06
Jul

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Listen
Java Jive – Love in the Afternoon

03
Jul

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Listen
The Snorkels – When I Say Go

02
Jul

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Iain: Too many to mention

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

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

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

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

Iain: That was our own label.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Iain: More than we needed.

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

++ And how come there were no more releases?

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

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

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

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

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

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

Iain: You tell that story Paul

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

++ What about gigs? Did you play many?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

++ And were there any bad ones?

Iain: Oh yes.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

++ Did you get much attention from the radio?

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

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

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

Iain: No

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

++ What about from fanzines?

Iain: And no

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

++ Anything else you’d like to add?

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

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

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

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

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

01
Jul

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Cassie – Change of Image

29
Jun

Day 109! Not much news from the past weekend, but some good finds worth recommending. In the meantime I work in findnig the right art for the sleeve of our next 7″ and wait patiently for the Macguffins release to come out from the pressing plant.

The Bunbury: the Indonesian label Shiny Happy Records have more new releases. The latest is a digital single called “Evil Knievel” by this somewhat newish band from Yogyakarta. Jangle pop, shoegaze, post punk, all mixed here in a very good way. Can’t wait to hear more by them!

The Crystal Furs: Subjangle Records are releasing on CD the “Beautiful and True” album by the great Portland, Oregon, band The Crystal Furs. I have recommended this band quite a lot and it is no surprise that they found a fine home for the 12 songs that make up their third album! If you like great popsongs, with hooks and sweet melodies, you should get this album that will be out on July.

Various Artists – Moments: this is the name of the new compilation tape released by the very fine Osaka label Miles Aparts Records. This compilation has songs by great bands as Pale Beach, Pictured Resort, Superfriends and a favourite of mine for years, Mariana in Our Heads. Sadly the label is not shipping to US so… bad luck for me. Maybe you are lucky.

Morningwhim: wow! This Japanese band sounds amazing. I wouldn’t seeing them in a label that starts with a C and ends with a Y. Hidetoshi Murai, Hikaru Mori, Yui Nishio and Aya Katsumata have just released a tape single with two songs “Talking to Myself” and “Smoke from Cigarettes”. Both are bright, luminous, songs!

Cindy: what an amazing release is the album “Free Advice” on San Francisco’s Paisley Shirt Records. Sadly for me it is on tape which I will skip. But I strongly believe this is a very beautiful album and I hope if it is not the same label, someone else will re-release it in a better format (better for me that is, don’t take it personal!). 11 songs of smart arrangements, of great melodies, somehow reminding me of Aussie bands from the mid 90s.

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The Rainpals. I have actually meant to write about them many years ago. And then for some reason or another I never did. I don’t know why. Maybe because there were so many songs by them on Youtube? Perhaps because I thought I was going to be able to get a hold of their self-released retrospective CD and then, after knowing more details about them, write a post? I don’t know honestly. But as they say is better late than never.

The Rainpals. They released one 7″ as far as I know. It didn’t have a picture sleeeve which of course is a shame. It was self-released on their own Rainpal Records (JPL 1001). This is the only record listed for this label. The date was September 10, 1987, and it included two songs. The A side was “A New Day” while the B side was “Cool Forever”.  Both songs were produced at Cava Studios in Glasgow.

Does this mean the band hailed from somewhere in Scotland? Let’s find out. We do have a name, Kev Kirkham, who produced and wrote the songs.  He was in another band too called Kev & the Raindrops. But The Rainpals was a proper band, a three-piece. There was Kev Kirkham, Bilbo Fraser and Paul O’Donnell. Not sure what each of them played.

The interesting part of the story, I think, is that around the mid and late 00s, Kev put together some CDs under the name Kev & The Rainpals on his own RPR Records. I am not 100% sure if these are retrospective CDs or re-recordings of songs from the 80s. Or maybe it is a mix of new and old songs. Who’d know. The fact is that at least 2 CDs with a bunch of songs exist.

One is “Far Distant Silver Clouds” released in 2008 (RPR 5545). This one had a whopping 20 songs: “Castles in the Air”, “Romantic Story”, “Dream You Away”, “Far Distant Silver Clouds”, “Faces at the Windows”, “The Incline”, “Flying Phoenix”, “Why?”, “Shiny & Black”, “Forever”, “You’ve Flown”, “Fall into My Mind”, “Girl in the Sky”, “Feel the Wind”, “Circle Dream”, “Fog”, “Midnight March”, “Who are You?”, “Rainy Day” and “Reflexions”.

The second CD doesn’t have a release date but I believe it came out later because of the catalog number (RPR 7747). This one is called “A Superstorm at High Velocity” and also included 20 songs, some of them that were included in the previous CD: “High Vel’ocity”, “Superstorm”, “The Incline”, “Far Distant Silver Clouds”, “A New Day”, “Welcome”, “Heat of the Day’, “You’ve Flown”, “Forever”, “Don’t Let it Get to You”, “Climb the Wall”, “Fall in to my Mind”, “Girl in the Sky”, “Space Travellers”, “Outerspace”, “Astro Galactica’, “Universal Rhythm & Rhyme”, “Dream You Away”, “Christmas Day” and “Dream You Away”. Yeah, odd, two times we see “Dream You Away”. Why?

I mentioned I found lots of these songs on Youtube. Of course. The channel is called The Rainpals RPRRecords. We find here the following songs: “Rainy Day“, “The Incline“, “Castles in the Air“, “Climb. the Wall“, “The Wind“, “Welcome“, “Gold Circle of Dreams Medley“, “Reflexions Medley“, “Fall into my Mind“, “Why War of the Worlds“, “Astro Galactica“, “Rhythm & Rhyme“, “Flying“, “Shiny & Black“, “Feel the Wind“, “Far Distant Silver Clouds“, “Circle Dream“, “You’ve Flown Today“, “Outerspace“, “The Day“, “Heat of the Day“, “You’ve Flown“, “Faces at the Window“, “Rainwalk“, “A New Day“, “Cool Forever“, “A New Day“, “New Day“, “At the Window“, “Superstorm Inst“, “Christmas Day‘, “A New Day ext“, “High Velocity“, “Why War of the Worlds“, “Tide of Dimensions“, “Fog“, “Velocity“, “Universal Rhythm & Rhyme“, “Those Days“, “Romantic Story“, “Dream You Away voc“, “Space Travellers“, “Midnight March“, “Castles“, “Astro“, “Bell City Lights“, “Who Are You“, “Fall into my Mind“, “Circle Dream“, “Astro Galactica“, “Rhythm & Rhyme“, “Outerspace“, “Don’t Let it Get to You“, “Romantic Story inst“, “Dream You Away inst.“, “Travellers“, “Superstorm voc.”, “Superstorm video voc“, “A New Day ext“, “Travellers“, “Welcome“, “Gold Circle of Dreams“, “The Wind“, “Astro Galactica“, “Outerspace“, “Far Distant Silver Clouds“, “Forever“, “Time“, “Astro Tide Dream medley“, “Superstorm video voc“, “Reflexions medley“, “Superstorm voc“, “Girl in the Sky“, “Forever & Forever“, “Forever & Forever CD version“. Yes I know a lot of them repeat. I am not sure why this is. I haven’t included others that were also repeated. I wonder what was the idea behind these uploads. In any case there’s lots of great music to listen.

Then another finding, according to Allmusic there was two more CDs. “The Rainpals” was just a 4 song EP with “Rainy Day”, “The Day”, “Rainwalk” and “Bell City Lights” while “Gold Circle of Dreams” had also 20 songs! “Travellers”, “Forever & Forever”, “At the Window”, “Castles”, “Climb the Wall”, “Romantic Story”, “Rhythm & Rhyme”, “Superstorm Voc”, “Those Days’, “Astro Galactica”, “Rhythm & Rhyme, “Astro”, “Fell into my Mind”, “A New Day”, “Welcome”, “Gold Circle of Dreams”, “The Wind”, “Tide of Dimensions”, “Superstorm” and “Tide of Dimensions”.

All of these songs seem to be in most of the digital platforms. The curious thing is that I kind find any biography for the band. No details. I only found a small blurb in CD Universe where it says that the band have toured Britain consistently around 2004-2008. That they recorded and gigged in London (had they relocated from Scotland then?) and that they have been featured on TC and radio all over the world. It also looks like that on the CDs it was just Kevin Kirkham playing nearly all instruments. So I would guess then that the songs on Youtube are new recordings? Not  from the 80s?

So yeah. This time around it seems it will be lots of music but very little details. Hope some of you can help!

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The Rainpals – A New Day

26
Jun

Day 106!

Okay! Macguffins proofs are approved so that is being pressed now officially. Pre-order button is up on the website and many people are pre-ordering. Remember that the CDRs with the first demo are limited to 100 copies.

Now now music so we can start this weekend in a happy way!

Sweam: this Oslo band sounds pretty neat. Fuzzy and dreamy. This 5-piece have just released an 11-song album called “Lounge Music for Cat People” and sadly it doesn’t look to be released in physical format, at least not yet. But good thing of course is that we can play over and over the songs on Bandcamp!

Sissy Space Echo & the Invisible Collaborators: I don’t know much about them, I just know they have a wonderful song called “At 7.44” on the compilation “Signals, Wires & Amplifiers”. The comp is sort of a mixed bag of good and not so good songs. But this one is VERY good. So check it out.

Fantasy Postcards: what do you get when an Able member and a Seashells member meet in Uppsala and make music?  They make a gem of a song. For now. Because I am hoping to hear more than the one song. Under the name Fantasy Postcards they’ve unveiled “Our Special Mission” a superb indiepop song!

Airhockey: a new track by the Miami based band that is pretty good. Every time I listen to them I feel some sort of nostalgia of the time I spent in Miami. Especially because there was no band sounding this way. Not that people can go to gigs now, but at least you can feel proud of the city you live in. “Not Enough” is the name of the song. Check it out.

Juliper Sky: another new digital single is “Afterglow” by this great Manchester band that is quite familiar to the Cloudberry blog. I have recommended their blend of jangly guitars and shoegaze guitar-walls many times. And here I am doing it one more time

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Another band that I discovered thanks to the compilation “Television Personalities From Japan, Too” was Sweet Petticoat. Of course I didn’t know anything about them, but I liked what I heard. So let’s see if we can find more info about this Japanese band!

The compilation was released by the very fine label A Trumpet Trumpet Records (TT006) in 1992. I’ve talked a few times about this label, and would be awesome if some day I’d get to interview the people behind it. I am sure they have lots of anecdotes about the fantastic Japanese scene from the early 90s.

On this compilation the band appeared last out of four bands with the track “How Does the Song Go?”.

We know that the band was formed by Shoga Matsuda on vocals and guitar, Toru Sasaki on keyboards, Kunihiro Isami on bass, and Yuki Fukazawa on backing vocals. Though on the booklet the photo of the band just shows two people. One must be Shogo Matsuda, who is the other one?

Shogo Matsuda and Kunihiro Isami are two well known names in Japanese indiepop as they had been involved in a legendary nineties band, Budgie Jacket. I wrote about Budgie Jacket some time ago on the blog too.

And of course, there’s little more info about Budgie Jacket. But nothing about Sweet Petticoat. Was it a one-off band? Just for this release? Or did they record more songs? Did they play live? I really hope find some details about them!

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Sweet Petticoat – How Does the Song Go?

24
Jun

Day 104.

Not much news today. But here’s some new music!

Remington Super 60: the great Norwegian band have a new song out called “Still Near” which is slated to be released on an upcoming EP this fall. The song is breezy and sweet, dreamy and bright. The synth melodies work like a charm on this one. Lovely really.

Lunchbox: another band that is back this year is the California duo formed by Tim and Donna. After the 2018 comeback they seem to have been quiet. Happily they have just released two new songs on their Bandcamp, “New Year” and “All Around the World”.

Lazy Eye: Indonesia keeps surprising me with the amount of quality indiepop. Lazy Eye doesn’t fall behind and they have released a terrific EP titled “Digital Primavera” consisting of 5 songs. The band is formed by Isabllea Maulidya, Cahyo Ahdiyatman, Bambang Bimo and Muhammad Darmawan.

English Summer: now three very jangly songs from Caleb Carr and his one-man project English Summer. Based in Clare, Australia, Caleb has only started putting songs up this month. In his latest effort he presents us with “Our Compromise”, “I’ll Help You” and “I Know You”

Freddie’s World: who is Freddie? It seems just a guy from Oakland who has recorded 4 songs, one of them a Dear Nora cover, in his bedroom. It sounds like 2003-2004 days. When the bedroom pop explosion happened and we were all sharing songs on Soulseek. Maybe Freddie has come a bit late to the party? Or maybe not. Maybe there is interest in lo-fi indiepop once again!

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Maybe you already know them, maybe this is the first time you hear about them. Me, I know very little about them. I managed to get a copy of The Pranksters’ sole 7″ recently and here I am digging for more information.

This 7″ was released by one of the most famous Australian labels, Waterfront Records in 1988. The catalog number was DAMP 70 and included two songs, “Living Edge” and “Traffic”. Worth noting too that it was released as a double A sided record, “Living Edge” being A and “Traffic “AA”.

I didn’t try to track down this band when I was planning my failed Australian retrospective compilation. Maybe I would have been able to find more information about them. Not sure. Now is my chance I suppose by writing this article. Discogs has some basic information about them.

The band was formed by Andrew Young on drums, Darion McCafferty on guitar and vocals, James Dixon on vocals and guitar and Darren Jones on bass and vocals. The songs on the 7″ were recorded at Paradise Studios and engineered by Tom Colley. They were mixed by Nick Mainsbridge and the band at Earth Media. Other people that helped in the record were Andrew McIntosh on guitar and keyboards and Philip Kerney on bass. The artwork is credited to Darren, the bassist. Both songs are credited to James Dixon.  And we also know the band was based in Sydney.

Aside from this 7″ the band appeared on two compilations. The first dates from 1986 and was called “On the Waterfront” (DAMP 31). On this record the band contributed the songs “City View” and “Untitled Day”. Eric Van Der Sande produced both tracks.  Then in 1989 on the cassette compilation “Lemon Cassette 3” released by Lemon Music the band contributed the song “Waiting for the Drought to Break”.

Checking if the band members had been in any other bands I notice that Darren Jones had been in Glovebox and Big Heavy Stuff, Andrew Young in Barb Waters and the Rough Diamonds, and James Dixon in Amplifier Machine, Drop City, Odette and Swordfish.

I keep Googling about The Pranksters but I don’t seem to find any other details about them. Hopefully I will get some help from you all eventually. I am sure some of you remember them. So yeah, any info on them will be great!

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The Pranksters – Living Edge

22
Jun

Day 102. Over a hundred days now.

Most important news today, we have the preorder button up for the Macguffins retrospective album and also the combo pack with the 3″ with their first lost demo! Record went to the pressing plant on Friday, so hopefully in no more than 2 months from now it should be arriving home!

What new music we found this past weekend? Here you go:

Gutingukuku: “Leisure Time” is the newest single out on the very fine Shiny Happy Records from Indonesia. This song will be included in an upcoming EP by this band. I don’t know much more about this band, but I can see they make some very lovely indiepop ala early Poppyheads.

Paris Street: “Catchy shit”, that’s how the band describes themselves. “15th Street – Part One” is the first of seven albums to be released this year as part of the band’s 15th anniversary. I must admit I am not familiar with the band nor with their 15 year career. As far as I know though it is a one-man project by Carl Polgar, and here are 10 fun songs worth listening. Bedroom pop, synth pop, and good catchy hooks.

Nos Etes Trop Courts: the second demo by this band based in Nantes sounds ace. This is actually not new, but from 1991-1992. This band was from what I understand one of the first shoegazey bands in this city and they were around from 1990 to 1992. They were formed by Gerome, Pascal and Jimmy. The first two went to be in Crash while the latter went to be in Les Autres. It is very interesting! Would love to know more about this band, would love to interview them some time.

NewCastle: last week I was recommending this Uruguay band because their latest single “Skates” sounded ace. Now they’ve released the “b side” for “Skates” and is called “Sunrise”. It is good too! Maybe not as immediate as “Skates’ but it is very nice, and I suggest checking it out.

Todavia: the dreamy pop band from LA is back with a terrific track called “So Close”. This song is said to be the opening track for their upcoming LP “Orange Faint of Sky” to be released this year. It will also appear in a compilation with Nicer Living Presents. That’s what we know at the moment. We can wait then for the album patiently.

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Why not another Japanese band on the blog. As you might have noticed that’s my latest thing, discovering indiepop from the 80s and 90s from Japan. Mostly because I know much less about that scene than others. And it was quite big! So there’s lots to find out.

Bubble Bus is not that unknown to me. I do own two of their releases, the “My Funny Face” 7″ and their split 7″ with The Paisley Shirts. But there is more to them and I would love to find out!

The first release they were on was a compilation CD called “See-see-You, Tomorrow!!” that was released by the very fine Pushbike label (UFPB-001) in 1993. They contributed two songs to it, “I Wanna Be With You” and “Bubble Bus Theme #2”. We could already tell at this point that the band was into making very nice jangly songs!

In 1994 they would release a split 7″ with the band The Goldenrods from San Francisco. The release was called “Motorway Strip” and came on the Japanese label Motorway (MOTOR 002). This release I don’t have yet. I should try to get a copy myself. Bubble Bus had the A side for themselves with two songs, “Words of Love” and “You Wanna Be Free”. The Goldenrods would only contribute 1 song. Thanks to this 7″ we know a few things. Firstly that the band hailed from Tokyo. That the songs were recorded at the R.d.s. studios. And lastly we know the band members:

Takahide Horiuchi – vocals, guitar and handclaps
Fumie Tsuji – backing vocals tambourine
Atsuki Nara – 12 string guitar
Tohko Kageyama – double bass
Fumihiro Ejima – drums

In 1995 the band would release the “My Funny Face” 7″ on Motorway (MOTOR-005). This is the only release they are on their own. They would have “My Funny Face” on the A side and “The End of Dreams” and “Maybe” on the B side. The band members on this record are the same as in the previous but we do find another credit, that for Isao Orita who designed the sleeve.

Lastly in 1996 they had a split flexi with The Paisley Shirts on Rover Records (ROV000). Bubble Bus would contribute the song “It’s A Clear Day” while The Paisley Shirts had “Stack of Dreams”. This flexi came alongside the fanzine “La Grande Illusion: vol.1” and was limited to 500 copies. That same year the band would contribute a song, “Scrap”, to the K.O.G.A. Records compilation “Pop Goes the Weasel Vol. 2” (KOGA007). This one song was record at Studio JAM in June 1995.

Lastly, I suppose when the band was no more, their song “Words of Love” would appear on the 2006 compilation “Musique Dessinee 01 – Just a Groove!” released by Production Desinée (PDLP-004) from Japan. This compilation was released both on vinyl and CD and looks like a mix and match of different music styles.

Now I am looking at the band members, see if they had been involved in other bands. The only one that seems to have worked on other projects is Fumie Tsuji who was in the band Fleckfumie alongside Nick Glöckner and JOhann Von Schubert, releasing 3 albums in the early 2000s. She also seems to have contributed with the Estonian band Popidiot, in their album “1111”.

Then I stumble upon a Soundcloud by Takahide Horiuchi where he has uploaded a bunch of his own tracks.

And that’s it. But quite a bit isn’t it? I just wonder why the band didn’t get to release an album or more records. And also what happened to the other band members. It seems Fumie was quite productive but what about the rest? Would be great to know more about them!

EDIT June 24

So thanks to a reader we’ve learned there are at least 3 albums and 4 singles by Bubble Bus that I wasn’t aware of!

First there was a 1995 album co-released by Hawaii Records (HAWAII-2) and MIdi Creative (CXCA-1008) called “Assnallo”. It had 11 songs, “Adventure”, “It Won’t Be Easy”, “The End of Dreams”, “A Picture of Boyfriend”, “I’m in a Fog”, “Like a Fish in the Air”, “Happy Days”, “My Funny Face”, “Troublesome”, “Road Runner” and “Walkin’ on the Railroad”. This album came out on CD.

Then in 1996 the band goes all Japanese, no more songs in English and they even write their name as バブルバス. They release CD single with Midi Inc. (MDCS-1002) with three songs, “バイバイ”, “君がそこにいる” and “通り道”. That same year, they release another CD single with the same label (MDCS-1005) with three songs, “タイムマシーン “, ” 青い屋根” and “ボクラシマッタ”. I am very curious why the change of language all of a sudden.

In 1997 they release  “ヒトトキカイ” a 12 song album on Midi Inc (MDCL-1318). The songs on these album are “カフェ・オーレ”, “明日はバイク”, “風の便り”, “月のかけら”, “何度も言うように”, ” 祭りのあと7 バイバイ”, “4、5年前の恋の歌”, “タイムマシーン”, ” 夏がやってくる”, ” 望郷列車” and “ボクラシマツタ”.

A year later, again on Midi Inc. (MDCL-1337) they release “Bubrock”, and even though they had changed the album title to English they release 12 songs in Japanese, “夕暮れの三叉路”, “舟の家”, ” 春来”, “夕立が止まらない”, “月がいつも”, ” 19才7 エンディング”, ” 工事現場”, ” 春色(アルバム・ミックス・ヴァージョン)”, ” 遠吠え11 スクロール1″ and “カントリー道路”.

Their last release will be a CD single on another Japanese label, Rhyme (MDCS-1010) with three songs, “春色”, ” 期待しないで” and “描けない空”.

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Bubble Bus – I Wanna Be With You

19
Jun

Day 99. Wow. Almost a 100 days working from home! How is everyone doing? After posting this blog post I’ll be preparing files and sending to press the Macguffins album. At last! Very very excited!

Now, here are some finds to enjoy over the weekend.

Teen Idle: the Asbury Park, New Jersey, band has just released a new EP titled “Insomniac Dreams”.  I have recommended this band not too long ago if my memory serves me right. So it is good to hear from them again, with their dreamy pop music. It is also worth mentioning that all proceeds of this 6-song EP will be donated to the Movement for Black Lives.

Fine.: I remember the great band Fine from Spain. But not. This one have a period at the end of their name. They also have female vocals but they are from this side of the Atlantic. They hail from Boston and have just released three new songs under the name “Lying Alone”. Lovely EP!

The Slow Summits: wow! The Linköping band is back again with a wonderful song, jangly and classic sounding. Just how I like it! Their new song is called “Safe and Sorry” and it does sound a bit like Cats on Fire, right? Oh I love this sound. I really wanted their previous EP which I don’t even know if it ever came out in physical format. I just didn’t approach them because they had a label… maybe now is a good time? What do you suggest me?

The Clientele: I think everyone knows the London band. There is not much to say aside that they have a new song. It is called “Closer”. And it is pretty pretty. So that. Don’t miss it.

Teen Angst: Another band with Teen in their name you’ll say. But hey, this quartet comes from Perth, Australia, home of so many fantastic bands in the past. So have a listen. Enjoy their  latest two songs, “Let (Pull Through” and “Cheeseburger”, two terrific indiepop songs with Michelle on vocals, Connor on guitar and backing vocals, Emilie on bass and backing vocals and Fraser on drums. Good stuff!

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The indiepop world was shook a few days ago. The Facebook page C86 & All That: The Creation of Indie in Difficult Times would tell us that Alex Taylor, the vocalist of the legendary Scottish band The Shop Assistants had passed away. This was enough to make the indiepop community fall into a deep sadness. I don’t know any indiepop fan that doesn’t like the Shop Assistants. Everyone is a fan and Alex Taylor was a very important figure for all of us to like this band.

But the shock was even more surprising. Our hero had passed away in 2005.  Many years ago, but only it became public now. It is hard to grasp, understand, anything after that news. I was silent. I didn’t know how to take it. It reminded me the beautiful song Strawberry Fair from Sweden had written maybe around 2004 or so, “Where is Alex Taylor Now”. A classic in my book. Yes, Alex had nothing to do with the indie scene for years, decades. But we all assumed that she was doing non-music stuff and that was that. And that was cool of course.

Michael Kerr was putting together the Motorcycle Boy retrospective compilation last year. The Motorcycle Boy, another wonderful band were Alex was involved with her amazing vocals. At last and finally we were going to listen the “Scarlet” album that was intended to be released in 1989. He tried to get in touch with Alex but with no luck. He would find out the news. And perhaps share with Neil Taylor who runs this Facebook page and who wrote the book by the same name.

This is tough indeed. And I wasn’t sure how to react. I want to give a tribute to The Shop Assistants and to the Motorcycle Boy. Maybe I could interview the other band members, I will love to be able to do that. I think it would be great to share their stories. I will try.

But as I’ve seen a lot of Shop Assistants and Motorcycle Boy records posted on the web these past few days, on Facebook and Instagram, I thought people are forgetting about a wonderful 7″ Alex released with the Motorcycle Ride. And thought maybe a lot of people have missed this one. I do own a copy and took me a bit to do so, finally bidding and winning on eBay many years ago. And yeah, I think it would be a good idea to let everyone know that this wonderful records also exists.

Originally this release was a tape. A tape released by no label. Perhaps a 100 copies, give or take. There were two songs on the tape, both Blondie covers, “Union City Blue” and “Atomic”. Motorcycle Ride was actually the band Ride  (Andy Bell [guitar, vocals], Loz Colbert [drums], Mark Gardener [guitar, vocals] and Steve Queralt [bass]) with Alex Taylor on vocals. Yeah, now you can understand the name of the band, Motorcycle – Boy + Ride. That’s my calculation.

These tapes were given away at the Jericho Taver in Oxford when Ride performed a special set for a small number of friends and family members. The date December, 22nd, 1989. A Christmas party. The question is, did Alex went down to Oxford to perform the songs? According to Ride’s website she did. There is even a tracklist of the songs they performed that night: “Union City Blue”, “Picture This”, “In the Flesh”, “(I’m Always Touched By Your) Presence Dear”, “Atomic” and “Dreaming” by Blondie and “I Wanna Be Your Dog” by The Stooges. It is said that the venue was re-opened for their private party after the main show had ended.

And another question, maybe even more important is, when and where were these two covers recorded? The Ride website also answers this. So there was a recording session at EMI Publishing Studios in Charing Cross, London. It was also in December of that year, tho it doesn’t say what day. It also looks like these were the only two songs recorded. Or are there more?

Four years later the Welsh label Fierce Recordings would pick this up. In 1993 they would release these two songs on a 7″. The catalog number was FRIGHT 060. On the back of the sleeve there is a small text explaining the release: “Ride with Alex out of the Motorcycle Boy, doing Blondie’s “Union City Blue” & “Atomic”. This was originally made for a christmas 1989 free cassette in some ridiculously small numbered edition and now it’s rescued from the void by Fierce Recordings of Swansea. We look on it as a public service. This is a release in our glorious ‘Trade Mark Of Quality’ series.”

The sleeve was a black and white fold-over sleeve. Blondie is on the cover, and on the back with a Doctor X shirt.

Not much more information about it. It is clear it was just a one-off thing. But would be amazing to find out when and how did the friendship between Ride and Alex started. If Alex had contributed with other bands in similar ways or was Ride the only lucky ones. Are there more recordings? Probably not, but would love to find out. Maybe there is a recording of that gig at the Jericho Tavern? I’d be thrilled to find out more.

And once again, I’ll play my Shop Assistants records. My Motorcycle Boy records. And my Motorcycle Ride record.

Thanks for the music Alex Taylor.

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Listen
Motorcycle Ride – Union City Blue

18
Jun

Thanks so much to Ian, Paul and Martin for the interview! The Radio Ghosts have just got back together, after releasing some great records in the early 80s, to release a new album called “Boo!”. They have written new songs and they sound great. The CD is available directly from the band, which features members of classic indiepop bands like The Wee Cherubs, The Bachelor Pad or A Tune A Day. Get it here!
And to learn more about them, here’s a great and funny interview I just did with them!

++ Hi! Thanks so much for being up for this interview! How are you?

Iain: In the pink. I speak only for myself; the others may admit to other shades.

Paul: Even paler than usual, having been indoors even more than normal.

Martin: Hi! I am fine, if slightly distressed from having recently emerged from a bath which was far
too hot.

++ I was surprised to see a new release by the band, a CD album! It has been released so many years after your previous release (1982!). I have to ask, what sparked this reunion?

Iain: Paul and Martin got in touch to suggest a one-night reunion birthday party gig. We played to a small invited audience and had such a blast we thought it was a shame not to do more. I said, ‘let’s make a concept album!’ but common sense prevailed and we started writing and recording in a more conventional manner.

Paul: In July 2018 we reunited to play at Iain’s birthday event – I’m sure Iain won’t mind me telling you it was a big birthday for him. He was ninety. No, not really, but we’re none of us young any more, you know. I just thought we should try and do something together while we still have a few usable faculties left.

Martin: In fact, we were working on the middle eight of a particularly tricky song from 1982-2018. This took up all of our attention, so gigging just had to take a back seat for a little while. Eventually, we went back to our initial version, so that was fine. Then we decided just to play a few songs at some bum’s birthday party, just for something to do really. Iain, I think his name was, but I wasn’t really paying attention.

++ Are the songs in the new album brand new? Or are there songs written back in the day?

Iain: It’s all new material and gushing out at a positively indecent rate. We have score of news songs written over the last year or two. Not all will manage to crawl from their puddles in our dark recesses into the light but many will at some later date.

Paul: We played some of the old songs at the reunion gig, but we decided it would be good to record some new stuff – and there seemed to be a lot of it emerging. It was quite hard reducing it down to just one album’s worth.

Martin: All except one are new, and written in a ten month spell of feverish, frantic creativity.

++ The new album is titled “Boo!”, why did you choose that name?

Iain: As, I believe most bands do, we spent ages mulling over what to call it, eventually settling on Hauntology Volume II: A Dance and A Cheery Song. Which we thought was great until we had to say it out loud. Paul saved us with this pithier and relevant suggestion.

Paul: I think we had been thinking too seriously about it for a while, and Boo! just made us smile.

Martin: We chose that name because that, allegedly, is what ghosts say.

++ For anyone new to your music, what can they expect in “Boo!”? Has the sound of the band changed much from your first period?

Iain: Freneticism and angular guitar has given way to a more varied feast of musical offerings. We have enriched our musical palette, nibbled on a sonic smorgasbord from hither and yon, sipped from the cup of diversity and offer up a banquet of tasty treats with more depth, width and heft. All nonfattening.

Paul: There’s things about it that still make it identifiably Radio Ghosts – Martin’s guitar playing is very distinctive for one thing, and often takes songs in unexpected and sometimes breathtaking directions. But there are differences too. The fast songs are less fast, and the slow ones are deeper, man. Iain and I are singing more now too, which I think adds new colours. And the technology has changed how we record songs too. Because we live in different parts of the country, we mostly record digitally, which also means we have more control over the recordings than we did when we were hiring studios and paying by the hour. Oddly, although you might think remote working would make collaboration more difficult, it has actually increased it I think. Partly because we have the time and space to go away and think about what we would add or change, rather than always having to come up with something on the spot in a studio or rehearsal room.

Martin: Dramatically. Our earlier incarnation produced spiky, guitar based post-punk excursions into harsh introspective territories. Our current form sees us more mature, still stirring the same pitch dark pot of paranoia, but not putting so much chilli in. Though the themes remain, the music ha definitely evolved and is more satisfying and rewarding for the listener.

++ And who are Spectroscope, the label that released the album? Is it yourselves?

Iain: We are not liberty to divulge this information.

Paul: Scary, dangerous people. Move on.

Martin: They say we may never know who is behind the shadowy Spectroscope entity. We definitely feel this is an area where the fewer questions we ask, the healthier we will remain.

++ Oh! And there are these three cartoons of the band members in the sleeve and booklet. Do tell who is who?

Iain: I believe I am the big-eyed, worm-like one. I make no comment on that.

Paul: For some reason I’m the cartoon character with the huge ears. I can see no possible justification for this. Other than the fact that I do have huge ears.

Martin: Cartoons, well perhaps, but the likenesses are striking and the depictions were based on real imagery from private sources. Martin is depicted wearing a loose-fitting summer dress, with his unmistakeable ear-flaps semi-extended. Iain, with his massive, earless grey head, is shown with his bifurcated trunk fully deployed. Paul is the only member of the band daring enough to sport cullottes, and as usual, is happy to bare his teeth to the world.

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

Iain: I wanted to learn the flute. Instead my music teacher gave me a recorder and public humiliation. Then a schoolmate stole a guitar for me. We didn’t have a proper record-player in our house until my father suddenly bought a decent stereo system and the world turned upside down.

Paul: My dad had quite a few old 78rpm discs – an eclectic mix of big band and light operatic stuff as well as Jimmy Shand accordion reels, and one of my earliest favourites, “Ghost Riders in the Sky” by Frankie Laine. He also had some early 45s – I particularly remember Anthony Newley’s “I’ve waited So Long” and Grieg’s “Peer Gynt” on EP. Like I say, eclectic. My oldest sister bought most of the early Beatles 45 singles when they came out, so they were always an influence. Actually thinking about it, my dad most likely bought those for her, as she’d only have been 11 in 1963. He also had one of those cool hinged-lid record players that could stack up 45s and drop them down one after the other. At school, as well as listening to Bowie like the cool kids, I also had a weakness for glam-pop bands like Roy Wood’s Wizzard. Later I got into Steely Dan, then Talking Heads, Buzzcocks, Cure,
Kraftwerk, Human League, Joy Division…
My dad also bought me my first guitar (for £8) when I was 12 – an almost unplayable steel-strung classical-type guitar (the action was about an inch off the frets at the top of the neck) – and then when I was about 15 I got my first ‘proper’ guitar, a big red jumbo acoustic… But I didn’t start taking music-making seriously till I met Martin, then I quickly realised I was never going to be as good as him on the guitar – which also partly explains the move to bass.

Martin: My earliest musical sources were playing my sister’s pop and Motown singles, my father’s 78’s, on the same radiogram. One evening, on the radio, I heard Immigrant Song played live by Led Zeppelin, and knew at that time that there was something deep and dark about it, much more so than any of the members of Led Zeppelin did. Then my brother brought home some prog rock albums – Atom Heart Mother, Ummagumma, In The Court of the Crimson King…and hey ho and away we went. But I still had a deep love for chart fodder. The 1960’s was a very rich melodic period, musical invention was spilling out everywhere.
My first instrument was a plastic guitar whose neck I accidentally broke and then had to hide under my bed after unsuccessfully trying to glue it back together. My parents took pity on me and bought me a cheap acoustic. I learned to play this along with Paul as we had taken up the guitar roughly at the same time. I was always very jealous of his big, red jumbo. And his nice guitar. Then my father saw I was making progress, and bought me a Sigma acoustic in the 1970’s. I still have it. It sounds awful.

++ Had you been in other bands before the Radio Ghosts? What about the rest of the members? If so, how did all of these bands sound like? Are there any recordings?

Iain: We were all three in a band called The International Spies (called after an Anaïs Nin book, which kind of says something about our street cred. The leader became a successful sociologist, which also kind of says something about our street cred)

Paul: Martin and I had dabbled in music-making for a few years, as school friends, mostly in each other’s houses – we just wrote ridiculous songs and did sonic ‘experiments’ with whatever very basic, ropey recording equipment we could get our hands on. But we had a few minor collaborations with other people – one of which led eventually to the formation of the International Spys, a confusingly long-haired post-punk band. The reason I started playing bass was because the Spys didn’t really need a third guitarist at the time, and there was talk about bringing in someone else on bass – so I decided to switch to bass myself, basically so I would have a place in the band. But it turned out to suit me musically anyway.

Martin: Paul and me had various bedroom bands, and recorded some very awful things on a variety of old reel to reel tape machines and comically failing cassette recorders. It would be hard to describe accurately what these recordings sounded like. Some things are better left unheard. Then, we were approached by some guy to be in a band called The International Spies, and made our entrance onto the punk scene. The Spies were disgraceful.

++ Where are you from originally?

Iain: We are all Glaswegians, of the Southside variety.

Paul: I’m technically a northerner – born in Springburn, in the north-east of town, but moved south to Shawlands when very young.

Martin: From the South Side of Sunny Glasgow.

++ How was Glasgow at the time of the Radio Ghosts? 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?

Iain: We formed in the post-punk period when all things were still possible, if not entirely probable. There was an epidemic of bands, largely centring around our local venue, the Doune Castle, a beer cellar with a sticky stone floor, sticky tables and some stonking music.

Paul: We were lucky living so near the Doune Castle pub, which was one of the main gigging venues for up-and-coming Glasgow bands in the late 1970s/early 80s. The punk/new wave era and its ‘anyone can be in a band’ ethos was great for us – we knew we didn’t want to be like a slick and predictable ‘covers band’, even though that might have got us larger (but less discerning) audiences, more gigs and and more cash. Or any cash. Enjoying the music we played always seemed more important than a music career for us.
Other popular Glasgow venues at the time included the Mars Bar, in the city centre, and dance-club type venues like Night Moves and the Mayfair ballroom. The record stores I remember best were independent ones like Listen and Bloggs. Have I still got the carrier bags…?

Martin: There were many bands playing in Glasgow at that time, all of whom were effortlessly attracting more success than we did. We didn’t make strenuous efforts to be commercial, mainly because we lacked the know how to do so. Simplifying and deadening your music so that it became
commercially more palatable was not our palette.

++ When and how did the band start? How did you all meet? How was the recruiting process?

Iain: There was a bit of a Southside music scene going on. My brothers both played in other bands and The International Spies supported my older brother’s band, The Alleged. Through that I met Martin and Paul.

Paul: Iain joined the Spies a few months into their existence, and when they imploded in late 1979 we thought it would be good if the three of us carried on in some form. Being in a band seemed like a pretty essential and quite natural thing to do at the time – or at least not being in a band for any length of time felt wrong, somehow. We were lucky to know each other already, and we didn’t have to get into the whole ‘musicians wanted’ recruitment thing – though we’ve probably all done that with some later bands.
Without knowing much about drum machines, we bought a drum machine, and gigged with that for the first six months or so. I still have it of course, being a hoarder – an Electro-Harmonix Rhythm-12. It was almost entirely pre-programmed, with preset fixed rhythms, so you could only really vary the speed/tempo. So we would do ridiculous things like use an extremely slow tango rhythm, or an unnaturally fast reggae rhythm, with jaggy frenetic guitars over the top. So our original drummer looked like this…

It was a novelty at first, but when we realised it was a bit limiting, musically and visually, we drafted in Craig Leslie, a great local 17-year-old drumming prodigy who could play fast punk or slow jazzish styles, or even both at the same time. And no doubt tango and reggae at various speeds if asked.
You can still hear the EH Rhythm-12 on the backing of ‘The Big Man Bites The Sidewalk’ on the Handfuls mini-album (and also on the ‘Falling Into Darkness’ demo on Messthetics).
As a sidenote anecdote, while we’re on the subject of ‘The Big Man…’ – that was a memorable recording for a couple of reasons. It was originally called ‘23’, just because we liked the number, but when we were recording it at Park Lane Studios, we wanted something weird and surreal to add to
it, and the studio engineer, Kenny McDonald, suggested we might add some random radio sounds – like a channel-tuning radio in a Beatles/Walrus style. We liked that idea, so we turned on a little transistor radio in the studio – and literally the first thing we heard was a live news broadcast of the shooting of President Reagan, which we had no idea was happening right then. So we scrambled to stick a microphone against the radio and quickly recorded some of the broadcast. This was long before the days of affordable samplers, so what you hear on that track is a pretty much live radio broadcast of a historic event, almost as it happened, faded in and out of the track. So there you go.
The other thing about that track? Just a wee musical anomaly that always makes me smile – there’s a big noisy ‘stramash’ section near the end, where we all just hit our instruments and other random things as hard as possible for eight bars, which was good cathartic fun to do. But when we stopped hitting things, unknown to us, we’d gone out of time with the drumbox, so we were then playing along with the off-beat for the next section. But being the musical pros we are (ahem), we seamlessly slid back into the right rhythm for the end section. And it all sounds intentional, of course. Too much information for you, I know, but who else are we going to tell?

Martin: After escaping from the International Spies, Paul and me decided to see if we could entrap Iain into playing guitar. He fell for it, and we knew that the extensive list of other desperate candidates for the gig need not apply.

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

Iain: We mostly practised in an office on an industrial estate just outside Glasgow, where we could make as much racket as we wanted and the drummer could practise handbrake turns in the van.

Paul: When we started, as a three-piece with a drum machine, we just practised and worked out songs in each other’s houses. Then when we recruited Craig on drums, that wasn’t practical, but luckily his dad had a warehouse/office space on an industrial estate in Renfrew just outside Glasgow, near the Airport, within smelling distance of the sewage works. Craig also had a van, which meant we no longer had to hire transport to get our gear to gigs.

Martin: Songs would be born and shared and then either prosper or left aside. Informal rehearsals took place in various bedrooms, basically whoever had the most amps, then more complete recitals would take place in various rehearsal locations, our favourite being in our drummer’s dad’s office, next to a warehouse complex, because it was free, and because we got to drive the forklifts.

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

Iain: The other two were keen on a relatively obscure band called Slap Happy. It comes from one of their songs.

Paul: We just liked the sound of it, and liked that it was a reference to an obscure band we liked. It was only later I found out it’s also an astronomical reference – a radio ghost is an “X-ray cavity caused by shock-induced compression of fossil radio plasma”. Which is more information than anyone needs. It’s also appropriately how we often feel.

Martin: One of our secret influences was a wonderful dissolute trio called Slapp Happy. They had a song called Arthur Rainbow, which contains the line ‘he’s cool like the breath of a Radio Ghost’.

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

Iain: I suspect the others will suggest different names but Talking Heads, Television, The Velvet Underground, the Beatles and Bowie are some of the names from that time, I would guess.

Paul: It probably changed from song to song, and definitely over time. I think we combined a lot of earlier and contemporary influences into quite a unique sound, not like any single other band. The sound was also inevitably influenced by the technology of the time, including early drum machines, roto-toms and affordable synths, as well as all kinds of guitar effects proliferating in those days.

Martin: Our peers and contemporaries at the time, too many to mention.

++ I know you were recording already in 1979, as the “Falling into Darkness” song that appeared in the Messthetics compilation was a demo from that year. Were there demo tapes prior to this one? And what other songs were recorded before your first release?

Iain: No idea.

Paul: We were recording all the time, in a sense – but mainly just mono cassette tapes of practice sessions. Martin and I had been making rough recordings for years – some of them on old reel-toreel tapes, now largely disintegrated. We always liked to capture what were working on – mainly so that we didn’t forget it, in case it was good. They were never meant for public listening or release.
But Chuck Warner, the Messthetics compiler, asked me send him as much stuff as I had, and ‘Darkness’ happened to be one he liked that didn’t sound quite as muffled and distorted as most of the others, so he put it on the CD.
We also did do a sort of studio demo as a 3-piece in a Hospital Broadcasting studio (for some reason) – but the quality of that was probably worse than our home cassette tapes.
I do have a few other ‘proper’ Radio Ghosts demo tracks from around 1981 that were never released – like ‘Black Shiny FBI Shoes’, ‘Belief in Myself’ and ‘The Funny Men’. Not sure the world would want to hear them, but I can dig them out if there’s any demand.

Martin: I frankly have no idea about that release. I do know about the song, which may have been inspired by Paul opening a cupboard door at a large venue we were about to play at (the Plaza in Glasgow, with the Cuban Heels) and taking a step in, only to find it was an unlit flight of steps down into a basement. ‘Help me, I’m falling into daaaarknesss’ he shouted. ‘Hang on,’ I replied, ‘I want to write that down, it might make a good song title.’

++ Your first release being “The Radio Ghosts Say Hello to the World of Love” EP, which was out in 1980. This one came out on Statik Records. Never heard of this label, so wondering if you could tell me who were behind them? How was your relationship with them?

Iain: That label was formed by The Alleged, Restricted Code and Positive Noise; the first two bands have also recently resurfaced.

Paul: We knew the bands that launched the Statik label – I shared a flat with a couple of the Alleged, Iain was related to one of them, and we all played the same sort of gigs. So it was quite close-knit. Not sure they released that many other records.

Martin: If I could remember, I would tell you.

++ This EP, in the front cover, has a text about a bearded man in a pub. What’s this about?

Iain: This was about us having a laugh, playing with phrases and giggling disproportionately.

Paul: I think it’s Falstaff, from Henry IV, Part 1.

Martin: The text is free association word play, which may very well have been written, at least in part, in the Shawlands Hotel bar. As well as our musical and pharmaceutical influences, we had literary inspirations too. Many of them came to play for that tawdry little sololiquoy.

++ Your 2nd record, the mini album “Handfuls of Everything”, came out in 1982 on Grampaphone Records. Again a label I’ve never heard. Can I ask any details about them?

Iain: It was a very do-it-yourself era. We just wanted to make music and let people hear it. So we did.

Paul: It seemed a good, funny label name for a record put out by young guys. Wouldn’t be so funny now.

Martin: I refer you to my previous comments on Statik Records. But I do think Grampaphone is a very good name for a record label.

++ By the way was there any interest by any other labels? Perhaps big labels

Iain: We had some interest but nothing ever came of it. Martin’s bands may have had more serious interest. I don’t know.

Paul: We did approach some record labels at the time, but we weren’t really savvy enough about, or have enough interest in, the business side of music to know how to approach it, or to know how to present ourselves as commercial entities. We never had a manager or agent, we used to find and book the gigs ourselves – mostly me I guess. I think sometimes those things can make the difference between commercial success and failure, rather than the music itself – our music was a lot better than some bands who did get signed. Not that we were the best band musically either, but we had something, and we could have BEEN somebody, man. We could have been contenders. I blame our older brother Charlie, he should have looked out for us.

Martin: I think the Ghosts were too uncompromising, and in a way, not good enough, to attract major label interest.

++ The front sleeve of the the mini-album has photos of the band members. Where were they taken? At your practice space perhaps? While on the back I’d guess there’s photos of you as kids/babies. Who is who here?

Iain: Yes, the industrial estate. I had the Fireball XL5 toy. Where is that now, I wonder.

Paul: I was quite proud of my Bass Machine bass amp, behind me in the pic. Its claim-to-fame was being dropped down the stairs of the Edinburgh Playhouse. Not deliberately, but we were too drunk and laughing too much to keep hold of it – and it was the quickest way down anyway. I seem to remember I’m wearing a leather jacket lent to me by flatmate and fellow bassist Brendan Moon – I was in the early throes of vegetarianism, so was unsure about wearing it, but Brendan insisted it would make me look cooler. I think I just looked like I was auditioning for the Grease house band.
On the back I’m the one on the ground in the nappy. Nothing’s changed.

Martin: Indeed they were, at the head office of Gordon Leslie Transport near Glasgow Airport.

++ This EP had many more songs, 6 in total. Some were recorded at Park Lane Studios and some in Cava Studios. Which studios did you like better and why?

Iain: Cava was plusher and more expensive. Park Lane was more rough and ready and therefore more comfortable to work in.

Paul: CaVa was a good experience for us I think – we’d never been in a proper top professional recording studio before (or very much since tbh – well apart from me and Iain moonlighting at George Martin’s Air Studios in London, but that’s another story). I can’t even remember why we used CaVa, or how we afforded it – we must have got a special deal somehow.
Trivia time again – the slamming door at the start of ‘My Room’ was me closing the big soundproofed door of CaVa’s sound room, which I thought would double nicely as a padded hospital ‘cell’ door. Took longer than it should have to get that sound right, and no doubt pissed off the rest of the band in the process.

Martin: Ca Va was a much revered, professional studio in Glasgow, but not so professional that they didn’t notice me pushing up the volume slider on Reflex Reaction half way through it. Park Lane was definitely our favourite of the two, as it was much more relaxed and informal, and you could skin up like a madman and no-one really cared.

++ Are there any other releases by the band? Compilation appearances?

Iain: Not as far as I’m aware.

Paul: Don’t think so, just the Messthetics stuff as far as we know.

Martin: The answer is no. None that I know of anyway.

++ And are there more unreleased songs from this first period of the band?

Iain: Paul is a hoarder. He has many, many ancient recordings stashed away, but damned few of them are of releasable quality.

Paul: There are some unreleased recordings, but they’re mostly verrrry rough rehearsal tapes, and I doubt even the best modern digital audio enhancements could make them sound acceptable.

Martin: Dozens of them, all locked in a vault and still squeaking and bleating to this day.

++ I think my favourite song of yours might as well be “Author”, which was inspired by Kurt Vonnegut’s “Breakfast of Champions”. Is this your favourite book by him? Which other authors come to mind, as a top five?

Iain: I think Breakfast of Champions is my favourite, but I also enjoyed Cat’s Cradle, Sirens of Titan and others. Authors: Flann O’Brien, Raymond Carver, Cormac McCarthy, Dickens, Haruki Murakami…not a top five but just some favourites that spring to mind.

Paul: Martin introduced me to Kurt Vonnegut – I was particularly struck by the writing style of Breakfast of Champions, and the excellent use of the scrappy hand-drawn illustrations. I liked Flann O’Brien’s Third Policeman too – the first band I started with Iain after the Radio Ghosts was briefly called Sergeant Pluck & The Bicycle Pumps – a Third Policeman reference – but we only ever played one gig before Iain had to go and catch a bus to England. I have to admit to being less literally literate than Iain and Martin (not sure how I wangled an English Literature degree), but I did get a bit obsessed by Douglas Adams for a while, and have enjoyed an odd bit of Orwell, McCarthy and Banks.

Martin: It was just a book I happened to enjoy at the time. At this time, it was considered cool to be stating around Glasgow with a book in your coat pocket, such that the title could be seen, thus letting all and sundry know how desperately cool and learned you were. But that was just a book I enjoyed. As for the second question, anything by Barbara Cartland really. Oh and maybe Masque of a Savage Mandarin by Philip Robinson. And while we’re at it, Merlin by Robert Nye.

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

Iain: 1969. It’s Martin and Paul at their best in terms of invention and production.

Paul: Out of the older recordings – I like them all, to be honest, but if pushed… I still find Handfuls of Everything can give me goosebumps, and I like the manic disco frenzy of I Won’t Tell You Lies. On the Boo! album, again it could be any of them, but I love the moody atmosphere created on Campfire, and the pure swaggery noisiness of Bring The Quiet. Some great new tracks in the pipeline too, including Biscotheque, Hidden and Little Snowflake…

Martin: Oooh I love choosing favourites let’s see. My current favourite is a song about those despicable, loathsome, shitty spiteful little arsehole-shaped creatures, wasps, called Wasp, but yesterday I was crying after listening to a song called Hidden. Neither of these have been unleashed on the public yet – but will be.

++ What about gigs? Did you play many? 

Iain: Lost count but not enough.

Paul: Maybe 100 or so over the 2-and-a-half years we were together? The Doune Castle in Shawlands was our local, most regular venue, and also quite prestigious on the ‘indie circuit’ (which probably wasn’t called that yet back then), despite being really just a small grubby bierkellar
underneath a steakhouse.

Martin: TOO MANY.

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

Iain: The last few where we were developing more a groove. We covered Chic and our own songs were really coming along.
Paul: Yes we got to play a few support gigs in Glasgow and Edinburgh with touring bands – like Huang Chung, who had a couple of chart hits and kept changing their spelling. One of the other highlights for me was a charity gig I organised at a big local Glasgow dance hall, the Plaza (now demolished, not completely because of us) – which was probably the biggest audience we played to in one place (500+). And of course I managed not to die after falling down a flight of stairs in the dark. And then later our frantic cover of Le Freak became semi-legendary. In the sense that we’re only half sure it ever happened.

Martin: I remember Huang Chung’s gong fell off the stage and landed next to me, and I was deaf for the next 2 days.

++ And were there any bad ones?

Iain: We did a two-night tour, hitting Glenrothes and Dundee. At the second gig a shaven-headed Dundonian pulled out a knife as we were on stage. ‘Ye Glasgie bastards,’ he growled. Show business, eh?

Paul: There were a few dodgy gigs in very unlikely venues, where we knew nobody and told nobody we were playing, but somehow expected people to magically turn up. Sometimes they did, but often they didn’t. (See, not very business-like.) I remember one gig where there were only two people in the pub/club audience, and they were only there to play pool, not listen to the band. The show went on anyway. There was another one where we kept getting electric shocks off the equipment, and our roadie/tech guy/vandriver Dougie worked out it was the faulty electrics in the venue – but instead of us refusing to play, he rigged up some kind of makeshift earth-grounding system and held it in place while we played. There was very little health & safety in those days.
One other classic gig always makes me laugh – we were mistakenly booked into a pub venue that normally hired country & western bands (surprisingly popular in Glasgow, but wasn’t at all what we did.) When we started playing, only halfway into the first song, the pub manager quickly realised the mistake, walked over and literally unplugged us from the power socket, only offering a simple, curt, “Not tonight boys.” We had to just pack up and leave.

Martin: Oh, the Dundee gig, which became known as the Tay Bar Disaster, was the pits. It was a tiny, narrow little place, but we brought in the full PA (well, we’d paid for it). It must have been SO LOUD. And he really did have a knife. Plus he kept switching on my effects pedals on while we were playing. Or even worse, turning them off during my solos.

++ When and why did the Radio Ghosts stop making music? After that you all were in very well known bands of course. But if there’s a chance to just list them, that’d be great!

Iain: Martin was always an infinitely better guitarist then me and I suggested I should do more of the singing which would leave him more free to do the tricky bits. He wanted to go in a different direction and instead formed the less complicated and more dreamy The Wee Cherubs. I left the
country in high dudgeon, or was it low dudgeon? No, I think it was a bus.

Paul: We stopped in around mid-1982. Ironically we were probably sounding better than we ever had as a band. The reasons were probably complicated, and might have seemed different to each of us. It did seem like we’d been trying for eons to make it, and were frustrated at limited success – but I guess in retrospect we might have got lucky if we’d stuck at it a bit longer, we’ll never know – just didn’t seem an option at the time. We all knew we wanted to keep doing music, so all threw ourselves into new projects. But it always seemed a shame we never did more together. We are now though.

Martin: I had become an insufferable little prick, certainly, and eventually decided that the others, who are two very nice people, should not have to put up with me any longer. We’d played so many gigs, tried so hard, made so little progress, so enough was so enough. I know I felt that the songs we used to love playing were becoming a bit of a chore, and losing their impact.

++ Had you been in other bands afterwards?

Iain: Paul had an electronic duo called Bamboo Shoots and later Iain and Paul played together in a band called A Tune a Day. There were other groups but the names would mean little to anyone and that was the case at the time too.

Paul: I realise this may shatter your idea of who I might actually be, but I’m often confused with other more famous musical Paul Quinns in various other bands. For instance I’m NOT the Bourgie Bourgie/Edwyn Collins-collaborating Paul Quinn – though we are more-or-less contemporaries. I’m also not the Paul Quinn who played drums in the Soup Dragons and then Teenage Fanclub. And I’m not the guitarist in Saxon – never had the hair for that. As we all do different things, I’ve always felt the four of us namesakes should get together and form a complete band called The Paul Quinns. But then I think, no. Other than Bamboo Shoots and A Tune A Day – who were very nearly but never quite signed by Virgin, Go Discs and some other 80s record labels – I was also briefly in a band in London called the Potato Underground.

Martin: That bit about Paul Quinn not being Paul Quinn is hard to accept. Anyway, I formed the Wee Cherubs after the Ghosts, who are enjoying a little revival just now as Optic Nerve Records are rereleasing the single Dreaming, as well as an album of previously unreleased demos. After the Cherubs, I formed the Bachelor Pad with Tommy Cherry, and quickly lost my mind. Wheee!

++ Did you get much attention from the radio? TV?

Iain: Our various formations had a few airings and interviews on local radio and some of Martin’s work made it onto TV. We did not set the broadcast media alight. John Peel played our records on national radio and for a short while we got fan mail. Which was just plain weird.

Paul: The John Peel radio playings were probably the highest profile, and a bit surreal. He had a huge cult audience on BBC Radio 1, and when he played Handfuls of Everything he read out our address on-air, and we got about 50 fan letters. Some people even quoting lyrics to the songs, having picked them up after just one hearing. This was way before the internet, so there was no researching or lyric-checking going on. We were quite chuffed. Some people kept on writing to us, even after we’d run out of things to tell them, and had run low on hair and bits of clothing to send them, which was kind of odd.

Martin: After John Peel played our single, and read out my address, I felt very chuffed but expected nothing, but then I got a deluge of letters. It was just so wonderful. We wrote back to them all. I even went to someone in Glasgow who had written, to personally give them a copy of the single.
They were hugely embarrassed that a Pop Star should walk two miles to do this – from Shawlands to Pollokshields! – and quickly offered me a cup of tea, which I wouldn’t have touched if you’d paid me.

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

Iain: Very little.

Paul: I think we got a couple of reviews in the music press – I remember the singer in local band Positive Noise doubled as a reviewer in a weekly national music paper… possibly Sounds, or Melody Maker? I probably even have a copy of it somewhere, but who knows where. Or why.

Martin: some gig reviews, and I think a few singles reviews. I remember my singing being described as ‘diffident’ in one, and so for years, I thought that ‘diffident’ meant ‘horrible and badly out of tune’.

++ What about from fanzines?

Iain: I remember one in particular. We interviewed by Bobby Bluebell before he was in the Bluebells (‘Young at Heart’) for a fanzine called Ten Commandments.

Paul: We were interviewed as a three-piece (must have been 1980) by Robert Hodgens – later called Bobby Bluebell – in Ten Commandments fanzine. There is a copy of that somewhere.

Martin: what they say, they seem to know what they’re talking about.

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

Iain: The last few gigs in Glasgow and Edinburgh really felt like gigs ought to. Buzzing.

Paul: Getting played on the Peel show is still a good one – to be fair he did play A LOT of bands over the years, but at least we can say we were one of them.
And making records was a big thing – I liked the whole process from the studio to the pressing plant, especially getting them back all neatly packed in cardboard boxes with all the spines matching. At the time it just seemed like something everyone was doing, or everyone we knew anyway, but in hindsight, in the big scheme of things, it’s not something everyone has done. And it’s great to be doing it again.

Martin: looking back, just having a band that was doing its own thing, playing gigs, being enjoyed by people. But the best thing for me personally was the sheer fun in having these two guys as friends.

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

Iain: I read, write and run a book group.

Paul: I rescue bees with teaspoons of sugary water. And I stamp on the ground until worms come up then feed them tea and biscuits.

Martin: I am engaged in a ceaseless campaign to rid the nation of wasps, fuck that Springwatch guy. I have a dog that has no respect for me. I have* a tame blackbird called Cheesybeak. I enjoy making videos for the band and these can be seen on the Radio Ghosts’ Youtube channel, and my own channel as 0ldfinger (with a zero). Smash that Like and Subscribe! Button as hard as you dare.

*No, I don’t

++ Been to Glasgow a couple of times but I still would love to hear your recommendations as locals, what sights one shouldn’t miss? Food and drinks one should try?

Iain: Take a stroll up Byres Road, get a coffee at the Tinderbox, try a Play a Pie and a Pint at Oran Mor, go to the Botanics and the Kibble Palace, see a play at the Citizen’s theatre, a film at The GFT, get a curry at Mother India’s Café and see bands at the Barrowlands or one of the more low key venues like Mono. The West End is the place to be, says a Southsider.

Paul: I don’t live there any more, now down in the south coast seaside town of Brighton, but Glasgow always has a big place in my heart. Or maybe it’s an arterial blockage. But you MUST have pakora when you’re in Glasgow. It was introduced in the 1960s by Indian/Pakistani immigrants, and has become as Scottish as porridge and haggis. And when you walk around the town centre, look up – the buildings are astonishing. Glasgow’s also surrounded by hills, and less than an hour from the seaside – take a trip down the Clyde Coast and eat chips in seafront cafes. Martin can advise on the whisky choices…

Martin: Yes, I am something of a cultural ambassador for Scotland and Glasgow. What I’d do is go into any large discount supermarket and buy a bottle of own label whisky – the cheapest you can find will do. Drink it noisily in the queue for the checkout, and get yourself into a violent argument about nothing in particular with the first person who makes eye contact with you, and have yourself escorted from the premises, shouting I DO NOT CONSENT. That’s what I call a day well spent.

++ Anything else you’d like to add?

Iain: You can follow our Facebook page – https://www.facebook.com/radioghosts/ And you can buy the Boo! album, or individual tracks, on iTunes or Amazon, or stream on Spotify or Deezer, among other places. Or we can send you a CD ourselves, for $10 + P&P!

Paul: We’re working on a new album, and may well release individual tracks into the wild as we go along. Keep an eye on the Facebook page.

Martin: I think Roque is a wonderful name. I think I told you this before. Do you want to swap?

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