got beyond the radio play we had with our demo tapes.

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

We were once featured in CKCU’s TransFM music magazine. We had a full-page article with our picture. Nick is not in the picture since he had left already or intended to around that time . We also were in the Ottawa Citizen newspaper with a full-page picture and a little blurb on their weekly local band feature. Again, this was just after Nick had left so the afore-mentioned Jordan was the drummer in the picture. Though , again,  we either played one show or not before this drummer left for university in Vancouver. We do have one pic featuring Nick, though. Our song “Colour” is on a YouTube channel called stoneeyedkiller. It’s a neat channel featuring tons of unsigned bands and mostly unreleased  songs from 80s and 90s indie jangle guitar bands. The “Colour” thumbnail is us at a Barrymore’s show with Nick on drums, myself playing bass and singing and Chantelle to my stage left. Chris is not in that pic though he is definitely on my stage right. Not an intentional omission. The channel just found that pic somewhere. The same channel also posted Beau Tie (a pic of some random girl as a thumbnail; don’t know who she is.)

++ What about fanzines?

Oh, what I would have done to be on the cover of TeenBeat Magazine, but alas, no …. no such luck 🙂

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

In the the two or so short years that we were on the scene, opening for Grapes Of Wrath and having our demo tape make the CKCU top ten chart would be our two biggest highlights.

++ Anything else you’d like to add?

We had a bit of talk between us recently of rerecording some of our songs. Hopefully we’ll do that sometime soon and put an EP out there. We’ll keep you posted.

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Listen
The Crowd Theory – Colour

14
Jan

Thanks so much to Kenny for the interview! I’ve been trying to do an interview with Jim’s Twenty One for years, and now as they have released a compilation of their songs called “Nadine” on the classic American label Harriet Records, it made total sense for it to happen! I think it was years ago that I contacted Kenny on Twitter (also called X), we chatted, and found out both had worked at the Wall Street Journal (all at different times, but how cool is that?!). Anyhow, I am so glad to find out more about the band as it was always a mystery to me to know that there was a British/Irish band that was clearly indiepop but was based in Brussels out of all places! Now, please enjoy this great interview, best way to start 2026! And get the “Nadine” compilation!

++ Hi Kenny! Thanks so much for being up for this interview! 

First of all thank you very much for this opportunity, I know you’ve been a long-time supporter.

++ There is some great news about the band. After such a long time your songs are getting a new life. Harriet Records is releasing a retrospective compilation called “Nadine”. How did this compilation come to be? Did Tim Alborn reach out to you? 

A while back, we started to think it was a shame that the jims’ EP released in 1987 was not available online, specially seeing some of the prices people were paying for second-hand vinyl copies on Discogs. So we had the four songs on the EP remastered into digital files, and the plan was to put them out on Bandcamp at least, if not also on vinyl. Earlier this year, purely by coincidence, I learned through Kieron Mitchinson of a band called The Rosslyns, who have an album out on Harriet, that Tim Alborn was a fan of the jims and in fact actually took the trouble years ago to upload a video for one of the EP songs to YouTube. I contacted Tim to thank him and mentioned our plan for a digital re-release, and he quickly replied to say he’d be happy to do it on the Harriet label as he revived it a couple of years ago. In terms of UK label interest, the EP was distributed by Fast Forward in Edinburgh at the suggestion of 53rd & 3rd, its sister arm and label. At one point we hung out with Alan McGee in Brussels, as described in the ‘Nadine’ CD liner notes, and we heard suggestions indirectly that there was some interest at Creation, but at that point, with us based in Brussels and with no profile really in the UK, it probably wouldn’t have made sense in practice for them to sign us.

++ It is definitely great to release on Harriet, a legendary American label for indiepop. I wonder though, was there any interest at any point from UK labels? And what does it mean to you that a label an ocean away is very interested in your music?

As for Tim/Harriet interest in us, we’re very flattered and excited. It’s certainly true that being on Harriet gives us a lot more exposure in the US, where we’ve been getting a lot of radio play I’m sure we wouldn’t have had otherwise. I should also mention Mike Schulman of Slumberland, who called the first EP “a total classic”, has been a huge help in getting the word out. People have checked us out purely on his recommendation. It really is pretty mind-blowing to know that whole new generations across the world are now getting the chance to hear our music.
Before all this came up this year, I had been working on solo stuff under the name Slow Country, and I put an album out on Bandcamp in September, called ‘You Still Believe In Me’. This stuff is the complete opposite of the jims because I wanted to explore tunes made without the usual pop song structures, and without any vocals, leaving more to the listener’s imagination. I’ll be doing more of this in 2026.

++ Let’s go back in time. What are your first music memories? Do you remember what your first instrument was? How did you learn to play it? What sort of music did you listen to at home while growing up?

The first rock’n’roll stuff that I was struck by was probably seeing the likes of T.Rex on ‘Top of the Pops’ on TV, and of course my parents didn’t get it at all, making it all the more interesting for me. Jim and William Reid talk about this in their autobiography – very funny, highly recommended – and it was a bit like that for me, although that world of pop seemed even more distant I think in a village of 200 people miles from any big town.

++ Had you been in other bands before Jim’s Twenty-One? What about the other band members?

Then punk came along… I was too young to be involved but seeing bands like Buzzcocks, Blondie, The Undertones on Top of the Pops, and starting to listen to John Peel on the radio changed everything. The idea that you could just get up and do things yourself was revolutionary in those days. So at school a couple of friends and I started a band, by default I became the drummer though I had never played drums and didn’t have any at first to practice with. No lessons, bar watching how others did it on TV. Needless to say we sounded pretty awful though we didn’t let that get in the way… I did get a little better on drums, played with a couple of friends in a band in my last year at university, but nothing much came of it and I was getting a bit tired of not being able to write my own songs.

Of the other founder members, neither Seán nor Andrew played in bands before the jims, though Andrew did know how to play guitar pre-jims.

++ Where were you from originally?

I’m from a very rural, remote part of southwest Scotland. So at home, when very young, I heard a lot of folk music records, and also live, as well as country and western, which is very big in Scotland. My mother was more into Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin, though, so it was a mix.

++ The story says that you all three met in Brussels. And that’s where the band started, right? How come you all ended up in Belgium? And how did you meet? 

We all met up in Brussels where we had each ended up individually for work. I met Seán in the first month after I moved from Scotland, he had just arrived a short while before and we were each staying with friends while looking for places to live, friends who happened to know each other and lived in the same building. So totally random really, but we quickly became friends, not least through similar interests in music, film, arts etc.

We met Andrew several months later, when we three shared a taxi home after a late night out. By the end of taxi ride it was clear we’d met another kindred spirit. Again, random as you like…
So as we became firmer friends, a strong common bond was a feeling that there were no good bands in town, no one making the kind of music we liked.

++ How was Brussels at the time of Jim’s Twenty-One? Were there any bands that you liked? Were there any good record stores? Or what about the pubs or venues to go check out up and coming bands?

Brussels was, and still is, a great city for bar nightlife and clubs, but very short of venues for gigs for up and coming but still small indie bands. A lot of the time touring bands would skip Brussels altogether in favour of places like Ghent or Antwerp – we saw the Shop Assistants three times but never in Brussels, for instance. To see the likes of McCarthy, the Pastels, the Brilliant Corners we had to go to tiny venues on the outskirts of Antwerp. i think the Brilliant Corners may even have just been in someone’s house…

There were a few highlight shows in Brussels, like the Jesus and Mary Chain in 1985, in a tiny back room in one of the main venues, the Ancienne Belgique, which was a revelation to us but was universally slated in the local press. And Felt in the main hall of the same venue in 1987, which was a great show though the venue was half full and the crowd silent. Also the Chameleons played in town, which is where drummer Kevin was recruited. But the kind of guitar music we liked really wasn’t a widespread taste in Brussels. Local bands were more likely to be doing industrial music using synths, or goth etc.

This all fostered a kind of ‘us against the rest of the world’ attitude and eventually the idea took hold that we should start our own band. Seán and I had to learn guitar from scratch and I guess our lack of technical ability was helpful in a way in that it narrowed down what we’d try to do.

++ You were one Irish, one Scot, one English. What did that mean for the band’s sound? DId that bring different influences, different ways of seeing music?

I don’t know if having grown up in different places was a big influence as such, as we had plenty of bands we liked in common, overlapping. But I do think that being a little bit older when we started the band than people who have started making music in their late teens with others with whom they have grown up gave us a bit more time, and space, to be sure of what we liked.

++ I read that you also got some help from someone called Janey on backing vocals. Was she also a brit in Belgium? Why wasn’t she part of the band? What about Kevin the drummer?

Though she wasn’t around when we founded the band, Janey was and is an integral part of the jims. She is English and we found her, again totally randomly, working in Brussels for a year before going to university. We had always wanted a strong female voice in the band and Janey was the perfect fit, another beginner like us but with a shared ‘let’s just do this ourselves’ attitude.
As mentioned, Kevin joined as drummer and was a great fit musically, a real drummer with a love of melody. We didn’t have a full kit most of the time so he played a floor tom and a snare, with great effect because he was technically very good.

++ Were there any lineup changes in the band?

Eventually though Kevin went his own way, and Janey went off to university in Edinburgh, so we were back down to three.

++ What instruments did each of you play in the band?

On instruments, Seán, Andrew and I all played guitar; bass was mostly Seán, sometimes Andrew; Kevin was the drummer on the EP and the live tracks on the album, on other tracks it’s mostly me, Andrew on a couple.

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

There was never any strict policy about this but for almost all of the songs, the three founder members each came up with music and words on our own and then presented tunes to the band in practice sessions. So that meant three separate songwriters and lead singers. There are a couple of joint compositions but those were the exception.

When we started rehearsing properly, if that’s the right word, probably one of us would present a new song at each practice and we’d gradually build up the repertoire.

Seán and I shared a narrow, multi-storey house, a very typical Brussels building with mezzanine floors. For some reason we had a spare kitchen upstairs that we didn’t use for anything so that became the rehearsal space. Band practice would be Friday and Saturday evenings from about 6.30pm or so. They’d be pretty short, maybe 45 minutes or so, because we had real drums in the room and practice amps turned up to crackling level to compensate and our ears would get blasted quickly. Not to mention those of the neighbours. No one ever really complained properly, though our landlady lived down the same street and used to moan about hearing us from there. I think the brevity of the rehearsals saved us. And prepared us for playing fast and loud.

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

The band name came about after months of trying to come up with something. At a certain point, we decided we really had to make a call and on the deadline night we pieced it together from the last remaining suggestions. I think some people have taken it to be some kind of reference to coming of age, but really it can mean anything you want it to.

++ I’m thinking of what was happening in the UK at the time, there was some sort of scene with the indiepop bands, the C86 tape, and so on. You missed it, right? But still, were you aware of that music, the bands and the labels? Would you think the band would have being part of it and get maybe the attention you deserved?

Yes, we were aware of what was going on in the UK in particular through buying the NME religiously, it arrived in Brussels about a week after it was printed, plus a bit of John Peel, though radio reception was a bit sketchy. Seán somehow persuaded a local community radio station to let him do a weekly show, and even more miraculously a new record store agreed to let him borrow a selection of new releases each week and play the ones he liked before returning them (or buying them). And when the bands that we heard and liked did tour, we did put best to catch them, wherever they played. We even went to Eindhoven in the Netherlands one night to see the Shop Assistants, and other times we saw them at outdoor festivals in remote corners of Belgium. Because of the 53rd & 3rd/Fast Forward connection, there was a rumour that we had actually played support gigs with them — not true but we didn’t go out of our way to deny it.

But we were obviously pretty disconnected physically from that C86 ‘scene’, and I think what ended up on the album was recorded really before we got going properly. The phrase ‘C86’ has come to mean something quite different to what’s actually on the tape, there’s a lot of really abrasive stuff on there, not just the more jangling indie pop kind of materials. We liked parts of it, from the Shop Assistants to A Witness and others, but I don’t think it was as big an influence, for me anyway, as the C81 tape the NME did five years earlier.

I don’t know if it would have been helpful to be on it, really. We were not in a position to tour in the UK, and I think for some bands, at various points, it wasn’t seen as a positive in later years to have been involved. Not being on it meant we remained completely separate. But there were lots of good bands from that time who were not on it, like the June Brides, for instance, That Petrol Emotion or My Bloody Valentine. Actually someone recently said our sound reminded him of early MBV, and if you listen to the ‘Strawberry Wine’ single or ‘Ecstasy’ mini-album, I can hear what he means, that combination of lighter and heavier stuff before they went full aural assault mode. Actually one time in London we used a practice room that we were told MBV had used – tiny, so it must have been ear-bleedingly loud when they played there.

++ During your time you only released a record, the “Throwaway Friend” 7″ EP on Tulip Records. I need to know about Tulip Records, who ran it? And how was your relationship with the label people?

Ah they could be really awkward, the Tulip guys… No, just joking, Tulip was just us, the name we chose after Fast Forward said they’d distribute a record if we had it manufactured ourselves.

++ And so, from what I understand, Nadine, who gives the name of the new compilation, ran the La Tulipe bar. Can you tell me a bit more about this bar? Where was it located? Did it have live music? Did it serve food or just beer? Do you recall what was your favourite stuff to order there?

Happy to answer this one… so yes, Tulip Records took its name from the bar, in Place de la Tulipe in Ixelles, just round the corner from where we lived. Ixelles was and is one of the coolest neighborhoods in Brussels, still very lively at night.
La Tulipe was in the dive bar category, opening at 9pm and closing around 3am or thereabouts. It was very basic in terms of decor, the pinball machine was the only ‘frill’. But Nadine made it a welcoming place for a bunch of mostly local outsiders, for want of a better word, with good grace and humour. Although some of the characters who hung out there were a little bit on the wild side, they always listened when she told them to calm down, including that guy one night waving an old-school flintlock pistol around… still no idea where he got that from, nor whether it was loaded.

There was absolutely no food, but there were a couple of fast-food places a few doors down. A typical Friday evening would see us trooping over that way after rehearsal to eat ‘frites’ and some kind of questionable sausages, then hit La Tulipe around opening time. We’d give Nadine a mixtape to play on the sound system, play a few rounds of pinball and have a few beers — Jupiler, I think, a Belgian brew — and then we’d head into the city centre, about 10-15 minutes by bus to check out what might be going on. We might stop at a bar called Interferences, run by the people who used to do Les Disques du Crepuscule, or the DNA, the bar where all bands who did play Brussels would be taken after shows — this is where we met Felt, Alan McGee, That Petrol Emotion etc etc. We might go on from there to a great dance club called the X, which would be open till 5am or so, or sometimes we’d head back to La Tulipe in Ixelles for a nightcap before it closed. And it would be pretty lairy in there by that time. I hasten to add, that wasn’t every night by any means, we all had reasonably serious day jobs to attend to.

++ The 7″ has also some very cool art. I wonder who made it? Was it you?

The cover artwork for the single is done by us, yes. Tulip was a fully DIY operation. The front is a picture of the Berlin airlift in the 60s, and the rear cover picture was taken by one of the canals in Brussels by a good friend, Dave Galloway, who gets a credit on the back cover. The tulip image on the label – we borrowed that from the artwork that Nadine had made up for the bar signage, again she was very kind to let us use it for nothing. Also also since the bar is long since gone, as least the logo is preserved in part on the vinyl.

++ The songs were recorded at Studio 105 in Brussels. How was this studio? Was it your first time at one? Did you work with a producer? Did it take long to record the songs? Any anecdotes you could share of the recording session?

Studio 105 — yes, this was the first studio we used, a small 8-track operation in a basement in a fairly standard Brussels suburb. The first demo and EP songs were recorded there. The rest of ‘Nadine’ was recorded in a variety of places in Brussels and London after we moved there in 1988.

Studio 105 was run by the engineer, Claude, we referred to him as Claude Spector because he helped us make our own ‘wall of noise’, a nice guy, he didn’t ever tell us to turn things down. The EP songs were recorded in one day, mostly the whole band playing live in one room, with some guitar overdubs later and vocals, of course. As for anecdotes, toward the end of the day I had two vocals to do but we were all starving by then, so the others went out to get takeaway food, and by the time they came back, 10 minutes later, I was done, just sang as best as I could and one or two takes were enough. When the others came back and heard the songs with vocals, they asked “Is that really you?”, because it had been done so fast. When we rehearsed you couldn’t really hear how anyone’s vocals sounded, it was all so loud.

One other thing I recall from that session is about when we recorded ‘Map of the World’. For that one I played the lead guitar part. I’m left-handed but in those days I was playing a right-handed guitar strung upside down, which is fine except it means you can occasionally brush against the guitar controls with your hand as you strum as they are between your hand and the strings. And sure enough, right as we started the song I must have clipped something because it didn’t sound at all like it was supposed to, was more muted but also with a hint of feedback. But when we heard it back it sounded just like it was always meant to be that way, so we kept it.

++ Why didn’t you release more records? Was there any interest from other labels? 

Seán, Andrew and me moved to London one by one in 1987-1988, in the months after the EP came out. There was no interest from other labels but that was partly because weren’t well connected in a city that was new to us, we didn’t play live there since it was hard to get gigs without paying to play. We had a low profile, if any, things move quickly and small bands go under the radar. We did do more recording there, some of which is on ‘Nadine’, but we felt like it was time for someone else to put out our music. And we came to realise it was — even in the indie world —- all business there at that time. We would need to gig a lot, probably paying to do so, while at the same time managing day jobs, personal life, etc. And then Andrew got a job offer to move to NYC, which obviously he couldn’t turn down.

++ The new compilation has 18 tracks! Let’s start with the 6  live tracks. Where were they recorded? I only know it was from a Brussels gig in March 1987, but do you remember the place?

The live tracks were recorded from the sound desk when we supported The Membranes at a small bar/concert room in downtown Brussels called the Planete. The Membranes and John Robb were very nice to us, mild-mannered until they got up on stage and turned into rock stars (in the best way). We played our usual set which was about 22/23 minutes long, so there are a few live takes that didn’t make ‘Nadine’ for various reasons, like the sound guy not recognising which vocal mics to turn up or down, or flubs in the performance etc. We were not originally planning to include these on the album at all, but then we came to see them as really good representations of the songs in pure live form, and Tim agreed, so we added them in.

++ And then where the other 8 tracks that are neither from the EP or live come from? Demo tapes? 

Yes, the others are from a selection of demo sessions in Brussels and London. One session, from which songs like ‘It Frightens Me’ and ‘Laugh’ are taken, is from recordings in a giant apartment in a leafy suburb part of Ixelles, engineered by a work colleague who was keen to try his hand at recording a live band. That was towards the end of our time in Brussels and we three founder members had been playing together for a couple of years by then, so we, er, rocked quite hard as a three-piece and made a huge racket in this stately old apartment block. So we again had to work pretty fast to avoid complaints, and I think the engineer guy was a bit taken aback by how ferocious it could sound, what someone else called ‘the fire and the immediacy’.

++ And also there is a video now for “That Means Nothing To You“. Care to tell me a bit about it? Where was it recorded? Who put it together?

The video footage was shot by us in Brussels in late summer 2025. We had actually started planning a trip back there long before we ever knew there would be an album coming out as we hadn’t all been there together since 2000. We shot the footage for the video at this huge fairground called La Foire du Midi that sets up in central Brussels for about a month in the summer every year. It’s really popular with people from all walks of life, and we always used to go there. A guy I know, Dave Cortez, stitched it all together brilliantly. He works in video editing but this was his first time doing a music video.

++ My favourite song of yours is “Map of the World”, wondering if you could tell me what inspired this song? What’s the story behind it?

We find that people have very different favourite songs so it’s interesting to know you like this one best. It’s one of Seán’s songs, so I passed your question on to him and here’s the response: “’Map of the World’ is about two people in a relationship that falls victim to geography. One of them hits the road, leaving behind a printed map as a fading memento.”

For this recording, Seán switched to acoustic guitar from bass, which was played by Andrew, and I played the lead guitar part as mentioned above (most of the lead guitar parts were played by Andrew).

++ If you were to choose your favorite Jim’s Twenty-One song, which one would that be and why?

Really difficult question to answer… I’d rule out my own songs mostly, because like most people who are not divas, I think, it’s always a bit difficult to like your own singing voice.

For the most out-there song, I’d pick ‘It Frightens Me’.

On the flip side of that, for the most poppy songs, I’d say ‘I Want To’ and ‘Out of Reach’.

When we discovered all the old tapes, I think one of the songs that I had not heard in a long time that I was really impressed by is ‘Knowing You’.

If I had to pick one for someone who has never heard us at all, I think ‘That Means Nothing to You’ is the best introduction. I think it’s very distinctively us, punky and poppy at the same time. And I got to channel my inner Steve Jones on rhythm guitar. Just my own personal opinion, but I think this one is to us as ‘Safety Net’ is to Shop Assistants.

++ What about gigs? Did you play many? What were the best gigs that you remember? Were there any bad ones? Any anecdotes you can share?

Gigs were hard to come by, as mentioned above in Brussels there was no scene for our kind of music and few venues, even fewer willing to take a chance on an unknown bunch of non-locals. And in London we didn’t want to do the pay-to-play game, as well as being comparatively unknown. But we did play a handful, yes, all in Brussels.

The best one would be the support slot for The Membranes, as heard in the live songs on the CD. There was a really good ambience, the venue was reasonably full, there were people we knew in the audience, including Nadine, who helped transport gear for us, and we played just about as well as we could. We only got this show because we had been pestering a local, small-scale promoter for months. As well as music on The Membranes end of the spectrum, he was really into bands on the Ron Johnson label, less poppy things and also he put on Dutch punk veterans The Ex. I think he just got fed up with us – he called us ‘boy Scout music – and relented, maybe couldn’t get anyone else for that night. But we were happy to do it.

The only other support gig we did was at a place that was really a jazz bar/club that had just opened and needed bands/music to fill their schedule. They put us on to play with a kind of avant-garde jazz-rock outfit called De Mins (The Minuses in Flemish). Needless to say, they were not our cup of tea and the feeling was mutual. One thing I recall, I think this is correct, is that the venue insisted we had to play for 30 minutes, whereas we only really had about 24/25 minutes’ worth of songs at that stage. So we added a cover of ‘Baby Honey’ by The Pastels to get us over the line… We don’t have a recording of that, unfortunately. This venue is still going, called Sounds, so fair play to them, they must be doing something right. I guess they started out strongly…

The very first show we did was a free one in La Tulipe, just the three of us who started the band, playing for about 15 minutes using practice amps and a drum machine. We had put some posters up in the bar beforehand, but I think it’s fair to say no one had turned up to see us in particular, they were just on their usual night out so they were a bit bemused, to say the least. I think it was the first and probably last live music show there. At one point mid-set a big guy in a black leather jacket with a punky haircut stood up and lunged uncertainly towards us, but it was only because we were blocking the way to the bathroom, which I think he needed to use urgently… After the show, he came over with a beer to talk to us and he was very cordial/well-lubricated. It turned out he was in a punk band, called The Tarantulas, and he offered some friendly advice on our stagecraft, saying we needed to loosen up and ‘perform’ more because we were “Too much the technique”, meaning looking at our instruments and concentrating on trying not to make any mistakes in the playing.

The last show we played was maybe the most memorable in some ways. This was in a room above a second-hard/collectors’ record shop called the Jukebox, which is still going (we visited last August).  It was on a Friday night in summer, and it was just us playing, so to drum up an audience Andrew and I spread the word at our workplace at the time. This was The Wall Street Journal Europe, so not exactly hardcore indie pop fans… but a lot of them did turn up. So too did a bunch of skinheads, which was a bit of a surprise as they, like the WSJ office staff, also did not seem like our natural audience. What we learned later was that during a show at the same venue the previous Friday, there had been a bit of a ruckus between the same skinheads and hardcore punks, so the skins decided to show up for a round two at our gig. So by the time we did start to play, the place was pretty crowded and pretty soon the skins started yelling abuse, pushing each other around for fun etc. Andrew wearing his Madonna t-shirt probably didn’t impress them either. It was a very low stage so at one point one of the skins was able to reach over and switch of the bass amp, which we had borrowed for the night from another, now quite concerned WSJ staffer. Some coins were thrown at us, no bottles, I think, and one or two made some kind of moves towards us. I don’t think we hit anyone with the guitars but we behaved as if to suggest we were prepared to. Anyway, we played pretty frenetically and got through the set without major mishaps. The skins headed out, probably in search of trouble elsewhere. The WSJ people were a little bit quiet by the end of it all.

++ When and why did Jim’s Twenty-One stop making music? Were any of you involved in any other projects afterwards?

As mentioned above, the band went into hibernation in 1989 when we started heading off in different geographical directions.

I did try to get something going in London after I became friends with Bruce Hopkins, formerly a guitarist in Jesse Garon & The Desperadoes, and also Terry Banks, who now plays in Dot Dash in Washington, D.C. and played in a number of other bands before that, including St Christopher. We practiced a few times in rehearsal rooms but nothing really came of it as we all three just played guitar and there are no recordings.

I moved later on back to Edinburgh, and with Sean and another friend we got our own ‘club night’ going, called Deep Fried, though that was a dance music thing, old school hip-hop etc, not an ‘indie disco’.

Andrew did do some stuff with a friend in NYC, but again it didn’t come to anything, I think.

And as mentioned earlier I do the Slow Country solo project these days.

++ Was there any interest from the radio? TV? What about the press or fanzines? Did they give you any attention?

I don’t think we were ever on TV, but songs from the 1987 EP were played by John Peel (“They don’t sound very Belgian”) and Janice Long on their BBC shows at the time, which was a huge deal for us. There was a little bit of radio play in Scotland and Belgium too, and there was some in the US and maybe elsewhere but this was pre-internet so we had no way of tracking exactly where and when. We know it was played in these other places because we got fan mail from people, which again was a bit wild to us. ‘Nadine’ has been getting what seems to us like a lot of radio attention, from the US, UK, Europe, etc — again a very welcome bonus.

There were UK fanzine write-ups of the EP, yes, which Fast Forward sent on to us. US coverage might have happened, but we didn’t get sent any of that. The EP did get reviewed in the UK weeklies, quite amusingly in some cases. In the NME, Steven Wells, then a prominent writer, described it as “Shop Assistants with beards”, which I think was meant as a put-down but we quite liked it. There were a few straight-out negative reviews as well: The Edinburgh Evening News (a local paper, I guess they reviewed it because of the Fast Forward connection) wrote: “Something’s definitely going wrong here” as a play on the title of one of the songs. Maybe our ‘favourite’ bad review was in a local Brussels magazine for expats working for the EU, which called the music “Seedy garage rock for timewarp victims”. We kind of treated these as badges of honour in a way, we were amused and not upset at all, we’d have been more disconcerted in a way if some of these publications had liked us. Noisy indie rock was absolutely not a mainstream thing in those days, it was a very minor taste, though the record pressing (500, small at the time) did sell out around the world.

‘Nadine’ has had a far better reception – some very positive responses – which I think speaks to how the audience for indie has expanded, older people who were into it then and are still into it now might have their own radio shows or blogs etc, and they’re reaching a contemporary audience but also much younger people.

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

At the time, I guess firstly actually just holding our own record in our hands was a big deal, and then seeing it in stores, and getting airplay on John Peel, etc – these felt like achievements. But probably being able to put out an album now, on a noted label, to a positive reception, and to finally have digital versions of the songs distributed across all platforms, and to hear how well the songs stand up after all this time, reminding us that, to toot our horn a bit here, the jims were and remain a really good band – all this is as big a highlight as anything.

++ Also wondering if you are excited about this year’s World Cup?

For my sins, being from Scotland, I always follow the national team’s efforts and mostly that’s not exactly been a source of joy. But yes, it’s very satisfying to see us make it to the World Cup for the first time in 28 years – though I think we’ll likely be back home before the postcards, as they say.

++ And now you are in Tokyo, right? How do you like it there and how did you end up in that city? Do you follow any indie bands there?

I moved to Tokyo for work in 2007, expecting to only stay a few years maybe. But it’s an amazing city, home now, family life is here, and no matter how long you live in Tokyo, as a non-native there’s always something new to discover, whether it’s older culture or more modern. And Japan as a whole is endlessly interesting.

As for indie music, I think I’ve been more focused lately on bands coming out of Southeast Asia, there seems to be a lot of stuff going on in Indonesia, the Philippines and so on. Most Japanese bands sing in Japanese so there can be a bit of a language barrier, but there is a huge range of music to enjoy here. I like the record put out this year by The Moment of Nightfall, and also very much enjoyed Taiwanese artist Yu Ching’s ‘The Crystal Hum’ album. Maybe stuff on the less well travelled fringes of indie music appeals to me more these days.

++ Anything else you’d like to add?

Just to say thanks again to you, Roque, for giving us the chance to be on your blog. And also, a big thanks to readers who made it all the way through this long read, hope it was amusing, interesting or both!

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Listen
Jim’s Twenty One – Map of the World

13
Jan

Happy New Year!

Back again to blogging after some weeks of holidays.

I’m again thinking of Swedish bands from the early, mid-2000s. Today one that is quite obscure, and who I suppose will find very little information online: Deep Frozen Lettuce!

I had discovered the label Små Krullig Får thanks to All of My Brother’s Girlfriends. AOMBG was a band I was friends with at the time. I used to chat on Soulseek and eventually ended up including one of their songs on the compilation “¡Es Pop Mamá!” that was released in Peru thanks to the Revista 69 magazine. AOMBG had released on the Små Krullig Får label. Actually the only release listed on Discogs for this label is the “Second Album on Cassette” by them.

The label, whose names translates to small curly sheep, released in 2004 a tape by Deep Frozen Lettuce! called “Business”. This tape had the catalog number 002 and included 6 songs “Everything & Space”, “All-Star Crew”, “Good Times”, “I Fell in Love at the Library (cassette recorder session)”. “Cherry Tree (porta session)” and “The Truth in a Song (computer session)”. Worth mentioning that the last 3 songs are listed as ‘new extra tracks’. I want to guess that originally there was a release just with the first three songs and then on the tape the other 3 were added.

A little poking here and there, I figure it out. Originally it was a CDR called “Dude Man! Yeah” that had the first three songs. Later on this CDR was discontinued. And then the tape was released with the extra songs.

Now, I also have the suspicion, and a blurry memory, that the person behind the band and the label was the same one. I am also pretty sure he was based in Lund, Sweden. I think the first name would have been Filip.

Other than that there’s absolutely no more information on the web. It is a shame. Anyone remembers this cool sounding project?

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Listen
Deep Frozen Lettuce! – Good Times

22
Dec

A few days ago we got the news that Peter Millson had died. He went under the name Maximilian Theodor Eider III but we knew him as Max Eider, one of the best guitarists ever.

I had just traveled for my holiday vacations. I wasn’t expecting to write new posts. I have a few prepared for the next coming weeks until I’m back to New York City. But then two days ago, December 17, 2025, the Facebook page of The Jazz Butcher, the band he was in with Pat Fish announced that Max Eider had sadly passed away. I was shocked. It was only a few years ago that I was writing a post about Pat Fish passing too. I was speechless.

When I wrote about Pat passing away I mentioned a show in Brooklyn where I saw The Jazz Butcher. That was the only time I had seen them both Pat and Max. It was quite a strange gig for me, I went with a coworker who loved them as he had listened to them while in college thanks to the famous “college radio” of the time that played actual good music. This coworker liked some 80s bands that I liked, but he wasn’t into indiepop at all. He just liked what he had heard on college radio, more mainstream indiepop like My Bloody Valentine or The Jesus and Mary Chain. But there was a band he loved, The Jazz Butcher, especially the song “Southern Mark Smith (Big Return)”. For me that gig was magical, it was so special. I had just moved to New York City and didn’t expect to see them at all.

I always thought I was going to see them on the many trips I have done to the UK. Maybe in one of the festivals I had attended. Indietracks? I wonder why they were never booked. Would have been fantastic. The Jazz Butcher were terrific, had so many great songs, a catalogue of records to be jealous of. And Max Eider played the guitar like he was enchanting snakes. He was such a good guitar player, original, elegant, classy.

When I moved to NYC I had the idea I was going to find good records for my collection. Records that I loved. I thought NYC was like London. That you know, second-hand shops would have good records. My surprise was that it wasn’t so. There were tons of records, but mainly 60s, 70s, stuff I didn’t care for. But the very first gem I found was a second-hand copy of “The Best Kisser in the World”, Max Eider’s first LP at Academy Records Annex in Greenpoint.

That was the first album he released solo. It was in 1987 on Big Time. I have the US version of that record that would later be released in Japan by Vinyl Japan, Zafiro in Spain and of course Big Time too in the UK. It is a work of art this album. I used to play time and time again when I just moved to NYC. That’s one of the reasons I was truly thankful when I got the chance to see them live in a small venue in Brooklyn. I chatted a bit with both of them. Maybe more with Pat if my memory serves correct. It’s been a while. I do remember though Max was friendly and kind when I was just being a fanboy.

Max would later release five more releases, “Hotel Figueroa”, “Back in the Bedroom”, “Disaffection”, “Duckdance” and “All Shall Be Well”. This last one a CDR on Glass Modern from 2024. I remember that during the Myspace days there was a page for Tundraduck Records, who released the last 3 of his albums. It was actually Max’s own label (alongside Augustus Pokerback). I bought “Disaffection” and “Back in the Bedroom” directly from Max and the label, by messaging them. It was quite cool. It was a time where musicians and fans were becoming closer thanks to the internet.

I haven’t listened “Duckdance” or “All Shall Be Well”. I should fix that. By the time these records came out Myspace wasn’t around and buying records that had smaller distribution became a bit harder. Still it is definitely my fault for not having listened to them, which I believe will be great records with top songs. If Max plays the guitar on a song, you know it is quality. And he was very good songwriter too. There’s no denying of that.

It is a difficult time for me. In general, I have very little time to listen to music these days. If I can listen 30 minutes to an hour a day it is a success. Years ago I could be listening music for more than 5 hours a day. This new situation, since becoming a dad, has made my indiepop heroes, my favourite albums, my favourite songs, to acquire a larger, bigger, importance and status that whenever I have a few minutes to listen to music I go back to them. This means I get to listen less new music. And when it comes to Max Eider, I do play “”My Other Life” and Rosemary” often. I love these songs. Maybe they are my favourite? I don’t know. I have many that I like. But it seems if I pick one, it ends to be one of these two. They are perhaps the most immediate ones, the catchiest.

For me Max is an indiepop legend. I am no one to ask for people to write/do tributes, but if anyone deserves them, Max Eider definitely does.

A genius of pop music is gone.

Rest in peace hero.

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Listen
Max Eider – My Other Life

15
Dec

Aeons ago I wrote about the Spanish duo Toilettes. This is what I said:

Toilettes: I heard “Observatorio” on the CD16 and thought, where does this beautiful lo-fi racket comes from? They hail from Barcelona and they are two girls, Joana Mallol and Julieta Caprara. They have a tape out (I don’t know if it is still available) on Discos Walden/Discos Populares and it includes 8 songs, all which you can stream on their Soundcloud. This is really, really great. Pop that reminds of flexi girl-fronted indiepop bands like The Felicitys, The Definite Article, or even Talulah Gosh!

It’s been almost 10 years since the release of their self titled tape. And I am honestly confused in how come their music didn’t make more of an impact,  and how they didn’t release more records. And on top of it all, did Joana and Julieta continued making music with other bands?

The “Toilettes” tape came out on May 19, 2016, on Ediciones Populares (EP09) and Discos Walden (DW52), both Spanish labels. I am much more familiar with Discos Walden who has released many bands I enjoy as well as some top-notch books related to indiepop and DIY. The album only had 8 tracks, all songs under one minute. The longest song clocks 1:39 minutes. Imagine.

The tracks are “Observatorio”, “Coge el Dinero”, “Salgo a la Calle”, “El Metabolismo”, “Dulce Hogar”, “Persiguiendo el Mal”, “Serpiente de Papel” and “Viaje a Zurich”. Julieta played electric guitar, electronic drums, backing vocals. Joana played keyboards and sang. The music is credited to both and the lyrics to Joanna.

As mentioned earlier, their track “Observatorio” was part of the terrific compilation “CD16” that my friend Joel released under Impermeable Records (IR-CD001). A compilation that captured the great moment indiepop was having with a great crop of bands in 2016.

On the band’s Soundcloud we encounter a few tracks not present in the tape like a cover  of the Bananas song “Salí del Cuerpo” or the song “Bye Bye.”

The band had set up a Facebook page. But there’s really not much in it. A photo dating from April 2015 says that they were preparing for their first gig.

I look for more info. I see that Julieta made the artwork for the Barcelona band Pacífico’s album “Muévete” in 2016. On this band I know both good friends Toni Amaya and Óscar Huerta played. Maybe they know more about Toilettes? I also believe that Joana made the video for the song “Buen Pastor” by the Barcelona band Miedo.

I find a gig where they played. They played the Ladyfiesta de Invierno on December 18, 2015, alongside Lucius Works Here, Pentina’T Lula! and Les Suques. I think this was in Barcelona.

I keep searching. I see that Julieta is actually from Argentina. She also goes under the name Jay and has been living in Santander prior to the Toilettes. There she was playing guitar with the band Meryl Streep and made cool fanzines like the one for Soma Records. She also Djed at a bunch of places like Metropole, Opium, Gareje Sónico or Zeppelin.

As far as I know the duo was based in Madrid. Julieta must have moved.

I read that a video was made for a song. I am not sure which song. I read the director was filmmaker Marçal Forés. Anyone knows? I can’t seem to find it in Youtube. But I did find another connection between the director and the band. Marçal made a film called “Amor Eterno” in 2014. I haven’t seen it. But it looks like Joanna was part of the actors in the movie.

And that’s what I could find. The two disappeared after Toilettes. A true shame as the tape was wonderful really. A burst of perfect pop. I hope they are involved in a way or another in music, or in the arts. Would be great what happened to them.

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Listen
Toilettes – Observatorio

08
Dec

Panache means a flamboyant, confident style or elegance, but it can also refer to an ornamental plume of feathers.

Who was Panache? It was the alter ego of Kristofer Lecander from the south of Sweden (not sure which town or city, anybody knows?) who released a couple of records in the mid-2000s.

I must say I was not very familiar with his music back then, I remember hearing a song here and there, but didn’t pay attention. I’m just rediscovering the music and listened to the track “The Streets Are Calling Your Name” and thought it was different and nice. So yeah, time to dig and find out more information.

Panache released an album on the Japanese label Rallye Label (RYECD01) in 2005. It was called “Black Letters” and included 11 tracks: “A Mind Forever Voyaging”, “Breeze Whispers”, “Disco in the Sky (I Won’t Go Back)”, “Remington Blues”, “When There’s No Tomorrow”, “Breeze Whistles”, “Counterfeit Astonishment”, “The Ivory Field of Flair”, “Jodorowsky Hijinx”, “The Flourishes of the Quadrille” and “Bombyx Mori”. All songs are credited to Kristofer. Dexter Cliff is credited for additional guitar, bass, brass, scratch and electronics. Both of them are credited as producers. Anna Cooper does guest vocals on “When There’s No Tomorrow” and Odd Lecander played guitars on “Counterfeit Astonishment”. Tracks were recorded at home in Held Bay and at Dexter Cliff’s studio in Ore Island between May 2004 and February 2005.

Four years after the release of the first album, in 2009, Panache releases a 10 song album called “Fractions”. This was released just digitally, as Mp3s. It had 10 songs “This Past Future”, “Every Floor is a Dance Floor”, “The Streets Are Calling Your Name”, “Never Return”, “Heartbreaker” with guest vocals by Hanna Brandén from Name The Pet, “Someday, Someday”, “Swirl”, “Silly Love Song”, “Too Much Time” and “Fractions”. The album was available on the band’s website which doesn’t exist anymore.

I wonder how the Japanese label Rallye found about Panache. Maybe online, songs were available to download around 2004? Or maybe like many Swedish bands of the time released some CDRs?

Aside from the albums we know that the song “Conditional” was part of the 2005 compilation CD “Rallye Cloack 2 “The Swim Sweet Swedish” Compilation” (RYECD012) and the 2008 cassette comp “Vänskap 002” had the track “Solitude in Springtime”.

And that’s really it. Couldn’t find any more info about Panache! Anyone remembers the band? What about Kristofer? Was he involved in other projects?

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Listen
Panache – The Streets Are Calling Your Name

05
Dec

Thanks so much to Jessica for the interview! It is no secret that one of my favourite bands are the Would-be-Goods, so it was really cool for me that during the Covid pandemic I got in touch with Jessica Griffin. I may have had opportunities before, the one time I remember most clearly was in 2012, in London, outside Bush Hall while my friends were having a smoke, I saw the band outside, but I chickened out! I must say that’s not being common in me (though I did get the setlist that time around). But yeah, being a big fan and all, didn’t want to bother! So yes, for me this interview is quite important and means a lot. And on top of it all it is great timing! The band is releasing a new album called “Tears Before Bedtime” on February 13, 2026, on the very fine label Skep Wax. You can pre-order the album on Bandcamp now too if you weren’t aware.

There are also a bunch of gigs already booked for next year to promote it, including the album launch gig at The Water Rats, London on February 21. It is a very exciting time for the band and fans for sure! So of course it made sense to ask Jessica about this… and that…. and everything in between.

++ Hi Jessica! Thanks so much for being up for this interview! I am a big fan and I have tons and tons of questions. How are you? I hear you have news of a new album!

I’m very well, thanks, and excited to have a new full-band album coming out.

++ It is great to see a new record by the band. This time around you are partnering with Skep Wax Records who have quickly become an important label for indiepop. How is it working with Amelia and Rob? Does it help working with people who have similar experiences when it comes to music? Were you a fan of Talulah Gosh, Heavenly, back in the day by the way?

We’re delighted that Skep Wax wanted to release the album. They are everything you’d want a label to be, and the fact that Amelia and Rob are indie musicians themselves means that we’re always on the same page.
I came to Talulah Gosh and Heavenly quite late as by the mid-80s I wasn’t listening to much new music or going to see bands. But Peter sent me their CDs in the late 90s and I was smitten.

++ The album is coming out on vinyl, CD and digital, definitely this is good news for any fan. Is there any difference between the formats, or are they exactly the same release? One thing that caught my attention is that there will be a lyrics sheet! Don’t think that’s common for the band?

The album has been mastered separately for each format but the songs are the same.
It’s the first time we’ve included lyrics with an album. But lyrics are such an important element of my songs that it seemed like a good thing to do.

++ Who is in the photo from the front cover of the record?

That’s me, in the early 1990s. It was taken on the set of a film made by Tony Potts, who worked with The Monochrome Set.

++ Without listening to the album, I want to say it is sort of a melancholic album, but maybe I am wrong? I am just taking clues by the name of the album “Tears Before Bedtime” and that there are two songs with tears in their title and another with the word crying. If I am very wrong, how would you describe the album, what can a fan expect?

There’s always been a melancholy element to my songs but there’s also lightness and humour, and I think that’s true of this album too. I didn’t think about the tears/crying motif until later, when I had to choose a title for the album.

++ Do tell me a bit about the recording of the record. Where was it recorded? Who produced it? Did it take a long time to make the album? 

We started recording at Jon Clayton’s OneCat studio in Brixton, in 2019. The pandemic held us up for a few years but we started working on the album again in late 2024, at Jon’s new studio in Crystal Palace. Recording is quite a slow process for us these days – a weekend here and there, unlike the first two Would-be-goods albums which took two weeks each. Slow recording works better, I think.

If by ‘who produced it’ you mean ‘who decided how the songs should sound overall’, the answer would be me/the band, although we needed Jon Clayton’s technical expertise and excellent musical ear to get the best sound and performances out of us and our instruments. I recorded all but two of the vocals myself, at home, as I’d learned to do this during my song-a-day project and find it more relaxing.

++ There is a listening party for the record on February 11. I’ve never been to one of them. I read that people can join and there will be a chat room to chat with the band. Is it going to be through zoom or something similar? Will there be a limit of people that can join? How is it being organized? I read that some cocktails will be recommended. Can you share any more details as it sounds quite fun!

The details are on our Bandcamp page – just click on the Tears Before Bedtime image. There’s a Listening Party link where you can RSVP. I don’t know if numbers are limited but Skep Wax say it’s probably a good idea to sign up as soon as possible. You may be asked to upload the Bandcamp app on your device. At the appointed time on February 11 you just sign in, sit back and listen as the album plays. There’s no Zoom/camera element but people will be able to make comments or ask questions in the chat room as the album plays, although you don’t have to join in.

I haven’t seen the cocktail menu yet but I’m sure they will be appropriate to the songs. One of them, The Tears of Cora Pearl, is actually named after a 19th-century cocktail which includes crême de violette, champagne and edible flowers. One for Peter, who’s partial to Parma violets.

++ And you have a few gigs lined up, all in the UK so far. Is there one in particular that you are looking forward to the most? And any chance you’ll be playing abroad next year?

We’re all looking forward to playing in the Wales Goes Pop festival in April. The weekend festivals we’ve played before (GlasGoes Pop in 2024, Paris Popfest in 2025) have been fantastic.

We don’t have any gigs outside the UK in our diaries at the moment but we love playing abroad so if anyone’s interested in putting us on, please get in touch.

++ Lets go back in time. What are your first music memories? What sort of music did you listen to at home while growing up?

Sitting on my father’s lap, aged three, listening to a record of John Williams playing classical Spanish guitar. I also remember him singing me old songs which were meant to be funny but which always made me cry, including ‘My Darling Clementine’.
There was always a record on the turntable in our house. My mother (who played the violin and mandolin) liked classical music (Bach, Sibelius, Debussy, Satie, Poulenc, Peter Warlock, Borodin, Rimsky-Korsakov) and musicals (from ‘Top Hat’ to ‘Hair’). My father liked ‘cool’ jazz (Dave Brubeck, Modern Jazz Quartet), Django Reinhardt and songs from the 1920s and 1930s, especially Hoagy Carmichael’s. There were some pop records too – Françoise Hardy, Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazlewood, Simon and Garfunkel, The Mamas and The Papas, the Beatles’ ‘Help’ album, Dionne Warwick singing Burt Bacharach, Sérgio Mendes, and later ABBA.

++ You grew up between Singapore and England. Why was that? When was the last time you visited Singapore? What are your fondest memories of that place?

My father was in the Fleet Air Arm and was posted to Singapore. We lived there until I was eight. I’ve never been back. I don’t think there’s much left of the Singapore I knew, with its dilapidated 19th-century shophouses, street markets and sampans in the Singapore River. At the weekend we used to go out in an old fishing boat to islands where we’d picnic on the beach and swim in the warm water. It was a shock coming back to cold, grey England.

++ Are you originally from London?

No. We moved around in my childhood and my family is from all over the place, so I never know what to say when people ask where I’m from. But I’ve lived in London since my early 20s and feel I belong here.

++ Had you been in other bands other than The Would-be-Goods? If so, how did all of these bands sound? Are there any recordings?

In my mid-teens I desperately wanted to be in a band but couldn’t find anyone else who was interested. I’ve always written songs of one kind or another but didn’t record with other musicians until my early twenties.

++ How did you all meet? How was the recruiting process?

Peter wrote to me, in 1995, I think. He told me he was a big Would-be-goods fan, asked if I’d written anything new and said that if I was interested in playing live, his band Heavenly would be happy to be my backing musicians. A few years later we met in London and I played him some of my new songs. (I’d started writing again in the mid-1990s.) He persuaded me to record them.
Peter and I did our first live shows as the Would-be-goods in 2001. Our drummer Debbie Greensmith and bass player Lupe Nuñez-Fernandez (from Pipas) joined us in 2002, recruited by Peter, who is well connected in the world of indie music. When Lupe left the band in 2004, Andy Warren (who had played on the first two Would-be-goods albums and had become a friend of mine) took over bass duties.

++ How is the creative process for you? It was only after “Mondo” that you learned the guitar, right? How did you compose previously?

I’ve always composed songs in the same way, writing everything in my head rather than with an instrument and singing it onto a tape recorder (nowadays, the voice recorder on my phone or computer) as I go along. The starting point might be a title or a very short musical phrase (just a few notes) I’ve overheard, or remembered from an old song. The words and music tend to come to me simultaneously, a few bars at a time. When I first started to play the guitar, strumming chords could sometimes spark something but very soon I went back to writing in the old way. I’ve always been able to ‘hear’ my songs, with quite detailed arrangements, but they do tend to change a bit when we start working on them in rehearsal. An example is ‘Miss La-Di-Dah’ (from The Morning After) which I imagined as a mid-paced, rather downbeat Motown-type song Iike ‘Heard It Through The Grapevine’ but which the band took in more of a garage direction.

I don’t tell the other band members what to play although I might occasionally ask them to try a part I’ve come up with.

++ Where do you usually practice? Has it changed much after the many changes of the band?

We’ve always practised in a rehearsal studio under the railway arches in West London. It looks exactly the same as it did 20-odd years ago.

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

It’s the title of a 1901 children’s novel by Edith Nesbit. I’ve always loved her books although The Wouldbegoods isn’t my favourite. It came to mind when I was recording my first single and needed a band name. Mike Alway didn’t like it but Simon Turner encouraged me to stick with it. I might have picked another name if I’d known we’d become popular in Japan, as ‘Would-be-goods’ doesn’t work well in Japanese.

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

People say we have a distinctive sound but it has changed a lot since the early days. On the first two albums the Monochrome Set were my backing band – the sound is more sophisticated and the arrangements more complex but it doesn’t sound like a Monochrome Set record. The third album, Brief Lives, was made with the help of guest musicians and feels more like a studio project than a band album. The Morning After is the first Would-be-goods album that captures what I think of as our ‘band’ sound. On that album and the follow-up (Eventyr) there’s a touch of garage-band rawness and energy which comes from Debbie’s drumming and Peter’s guitars, but there are other  influences, such as French chanson, which you can hear in songs like ‘Bluebeard’. The new album has a more lush sound, with more complex arrangements. Our sound has evolved naturally – we’ve never tried to sound like anyone else.

++ I have always wondered how you ended up working with Él Records. How did that relationship start? And who picked the two songs for the first single?

I was a fan of The Monochrome Set and met Mike Alway in their dressing-room at one of their shows after a friend dared me to go backstage. This was a few years before Mike started él Records – he was the A&R man at Cherry Red. We met up a few times while I was doing a summer job in London in my gap year. He kept in touch and sent me records while I was at university, and I wrote sleeve notes for his new label, él. After I graduated and moved to London he asked me if I’d be interested in making a single. I was surprised but of course I said yes. His first suggestion was that I should cover a song by ‘60s band The Herd and/or a very early Bowie song from his Mod period, then he wanted me to do a duet with a footballer, Vinnie Jones, but in the end he asked Simon Turner to write a couple of songs for me.

++ After the single, which had songs written by Simon Turner and Colin Lloyd Tucker, you decided to release an album of your own songs with The Monochrome Set as a backing band. Were you already friends or familiar with The Monochrome Set before this record? Was it something Él got for you? 

It wasn’t my decision to make an album. Mike suggested it after the single got good reviews and some airplay. He approached various songwriters but either they were tied up with other projects or their songs weren’t right for me, which is why I ended up writing my own songs. Mike asked Bid, Andy Warren and Nick Wesolowski to be the backing band. As a long-time Monochrome Set fan, I was thrilled. I’d met them a few times but had never exchanged more than a few words with any of them.

++ I’ve always been curious about the photos of you and your sister Miranda from that time. Curious about what sort of hats you were wearing in them? 

People often ask about the outfits we’re wearing on the album cover. The hats and jackets were from East Asia, I think. Mike sent us to a theatrical costumier (Berman and Nathan’s) and told us to choose anything we liked.

++ After this record you left music to work in the City of London. What did you do there? Did you enjoy this job?

I’d already been working in the City for a year when we made The Camera Loves Me. I studied English Literature at university then to everyone’s surprise (and by a rather roundabout route) I became a trainee Japanese investment manager. I loved my annual visits to Japan but I felt out of place in the City. So after a few years I left and worked as an editor for a small and eccentric publishing company before going freelance, recording Mondo and becoming a mother.

++ Soon after you recorded “Mondo”. I read in an interview with Marcus Törncrantz that this record received no promotion at all after being re-released in the UK (it was originally a Japan-only release on Trattoria). What happened? Why didn’t Cherry Red support this record as they should have?

I don’t know.

++ Reading your biography on your page, it mentions that between 2000 and 2001 you recorded 22 songs with Orson Presence, Struan Robertson and Jim Kimberley. Were these songs released?

Yes – they were the songs that became Brief Lives, the Emmanuelle Béart EP and the Sugar Mummy single. Orson Presence played keyboards and Struan Robertson and Jim Kimberley played drums. Another track, ‘Leave My Mind Alone’, is on a compilation, All’s Fair In Love and Chickfactor.

++ Then you started working with new labels, much smaller and indie than Cherry Red, like Matinée and Fortuna Pop. How did these relationships start?

After we’d finished recording Brief Lives, Peter and I approached some independent record companies. Several of these were interested in releasing it but we decided to go with Fortuna Pop!) and Matinée.

++ “Emmanuelle Béart” was your comeback EP in 2001. One thing that I always thought about your music is that it is very cinematic in a way. From the top of your head do you have a top 5 favourite movies?

People have said my songs are like novels but maybe they are more like little films. My imagination is quite visual – when I’m reading or writing I ‘see’ the characters and events.
Favourite films, off the top of my head: Jacques Tati’s Mon Oncle; something by the Hong Kong film director Stanley Kwan (maybe Rouge or Centre Stage); Bergman’s Smiles of a Summer Night; Kind Hearts and Coronets; something by Eric Rohmer (maybe A Winter’s Tale).

++ Then came “Eventyr” which of course means adventure in Swedish. Previously you had sung songs in French, so wondering how many languages you speak?!

My French is very rusty these days but I do try to read in French and speak it when we go there. I studied German for two years at school but have forgotten most of it. In the 1980s I learned a bit of Japanese. I started having lessons again a few years ago. I really enjoy it but it’s quite challenging.

++ And I have to ask, all of your albums had a photo of yours on the cover. But not on “Eventyr”? Why did you decide to change that on this one?

I wanted it to look like the cover of a book of fairytales from the golden age of children’s literature. ‘Eventyr’ was the title of a collection of stories by Hans Christian Andersen, some of which inspired songs on the album.

++ During the Covid pandemic you started making and releasing music on your own, as a solo project instead of with the full band. Four EPs have appeared on Bandcamp of wonderful new songs. What made you decide to pick up your guitar and start posting these on the web?

I needed a project while we were all stuck at home and only allowed out for one short walk a day. So I came up with the idea of writing (and demo-ing) a song a day, using a title which my partner Peter Momtchiloff would give me the evening before (with no other guidance). I sang, played and recorded everything myself. Making songwriting into a game took a lot of the pressure off and opened up all sorts of new songwriting avenues for me. For the first time since my teens I was writing without any intention of releasing the songs. Later I decided to make some of them into digital EPs. I took five songs at a time and worked on the original demos, re-recording parts if necessary and getting Peter to play bass if the song needed it.

++ And I have to ask, is there a possibility if all of or some of these songs will be re-recorded by the full band? Or a possibility for them to be released as they are in physical format?

I ended up writing 173 songs so it’s very unlikely I’ll ever release them all. The sound quality of the early songs is terrible. They sound as if they were recorded underwater, as I didn’t really know how to use Garageband and lacked some vital bits of kit, e.g. a guitar interface. It was a slow learning process.

I released twenty of the songs on Bandcamp (and later on a CD). You’ll be able to hear more of them on the new album and I’m sure we’ll work on others with the band for future release.

++ Only “The Camera Loves Me” was released on vinyl back in the day, and I wonder with these trends of reissuing things on vinyl, have you considered doing so?

Our new album is coming out on vinyl, as well as CD and digital, but there are no plans for any of our other albums to be re-issued in any format.

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

There are a few songs which we started in 2019 and didn’t finish for one reason or another.

++ I think my favourite song of yours is Pinstriped Rebel” (though it is hard to pick just one), but as I use it as my personal email address (!). I was wondering if you could tell me what inspired this song? You know here in the US people who read my email think I am a fan of the Boston Red Sox, or a baseball fan, because of the name! Whats the story behind it?

The title came from an article in the Financial Times, which I read every day when I was in the City. The character in the song is based on someone I was very briefly in a relationship with – he was the archetypal ‘City boy’ of the 1980s.

++ Comet Gain did a wonderful cover of this song. I was wondering what you think of it? And also if there are any other Would-be-Goods covers that you would recommend checking out?

It’s very good. It comes from a project which Matthew Jacobsen of the US label Le Grand Magistery began in the mid-1990s. He asked various indie bands to cover songs by él artists for a tribute album. It’s never been released, although some of the songs (including the Comet Gain ‘Pinstriped Rebel’ cover) appeared on another Grand Magistery compilation. I liked all the Would-be-goods covers I heard from that project – the bands took the songs and really made them their own. I don’t see any point in covering a song unless you do something different with it. The Softies covered ‘Perfect Dear’ and still play it live. And a young Canadian band asked me if they could cover ‘Too Old’. They did a good job – I think it’s on YouTube.

++ If you were to choose your favorite Would-be-Goods song, which one would that be and why?

That’s a hard one! It changes. At the moment it’s ‘Ouija Board Romance’ from my lockdown project. It was one of those rare songs that came to me pretty much in one go, despite being one of the most challenging titles Peter gave me. Most of them gave me a bit more scope, e.g. ‘A Family Secret’ or ‘I Loved A Ghost’.

++ Did the Would-be-Goods gig back when the first two albums were released? Perhaps with the Monochrome Set as a backing band, or not?

No – Mike Alway was very much against the él bands doing shows, although there was an él showcase event at the Limelight Club in London and a short Japanese tour. I sang backing vocals for Simon Turner and Louis Philippe in London and Tokyo but I’d never have had the courage to perform as a lead singer in those days, with or without the support of The Monochrome Set.

++ Did you play many gigs? In other countries?

We’ve been playing gigs since the early 2000s, mostly in the UK but also in the USA, Spain, France, Sweden, Denmark and Finland.

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

The Chickfactor 2002 show at the Fez Club in the Lower East Side was one of our favourites – there was such a gala atmosphere. The Would-be-goods were all wearing tuxedos. I was expecting to borrow an electric guitar but they could only find an acoustic one with a strap that kept slipping. Peter had to fix the strap to my back with a big ‘X’ of gaffa tape.
Glasgoes Pop in August 2024 and Paris Popfest in September 2025 were really special, too.

++ And have there been any bad ones?

We did a show in Nottingham in the early 2000s. It was a very rainy night and the promoter didn’t turn up. We played to an audience of five, all of them from the support band.
We also did a show at Cecil Sharp House (a folk venue in London) where we kept triggering the noise restrictor. It was the first and last time we’ve ever been told we were too loud.

++ There have been no promo videos for the songs for the Would-be-Goods in the past. How come? If you would have been able to pick one song that should have had a video, which one would it be?

I’ve had plenty of ideas for videos but for some reason never got round to making one until this year. ‘Velazquez and I’ would have been a contender.

++ Right! ‘The Gallopers’ is your first video ever. It was quite a surprise. So I wonder how it came together? Did you make it yourselves or did you work with someone? Where did you record your takes and where does the old footage come from?

Skep Wax like to release three singles before an album comes out, so we needed videos for these. We’ve been working with Ian Button, who’s made videos for Pete Astor, Louis Philippe and his own band, Papernut Cambridge.

I filmed myself singing and Peter playing guitar at home, and the old footage is from amateur films made in various parts of England.

++ Looking back in retrospect, what has been the biggest highlight for the band?

Playing live. Not just being on stage but everything that goes with it – meeting other musicians and people who’ve come to see us, and getting to spend time with the other band members.

++ Aside from music, what other hobbies do you have?

Drawing, cooking, walking around London, going to art exhibitions, but most of all, reading.

++ Been to London many times, and really liked it but I would ask a native about it, what are your recommendations? I want to know what would you suggest them doing here, like what are the sights one shouldnt miss? Or the traditional food or drinks that you love that I should try?

I would go on a long bus ride through the city (a regular bus, not a tourist bus), sitting on the top deck; I’d take a boat up the Thames from Embankment to Greenwich, or if the weather’s good, I’d walk along the river – eastwards from the Royal Festival Hall along the south bank to Tower Bridge and beyond, westwards from Hammersmith Bridge to Richmond, or along Regent’s Canal from Ladbroke Grove to Islington. The permanent collections at the National Gallery, V&A and British Museum are must-sees, and if you have time there’s the Dulwich Picture Gallery in south-west London which has a lovely small permanent collection and often has good temporary shows. I’d go to Golborne Road at the top end of Portobello Road (north of the Westway flyover) on a Friday and have a coffee and nata at Lisboa Patisserie.
I don’t know what counts as traditional food in London – it’s such an international city and we’re adventurous eaters. I do drink a lot of tea, always loose-leaf, which I buy from the wonderful Postcard Teas in Dering Street, W1.

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Listen
Would-be-Goods – The Gallopers

 

01
Dec

Hailing from Birmingham, here are the Surf Drums.

I can’t believe I haven’t dedicated a post to this classic mid-80s band yet. I honestly thought I had! But it is never late, right?

The band’s first release came in 1985 on a label from their hometown called Swordfish Records that had released all sorts of music, not necessarily indiepop. On this label the band released “Take It With Me This Seven Years” 12″ EP (SWF 003). It included four songs, “Take it With Me” and “Stone and Silver” on the A side and “This Seven Years” and “Everything” on the B side.

On the album we see David Kehoe singing and playing acoustic guitars (he also wrote the songs), Richard Left on lead guitar and backing vocals, Ann-Marie Taylor on keys and backing vocals, Michael Laffoley on drums and Colin Packwood on drums. The songs were produced by Bob Lamb. Record sleeve was designed by D.T. and the band’s photo was taken by Gareth Owen.

2 years later we see the band releasing “Walkaway” perhaps their most known release. This one came out on 7″ and 12″ and was released by Kaleidoscope Sound (KS-703). This label was founded in 1986 by Joe Foster, who you must know from Creation Records, Rev-Ola… and also for playing as Slaughter Joe and producing so many bands. The 7″ version had “Walkaway” on the A side and “She’s Not Giving” on the B side. The 12″ included “Tell the World” as a second track on the B side. The record was produced by Joe Foster and the sleeve was designed by Rob Boyle.

That same year the band releases “Black Tambourine” again on Kaleidoscope Sound (KS705). This one again is released as a 7″ and 12″. The 7″ had the title track on the A side and “All There Is” on the B side. On the 12″ the song “On My Way” is included on the B side. The songs were produced again by Joe and recorded at Loco Studios Llanhenrock in Wales and Rich Bitch Studios Selly Oak.

Listening to the songs, you notice a clear change of direction of the band sound from their first release compared to their “Walkaway” single. Their first release is rockier.

Looking for info I learn that the band used to play “You Got My Number” by The Undertones at their gigs. I also learn that Michael Laffoley left the band in 1987 to be replaced by Paul Tibetts. A year after Paul and Anne Marie left the band to the Korova Milkbar who released some records on the Subway Organization.

Kehoe and Left carried on and recruited Pete Tweedle, the former drummer of The Primitives. They split from Joe Foster and tried to negotiate with Wayne Morries, The Primitives manager, for a management deal. This never happened though it seems a tour was planned with The Primitives, Birdland, The Impossibles and themselves. This last lineup of the band may have recorded a demo but it is not clear.

What is clear is that Richard Left would end up playing in the final Felt record, “Me and a Monkey on the Moon” and then joining his former bandmates on the Korova Milkbar. Another interesting bit of information I see is that Ann-Marie Taylor married Richard March from Pop Will Eat Itself.

There was a Facebook page for the band to my surprise. It says the band was resurrected? I wonder if they played a reunion gig or something. There are some cool flyers of gigs, see that they played with Mighty Mighty, Bounty Hunters and Filipinos. Also at Dingwalls where they supported Felt, The Jasmine Minks and Bradford. There’s another gig at the Barrel Organ, with just themselves. Then on the Saint Etienne website, we see that Bob Stanley reviewed a couple of their gigs, one from August 15, 1987 at Burberries and another on November 21 of that same year where they played alongside I, Ludicrous at the Sir George Robey in London. Another one dates from May 3, 1987, when they played with The Gun Club and The Highliners at the Astoria in London.

Pete Paphides also mentions them on a post just a few weeks ago.

I keep looking and see that David Kehoe now goes under the name David Keogh. Under this name he has published a book called “The Accidental Gangster: Part 3: Volume 3” that came out in 2016.

It seems they had a good following in Birmingham. So yeah, I am quite curious to know what our friends from Brum remember about them. I am especially curious to know if more songs were recorded, especially with that last lineup, how did they sound like?

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Listen
Surf Drums – Walkaway

24
Nov

The Salty Pirates from Halmstad, Sweden. Also active during those early 2000s. Good band. Whatever happened to them?

It was the days of CDRs and so they released their music that way.

Discogs has listed one release, “We Thank the Lord Each Day for the Apocalypse”, which was self-released with 6 songs, “Did You Ever Feel Like Fucking Up?”, “The Alien Invasion”, “Black Minds, White Lies”, “My Academic Beard”, “I Lost My Virginity to the Sound of Per Gessle” and “Skogspromenad”. The only detail about this release is that it came out in 2004, on an Imation CDR (remember those?). On the back of the sleeve we see a website for the band which these days doesnt exist anymore, today it is actually own by a company in Florida that does Painting and Renovations and also called Salty Pirates.

Then I track down another release, this time from 2003, called “Make Bombs Not Popsongs”. This one had four songs, “You Got Your Seatbelt and Cars are so Safe”, “Somethings Beautiful are Ugly”, “Fire Deathstar, Fire” and “All That Glitters Can Be Gold”. This EP was produced by Mathias Söderlund and mastered by Klas Holm during the summer of 2003. You could download the EP from their website back then.

I also learn that the band’s original name was Happy Tom. Then they changed to Salty Pirates. They would eventually change their name again, in 2008 they became The Weather in Sweden.

I keep searching.

On Youtube I find a track called “Common Sense” that my friend David has uploaded. It seems to come from a release called “Back with a Vengeance”, it has a date of 2007.

I see a post by Jerry Boman dating from 2005, where he reviews a gig of them at a club called “Thursday I’m in Love” at the Respekt club in Göteborg (I think).

I also think they played Emmaboda at some point. What else? They seem to be a five-piece band.

Other than that not much info. Anyone remembers them

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Listen
Salty Pirates – You Got Your Seatbelt and Cars Are So Safe