Showing posts with label Roddy Frame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roddy Frame. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 May 2020

Hot 100 #7


I realise there were a bunch of other 7 bands I could have chosen to illustrate what's shaping up to be the biggest edition of this countdown to date. Bands like...

L7 - Pretend We're Dead

School of Seven Bells - Signals

The Temperance Seven - You're Driving Me Crazy

RF7 - Day At The Crisis

The Galileo Seven - Cruel Bird

Sirens of 7th Avenue - Shine On

And, of course...

Seventh Avenue - Love's Gone Mad

(I've never heard of them before either, but Jim in Dubai is a fan. I honestly had to check the lead singer wasn't a young Simon Cowell.)

However, I always had a lot of time for Shed Seven, or "what Oasis might have been if they hadn't been a bunch of absolute Aresholes" as I like to think of them. They put out a bunch of cracking Britpop singles, never took themselves too seriously, and always put on a good live show.

Here's a Positive Song For Negative Times from them...

Shed Seven - Getting Better

And now on with the show, which will, by necessity, be a lot of your tunes and very little of me talking this week, if I'm to have a cat in hell's chance of getting through all the 7 songs you suggested.

(Update: well, that didn't happen, did it?)

At least The Swede got his artists and titles the right way around this week...

Day off today and up late, yet still the first one in!

I know, it's like they all have better things to do first thing on a Tuesday morning, isn't it? But what could be better than this? Anyway, on you go, Swede...

Winston Wright & the Soul Kings - The Magnificent Seven

Pharoah Sanders - Seven by Seven

Owen Gray - Seven Lonely Days

I like that.

Can - Seven Days Awake

That... not so much.

Bob Dylan - Seven Days

The Hippy Boys - Seven Heaven

Wah! Heat - Seven Minutes to Midnight

The Soft Machine - And Sevens

Couldn't find that, so here's a cut from their album Seven...

Soft Machine - Bettle Bed

Baba Brooks - Seven Guns Alive

Nic Jones - Seven Yellow Gypsies

Pye Corner Audio - The Seventh Labyrinth

Appendix Out - The Seven Windows

I've got to say: Appendix Out... not a great name for a band. An impossible to google search too.

Hawkwind - Seven by Seven

Egg - Seven is a Jolly Good Time

Lynchie recalled: I met the prog rock band Egg at a bed & breakfast place in Dundee sometime around 1970 if memory serves me well. Can't say I was a fan.

George wondered: Of Dundee or Egg?

Lynchie replied: Both!

I used to write ads for the radio station in Dundee. Never got the opportunity to visit.

Ballroom - Seven's a Secret

They've been listening to a lot of Suede.

Niagara - Dance in Seven

Nope. Anyone else think The Swede is just making 'em up now to tax me?

Chuck Wood - ‎Seven Days Too Long 

At last! One I have in my library. Although I did get this version first...

Dexys Midnight Runners - ‎Seven Days Too Long

Miles Davis - Seven Steps to Heaven

Culture - Two Sevens Clash

Big Blood - Mouth in Seven Tongues

Another one that turned up some particular unpleasant youtube searches.

Chris Squire - Lucky Seven

Moon Duo - Sevens

Return to Forever - Beyond the Seventh Galaxy

Scott Walker - The Seventh Seal

Liz Phair - Dance of the Seven Veils

Yeah, I had to listen to that one a couple of times. Sigh.

Derrick Morgan - Seven Letters

Brian Eno - Seven Deadly Finns

The Soul Rhythms - Round Seven

Another made up one.

Causi Sui - Seven Hills

The Clash - Magnificent Seven

A lot of people thought that was going to be a shoe-in this week. Sorry about that.

David Bowie - Seven Years in Tibet

I kinda liked Earthling at the time. More than I should have done. But what about this...?

David Bowie - Seven

Don Drummond & The Tommy McCook Band - Lucky Seven

I could only find the Skatalites version. Hope that'll do ya.

The Skatalites - Lucky Seven

Love - 7 and 7 Is

Now that... that was a strong contender. Oop ip ip, oop ip ip, yeah!

Richard Thompson - Seven Brothers

Larry Coryell's 11th House - Seven Secrets

OK, well, I guess that's it for this week. Join me again next Tuesday when we move onto #6 on the countdown and...

What?

Other people have suggestions?

You mean The Swede didn't cover everything?

Blimey.

Has the Swede left us any? pondered Charity Chic, before offering up the following...

Steve Young - Seven Bridges Road

(Alyson recalled the version by The Eagles.)

White Stripes - Seven Nation Army - surprised the Swede missed that one

Me too. That's a very strong contender.

Desmond Dekker - 007 (Shanty Town)

And how could we forget... 

The Goombay Dance Band - Seven Tears

No matter how hard we try to! said C.

Confession time: I had forgotten that.

Confession two: listening to it made me feel like a boy again.

God, I think The Swede has nailed this down, said Martin. Before coming up with his own list almost as long as The Swede's.

Sting - Seven Days (to irk the musos, right?)

I feel myself turning muso.

Youssou N'Dour and Neneh Cherry - Seven Seconds (might be in with a shout)

Well, it's definitely the best thing Neneh Cherry ever put her name to.

Oh wait, here's Alyson again...

My pick would be Youssou N'Dour/Neneh Cherry though with 7 Seconds as wrote about it recently so found out so much more of the back story - Again, don't include this bit, but here is a cut and paste:

Sorry Alyson, I need something to break up the endless list, so you're subbed.

'7 Seconds is apparently about the first positive 7 seconds in the life of a newborn child, a child who does not know about the problems and violence in our world. Three different languages were used in the song: English, French and Wolof, which is a language spoken in Senegal, Gambia, and Mauritania.'

See. That was far more interesting than just another boring list, wasn't it?

Speaking of which... back to Martin:

ABC - Seven Day Weekend

Now it turns out... sorry to interrupt again, Martin... that there are quite a few songs with this title. As supplied by Douglas...

Grace Jones--7 Day Weekend (different)

Foghat--Seven Day Weekend (yep, different)

Gary US Bonds--Seven Day Weekend (uh-huh, different)

Elvis Costello and Jimmy Cliff - Seven-Day Weekend (okay, that one's a cover)

You sure about that, Douglas? My research says it was written by Elvis & Jimmy. And I pulled the Deluxe Edition of Blood & Chocolate off the shelf to check. That would have been my choice, anyway.

Sorry, Martin. You were saying...

The Four Tops - Just Seven Numbers (Can Straighten Out My Life)

A fine track... but is it really the most obvious Four Tops 7?

No, it isn't, is it, Alyson?

The Four Tops - Seven Rooms of Gloom

Shivers. Spine. That would be in my Top Ten.

Any chance we could just let Martin finish?

John Entwistle - Cell Number Seven

That's all kinds of wrong. I like it.

They Might Be Giants - Seven

Florence & The Machine - Seven Devils

Nirvana - D-7

Bruce Springsteen - Seven Angels

That's an out-take. That's an out-take! Other bands would base their whole careers on the songs Bruce deems unworthy of release.

Frank Black - Seven Days

See, Sting? That's how you do it.

Graham Coxon - Seven Naked Valleys

Patti Smith - Seven Ways of Going

The Travelling Wilburys - Seven Deadly Sins

REM - 7 Chinese Bros 

Could you do an entire REM numbers countdown?

Probably. But not this week.

Over to Swiss Adam...

REM, obvs

Obvs.

Andrew Weatherall - Let's Do The Seven Again (a tale of heroic failure and circus acrobats)

Thank you. I like that a lot. Is he actually singing on that or has he drafted in guest vocalists?

Dion - The Seventh Son

Class.

Cola Boy - Seven ways To Love

Eric B and Rakim - Paid in Full (Seven Minutes of Madness Mix) a minute less than DSK

Swiss Adam also seconded a bunch of The Swede's suggestions, which you may remember from about three weeks ago when you started reading this post.

C, meanwhile, worried that all the good ones had gone, until...

Oh, got one, I think?! 

The Wipers: D7

The original, not the Nirvana cover. I really loved the Wipers.

(I should have filed that after Martin's suggestion, but frankly it's about 11.45 on Sunday night and I'm not even half way through these yet.)

One more. 

Elbow - Seven Veils

I have a lot of time for Guy Garvey, but I know I didn't spend enough time on that last album. That's lovely.

Alyson, meanwhile, is still worrying about appearing cool. Listen, Alyson, Martin proudly suggested Sting, so you've got nothing to worry about!

My hard drive obviously comes from Planet Uncool as very little overlap with the above choices at all. Other than Love and Youssou N'Dour, I have the following:

Madness - Return of the Los Palmos 7

Craig David - 7 Days

And on the 7th day, just like God before him, Craig David chilled.

James - Seven

That would have been in my list too.

Simon & Garfunkel - Seven O'clock News/Silent Night (Vietnam War era news bulletin in the background)

And I listen to that repeatedly, every Christmas.

Pretty sure I'm going to irk a lot of musos with that lot. 

Like I said, Martin too that crown this week. And it's not like you suggested Ken Dodd again, is it?

And, as a 7 band, my hard drive is littered with material by those giants of pre-teen pop S Club 7 as my daughter was just the right age for them at the turn of the millennium.

S Club 7 - Reach

Why is it I feel strangely nostalgic for that? This lockdown really is getting to me.

Now I know what you're all wondering: Where's George this week?

Wonder no more...

Has Moon Mullican's "seven nights to rock" been mentioned? (a song covered by BR549)?

I'm not sure, George. I'm not sure I can check through The Swede's list again. Apologies for any repeats this week.

Moon Mullican - Seven Nights To Rock

BR5-49 - Seven Nights To Rock

And let's not forget this version, recalled by Jim in Dubai...

Nick Lowe - 7 Nights To Rock

Or even this...

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band - Seven Nights To Rock

And Willie Mabon "7th son", a rhythm and blues song written by Willie Dixon?

Willie Mabon -7th Son

That's the original of Swiss Adam's Dion suggestion then, is it?

That does. however, lead very nicely into Rigid Digit's Top Choice this week...

Iron Maiden - Seventh Son of a Seventh Son

Surprised not already been mentioned:

Queen - Seven Seas Of Rhye

I'm kinda not surprised, but it was near the top of my list. I mean, listen to that intro!

And while we're here...

Queen - In Only Seven Days

Back to RD, who was also surprised nobody had suggested this...

Fleetwood Mac - Seven Wonders

Watch that video and you just know it was recorded on a day when they'd all fallen out with each other (even more than usual).

Others:

Seven Months - Portishead

Why are you doing them that way round, RD? Just when I trained The Swede to go artist first. Og, I don't have the energy to swap them round anymore...

(That Portishead song sounds like Shirley Bassey in The Twilight Zone.)

Seven Years - Norah Jones

Seven - Megadeth

From Norah Jones to Megadeth. Much respect.

777 - Danzig

Seven High - Damon Albarn

Bring back Danzig.

Seven Shades Of Nothing - Babyshambles

Here, Danzig, Danzig, Danzig! Come on, boy!

Seven Walls - Gaz Coombes

Tom Robinson Rule?

4st 7lp - Manics

3s and 7s - Queens Of The Stone Age

Thank you for reminding everyone of the Tom Robinson Rule.

Now back to Jim in Dubai...

Echo & The Bunnymen - Seven Seas

Surprised that hasn't come up yet.

Graham Fellows (Or Jilted John as some people may know him better as) - Seven Pints & a Suicide 

Or John Shuttleworth, adds Rigid Digit, a truly right thinking man if ever there was one. Who else could impart the panic and shock of opening the fridge and findings two margarines on the go.

Chew Lips - Seven

Positive Noise - Waiting for the Seventh Man

Revenge - 7 Reasons

Swiss Adams likes that one...

I woke up this morning with the riff from 7 Reasons by Revenge running in my head, the best New Order song not by New order. 

Back to Doug in Canada...

Okay, this time I am still late, and despite the whopper load of songs already listed, I see there are a few left to nab! I would of course have taken R.E.M, myself, but on the philosophy that they can't win two weeks in a row (can they?) I am glad my second favourite choice of all 7 songs is still available, so here goes:

Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark - Sailing On The Seven Seas

Good call.

Duran Duran - The Seventh Stranger (which naturally counts double becasue
it is from the album "Seven and the Ragged Tiger")

Oh, in that case we have a winner!

Maybe not.

Cinerama - 7x

More like it. Mr. Gedge has far more chance around here than Mr. LeBon.

Audience--Seven Sore Bruises

That actually has featured here before, even though it's not the far superior Sophie Ellis Bextor band. Unfortunately, the version on youtube appears to have been hacked by the Russians, possibly as a revenge attack for The Scorpions. (See Sunday's post if you don't know what I mean. Do keep up.)

(Speaking of Ms. Ellis-Bextor... this was obviously a b-side...

Theaudience - The Last Seven Minutes With You)

Feeder - Seven Days In The Sun

Animals That Swim - Seven Days

Points for that. Great album.

Cracker - Seven Days (a different song, of course)

Kenney Chesney - Seven Days (... different still)

...and yet, still better than Sting.

Are we done yet? Of course not! Here's Brian...

Boy, talk about left with the scraps! I was going to wow you with Wah! Heat's Seven Minutes To Midnight,and that has already been mentioned at least twice! All of the best ones are taken, and even most of my songs from the B squad are already here. Time for the C squad:

The Apples in Stereo - 7 Stars

Me and Dean Martin - 7 Compton Street

Wow. They listened to a lot of The Smiths, didn't they?

Andy Pawlak - Seven Days

The Holidaymakers - Seventh Valley Girl

Never heard of them before, but I reckon Colin Meloy might be a fan.

Elvis Costello - Seven o'clock (Demo)

A precursor to Luxembourg. I do have that somewhere, but don't have the energy to upload it now.

The Clientele - Carnival on Seventh Street

Velocity Girl - Seven Seas (Echo & the Bunnymen cover that's well done)

Vocals a little too low in the mix for me. I'll stick with Mac.

Strawberry Switchblade - Dark 7

The Ocean Blue - F Major 7

...And my album pick is Roddy Frame with Seven Dials. Beware of the term 7" version/mix when you search through your archive! Ugh.

I hope this is the right one, Brian...

Roddy Frame - Seven Dials

And finally comes Alyson, with some sage advice...

Think you're going to have to trim this list down, probably...

I'm trying to avoid trimming at this late stage... much as I may live to regret that decision in the remaining weeks.

...but as is tradition I will throw in an oldie for sake of completeness:

Paul Evans - Seven Little Girls Sitting In The Back Seat

(definitely not the Bombarulina version.)

I'm glad you said that. I can go right off people.

To be fair though, it's not a patch on this...

Paul Evans - Hello, This Is Joannie

I'm guessing that's a different Paul Evans, though I stand to be corrected.

Good luck with getting through that little lot above (no pressure remember to deliver every week).

Good job too, considering how I failed to get through all this last week.

All of which leaves me with only the scrapings from my own hard-drive... but I may whittle that list down a little for my sanity this week. Lots of 7" mixes I had to skip past while searching through these.

Inspiral Carpets - Well Of Seven Heads

John Martyn - Seven Black Roses

The Teardrop Explodes - Seven Views of Jerusalem

Van Halen - The Seventh Seal

Lew Lewis Reformer - Lucky Seven

Philip Jeays - Seven Signs Of Ageing (Top Mid-Life Crisis Song alert!)

The Boo Radleys - Martin, Doom! It's Seven O'Clock

Uriah Heap - Seven Stars

The Blue Nile - Seven a.m.

The Broken Family Band - Seven Sisters

The Indelicates - A Book of the Seven Seals

The Undertones - Soul Seven

Willie Nelson & Ray Charles - Seven Spanish Angels

Trembling Bells - Seven Years A Teardrop

Laura Viers - Seven Falls

Barry Manilow - Seven More Years

The Walkmen - Seven Years of Holidays (for Stretch)

dEus - 7 Days, 7 Weeks

The Quireboys - 7 O'Clock

The Bastard Sons of Johnny Cash - Seven Steps

Jens Lekman - Tram #7 To Heaven

John Doe - 7 Holes

However... when I began this countdown, approximately 77 years ago, I knew immediately what number 7 would be on the Hot 100. Just as I've known all along what #1 will be.

Looking up at the list above me now, I can see a number of tracks I might pick instead of this one... some truly excellent tunes that I couldn't be without. But this is what I'm going with, as suggested by The Swede, because... erm... I don't really know why. But it's Prince, and that'll do nicely.

Plus the video is absolutely bonkers...



Only half a dozen to go. And so, as George once sang... I Want Your Six!


Friday, 10 May 2019

The United Kingdom of Song #30: Leicester


I have loads of songs in my collection that mention Leicester Square (farewell, and all that), but all of them are about London, not the East Midlands city of Leicester, a place that crops up in songs far less.

Famous musical children of Leicester include Engelbert Humperdinck (who was born in India, but moved to Leicester when he was 10), 80s rockers Diesel Park West, Kasabian (who namedrop their hometown in Treat), Peel favourites Gaye Bykers on Acid, Mark Morrison, Showaddywaddy, and a couple of great bassists: John Illsley from Dire Straits and John Deacon from Queen (the sensible one, who retired when The Game was up).

The Fall stop off at Leicester Polytechnic (probably a uni now) in Words of Expectation, and I might have had to inflict all 9 minutes of that on you this week were it not for a last minute save from East Kilbride's finest, Roddy Frame. No idea why he mentions Leicester (or who Leicester's left-it-lad might be) in this tune originally included on the 12" of Oblivious... but I'm glad he did.

We'll be wired with the force of a wave
We'll be leaving with the force of a wave
It's like, "but how can I help it, if they break then they break
When my hands are untied they're entitled to shake"
It's like, I look to Leicester's left-it-lad
And the sickness was singing and the song it was sad
It should be haywire
Haywire!



Friday, 15 January 2016

My Top Ten Hymns




This week, I give thanks for ten fine examples of pop praise.

Specials mentions to Hymns and The Verve's classic album Urban Hymns.


10. The Charlatans - I'll Sing A Hymn (You Came To Me)

I came across a good haul of Charlatans CDs in a local charity shop recently and was able to stock up my collection beyond the obvious titles. This is from their 2004 album Up At The Lake, apparently the only Charlies album never to receive an American release (not sure why, but whenever they do release records in the US they have to stick a UK on the end of their name because of an obscure American band from the 60s). Iffypedia tells me this particular song was only available on the UK release of the album - again, not sure why, it's a perfectly decent laid-back, Stonesy groove.

9. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Cannibal's Hymn
But if you're gonna dine with them cannibals
Sooner or later, darling, you're gonna get eaten
The above might seem like a statement of the bleeding obvious, but Nick still makes it sound bad-ass. 

8. Don Henley - She Sang Hymns Out Of Tune

I originally came across this song on Harry Nilsson's album Pandemonium Shadow Show but I hadn't listened to that in years, so it took me a while when I heard Don Henley's version (on last year's Cass County) to work out where I knew it from. It was originally written by Jesse Lee Kincaid, a member of 60s folk-rock band Rising Sons along with Ry Cooder and Taj Mahal.

I've listened to the lyrics of this song a lot trying to work out what they're all about... there's a spooky, otherworldly quality to them. The People Who Are strike me as the sort you don't want to mess with.

7. The Decemberists - January Hymn / June Hymn

Two contrasting hymns from The King Is Dead album (Colin Meloy was always a huge Smiths fan). The first is an ode to shovelling snow, the second a celebration of pegging out your washing. Ironically, it's the latter which appears to steal its chords from Simon & Garfunkel's I Am A Rock (y'know, the one that begins 'A winter's day, In a deep and dark December...')

6. Roddy Frame - Hymn To Grace

Aztec Camera were a brilliant band, but I sometimes feel Roddy Frame has done better work since he packed in his famous job and turned solo. In the one-man-and-a-guitar stakes, he takes some beating.

5. The Magic Numbers - Hymn To Her

Kill all hippies.

No, I like The Magic Numbers. This is from their first album, when they showed the most promise. You have to wonder if, in our looks-obsessed culture, lead singer Romeo Stoddard's Steven Toast meets Giant Haystacks image prevented the band from getting on any magazine covers. Shame...

Of course, this wasn't the most famous song with that awful pun-title. I'm presuming Romeo stole it from the band at #3.

4. Hefner - The Hymn For Cigarettes

Hefner have written more hymns than Charles Wesley or Isaac Watts (look: if I can google them, you can). See also The Hymn For Alcohol, The Hymn For Coffee, The Hymn For The Things We Didn't Do, etc. etc. This one's my favourite. Although I've never been a smoker, I like the way Darren Hayman pays tribute to all his favourite cigarette brands, but mostly I like it because it contains one of the greastest questions in the history of pop...
How can she love me 
If she doesn't even love 
The cinema that I love?
3. The Pretenders - Hymn To Her

Written by Chrissie's old school pal, Meg Keene, this is as close as The Pretenders ever got to becoming Fleetwood Mac. Apparently there are pagan themes to the lyrics, which would have fit the White Witch, Stevie Nicks, very well. Chrissie even sounds like Stevie on this.

Before she became famous, Chrissie Hynde worked for the NME. Among others, she interviewed Brian Eno, Tim Buckley and David Cassidy. Not Nicks though... I wonder if she was a Mac fan?

2. James - Hymn From A Village

From their second EP, released in 1985 (their first record was out in '83!). It's still a pretty powerful mission statement from a band just starting out...
This song's made up, made second rate
Cosmetic music, powderpuff
Pop tunes, false rhymes, all lightweight bluffs
Second-hand ideas, no soul, no hate
Wasn't mean to be
Built on complacency
The nightmares ride away
When you refuse to play
Oh go and read a book
It's so much more worth while
Being a song-smith crook
Study death in style
Death in style
And thirty years later, they're still at it. Their 14th album, Girl At The End of the World, will be out in March.

1. Fleet Foxes - White Winter Hymnal

I bang on a lot on this site about how much I love storytelling songs and how important lyrics are to me, but I have to confess I've never really paid much attention to the lyrics of White Winter Hymnal. I know it's about something, and there's some wonderful imagery, but the effect the song has on me is purely down to the sound: the harmonies and the canon effect work together to make this a mesmerising piece of music. When something sounds this good, I don't need to know what it's all about.

As we move house next week, I'd be thankful if the white winter can stay away this year, please.




Which is your Lord of the Dance?

Friday, 1 February 2013

My Top Ten Songs With Reasons


I have ten good reasons why you should listen to this blog post...


10. Franz Ferdinand - You're the Reason I'm Leaving

Was it something I said? (Was it 'cos I told you the band's name is pronounced R-E-M, not "Rem", you bunch of idiot-twits?)

9. The Unbelievable Truth - Higher Than Reason

OK, I'm stretching the criteria to include this one, but it's a lost classic from a songwriter who deserves to be remembered as more than just Thom Yorke's younger brother.

8. Loretta Lynn & Conway Twitty - You're The Reason Our Kids Are Ugly

I was introduced to this via the excellent Indelicates cover, which manages somehow to be even more bitchy. Sadly, it's also too ugly for youtube.

7. Jeff Klein - Five Good Reasons

Jeff's got five good reasons why he never sleeps alone. One of them being: he writes some lovely songs.

6. Half Man Half Biscuit - Reasons to be Miserable (Part 10)

Of course, Nigel Blackwell has hundreds of reasons to be miserable. He's built a career writing songs around them. That's why we love him.

See also Paradise Lost (You're The Reason Why).

5. Roddy Frame - Reason To Live

Wow. Forgotten how good this one was.

4. My Life Story - 12 Reasons Why I Love Her

Ah, Jake Shillingford. Where are you now?


Reason #11 is the one I couldn't get down with. She leaves the pie but always eats her greens? Who the heck leaves pie?

3. Tim Hardin - Reason To Believe

Or, you may have reasons to prefer Rod's version. Nothing wrong with that. I, of course, have a very special place in my heart for Bruce's song of the same name... philosophy from roadkill.

2. Frank Turner - Reasons Not To Be An Idiot

Reasons why I love Frank Turner #84.
So why are you sat at home?
You're not designed to be alone
You just got used to saying "no"
So get up and get down and get outside
Cos it's a lovely sunny day
But you hide yourself away
You've only got yourself to blame
Get up and get down and get outside
1. Ian Dury & The Blockheads - Reasons To Be Cheerful (Part 3)

If you're struggling to find reasons to be cheerful... any of these should suffice:
Something nice to study
Phoning up a buddy
Being in my nuddy
Saying hokey-dokey 

Singalonga Smokey
Coming out of chokey



Be reasonable - don't just tell me your favourite. Tell me your reasons...


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