25
Apr

Just finished Tracey Thorn’s “My Rock n’ Roll Friend” and I had to say it is my favourite of her books so far. Gave her 5 stars on Goodreads. Really enjoyed all the anecdotes with Lindy Morrison, and all these stories of the 80s in London. Stories about The Go-Betweens, mentions of bands like The Bodines or The Woodentops. I was transported and was as close as I could be as to those days I never lived. If you haven’t read this book I urge you to do so!

Art Museums: the fantastic and underrated Art Museums from San Francisco was formed by Josh Alper and Glenn Donaldson. Glenn who you might know from The Reds, Pinks & Purples. I wasn’t aware that there was a “lost album” by them. I just found out on Bandcamp. Though it says that there should be 15 tracks in total but I only see 11. In any case the songs are superb, I totally recommend them.

Drizzly: second time checking out Paska Records from Surabaya, Indonesia, after The Caroline’s. Their latest song is by a band called Drizzly. There is not much info about them, that the singer is called Amanda and mostly that’s all. The song is called “Bitter to See You” and it is pretty pretty. Fragile and upbeat.

Pop Threat: few copies are still available for “Give Me The Sonic Kill: 1999-2003” the great retrospective compilation by the noisy popsters from Leeds.  There are two versions of this release, one that has 23 songs, another that has 16. I guess you know which one to get. Don’t miss out on this one.

Top Sound: there’s a new album by the Swedish band! It is called “Isn’t Happiness” and it is available on CD as of last February. With a beautiful artwork, the CD has 10 songs. The band formed by Johan Fredriksson, Katarina Andersson and Tobias Adolfsson seems to be in top shape here.

The Last Broadcast: this duo formed by Kyle McGurk and Paolo Lombardo has released their first song called “Daisy” as aa digital single on Bandcamp. Somehow there is another date on Bandcamp, for October 2. Maybe then they will release a proper record with this song in it? Doesn’t seem clear.

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Today I was looking at my friend’s Tommy instagram account “silentsighcity”. There he does small bios of Swedish bands and that always help me remember many of them, that for a reason or another I hadn’t listened in a long time!

Douglas Heart, named themselves after Douglas Hart, the JAMC bassist, is the band his instagram brought back to my memory.

There was a piece of information that I wasn’t aware. That the band originally was called Hal Blaine (the US studio drummer) and with that name they recorded some demos back in 2001. Are these demos available anywhere? I wonder… I am curious to listen to them.

Previously both of them had been in a shoegaze band called Standing Pales. I have never heard this band, so if anyone can point me in the right direction that’d be great.

The band was formed as a duo by Pontus Wallgren and Malin Dahlberg. Later on more people would join the band including Max Sjöholm, Ramo Spatalovic and Daniel Fridlund Brandt. Pontus would later be in two fine bands Franke and Afraid of Stairs (I’ve been meaning to write about them), Malin was in the super Wee Are Soldiers Wee Have Guns, Laurel Music and Shipyard. Max was in Afraid of Stars and Laurel Music. Daniel in Animal Daydream, The Greencoats and My Brother Wind. And Rramo was in Franke, Melody Fields, Shipyard and The Greencoats. As you can see they collaborated a lot later on.

The band’s first release was a 7″ with two songs on Labrador. Released in 2003, the vinyl that came on a generic Labrador sleeve had the songs “Smoke Screen” on the A side and “The Fast Way” on thee B side. Catalog number was LAB 036.

The band released their album “Douglas Heart” (LAB024) the next year, 2004. 10 songs were included in it, “Smoke Screen”, “A Question of Gender”, “Dream”, “The Telephone Trick”, “Bear Olsson”, “Jim:, “Eveningsong #3”, “When We Become Strangers”, “Lights Dim”, “Song for Douglas”.

The album came out on CD and the artwork is credited to Elin Conradsson with design by Hugo Sundkvist. It was mixed by Björn Olsson (was the song “Bear Olsson” dedicated to him?) from The Soundtrack of Our Lives, The Sonic Walthers and more and Mattias Glavå. Björn produced the record and Mattias mastered it. Gunnar Frick played pedal steel guitar.

“I Could See the Smallest Things” (LAB067) was a 5-song EP released in 2004. With art from Elin Conradsson and recorded by Pontus, Ramo and Jonas Odhner in Spain at View of Parking Lot & Sonores studios between June and July that year. The songs that were included in this record were “Always No”, “Komplex” (with synths by Dan Olsson), “Timewaste/Lovewaste”, “Colonna Sonora” and “Microphones”.

No other releases by the band but they did appear on a few compilations.

“Explained” and “Jim” were actually the two first songs they released. They appeared on “Labrador Kingsize Vol#1” (LAB020) in 2002.

In 2004 the band contributed “Always No” to “CD 9 – 2004” released by Groove (GROOVE0408). That same year the song “The Fast Way (of Making Art)” appeared on “Labrador Kingsize Vol#2” (LAB052) and an extended version of this same song was on “Club AC30 #2” a CDR comp released by Club AC30 (AC301025).

2005 sees the song “Alison” appear on “Never Lose that Feeling Volume One” released by Club AC30 (AC302052). And in 2007 “Expired” appears on “David Design from Sweden with Love” (LAB031) and on the 4CD boxset “A Complete History of Popular Music” (LAB100) they had “Expired”, “Smoke Screen”, “A Question of Gender” and “Always No”.

The band had started recording a second album but don’t know how far along they got. I remember seeing online some songs for it many years ago if my memory serves me right. But nothing was ever released. According to Pontus Wallgren the songs for the 2nd album were lost in a computer crash though mixdowns and semi-mixed versions of the songs do exist. Hopefully one day they can finish them and release them!

So many things I’d love to hear… curious if anyone has more details? And yeah, what are they doing these days? Any cool pop projects?

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Listen
Douglas Heart – Timewaste/Lovewaste

22
Apr

Happy weekend! Let me go straight to some good recommendations today!

Whimsical: last post I mentioned I was going to go check what I had missed from Shelflife Records. Well, I certainly missed Whimsical’s “Melt”. This album was released on April 1st with 9 superb shoegaze tracks. In the past I had recommended them, mentioning that the band from Indiana was active from 1999 to 2005 and later reformed in 2015. This is a very fine record and it is available in CD and vinyl (different colors too)

FOG: this one is also on Shelflife but looks sold out on both color and black vinyl versions. I am not familiar with this Seoul four-piece so listening to their album “Fogesque” even if it is on Bandcamp is good. The 9 track album is also a fine shoegaze record. Little by little I feel Shelflife is becoming a go-to label for dreampop sounds!

Cristina Quesada: now time to also check what I may have missed from Elefant Records. Surprisingly I missed listening to Cristi’s “Primavera”, a digital single that was released in March! Our favourite singer from Canary Islands has three songs here, “Primavera”, “Be My Baby” (a cover of Vanessa Paradis) and “Italia (English version)”. Also announced is that there will be an album coming out soon to be titled “Dentro Al Tuo Sogno”.

Lisasinsón: another favourite band of mine on Elefant is the great Valencia punky pop band Lisasinsón. After their 10″ release the duo is back with a digital single called “No Sé Muy Bien”. Fun!

Lightning in a Twilight Hour: and lastly an essential record. “Overwintering” is the latest release by Bobby Wratten’s band. 11 songs where he collaborate with Ian Catt, ex-Field Mice colleagues like Anne Mari Davies and Michael Hiscock and Beth Arzy from Trembling Blue Stars. A superb 11 track record that is available now on vinyl and CD. This is one that I can’t miss. And neither should you.

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Once again through stoneeyedkiller’s Youtube channel I end up on Soundcloud discovering an obscure band and their wonderful sounds.

This time from the US. From Anaheim, California. Close to Los Angeles. The account owner is Oliver Zavala. His band’s name was Sandbox. And there are four songs from a 1991 demo tape.

The song names are “Chester”, “I Don’t Mind”, “Unforgettable” and “Don’t Mind Me”.

As soon as you listen to them you can tell they loved The Smiths. The guitars are very Johnny Marr-esque. That’s good in my book. I suppose in yours too!

The band was formed by Oliver Zavala on vocals, Ryan Steele on guitars, James Scoggins on bass and Phil Hanson on drums.

The tape artwork is very of the time. Black and white. A hug. The name of the band.

Other than this there is no other information. Oliver has some songs of his own also uploaded. They sound quite different to Soundbox of course.

Then after a little googling I find that there’s a Sandbox Facebook page.

What do we find there? That there was the intention of reunion gig in 2009. It seems it never happened. There are also many photos from the 90s. From there we can figure out some more details.

First that the band played at Goodies with The Pure and Praise Folly. Another venue we know they played was Lindy’s Cafe in Anaheim. At Quality Ballroom they played alongside with Whiskey Biscuit, Suburban Rhythm, Barney’s Bicycle and Nuckle Brothers. Another gig they played was at Anti-Club in Hollywood with True to Life, Full Moon and Standard Fruit.

This is all I could find. Really cool sounds and you wonder what happened to them. If they were in bands afterwards and if they sounded as good as Soundbox! Any West Coast friends remember them?

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Listen
Sandbox – Chester

20
Apr

Our friend Tim shared the other day with us, on the comments section, the mysterious Orchard Popfest. What is it? Who is behind it? When will it happen? There is absolutely no info online. There’s just an instagram account and that’s all. According to Tim the location seems to be somewhere in South Somerset… but nothing yet announced. We will have to keep an eye on this!

U.S. Highball: the Glasgow band seems to have been a favourite at Madrid Popfest. They were presenting then their latest, the superb album “A Parkhead Cross of the Mind” that was released by Bingo Records in Europe and by Lame-O in the US. The vinyl album has 12 songs of upbeat pop, with great hooks and solid lyrics!

Keaper: now we head to Melbourne. Been a while since I checked out a band from that city, in the past it seems I would do it in a weekly-basis! “Fade” is the name of the EP this four-piece released last March. 5 songs of dreamy and fuzzy dreampop crafted smartly by Ameya Ajay, Julia Derwas, Austin del Rio and Samuel Wallace.

Royal Arch: I am still going backwards after missing lots of music between November and March. Royal Arch’s 7″ with “La Nuit” and “Road to the Light” seems to be sold out at Make Me Happy Records from Greece. The record was also out on Jigsaw Records in the US so maybe there’s luck there!

Sugar for the Pill: the other record I missed from Make Me Happy Records was “Wanderlust” by Sugar for the Pill. This also seems to be sold out. In the US it was released by Shelflife, maybe there’s luck there. Now that I think of it, next post I’ll go through Shelflife’s catalog and see what I’ve missed. Anyhow, the vinyl album of this great pop band has 10 songs seems one that we all should try to track down.

Happypills: another sold out record. This one is from a favourite band of the blog, the Japanese Happypills. A cassette EP titled “Porthole” was released by Miles Apart Records last February. It sounds fantastic, and it does look like Japanese music mailorders may still have copies.

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Now we head to Dublin, Ireland.

Another Soundcloud account, this one put together by Keith G. Byrne. I suppose part of the band. Must be!

The first song I listen to is called “Sell You My Soul”. I see that this song was recorded in 1989 at Harolds Cross 24 track studio. Then another jangly track comes up, “Smile Again”. This recorded in Sun Studios in Dublin. No year for this track.

I am not sure if this is the best way to go through the songs and the band. “See What We Can Do” and “Day to Day” were also recorded at Sun Studios.

There are also live tracks. There is a whole gig of the band playing at The Ramblers Room in Dublin on December 10, 1988. That day the band played “Be My Friend”, “See What We Can Do”, “Sell You My Soul”, “I’m Tearing Me Apart”, “What is the Message”, “Tears of a Clown”, “The Place Where I Was”, “Two Great Days”, “Desperation”, “Alison”, “Day to Day”, “Smile Again”, “Bigmouth Strikes Again”, “Sell You My Soul” and “Smile Again”. Clearly they liked The Smiths to cover them. And also it seems “Smile Again” was their most well known song if they did it as an encore?

But that’s not all. There is a second gig, also at The Ramblers Room but this one dating from March 4, 1989. That day the band played: “Desperation”, “See What We Can Do”, “Two Great Days”, “Sell You My Soul”, “Alison”, “Loving Only You”, “The Place Where I Was Born”, “Tears of a Clown”, “What is the Message”, “I’m Tearing Me Apart”, “Is She Really Going Out with Him?”, “Day to Day”, “Smile Again”, “Be My Friend”, “Bigmouth Strikes Again”, ” Day to Day” and “See What We Can Do”.

At this last gig we know the band had become a 5 piece. The had just added Mark Wilde as their saxophonist. Previously the 4 piece was formed by Johnny Boulevard on vocals and guitar, Tim Murphy on guitar and vocals, Keith G. Byrne on bass and Jimmy Murphy on drums.

Another track I find on Soundcloud is an instrumental version of the song “It’s So Easy”.

It looks like the band split in 1989. I am guessing here that after they split 3 of their members went to form the band Soul Doubt. Songs by this band are also on the Soundcloud. The recordings are much rougher, maybe recorded at their practice space. I don’t know. You can see the potential. It says the band used to play at the Baggot Inn with the wonderful The Outpatients.

I look for more info about them, I look in Irishrock.org but they are not listed there.

It’s interesting to find some superb songs here but see that they never released a record. Any of my Irish friends remember them? Would be nice to know their story.

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Listen
Mrs. Joyce – Day to Day

18
Apr

Happy Monday all!

Not much news this weekend, but I am hoping that this week will be eventful. Right now the new projects are on the band’s side, I have to be patient and wait a bit. But I hope soon things will start moving faster.

Last weekend was Wales Goes Pop, one of the few pop festivals around. I was looking on Facebook at my friend’s photos. Seems like they had lots of fun. Would be nice to return to Wales someday. I hope the festival continues for many years. We need more of them!

Space Daze: new music by the ex-Seapony. The Seattle one-man band has just released “Remote View” a mellow 5-song EP. The release seems to be available in digital format only but it is pretty enough to spend time streaming it, having it play time and time again. If you think of Seattle, you think of rain, rainy days… the music gives you just that feeling.

Swiss Portrait: this cool project by Edinburgh’s Michael Kay Terence will be releasing a digital EP titled “Safe House” on April 25. It will have 6 songs and we can now preview two of them. I suggest checking out the excelleent “Play with Fire”, with some superb guitars and great vocals. Really like it!

Atmos Bloom: Curtis Paterson and Tilda Gratton from Manchester are behind this dreampop band. Their latest single “Daisy” is a true corker! I thought the song was great immediately. Great melody, good vocal delivery and the guitars are ace. This is a digital single, I hope it gets released in physical format.

An Ocean of Embers: the great Nantes band is back with a reworked version of their song “Last Night I Fell Agsain”. The band formed by Jimmy Arfosea and Elsa Muller have recorded three versions of this track, the normal one, an acoustic mix and an instrumental. Sounds good!

The Catherines: “I’m Gonna Sue You Real Good” is the new track by the duo from Hamburg. The band that has the best song titles out there, also knows how to make wonderful pop songs. This digital single is no exception!

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I was listening after many years the EP “Turbulencias en Nunca-Jamás” by the Spanish band Tecnicolor. One thing that came to mind immediately was that I didn’t know anything about them. That this was the only release I knew by them and as far as I know they disappeared into obscurity.

I am looking at the CD release that was lovely designed by Gregorio Soria, the mastermind of Annika Records. The EP wasn’t released by his label but by Elefant Records in 2001. Catalog number being ER-340.

I remember playing these songs a lot back in the early 2000s. They may have aged a bit now. But I still have a soft-spot for them. 5 songs were on this EP, “Tú (Eres la Solución)”, “De Otro Color”, “Yo Sé Qu´é Es”, “Amor Bajo Cero” and “Parecido a una Ilusión”.

The band was just two people, Marta on vocals and keyboards and Horacio on guitars. One interesting thing is that the songs were recorded at Refugio Antiaéreo in January of 2001. This studio was Los Planetas studio. Los Planetas being the biggest indie band in Spain. Erik Jiménez played the drums and Miguel López the bass, both members of Los Planetas. You start to wonder if the band was from Granada. Could be because of these connections, right?

The producer was Carlos Hernández and Mónica Esteban did backing vocals. Mastering was done at Sonoland in Madrid by Carlos as well.

That’s all the info on the CD. But one thing I remember from back in the days is that the band had more songs, probably released as demo CDRs. Could I find more info about that?

The band did record  at least three more songs that we know about. “Mi Plato Favorito” which was included in the compilation “Le Touriste Rebusca en el Desván de la Nueva Ola” released by Ventilador Music (CDM 031) in 2003. This of course was a cover of Rubi y los Casinos.

Then a cover of “Oh Que Pena Me Das” by Aerolíneas Federales was included in “Alegra la Cara – Tributo a Aerolíneas Federales” that was released by Ya Estas Ya Producciones YP-10) in 2005. And lastly that same year the song “Idiomas del Corazón” was inccluded in “Contempopránea – 10 Años Pop (Concurso Grupo Revelación)” released by Contempopránea, the fine pop festival in Spain.

Then I find that the band actually hailed from Málaga. And luckily a PDF of the Popchild fanzine. Here there is an interview with the band!

Here they mention the following demo CDRs, “10 Minutos Con…”, “Melodías Olvidables” and “Maravilloso Mundo Imperfecto”. There is no tracklist btu we have some names now.

Seems that their relationship with Elefant was just for the CDEP. When this interview was conducted the band was looking for a label. Seems they had no luck as they never released anything afterwards.

Another interview is available in El Planeta Amarillo, Rafa Skam’s fanzine. At this point it seems the band had grown, now they had Sara on keyboards, Manolo on bass and Alberto on drums. A five-piece! A curious detail too is that Horacio had a bar in downtown Malaga. So cool, would be nice to visit if he is still running it! Sara on the other hand was a teacher in an institute, Sara was studying piano and music education while Manolo and Alberto were into computer science.

And finally found all of the band’s songs that were released on their demos (though can’t seem to find anything about the release “10 Minutos Con…”).

The demo CD “Febrero” from 2002 had the songs “Gotas de Lluvia”, “Cuando estás Conmigo” and “Un Mal Sueño”. Then “Golpes de Amor” also released in 2002 had “Deja Ya de Disimular”, “Cuatro Razones”, “Quizás” and “Mi Plato Favorito”.

“Maravilloso Mundo Imperfecto” came out in 2003 and had the songs “¿Qué Me Das?”, “Bubblegum”, “El Reloj de Arena” and “Plata”. In 2003 they also release “Melodías Olvidables” with the songs “Idiomas del Corazón”, “Enloquecer es Posible”, “Adiós Tristeza”, “Mi Hombre Invisible” and “Mi Droga eres Tú”. Lastly in 2004 they put out “El Color de Algunos Días” which had four more songs, “Si Supieras”, “Amor 100%”, “Tu Suave Violencia” and “Hipnotizada”.

What happened to Horacio and Marta. Where are they now?

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Listen
Tecnicolor – Plata

15
Apr

I was telling you that Say Sue Me was to tour the US and play NYC in about three weeks. Well that gig will now be in November, not sure why. In a way it is good to me that it is a bit more spaced between the Cariño gig on the 28 and them the week after. I feel a gig a month I can probably go.

I have friends that have been going to gigs for so many months now and continue being healthy. I guess I am not that worried about health right now after getting infected in February. I should have some immunity for at least one or two more months. At the same time there is a new Omicron variant that they say will create another peak in infections.

But I want to go to see bands. Especially those that aren’t from NYC and that I won’t have much chances to see again if I miss this opportunity. For example Cariño is a true rarity. A band that sings in Spanish playing here, that is a true surprise. Say Sue Me maybe is not, they are in a label that have some muscle. But still, a band hailing from Busan and coming to NYC is something uncommon. So one has to do everything not to miss these opportunities!

The Harriets: I interviewed this fantastic Japanese band a long time ago! Their tape with “Eenie, Meenie, Miney, Moe” has been sold out for a long time too. But here is the good news, the Indonesian label Gerpfast Record is re-releasing the tape! It is limited to just 75 copies, so don’t miss it. Out on May 31.

Foliage: this project by Manuel Joseph Walker has been a favourite of mine for years now. Every time I have the chance to recommend one of his songs, I do. His latest single is “Can’t Go Anywhere”, a fine jangly track that has some beautiful melodies. There is even a video for it!

Mint Julep: another band I have followed the last few years is this duo formed by Keith and Hollie Kenniff. This latest release of them is actually a collection of covers, 7 in total, of the likes of Bananarama, Tears for Fears, Depeche Mode and more.

Stomp Talk Modstone: the Japanese band is back with “Mew”, a new full-length album with 20 songs! The band formed by Takamitsu Kawashima, Naoki Nishino, Kouta Hoshino, Megumu Asai and Ayumi Igarashi has been getting lots of praise for their brand of shoegaze. This new album seems to be available in digital format.

We.The Pigs: this record seems to be a must for everyone. At least that’s what I think. Released back in November the Swedish band has crafted a wonder. Released by the great Berlin based label Dreams Never End, the 12 songs shine and impress. I need to get a copy of this. I need to see if Jigsaw Records have copies!

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Ian Hadley on vocals, Nick Morgan on bass, Steve Chen on drums and Jamie Sinclair-Thomson on guitar were The Penny Drops.

The band hailed from Cardiff, Wales, according to the Facebook page Cardiff Music History. It was thanks to the Youtube channel that they have that I discovered three songs by this group: “To Sell Your Soul”, “Lost” and “The Chase”. These three songs come from a demo tape. Not sure if the band recorded another one as they were short-lived. The band was only around 1985 and 1986.

The only other interesting information about the band is that previously Nick Morgan and Jamie Reid-Sinclair had been in A Sound Reaction. After the demise of The Penny Drops, Jamie would be involved with The Third Uncles. With this last band the band would end up supporting the likes of The Weather Prophets, Mighty Mighty, The Jack Rubies and more.

And that’s all I can tell you about The Penny Drops. Anyone saw them live? Anyone remembers them?

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Listen
The Penny Drops – To Sell Your Soul

13
Apr

Some cool gigs coming up in NYC that I want to go. First is Cariño at Knitting Factory on April 28. I have a ticket for this. The second one is Say Sue Me at Bowery Ballroom on May 4. This one I haven’t managed to get permission to go to, but I hope I do. The “good” thing is that they are at night and that there are opening bands. So even leaving home at 8pm, after baby falls asleep, I might be able to catch them.

It’s been a while since I went to a concert. More than two years. Let’s see if I can make them!

Vansire: just discovered this dreampop band from Rochester, Minnesota. The band is a duo formed by Samuel Winemiller and Josh Augustin. Their latest release is a digital single called “Kind of a Nice Time” that is really pretty. The band also announces a new album coming out on May 6th.

Petite League: I will go see the Spanish band Cariño in Brooklyn at the end of the month. One of the opening bands is this New York combo. Their latest song is “Pantone Karaoke” which I didn’t get immediately. I prefer their previous effort “Floating Blue” which has a catchier chorus and poppier melodies. The band says they hail from Queens, and that’s something I like. I need to keep listening to their songs, there’s some good stuff!

Peaness: the Chester band is a favourite of many in the indiepopworld. The threee piece know how to craft a good pop song. Their latest “IRL” is no exception. The song will be part of the band’s new album “World Full of Worry” that is coming out on May 6th on vinyl and CD.

Sea Lemon: another digital single. This song is titled “Turn Away” and comes from Seattle! Not much info on their Bandcamp aside that the band tells us they make dreampop and are on the Spirit Goth label. The sound in any case is nice, with a jingle jangly guitar.

Jack in the Green: years ago I interviewed this fantastic early 90s Stoke-on-Trent band formed by Caroline, Corinne, Pete and Mark. Well, now all of their studio recordings, from 1992 to 1993, are on Bandcamp! A fantastic treat for us pop lovers!

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Have to continue raiding Soundcloud for great janglepop from the late 80s and early 90s.

If you follow the link I just shared in the previous line you’ll end up discovering a band called Purple Room. You’ll also notice that there is absolutely no information about the band.

It is easy to assume the band hailed from the UK. There’s a full gig of the band playing in Exeter on June 12, 1992. Where in Exeter? It doesn’t say. We know the songs played that night were “Picture the Moon”, “21 Nightmares”, “Box 17”, “Floating”, “Untitled” and “Wave”. I doubt the band hailed from another country if they were playing Exeter. Most probably too the band hailed from the area.

Never been to Exeter. Was looking that it is about 2 hours from London by train. Wonder if in my next England trip I should visit. There seems to be a good museum called Royal Albert Memorial Museum, a castle called Exeter Castle (though doesn’t look medieval as I like them myself), Exeter Cathedral that looks beautiful and a place called the House that Moved. Interesting.

The band Purple Room recorded many songs. Dating from 1989 to 1993 we find these songs: “Floating”, “All of This”, “Picture the Moon”, “All or Nothing”, “Glow”, “Wave”, “Communication”, “Confused” and “I Want You”.

Then we find three songs that we don’t know the year, they are collected as “Forgotten demos”. These songs are “Skimming Stones”, “Wasted” and “Box 17”.

Then we find 5 songs collected as “Flower Eyes”. Was this an EP? A cassette perhaps? The songs here are “Nothing to do With You”, “Drift Away”, “Kiss the Playground”, “Two” and “A Single Tear”.

I start poking Google. I find aa forum called Thetownend.com. Here there is a post by someone with the alias Saxondale saying he was in a shambling indie band called Purple Room. They had participated in a battle of the bands at the Wyvern. They didn’t win.

I look for a Wyvern venue close by. There is a Wyvern Club in Taunton. That’s 25 minutes by train.

Sadly this is where my detective skills prove useless. I can’t find anything else. I don’t have names. There were no releases as far as I know. Hard to track them down even though they were around for at least 4 years.

Who remembers them?

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Listen
Purple Room – Drift Away

12
Apr

Thanks so much to Rhys and John for the interview! I wrote about Southville time ago on the blog, but it was thanks to the new and essential retrospective compilation “Across the Airwaves” that was just released by the legendary Harriet Records on CD, I was able to get in touch with the band and talk about their music and more!

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

John: Well thanks. Yes, I still do stuff from time to time. Since Southville there has been Metrotone, Landshipping, Ojn and Tonfedd Oren with Rhys. My work rate is very low though.

Rhys: I record covers and things for my own amusement, but I need a sparring partner to motivate me for anything serious.

++ So is Tonfedd Oren still going? What would you say are similarities and differences between Southville and Tonfedd Oren?

John: We wouldn’t rule out doing some more. Life gets in the way though! Similarities? Not sure.

Rhys: Southville is lo-fi jangly indie guitar pop, while Tonfedd Oren is playful synth-based electronica with cut-up vocals. Both have made good use of short-wave radio noises.

++ 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?

John: For me, the house was always full of the Beatles and Bowie.

Rhys: I’d developed a slow-burning obsession with the electric guitar since an early age. Most of the stuff I listened to early on was Welsh-language rock and pop – the Welsh Rare Beat compilations on Finders Keepers will you give you a good idea of that kind of thing. When I was 14, my friend from across the road started playing his mum’s old nylon-string acoustic and he taught me a few chords. We plotted to get electric guitars and form a band, which we eventually did! We were into rock and metal at the time, but later on I discovered the Smiths, The Cure, Jesus and Mary Chain, and read the NME religiously when I went to university.

++ Had you been in other bands before Southville? If so, how did all of these bands sound? Are there any recordings?

John: For me, there were a couple of home-recording projects, notably a track under the name The Locations on a cassette compilation called “Something’s Burning in Paradise Again”. Rhys was a legit pop star though!

Rhys: I wouldn’t go that far! I’d been in a few bands since I was 14 or 15 – not particularly successful, but I’d played live on stage regularly, writing songs (well, just the music part) and made a couple of tv appearances.

++ Where were you from originally?

John: I’m from Staffordshire. Rhys is from Ynys Môn.

Rhys: It’s the little island off the top of Wales.

++ How did you two meet?

Rhys: We were both postgrad students in 1990 and after the department’s Christmas meal there was always an unofficial party in the lab of one of the research groups, everybody would turn up in the afternoon and have a drink or two. I overheard John talk with somebody about recording songs on cassette so I butted in and asked him what kind of stuff he wrote. We had similar tastes so we made big plans but I didn’t expect anything to come of them. John turned up at my flat the next day with a Casio keyboard under his arm! I played him a song I’d written the music for my band which had just fizzled out and that became Looking From A Hilltop.

++ How was Aberystwyth at the time of Southville? 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?

John: We saw loads of bands, both English and Welsh-Language. I remember seeing Y Cyrff and being very impressed…. We saw a lot of pub rock at a place called Rummers too. Andy’s Records was a really good record shop with a knowledgeable owner.

Rhys: John thought Cyrff sounded like Echo and the Bunnymen. Cyrff had been my favourite band for a few years and were a great live act. Mark and Paul from the band went on to form Catatonia. The Welsh language scene was very lively at the time. The Students Union used to get some good bands now and again – I saw The Stone Roses and The House of Love there. The Sea Urchins played there as well but I missed them. Rummers was more pub-jazz though! Andy’s Records is still going strong, and I pop in when I have a chance. There was also a good record fair at the Students Union once a term, and I picked up a lot of good albums there for not much money.

++ I am aware of only a few fantastic Welsh bands of the early 90s but not that many, so I wonder if you have any recommendations for obscure bands that didn’t get a chance to make it?

Rhys: I introduced John to Datblygu, who were hugely influential, and Ffa Coffi Pawb – one of Gruff Rhys’s early bands. There is some great stuff around now as well – Mellt, Los Blancos, Adwaith, Papur Wal, Melin Melyn, Gwenno… You don’t have to understand the words to enjoy a good band.

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

John: We’d usually come up with a tune and share it on cassette, and the other would go away and think of a way of adding to it.

Rhys: What we did quite a lot was once we’d sorted out the music and lyrics, and what we wanted it to sound like, we’d record all the parts and produce the finished song quite quickly – then over several weeks or months we’d refine the ideas, decide we could do a different guitar part, better vocals, a nice keyboard sound or something. So we’d go back and record a much better version. Quite a few songs exist as a rough version and a better version.

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

John: The cassette compilation “Somethings Burning in Paradise Again” was put out by woman called Christina Williams who lived in Southville, Bristol. We thought it was a cool name, like a kind of name of a band who might support Uncle Tupelo or one of the Northwest USA indies we listened to… I actually ended up living in Southville years later, which is kind of an odd thing.

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

John: The Smiths, REM, a lot of the Sarah bands. I remember listening to the Rockingbirds and the Go-Betweens a fair bit at the time.

Rhys: The Smiths and early REM were the big influences on how I played guitar and wrote songs, and John introduced me to the Go-Betweens and the Sarah bands. I loved the NME’s C86 compilation a few years earlier but I hadn’t realised that Sarah (and a host of others I’d come to know) was releasing that kind of stuff still.

++ I was surprised to see a compilation of your songs being released this year by Harriet Records. I didn’t know there was a relation with Tim from Harriet. When did it start? Was it for this compilation or does it go further back?

John: We sent him a demo in … what?… 1994? And he said he couldn’t do a single then. Maybe a compilation. 27 Years later he bought a Tonfedd Oren download on Bandcamp. We wrote to him to say thank you and he said “By the way, are you Southville?” and asked us if we wanted to do a CD!

++ I’ll come back to this compilation in a bit. Let’s go in order. Your first release was the “Looking from a Hilltop” 7″ on Pillarbox Red. This is a fine label with great releases but I know little about them. Who were they and how did you end up working with them?

John: Andrew from Pillarbox had heard the Locations track on “Something is Burning in Paradise Again” and said he liked it and did we have anything else? By that time Southville had started so it was very serendipitous.

++ Speaking of the title song, “Looking from a Hilltop”, was the song inspired by any hill perhaps in Aberystwyth, or not really?

John: Kind of – I always think of Constitution Hill in Aberystwyth.

Rhys: The view from there is the background on the inside of the CD booklet.

++ Before this release, had you already released demo tapes? Or were the songs on the 7″ your first recordings?

John: They were our first songs.

++ On the sleeve there’s a map, is it Aberystwyth? Or another place?

John: Yes its Aberystwyth, with the town name Tippexed out!

Rhys: We were concerned that we’d get into trouble with the Ordnance Survey (who publish maps)! It was all done with photocopiers, razor blades, glue, and Letraset.

++ There’s a song called “16th of April” and I was wondering, is this day an important day for you? Or why this date?

John: I was thinking of the 16th April 1989, just a very odd day when no-one was at their best, against a backdrop of awful national events. I also thought that “16th April” was a cool title.

++ I also was wondering about the sleeve of your next record, the “Inside and Out” 7″. Where was that photo taken?

John: My colleague Richard Bambrey, who is an excellent photographer, took the picture of a wave hitting the shore at Aberystwyth.

++ The “Inside and Out” 7″ has the same song on both sides. Was this on purpose? Why?

John: It was cheaper, and allowed us to sell the song, including postage, for under a pound in the UK. I love the fact there is only one song on it. No need for a b-side.

++ And do tell me about the new version of this song that is on the compilation. It was recorded many years later, in 2013. What made you rediscover and rework your song?

John: We’ve both always been proud of Inside and Out. When digital recording came along it Rhys did a new version of it. I put a new vocal on one day when I came over to do some Tonfedd Oren vocals.

Rhys: The original version was recorded very quickly… I think we did it in a morning after the weekend we spent recording Hilltop and the other songs for the first EP. At the time I don’t think we knew it was going to be coming out on record so it was kind of rushed, just to get the idea down and I made at least one glaring mistake trying to play the bass line I’d just written. Years later I have much nicer guitars and a much better recording setup, and I thought the song had more potential than the one we’d hurriedly recorded on a 4-track with a cheap microphone.

++ So only these two 7″s were released even though you had many more songs. How come? Was there any interest from other labels at the time?

John: No! There was a plan for a split LP on Pillarbox, and a single on Meller Welle. It was so expensive to do vinyl then. We were very keen to get on Sarah Records, and still have some quite inventive rejection letters from them!

Rhys: We though the Meller Welle EP was our best opportunity yet so decided to spend a weekend at a real studio to get at least a couple of songs recorded well. Neil the engineer managed to get a great sound from us, so it was disappointing that it didn’t come out at the time. There was also a cover of a Field Mice song we did for a tribute LP that didn’t happen either.

++ You did appear on tons of cassette compilations in the 90s. One tape label that released you a lot in your compilations was Grapefruit. Again if there’s anything you could tell me about them, that’d be great.

John: It was always good to do cassette compilations. Grapefruit was done by a chap called Simon Minter. We are still in touch – we follow each other on Twitter. He’s an excellent graphic designer and you can see it even then in these photocopied cassette inlays.

++ Your songs appeared on compilations in the US, Italy, Germany… How did it work in those pre-internet days? Did you ever meet the people behind these tapes?

John: No – in fact we weren’t aware of some of them! We send tapes out to people. It took a long time to get responses, and was quite an expensive and time consuming process to buy a cassette, record onto it, write a letter, send it out. I bumped into Karen White, who ran Pillarbox Red with Andrew Austin a few years ago and she described the whole letters-tapes-fanzines scene as “incredibly slow social media”!

Rhys: It was a good way to get some exposure. We had a load of songs recorded by then, so we were happy to “donate” one to a cassette compilation so that more people could get to hear us.

++ I am looking at the new compilation called “Across the Airwaves” and something that caught my attention is that you recorded many songs in Edinburgh. Did you move to Scotland at some point? Or how come you were recording that far from Wales?

John: Rhys had a job at the University of Edinburgh and, by accident, a year or two later I got one too. So there was a year or so when we overlapped there, and of course we met up and recorded songs.

Rhys: Ironically, we became very productive in terms of writing songs when were living far away from each other. John lent me his 4-track for a while and I recorded the music, then we’d met up for a weekend now and again and finish a couple of songs.

++ On the compilation there are 18 tracks. Are these all of your recordings or are there still unreleased songs waiting to be released?

John: There are others but I think these are about the best.

Rhys: I’m a bit of an archivist, and I think we have about 40 recorded tracks, plus a handful of unfinished ones. A lot of songs were recorded twice or even three times though. We’d record it quickly to get the idea down, then we’d think of more ideas and record it again more carefully, with more effort to get the right sound. There are a couple of others which could easily have made it onto the album, but between us and Tim I think we agreed on the best selection.

++ Lastly the CD includes the original Harriet rejection letter! How did you take it at the time and how did you take it now that Harriet is finally releasing all your songs?!

John: We have many, many rejection letters, Harriet was only one. Hearing from Tim was amazing though. Its excellent that these songs are having a second life.

++ I think my favourite song of yours might as well be “Inside and Out”, wondering if you could tell me what inspired this song? What’s the story behind it?

John: It is about a very specific incident, but its many years ago, and… all’s good now and I will say no more.

Rhys: I had some nice sounding jangly chords which I’d been playing for weeks but couldn’t work into a complete song. John cajoled me by suggesting random chords and it quickly came together. We’d also discovered how to program a cool new beat into the drum machine, which worked perfectly with the guitar part.

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

John: “Inside and Out” – I love the fragility and the vague grooviness. I also like “She Says” and the four tracks on the first single. “Sometimes…” as well.

Rhys: I quite like “Underneath The Sky” at the moment because I think it marked a point where my songwriting had progressed, I was arranging more varied guitar parts and programming the drum machine in a more realistic way. The sound and the lyrics just takes me back to carefree summer Saturday afternoons in my flat in Aberystwyth in the early 90s.

++ What about gigs? Did you play many?

None

++ When and why did The Southville stop making music? Were you involved in any other bands afterwards?

John: We moved apart, we had other priorities. I did Metrotone, Landshipping, Ojn… Tonfedd Oren has been lots of fun.

Rhys: I only really played for my own amusement, so I was glad when John sent me some demos of his electronic stuff that became Tonfedd Oren. A totally different way of working for me, but yes, a lot of fun creating the tracks.

++ Has there been any Southville reunions?

John: We have been out for a pint together on occasion if that’s what you mean?

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

John: We got on the radio in France and Belgium. I think that kind of sound made much more sense there than it did in the UK.

Rhys: I remember a small college radio station somewhere in the USA playing us as well, but the radio play was quite sporadic I think. And of course at the time, we couldn’t hear it! The new CD has been picked up by a couple of blogs already so hopefully it will get some radio play.

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

John: None whatsoever!

++ What about fanzines?

John: Yes, quite a few. We were very pleased to have a long piece in a beautiful zine called “Soft White Underbelly”. There were odd bits and pieces in French zines and “Swinging Ruislip”, the Pillarbox in-house fanzine.

Rhys: We made a demo tape to send to prospective labels and it ended up being reviewed by a publication called Sun Zoom Spark, which was much glossier and substantial than the usual photocopied fanzines.

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

John: The first single arriving in the post!

Rhys: Andrew and Karen had sent them to John and he came round to my flat. I went to make coffee and he left them on the table, waiting for me to notice! It took me a couple of minutes because I was expecting the covers to be black and white, not red.

++ Never been to Aberystwyth so I’d like to ask a local about what you would suggest checking out in your town, like what are the sights one shouldn’t miss? Or the traditional food or drinks that you love that I should try?

John: Just walk along the sea front on a sunny evening.

Rhys: I’ve had the opportunity to spend time in Aberystwyth regularly again. It’s kind of completely different to how it was, but still the same, if you see what I mean. There are are a few interesting restaurants there now, hidden away. And of course Andy’s Records is still going strong.

++ Anything else you’d like to add?

The text from the CD booklet, in case you find it useful:

So: Rhys and John, grad students in Aberystwyth, on the coast of Wales, six hours from London, but in a different country. It’s Christmas 1990 and at a party we start talking about music. We agree on the Smiths, Jesus and Mary Chain, and bands who became Catatonia and the Super Furry Animals. Rhys had been in a couple of Welsh-language bands, had made an album, been on the television; John had some home recordings and a pile of rejection letters. Maybe we could try recording something ourselves?

One of John’s solo tracks on a cassette compilation (based in Southville, Bristol) attracted a DIY label in London called Pillarbox Red, run by Karen White and Andrew Austin, one of many small labels producing cheap, short run 7”s made in newly-open Eastern Europe and selling them at gigs and by mail order in the UK, Europe and the US — new, relaxed customs rules in Europe had recently made this cheaper and easier. Fanzines and home-duplicated compilation tapes spread news and music, loosely clustered around a group of bands, writers, fans and labels inspired by the DIY ethic of Sarah Records. John met Karen 20 years later. She succinctly encapsulated the scene as a “kind of extremely slow social media…”

A demo followed, recorded on a hired 4-track, which led to two Pillarbox Red singles, and more compilation cassettes. The songs reflected the time and our situation: set in the kitchens of shared houses; concerning letters that are written or not, received or not; (phone calls were expensive, email a rarity); the yearning to join in with a different, wider world, yet a preoccupation with the psychogeography of the quietly amazing place we lived in (Before you go, think of me, looking from a hilltop to the sea). The singles got on a small, syndicated Belgian radio show. We sent out demos to labels and fanzines. People began to write from abroad — French women, German men… we never did understand why things split like that.

New influences came: the beginnings of Britpop and shoegaze, dance beats. Tapes of US bands via Pillarbox Red. Political and environmental concerns. Together we watched Welsh music TV, Rhys filling the gaps in John’s understanding of the language. We moved out of Aber to respective jobs across the UK, swapped tapes in the post, recorded some demos over a few weekends, overlapped in 1996 by accident in Edinburgh and recorded three tracks for a German single that didn’t happen, in a real studio.

Our lives diverged. Music kept us in touch despite working on our own musical projects. In the early 2010s we worked together again on some tracks as Tonfedd Oren (tonfeddoren.bandcamp.com) which resulted in a single on orange vinyl which still gets regular radioplay, and we revisited “Sometimes…” and “Inside and Out”.

So this was Southville. Thanks Tim at Harriet Records, for this chance to listen again and put it in context. I think I finally know what I was singing about: A feeling of joining a silent tradition without knowing quite what it meant.

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Listen
Southville – Inside and Out

11
Apr

Happy Monday!

Seems like I’ll be in Paris in July. Also in Brussels for the first time. As every time I get to travel I am happy to bring records to anyone living in these cities to save on postage. I know there is still a lot of time until then (I’ll do a reminder later on), but do let me know if you’d like any of the label’s releases.

Now let’s see what we found over the weekend.

Los Lucha: the Glasgow band that was an amazing surprise last year with their first tape is back and better than before. Their new release is also a tape. It is aptly titled “Tape 2” and has that superb guitars we fell in love with. The EP has 5 songs that carry the flag of the c86 bands and Galaxie 500. A good mix indeed.

Sapphire & Steel: a new track by this great duo formed by Jørn Åleskjær and Estella Rosa. This new digital single is titled “Evelina” and it is a fine jangly tune. The long-distance project has been releasing fine songs every couple of months. I hope they are thinking of putting something out soon!

The Reds, Pinks & Purples: there were some t-shirts being sold by the San Francisco band. They are sold out now. But 3 songs are available, “Life in the Void”, “Nothing Between the Lines at All” and “Evening at Land’s End”. As usual they are excellent. How does Glenn Donaldson do it?

Shiny Times: 4 songs recorded in Garageband between February 2020 and February 2021 by Kim Hart. “Start with S” has four songs that start with the letter S. That’s right. According to Kim this is a song dump, I guess these songs didn’t find a place where to be released but glad that we can listen to them in the end.

Love, Burns: and now a live set by our friends from New York! Phil’s band played at Pete’s Candy Store on February 10, 2022, and the 8 songs from that night are here to listen and enjoy! For this live gig the band formed with Phil on vocals, Alex on bass, Kenny on lead guitar and Hampus on drums.

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Another draft I left years ago was my intended post on the fantastic German band Painting by Numbers.

Of course, you’ll figure out immediately that they took their name from the Television Personalities. And that’s a good thing. That tells us a lot of the band’s intentions.

The band was active in the early 90s and were based in the city of Darmstadt. I’ve been to Germany many times, but not to this city. Oh dear…. it hurts me that I was supposed to go to Germany on 2020, but with the pandemic that plan was killed. I may have been able to visit their city… who knows…

Maybe soon?

Anyhow, according to Discogs we know of at least two releases. The first one is a demo tape that dates from 1990. This tape had four songs on it, two on each side. The A side had “Von Einem Fremden Stern Zurück” and “Samstag Abend” while the B side had “Lied Für Werner Enke” and “Rette Mich (Live Am 9.2.199 Krone-Darmstadt)”. There is no artwork uploaded for this release so sadly don’t know how this tape looked like.

The second release is a CDR live album released in 1996 on the label Declaration of Santo (DoS 12). According to the small bio  I found, this label was founded by the band The Dass Sägebett to release and distribute material of their own band and related bands. I don’t think any of the Painting By Numbers were in that band, so maybe they were just friends? Or what was the relation?

Anyhow, this live album was titled “Samstag Abend”. I really hope I could find it. The songs were recorded live on October 10, 1996, at Goldene Krone, a music venue in Darmstadt and mixed by Achim Lowitsch. The songs were “Lilac Car”, “Jesus Comes Again”, “Pet Cementary”, “Atomic Café”, “All Gone”, “Samstag Abend”, “Lied Für Werner Enke”, “Carol”, “Der Auftrag Lautet: Töte Sie!”, “Fremder Stern”, “Der Schönste Mann Dieser Welt”, “Die Zeit Läuft Dir Davon”, “Hassliebe”, “Tief Über Irland”, “Fantastic Feeling”, “Einsam”, “Leuchtturm” and “Eisbär”.

I was curious then about the song they dedicated to Werner Enke. I didn’t know who he was so I had a look. Turns out he is a film actor and screenwriter. I have to say I haven’t seen any of his films. Anyone has any recommendations where to start?

The other detail we know about the band is that of the band members. They were 6 people in the band. Four guys, two girls. The band was formed then by Andreas Debus, Cornelia Henker, Felix Bayer, Frank Koriath, Herbert Sterzik, Peter Horsch and Silke Dressler. Okay, I have said 7 members and in the photo there are six. So one of the guys listed is not on the photo. I want to say it is Felix Bayer the one missing. But can’t be sure. In any case all of them were members at some point of the band.

When it comes to compilations the band did appear on a few. That’s how I discovered them actually, thanks to appearing on “Hier Super 21 – Bitte Maiden!” LP compilation released by Viel Leicht (Propeller 005) in 1993. I own this record where they appear with the song “Samstag Abend”.

But there’s more. In 1989 the band started appearing already on compilations. On the P-fanzine issue number four a 7″ compilation came with it. On it the band contributed the song “Lied Für Werner Enke”. That same year they contributed two songs, “Lilac Car” and “Jesus Comes Again” to the fantastic indiepop compilation “Mit Sonnenschirmen Fingen Wir Den Blütenzauber” on Frischluft Tonträger (FRL 002). So good! I had interviewed Krischan! who ran this amazing label.

Another label I had interviewed, Blam-A-Bit, included them on a cassette tape called “Instants of Pleasure” (BLAM 001) in 1990. The song on this tape was “All Gone”. Then on the classic cassette tape compilation “Heaven Sent” (HS 002) released by Heaven Sent that same year the band had the song “Kill Them All”.

Lastly in 1990 the band had the songs “Einsam” and “Von Einem Fremden Stern Zurück (Remix)” on a compilation LP titled “Hurra, Wir Leben Noch!” that came out on Daxl-Musicx (52-489).

In 1992 we seee the band include “Samstag Abend” on “Mermaid Employee of the Month: Gustav Sackmüller” (MIRABELL 665), a CD, cassette and 7″ compilation. Their song appears on the tape.

The other compilations are more recent. So in 2016 the band contributed “Lied F¨¨ür Werner Enke” to “Falscher Ort Falsche Zeit” (TR331) and “Fremder Stern” to “Falscher Ort Falsche Zeit Volume 2” (TR345) released both by Tapete Records.

Now, on what other bands were the band members involved with? Well it turns out that Andreas Debus did contribute to The Dass Sägebett, playing guitar on one of their songs as far as I know. Felix Bayer on the other hand was in Der Heitere Himmel and the legendary Die Fünf Freunde. Frank Koriath, the same, he was on Die Fünf Freunde.

What else have I found out?

There is an official video for the song “All Gone” on Youtube! This is a great find. I believe the video is not from the time when the band was active, but the footage is. So this is amazing actually.

Om this same account, by Petrus Morsch (I want to think he is Peter Horsch?) I find live performances of the band. There is a video of them playing “Lilac Car” in 1997 at Negativ in Frankfurt, supporting the Cosmic Psychos. Then there’s them playing “Eisbär” with the help of Hardy Zech from The Dass Sägebett. And lastly them playing a cover of Die Sterne’s “Ein Verregneter Sommer“.

And that’s what I could find out. I wonder why they didn’t release any records on their own at the time. They had fantastic songs. Would be great to find out more details about this amazing German band!

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Listen
Painting by Numbers – All Gone

08
Apr

It’s Friday and I really need this weekend. Been tired lately.

Things still moving slowly on my side. Trying to find out the DAT tapes from an 80s band that I love. Emailing here and there. Another band trying to figure out publishing deals. Waiting and waiting now for things to be more clear.

Cinema Engines: Our friend Sebastian Voss from Nah… and The Grindcore Poppies has a new project with Nero Bates from The No Colour Twins and it is called Cinema Engines. The two Münster guys have just put out a limited CD single out titled “Hello Springtime, Hello Sunshine” that has two wonderful poppy songs, “Springtime Remains” and “Netty’s House”. Both tracks are excellent. Don’t miss this one out.

The Crooner: here’s a new digital single by Zissimos from Athens! The classic project of his is teaming with Make Me Haappy aand this one is a song I don’t think I’ve heard before! Is it an old one? or a new one? I don’t know! But “I Wish I Were a Jet” is really lovely.

Amor Propio: this new project that features ex-members of Cola Jet Set sounds great. The band just released a self-titled 7″ EP! It has 3 songs of sweet pop Barcelona-style, with influences that go from bands like the aforementioned Cola Jet Set, Brighton 64 or Kamenbert.

Broke Chanter: David McGregor, formerely of Kid Canaveral, is behind this cool project that has released an album titled “Catastrophe Hits”. The album which is available on vinyl and CD has 10 songs of great pop songs! It came out a bit ago, back in October but I just find out about it. So maybe you also missed it or maybe not. The thing is this Glasgow band seems to be on the right track, this is a fine album!

Ferri-Chrome: and we end this week with yet another fantastic album! The new one by Japan’s Ferri-Chrome! Titled “Dazzling Azure” it is indeed dazzling. The dreamy band has released this record on CD with Testcard Records and I would say to everyone to get it. I will try to do so myself too. 10 songs of pop brilliance!

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I thought I had written about Mr Peculiar before. I guess not. I was looking at my 7″ collection and thought, this looks obscure enough for the blog, but I wrote about them before, right? A quick look on my list of bands on the right-hand column of the blog shows me that no, I didn’t yet. So let’s see what can we find about this British band!

The band, as far as I know, only released one 7″ on the label Lust Recordings. Lust was Stephen from Woosh second label. Mr Peculiar’s release was the third on the label (LUST 3) and came out in 1990. Three songs were included, “Loonyverse” on the A side and “How Many Times” and “Isle of View” on the B side.

The producers of the songs were Richard Fromby and Mike Stout. The songs had been recorded at Woodhouse Studios in Leeds in June 1990. There is an address. We know then that the band hailed from Leeds.

I see a photo of the band playing at Daggi’s Bar in June 1990. It says that Simon Spaceman is on vocals. The guitarist has left a comment. He links to a page of his photography. I can’t find his name though…

I find a gigography for the Pale Saints. I see that on March 15 (my birthday!), 1989, Mr Peculiar supported the Pale Saints in Lancaster.

Sadly this is all I could find about them. I hope someone remembers them and can give us some insights, some details, about the band!

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Mr Peculiar – Isle of View

07
Apr

Thanks so much to Tony Gauslin for the interview! I wrote about the one-off project Boy Mouse, Girl Mouse years ago on the blog! The band formed by him and Beth (Aberdeen, Jetstream Pony and many more) released one song you can imagine that there was very little info about the band. Happily Tony was up to fill in the blanks and also tell us more about other music projects he has been involved with!

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

Hi Roque. Thanks for asking me to do this. I’m doing well – managing to survive in a world that lately seems to get a new wrench thrown into it every few months. A lot of that is thanks to having music to fall back on to distract me from life.

++ 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?

First music memories? Probably hearing my dad listening to Zeppelin, Heart, Pink Floyd, and Fleetwood Mac in the late 70s. My first instrument was drums/percussion, which I started in 6th grade. I was a serious band nerd growing up and was in band through all of junior high and high school. The music program was a pretty serious thing where I lived. Marching band/drumline, symphonic band, after-school percussion ensemble, pit band for a couple musicals, etc. The private lessons that I took only focused on drum set for the first year or two, then I switched instructors and instead focused more on orchestral percussion (concert snare, tympani, marimba/xylophone/other mallet percussion).

I got a guitar for my 16th birthday and pretty much have been self-taught on that, bass, and piano/keyboards since then. As for what I listened to growing up, that’s kind of all over the place. The classic rock stuff that my dad listened to, obviously, but I was also exposed to Rush through some kid in the neighborhood when I was like 7. Around that time I also started listening to Top 40 radio and watching music video shows, so I got a healthy dose of early 80s pop and new wave. By high school my favorite bands were the Pixies, the Cure, and Dinosaur Jr, though I also was listening to Young Fresh Fellows, Poster Children, some Dischord stuff, generally whatever was angsty and loud but with some sense of melodicism in there. I fell down the indiepop rabbithole when I went off to college in 92 and started working at the radio station. From then on it was all about Slumberland, Simple Machines, K, TeenBeat, SpinArt, Pop Narcotic, Harriet, Merge, Sarah, etc etc. Mostly US-based stuff, though, since that’s what I had easier access to at the time.

++ Where are you from originally?

My family moved every few years when I was growing up, so we primarily bounced between the DC suburbs and Southern California (where my dad is from). But the formative years were spent in Fairfax, VA.

++ How was LA at the time of Boy Mouse, Girl Mouse? 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?

I was in LA for a few years leading up to 2000, and it was kind of a weird place. Definitely drastically different from the massive DIY thing that DC had going on, though there was certainly an undercurrent of it. I got to witness the final days of No Life Records, which was probably my favorite shop there. Rhino deserves a mention, but that’s mostly because it wasn’t too far from where I lived. Most of the good “bigger” indie bands played the Silverlake Lounge if they even came through town. The Smell was interesting. Saw a few good shows at some hole in the wall down in Long Beach whose name I forget (including the first time I was blown away by the Aislers Set when that first album came out). There were some other shops and venues around, but it’s been over 20 years and their names slip my mind at the moment.

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

IIRC, a week or two before the Family Twee project came up Beth had given me a drawing that she made of a pair of mice with a little verse about them. When we decided to record the song she threw that out as a name and it stuck.

++ And how did this project start? Were you and Beth friends already? How did you two meet?

Beth and I were both on the indiepop-list. Shortly after I moved to LA, Beth posted that a band she was involved with was looking for a drummer. I responded and that’s how we initially met. We started dating, then that project fell apart due to various reasons. When the idea for the Family Twee compilation was floated on the indiepop-list we decided to throw a little song together for it.

++ She was of course in Aberdeen, a band many of us are big fans of, did you have the chance to see them live?

I never did see them live. They had already broken up when Beth and I met. I did have a chance to see them once after they reformed, but I ended up not going.

++ Had you been in other bands before Boy Mouse, Girl Mouse? If so, how did all of these bands sound? Are there any recordings?

I was in a bad cover band for a short bit in high school, but that doesn’t count. Then there was the aforementioned project where I met Beth, which was led by a guy who worked at KCRW, the NPR station in Santa Monica. Recordings of that do exist, but I don’t think he ever released them.

A year or so after the BMGM song I got together and played bass with two guys who were in Bunny Summer, which was an early Rachel Blumberg band (they had a 7″ out on SpinArt). We practiced 4 or 5 times and got up to the point of talking about playing an open mic night somewhere, but then I started a new job and it all kind of fell apart. When I moved a few years later I still had the bass that I had borrowed from them. So Jeff and Adam, sorry about that…

++ After this project I know you were in a band called Color and Shapes with Laura Watling, right? Again, I have to ask as both Beth and Laura are two of the most well-known women in indiepop in the US, how did you two meet and what prompted both to start a project?

I met Laura at one of the poplucks (potluck dinner/living room concert) that she put on out in Riverside when I was in the LA area and got to know her there a bit. We both moved up to the San Francisco area around the same time and she asked about playing together. She brought her cassette 8-track over to my apartment and recorded me playing some acoustic guitar once or twice, then took that home and finished them up. I did go to her place in Santa Rosa and recorded some lightly brushed drums for one of the tracks, but I don’t believe those got used.

++  Speaking of Color and Shapes, you were telling me a tape was released? I had no clue. Who put it out? What songs were on it? Are there more unreleased tracks?

Raoul from Popgun put a tape out at some point. I found out about it maybe around 2005/6 or so when a friend messaged me and told me he had bought a copy. I don’t have a copy of it but I think it had two songs on it, which I’m pretty sure are the only two that we recorded (though again, there were drums for one, so there might be an alt mix out there).

++ You are now making music under the name The Quiet Corners, and the songs are great! Was wondering when did you start this project and if there are any news coming up for this project?

Sometime in 2015 I ordered a cheap bass online to mess around with. When it showed up I dug out my cassette 4-track to see if it still worked. Within a few minutes I ended up coming up with the chords that became Goodbye Wherever. I quickly threw a bass line on that and recorded a (poorly played) drum track on my frankensteined electronic drum kit. I had previously dubbed the little practice area in the corner of my living room as “the quiet corner” since I could bang away on the v-drums with headphones on pretty much whenever I wanted (it was a ground floor apartment with thick walls and a garage on the other side of the wall). The name stuck even though it took another 5 years for me to get some other stuff recorded and released.

As for the future, I’m constantly messing around and coming up with little musical phrases or chord progressions that I then flesh out a bit and promptly forget. All of the recordings I’ve made so far are the times when I’ve actually bothered plugging everything together and hitting the record button. I have a few ideas that have been bouncing around my head for too long that I need to record, so there will be more stuff posted someday. I also need to sit down and record some Erik Satie piano pieces that I learned while teaching myself piano over the past few years. I’d like to get both of those done by the end of the summer, but we’ll see.

++ It seems there were many small indiepop bands in California in those late 90s, many that had great music but didn’t make it. I wonder if you have any recommendations for obscure bands that didn’t get a chance to make it?

Unfortunately that’s about the time I began falling away from the indiepop world, so I can’t really help you there.

++ As far as I know Boy Mouse, Girl Mouse was a one-off project, right? Or were more songs recorded?

Correct, just the one song. Nothing else exists.

++ The song that I am aware of, “Make Like We’re Not Sad” was included in a compilation called “Family Twee” that was put together by Skippy of March Records. What made you want to be part of it?

At some point in 1997 someone on the indiepop-list threw out the idea of releasing a compilation of songs contributed by list members. Specifics were hashed out regarding track length, payment, etc (you’d have to check the list archives for specific details on it). IIRC, Skippy took the reins on it, which I’m sure is a decision he quickly regretted. I asked Beth if she wanted to do a song for it, we checked whether we could do a longer song if we pooled resources and that was that (that’s why our track was ~4:30 minutes while everyone else’s had a 2:30 cap).

++ This compilation mostly features people that were involved in the indiepop-list email group. Were you active in the mailing list? How did you like this email forum?

I joined the indiepop-list in 1995, back when the internet was a very different world. Back then there seemed to be only a handful of places to discuss that sort of music online and there was definitely a sense of community from the various popfests and meetups. Even a severe introvert like myself managed to meet a lot of great people over the years (keeping in touch, well that’s another story).

++ I really like the song “Make Like We’re Not Sad”. Care telling me the story behind it? Where was it recorded? Did it take long to put together?

The whole thing was surprisingly quick. I wrote and recorded the instrumental tracks in my bedroom on my PowerMac one weekend after we decided to contribute a song. I gave a tape with a rough mix to Beth, she came up with the lyrics, then came over and recorded them a week or two later. There were some issues regarding horrible monitoring latency when she recorded those due to the jury-rigged setup we used, but she somehow managed (she wouldn’t let me into the room while she recorded the vocals). There were a couple rounds of mixing and the tape was sent off. And that’s the story of the birth and death of BMGM.

++ Who would you say were influences in the sound of your different bands?

That’s a tough one, because I was always a fan of the lofi and DIY aesthetics. Yet I know that really doesn’t come through at all in my recordings. I’d say that’s largely due to recording conditions and equipment – nearly everything I’ve done is via direct input and headphones with no/minimal mics (again, that quiet corners thing). Despite the technical differences, I guess a lot of what sounds I like comes back to the stuff I grew up with all those years ago – Sarah, early Slumberland, the Magnetic Fields, and any of the other stuff I mention in my posts buried in the list archives. Beyond that, I suppose I’m still finding “my sound” which seems to change a little each time I hear something in my head that wants out…

++ After recording this wonderful song, you didn’t think about continuing this project?

Beth and I had a falling out not too long after the song was recorded, so there really wasn’t anything to continue. But I’m certainly open to working with Beth again if she were up to it. But I wouldn’t get your hopes up.

++ One thing that I thought was funny was that a year later after the release of the “Family Twee” CD you were saying you hadn’t received a copy. In the end you did receive one, right?

I did have to email Skippy more than a few times to eventually get some copies.

++ On this CD we see many friends and bands, was wondering which are your favourite tracks on it? And if you were familiar with any of the projects at all?

It’s been years since I’ve even looked at the disc, let alone listened to it (it’s stuck away in a box of CDs in the garage somewhere). I do remember there were a few tunes that I did like, but I couldn’t tell you who or what they were at this point.

++ If you were to choose your favorite song of yours, which one would that be and why?

I kind of like how “We Are Going Nowhere” came out despite the fact that it never really goes anywhere (yes, the title is a little self-referential). And Goodbye Wherever has some of that quick bash-it-out sensibility that I like. But I like to imagine that my favorite song is still to come.

++ What about gigs? Did you play many? With which bands?

One C&S gig where we opened for Aerospace from Sweden. No comment.

++ Having collaborated with both Beth and Laura, I have to ask who else in the indiepopworld has made music with you?!

Nobody, because as far as I know nobody’s ever been interested. If you are, hit me up! Especially if you can provide vocals and/or assistance and feedback on arrangement and composition. tgauslin[at]gmail.com

++ Was there any interest in your music from the radio? TV?

A handful of people from the indiepop-list played the BMGM song on their college radio shows, which I know about because they posted their playlists to the list each week. If there was any interest beyond that, I’m not aware of it. I do recall Beth telling me she played the song for Matt from Sarah and that he liked it, so there’s that.

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

One time the guy from Cloudberry Records asked about an interview for his blog. 😉

++ What about fanzines?

Again, not that I’m aware of.

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

Honestly, at this point I’m touched that people still like and remember the very first song I ever recorded, even if it is mostly remembered because of Beth’s involvement.

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

Reading, getting out for bike rides, and getting away from screens to play some mind-numbing hours-long strategic board games. (Though I’m terrible at them I loves me some 18xx. CCMF!)

++ Been to Los Angeles once but I’d like to ask a local about what you would suggest checking out in your town, like what are the sights one shouldn’t miss? Or the traditional food or drinks that you love that I should try?

It’s been decades since I’ve been there, so I can’t really help you. But you’re doing yourself a disservice if you find yourself in California and don’t spend a few hours basking in the sun just staring out at the Pacific.

++ Anything else you’d like to add?

Thanks so much for listening and being interested enough to interview me. I really appreciate it. Take care!

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Listen
Boy Mouse, Girl Mouse – Make Like We’re Not Sad