Sunday, 10 November 2013


That's Entertainment : Aus-Music Month - The Nineties




AusMusic Month Part 2 - the 1990's.

In the early 1990's, four pivotal things occurred in Australia.

* Pubs got pokies
* Triple J went regional and national
* Vinyl LPs were discontinued as a mainstream music format 
* The Recession we had to have

All of a sudden, pubs that had crammed in drinking punters for bands could fill their dance room with one arm bandits, and ker-ching, instant moolah.  More and more venues became gambling dens and the local Sydney live scene began to shrink.

In late 1991, LP and 7 inch singles were also discontinued (and soon cassette tapes would follow).  CDs were the future.  Anecdotal estimates say that up to 50-60% of the Australian music buying public stopped buying music.  The 80's had ended, and in 1990, the last golden hurrah of BIG albums - Midnight Oil, Icehouse, The Angels occurred.  I would hazard a guess that with the Recession biting, disposable income dried up and with the more expensive compact disc now the only format (at $30 a CD, or $10 a CD single), most punters couldn't afford music.  

Of course, there were global changes occurring and newer trends replaced pub rock and electro pop.  But despite these industry setbacks, by 1996/97 - the breakout years of the new Aussie sounds - every city and town in Australia had recovered and were giving us great bands to listen to.

One of the first to burst this bubble was the breakout act of 1991 - Ratcat.  Mixing buzzing alt-pop and shoegaze aesthetics, Ratcat's Tingles EP (at $5) was a steal and rocketed to #1.  The song That Ain't Bad is one of the classics of the 1990's, as were the breakthrough follow up hits Don't Go Now and Baby Baby.  For mine, Ratcat were probably 5 or so years ahead of their time, and had they come out late 1990's, they'd probably still be around now.  Alt Aussie pop was rubbing against the grain, and we got gems like The Clouds, The Fauves and TISM.

Another band that successfully side-stepped the death of pub rock was The Screaming Jets.  Hailing from Newcastle, their straight ahead bluesy rock and working class ethics saw them barnstorm around the nation, releasing a string of well selling albums and interesting rock videos.  Better is another of the 1990's Aussie classics.

In the early 1990's, Triple J also went regional then national.  Many of the changes, unpopular at the start, led to a more corporate Aussie radio station.  Some of the J's initiatives  like the Hottest 100 and unearthed continue to produce [and give a leg up to] new bands, create ongoing revenue and with the mid-1990s rise of the alternative, gave us the 1990's seminally influential acts like PowderfingerSilverchairThe WhitlamsSpiderbaitRegurgitator and You Am I, along with the lesser acts like CustardGrinspoonFauves and Superjesus.  Whilst Triple M stuck rigid to a pub rock playlist it wasn't until 2001 that Triple M 'pretended' they'd always supported Aussie bands, by latching on to the Aussie bands who'd gone gangbusters with 3-4 albums with mostly Triple J airplay.

Powderfinger went on to sell more records than Midnight Oil and Cold Chisel - emulating both bands.  Silverchair (Nirvana In Pajamas) were massive (even in the US with their debut album).  Regurgitator released wicked albums full of crude and sly references and pastiches.  I took my mum to see them at Gosford Leagues Club (she loved Polyester Girl) and had a mind altering freak out night with the band.  You Am I had THREE ARIA #1 albums in a row, releasing a string of intrinsically Aussie sounding records (though Tim Rogers def wears his 60's English Mod references on his sleeve).  You Am I hold a special place in my heart after seeing them at Homebake in 1998 - it was raining cats and dogs, the previous band Skunkhour had chucked a tanty, and Tim Rogers and the boys said 'fug the rain, let's rock!' and proceeded to win the day.  The Whitlams went from Newtown trendies to radio darlings with the independently produced Eternal Nightcap.  I saw them at the Long Jetty hotel on that tour and was amazed Tim Freedman could play piano and sing after downing a couple of bottles of red wine.

Many bands suffered from the 3 album deal.  MASSIVE debut, decent follow-up, forgotten non-selling third album.   Plenty had a hit or two, and with RAGE acting as the de facto video/TV arm of Triple J, and with Dylan on RECOVERY on Saturday mornings, many of these bands got to blaze their one big hit to a national audience, and the better ones got a few singles out before falling by the wayside.  The rise of The Big Day Out and later Homebake led to day long bills filled with these bands who were giving it a crack and were seen one year and gone the next.

On the pop front, Diesel (Mark Lizotte / Johnny Diesel) had some huge albums with some unforgettable rocking hits.  Seeing him live at Toronto (Newcastle) playing to a couple of dozen punters, he put on the BEST show ever.  Savage Garden blitzed the world, esp America, where their blend of pop won them fans and then with album #2, they pandered to the American market, releasing syrup.  Bands like Things of Stone and Wood with Happy Birthday HelenChocolate Starfish with Mountain and You're So VainRick Price with Don't Walk Away Renee and Southern Sons notched up decent sales too.  Towards the end of the decade, poptastic bands like Taxiride and Vertigo (Desensitised) existed too.  Alex Lloyd released his fantastic debut only to become a bland pop star.  Yothu Yindi - an indigenous pop band, obliterated the chart in 1992 with their hit Treaty.

The Baby Animals got stuck in that post hair band - pre grunge period of 1991/92, releasing their debut album chockfull of classics...and Suze DeMarchi has to be one of the coolest, sexiest women in Aussie rock EVER!!!  For the stoners, Wollongong's Tumbleweed provided hits for the bong.

Another band that had the charismatic female vocalist was Frente!  If you were around in 1992, there was no way you could miss Accidentally Kelly Street and Ordinary Angels  (Angie Hart also sang Tingly with Pop!).  There was also Max Sharam with Coma and Rebecca's Empire with Atomic Electric and So Rude, and towards the end of the decade, we got Bachelor Girl and Madison Avenue.

And notice something else?  Out of the beer fuelled masculine pub rock 80's, there's more woman making massive strides.  What - chicks like rock music?  Apparently they can play guitar too.  If not out front, many 1990s bands were blended male/female groups with vocals, writing and playing all shared.  

For the tres cool, Nick Cave hit his peak.  Tex Perkins took over the Cruel Sea and minced/menaced stages with his whiskey and cowboy boots.

For the tres naff, like me, we had Peter Andre.  Yep.  Champion!

Of course one of Australia's greatest independent bands - The Hard-Ons - mixed metal, pop,  surf and punk and released a slew of 7 inch singles, Eps and damn fine albums populated by perfect 2 minute ditties about everything and nothing.  Greater Western Sydney's true giants, they brought the greatest waste of space - Western Sydney - to the masses with their own brand of wonderful that shits on anything Americans did later in the decade.

There were the girlbands - Girlfriend and Teen Queens.  There were the bands who'd done it tough like Weddings Parties Anything.  There was The Sharp - who were HUGE for about 3 months in 1992.  Even a glammy hair band in Roxus.  There was techno like Nick Skitz and Itchee and Scratchee and Southend (The Winner Is Sydney), and the first of the skip-hop acts in Sound Unlimited Posse.

For your punks there were the snot nosed Frenzal Rhomb.  For your more shouty, picket line punk, the Living End.

And of course, my fave - TISM.  This Is Serious Mum is an anonymous band that heaps scorn upon and embraces and belittles the Aussie way of life.  To me, they are the quintessential Australian band.  Humorous, vulgar, ironic, unafraid to say it how they see it.  They existed in the 80's but hit their commercial peak in the 90's with a clutch of rip roaring ditties tearing shreds off everything.  When I think of ANZAC diggers, I think of Aussie blokes who take the p!ss in the face of disaster and I think of TISM, flying the flag for our freedoms.  

For mine, there were plenty of fantastic albums and singles in the 1990's.  Heaps to see and do.  We won the Olympics.  Our sports teams smashed everyone to win World Cups around the globe.  I know I've missed bands.  I've missed songs.  I don't mean to.  If you think I've forgotten anything, feel free to email me.  I know someone will remind me of something cool.

Aussie music in the 1990's, twas a great decade.



Spiderbait : Greatest Hits
(contains : Buy Me A Pony, Joyce's Hut, Calypso, Shazam, Stevie)


Regurgitator : Jingles
(contains : Kung Foo Sing, Polyester Girl, Everyday FormulaBlack Bugs, Fat Cop)




Diesel : Rewind - the Best of Diesel
(contains: Never Miss Your Water, Tip of My Tongue, Love Junk, All Come Together)


Screaming Jets : Hits and Pieces
(contains : Better, Living in England, Shivers, Helping Hand, Stop The World)




The Whitlams : Truth Beauty and a Picture of You (Best of the Whitlams)
(contains: Blow Up The Pokies, No Aphrodisiac, I Make Hamburgers, You Sound Like Louis Burdett)
  
The Hard-Ons : Suck and Swallow : 25 Years 25 Songs or The Best of the Hard-Ons!
(contains: Radio, You Disappointed Me, Missing You, Missing Me, Where'd She Come From, Suck n Swallow, She's A Dish)
  

You Am I The Cream and the Crock 2CD
(contains : Purple Sneakers, Jaimme's Got A Girl, Berlin Chair, Good Mornin', Heavy Heart, Damage, Get Up)


Powderfinger :  Fingerprints/ Footprints - the Best of Powderfinger 1994-2000 & 2001-2011) 2CD
(contains:  My Happiness, Passenger, Pick You Up, These Days, DAF, The Day You Come)
[criminally leaves off Good Day Ray!!!]


Grinspoon :  Best In Show
(contains : Just Ace, Ready 1, Champion, Black Friday, DCx3)




Jebediah : Slighty Oddway (debut album)
(contains : Leaving Home, Benedict, Harpoon, Jerks of Attention, Military Strongmen, Teflon)



Custard : Goodbye Cruel World
(contains : Apartment, Girls Like That (Don't Go For Guys Like Us), Music Is Crap)



TISM :  Best of
(contains:  He'll Never Be An Ol' Man River, Greg The Stop Sign!,  Whatareya, 5 Yards, All Homeboys Are D!ckheads, Defecate on My Face)



The Badloves : The Definitive Collection
(contains : Lost, The Wright, Green Limousine, Caroline )



Weddings, Parties, Anything : Trophy Night - The Best Of
(contains : Father's Day)


Savage Garden : Truly Madly Completely: The Best of Savage Garden
(contains : I Want You, To The Moon and Back, Break Me Shake Me, The Animal Sing, Truly Madly Deeply)


Ratcat :  Twisted Tails
(contains : That Ain't Bad, Baby Baby, Don't Go Now, Candyman, Skin, The World In A Wrapper)



Silverchair :  The Best Of - Vol 1
(contains : Anthem for the Year 2000, Freak, Ana's Song, Tomorrow, Cemetery, Abuse Me, Pure Massacre)



The Clouds :  Favourites
(contains: Hieronymus, Anthem, Soul Eater, Say It)




The Fauves : Surf City Heart
(contains: Surf City Limits, Bigger Than Tina 1, Dogs Are The Best People, Celebrate the Failure, Self-Abuser)




The Hummingbirds :  Greatest Hits
(Contains:  Blush, Alimony, Word Gets Around)


Peter Andre : The Very Best of Peter Andre : The Hits Collection
(contains : Mysterious Girl, Flava, Gimme Little Sign, Kiss The Girl, Funky Junky, Get Down On It)


The Living End : From Here On In - The Singles 1997-2004
(contains: Prisoner of Society, Roll On, Second Solution, All Torn Down, Who's Gonna Save Us?)




Cruel Sea : The Most
(contains: Better Get A Lawyer, Black Stick, Honeymoon Is Over)





Something For Kate : The Murmur Years
(contains: Monsters, Electricity, Whatever You Want, Captain - Million Miles An Hour, Three Dimensions)






The Falling Joys : Lock It






Bands (most) without best ofs (as yet) but well worth checking out:

The Mavis'  (Cry, Lever)
The Falling Joys (Lock It)
Lavish (Careless, Parasite, Homosapien)  [Polaroid is an essential album]
Lino (Troubleshooting, Wasted, Drop)
Taxiride (Get Set, Everywhere You Go)
Defryme (God Inside A Man)
Baby Animals (Rush You, 
Superjesus (Down Again, Gravity, Enough To Know, Saturation)
Sidewinder (Here She Comes Again)
Ammonia (Drugs)
Single Gun Theory (Fall)
Skunkhour
Def FX (Psychoactive Summer)
Bodyjar
Sugargliders
Fini Scad (Coppertone)
Deadstar (Run Baby Run, Deeper Water)


That's Entertainment : Aus-Music Month - The Eighties 


I thought I would try something different this month.

November is Aus-Music month, and quite often, I don't think due respect is given to our local industry.

So for the next four weeks, I'll break it down to the 80's, 90's, 00's and now.

Shall we begin with the 1980's?

The 80's will always be the decade of my youth.  I have fond memories, even though people say it was a stunted decade that time should forget - from the fashions, the films, the music...blah blah.  I happen to love the decade.  Call it rose-tinted glassed, I say whatever!

In the era where the A-Team, Knightrider, V, Magnum PI, ALF and Punky Brewster were all TV staples, cheesy American sitcoms were de rigeur and Esme Watson was snopping, Pat the Rat was shocking and Neighbours and Home and Away had their 'early' years, I was living a charmed life of sunnyboys, whizz fizz, Scanlens bubblegum and Star Wars action figures.

And as a kid, the top of the pops stuff was the music I mostly heard.  

It's only later, as I grow older, when I speak to teens and twentysomethings of the 80's do I realise how good the era was.  Pubs all had bands, fighting for your ears.  No pokies, $5 entry and entertaining bands sweating it out with the punters on every corner.  

I've also started digging deeper - thanks to people like Con and Rob, amongst others - to find little one off pop nuggets that when heard, are pure gold...just forgotten.  I'm forever trawling Ebay and YouTube for bands.  In fact, I only recently bought the best of Nick Cave and The Triffids to digest their works and 'discovered' Matt Finnish (and by way of that band, their singer-guitarist Matt Moffitt) who crafted some mighty fine tunes.

And in Australia, we've been spoilt for choice.  There was pub-rock, straight pop and the moody alternatives.  There's the obvious clones and trend setters.  Bands like Midnight Oil struck out with a political message, copping flak but winning respect, long before it became trendy to do so.  Some of our bands blazed a trail overseas for today's pop/rock groups.  Others had that moment of burn and fade, or a couple of sustained hits or 7 inch singles scrapping in to the Top 100 or Top 50, and their video got a couple of whirls on the music video shows of the time.

By no means is this an exhaustive list.

But I think you will agree the BIG bands of the era sustain themselves, and are nice to listen to every once in a while.  Nostalgia or not, there's some HUGE hits amongst them.  Others like The Church should have had multiple hits around the globe.  The Severed Heads pioneered electronica as did Icehouse in its own way, being one of the first bands to embrace the Fairlight synthesiser.   INXS swaggered around the world, Guns N Roses covered Rose Tattoo and Nick Cave was a goth troubadour.  Each, in their own way, brought us something exciting, something to sing along to, something to cherish.

In this digital age, you can cherry pick the best.  And most bands have excellent best of sets.  Delve a little deeper...there are so many gems.  

As for me, I'm always listening, always learning, always liking.  At the moment it's a live cut of Fade Away recorded by Matt Finish in 1981.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QLE7Y2yJ7Vs  To think I've only just found this song makes me sad to think they aren't all over the radio still today.  That said, Triple M's hottest 500 of all time had them rank quite high, so maybe there's fans out there still.

Next week, the 1990's.  What's not to like about Ratcat, Savage Garden, the Screaming Jets and You Am I. 


INXS : Shine Like It Does: The Anthology (1979-1997)  OR The Very Best (2 Disc)
(includes: Need You Tonight, Original Sin, Kiss The Dirt, New Sensation, Devil Inside, Don't Change, Need You Tonight, Mediate, Never Tear Us Apart, Mystify, Kick)
Essential: Kick


The Divinyls Greatest Hits
(Includes: Science Fiction, Pleasure and Pain, I Touch Myself, Back to the Wall)


Midnight Oil Essential Oils (2 CD) 
(Includes: Beds Are Burning, Put Down That Weapon, Dreamworld, Kosciusko, Short Memory, Power and the Passion)



Icehouse : White Heat 30 Hits  
(includes: Electric Blue, Crazy, Man of Colours,  We Can Get Together, Great Southern Land, Don't Believe Anymore, Touch The Fire)
Essential - Man of Colours



The AngelsWasted Sleepless Nights - The Definitive Greatest Hits
(includes: Am I Ever Gonna See Your Face Again?, Take A Long Line, Marseilles, No Secrets, Let The Night Roll On, Dogs Are Talking)




Hunters & CollectorsNatural Selection
(includes: Talking To A Stranger, Throw Your Arms Around Me, When The River Runs Dry, Holy Grail)




Hoodoo Gurus: Ampology
(includes: What's My SceneI Want You Back, Like Wow - Wipeout!, Come Anytime)




Australian CrawlMore Wharf: Greatest Hits
(includes: The Boys Light Up, Beautiful People, Errol, Reckless, Downhearted, Oh No Not You Again)




Mental As AnythingBest Of
(hits include: The Nips Are Getting Bigger, If You Leave Me Can I Come Too?, Live It Up, Too Many Times)



Men At WorkBusiness As Usual
(includes: Who Can It Be Now?, Down Under, Down By The Sea, Helpless Automation)



Paul Kelly : Songs From The South Greatest Hits Volumes 1 & 2
(includes: From St Kilda To King's Cross, Dumb Things, To Her Door, From Little Things Big Things Grow)




The Church : Deep In The Shallows - The Classic Singles Collection
(includes: Under The Milky Way, Unguarded Moment, Reptile, Metropolis)




Boom Crash OperaThe Best Things
(includes: Onion SkinGreat Wall, Get Out Of The House, The Best Thing, Bettadaze, In The Morning, Gimme)
Essential : These Here Are Crazy Times



Mi-Sex : The Essential 
(includes: Computer Games, But You Don't Care, Space Race, Falling In And Out, Missing Person, Shanghaied!)  
Essential : Graffiti Crimes




The Sunnyboys:  This Is Real (Singles / Live / Rare )
(includes: Alone With You, This Is Real, You Need A Friend)


The Radiators :  Radiology
(includes: Coming Home, Gimme Head, No Tragedy )




Rose Tattoo : The Essential 
(includes: Bad Boy For Love, We Can't Be Beaten, Rock n Roll Outlaw)  



Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds : The Best of Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
(includes: Where The Wild Roses Grow, Stranger Than Kindness, The Mercy Seat, Into My Arms, Red Right Hand, Do You Love Me?)


Severed Heads : ComMerz
(includes: Dead Eyes Open, Petrol, Bless This House, Harold & Cindy Hospital)



The Go-Betweens : Quiet Heart - The Best of the Go-Betweens
(includes: Cattle & Cane, Streets of Your Town, Love Goes On, Bachelor Kisses)



1927The Very Best Of
(includes: That's When I Think Of You, You'll Never Know, If I Could, Tell Me A Story, Don't Forget Me, The Other Side)


Pseudo Echo : The Essential
(includes: Funky Town, Listening, A Beat For You, Stranger In Me, Love An Adventure)





Crate digging 'honourable mention' [so go check 'em out] : 
Real Life, Spy Vs Spy, Matt Finish, The Triffids, Deckchairs Overboard, The Reels, The Models, Wa Wa Nee.

FYI : Sony Essential Series is a fairly good start for some bands.  Fairly comprehensive, occasionally a 'hit' or two might be left off for a random album track or b-side.  But overall, the 'hits' are contained within.  

Sunday, 30 June 2013


That's Entertainment : Pseudo Echo


Back in the day, much like now, Australian bands liked to ape what was happening overseas.

For instance, in the late 80's when hairbands like Poison dominated the charts, Australia had Roxus.  Then in the early 90's the world was gifted Nirvana and grunge, so we got Nirvana In Pyjamas, ahem, silverchair.  When Nu-Metal hit in the late 90's/early 2000's, there was Limp Bizkit, so we had 28 Days.   And so on.  It's no shameful thing that influential bands at their peak influence bands who like to mimic the sound, image, etc.

Anyway, in the early 1980's, when Futurist New Romance was at it's peak with bands like Duran Duran, Simple Minds and Ultravox, a little Aussie band sprung up copying the sound and image of these dandy pop stars.  Now, depending on who you listen to, they were either one of the worst Aussie bands ever or one of the best Aussie bands ever.  If the prevailing scene of pub rock is to be believed, this sinful, wicked band full of poofs and ponces that had no cred.  On the other hand, they were equally adored and had mass chart success, no doubt helped by numerous appearances on Countdown.

The band I refer to, is Pseudo Echo.

Now Pseudo Echo are a funny band.  Their first album was as I said, very Ultravox / Duran Duran with keytars, awash with synth squelches and electronic African/Asian drums.  By the time they released their second album, they'd moved in to the mid-80s prevailing pop sound and my 1989, they'd gone sort of hair-band pop-rock.  When they returned in 2000, Pseudo Echo had arrived at the future they had seen some 20 years earlier, but with edgier synth and technological leanings of cool electro.

That aside, they did record one of the biggest selling and best covers of all time in Funky Town.

For mine, A Beat For You is one of the greatest New Romantic tunes, and often finds it's way on to mix tapes of the era.      

I'm pretty sure the girls loved Pseudo Echo.  If they were around today, think Reece Mastin.   Pseudo Echo played their own instruments, wrote their own songs, performed live (though not on Countdown).  But like a Reece Mastin, Pseudo Echo were probably burdened by the teen girl image, bad posing, and even when they tried to move away from the poncey side of things in their early days, there was a lingering doubt that they were just a fad band.  Which is not fair for Pseudo Echo.  Reece is burdened by the fact he was a reality TV show winner.

And dredging through all the singles and video clips, I am quite surprised by just how many hit singles (Top 40) Pseudo Echo had.  And today, they're pretty much ignored in the pop history landscape.  (Another parallel to TV show winners, where is Lee Harding, Cosima or Paulini now?  Hell, where is Atilyan Childs?).  Pseudo Echo slip in to a period where Aussie men were still men, but there were Aussie blokes who were blokes who liked girls and therefore went to many of the gigs with their girlfriends and won't admit in public they ever tapped a toe to Pseudo Echo, let alone sang along, bought a 7" single or watched Countdown or Sweet & Sour.

And I think we can safely say Pseudo Echo fall in to that sad Aussie music trap of a massive first album, a decent follow up and the forgotten third album that came out just before the record company sat them down and gave them a chat about finding a job at Franklins...a la 1927 and Thirsty Merc.

So at the end of the day, I will freely admit to not minding Pseudo Echo.  And when it all boils down, at least Funky Town kicks some major ar$3.  

And now, while I pull some electric boogaloo moves in the privacy of my lounge room, I'm going to whack on some Pseudo Echo, and go ape with the kids.  Just hope DOCS don't come a knocking!

Listening


A Beat For You


Stranger In Me


Dancing Until Midnight


Don't Go


Love An Adventure


Living In A Dream


Try


Funky Town


Fooled Again


Take On The World


Over Tomorrow


Eye Of The Storm


Don't You Forget


2000

Lessons In Love # 1


2012

Suddenly Silently


Fighting The Tide


That's Entertainment : John, Paul, George and Ringo


Friction is what keeps things interesting...  

I live in a split home.  You see, when Lee and my fathers were growing up, it was either The Beatles or The Rolling Stones.  Lee grew up in a Rolling Stones home; I grew up in a Beatles home.  

Put on the Beatles Red or Blue best ofs, and I'm pretty sure I could sing most of them.  From the mop top I Wanna Hold Your Hand to the psychedllia of Sgt Pepper's...to the dsyfunctional disintegration of  Abbey Road.   They are a blue print of my musical life.  Alice Cooper says that modern bands forget to listen to the Beatles - for mine, respect to the DNA of pop music must be paid to the Beatles.  Anyway...we're not here to talk about The Beatles as a band. 

So aside from the Beatles / Stones divide, and not that I knew it at the time, there was an even greater divide: a McCartney home, or a Lennon home.

My home, was smack bang in the Lennon camp.  Don't know why.  It's not something I've ever asked.  Maybe I will sit my dad down on Sunday and ask him why he preferred Lennon.  It's not like we didn't listen to the Beatles...it's just he didn't have any McCartney tapes.  

I grew up with a cassette tape of his Lennon's greatest hits.  And there were quite a few of them.  Genuine, bona fide classics.

So here are my fave John Lennon solo tracks, each a breath of fresh air every time I listen.

Imagine  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XLgYAHHkPFs   [ close to, if not, the greatest song of all time to many ]

Just Like Starting Over  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fWWbu_RSh7Q



Nobody Loves You When You're Down And Out  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G82q8Yds0hA


Oh Yoko  





But then I rebelled, because in the 1980's, Paul McCartney was still alive, he was still a massive pop act and he had heaps of songs, which now are considered way naff.  I worked my way backwards too to his time as a solo artist and in his highly successful band Wings.  It's sad today because I think more people think of Paul McCartney being a pot head vegan whose 2nd wife went batty and unfairly say that John is the better artist because he died.   People in the music press like to get all misty eyed and revisionist, forgetting Paul McCartney was a massive, MASSIVE act in the 1980's and still in to the 1990's and probably still today in the markets outside of the US and UK.

Personally, I don't buy in to it.  Press is a silly pop song with silly lyrics but is a sugar hit I need from time to time, as is the unabashed cheesiness of No More Lonely Nights.  

So now, with so many people listening in, here's my fave Paul McCartney songs:


Band on the Run  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S7D65IomNYY   [ quite possibly one of the greatest songs of all time ]


Silly Little Love Songs  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_9QooYDYtU




Say Say Say [with Michael Jackson]  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aLEhh_XpJ-0






But you know what...there's a third house down the street.  

And in 1987/88, a man by the name of George Harrison released a solo album that was mucho mega big.  I didn't know until then he was also a Beatle.  These days, the revisionist set say he's better than both Paul and John.  Maybe.  I won't buy in to it.  I'm ignorant to much of his work, and I'm working on listening to more of his gear but I have read a lot about him and he seems like the wickedly dry, humourous kind of bloke I could have a laugh with.  





Shanghai Surprise [with Vicki Brown (George Harrison produced this Madonna and Sean Penn film of the same name ] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cPU2eQ4AT4A



Handle Me With Care (with Travelling Wilburys)  [originally to be a B-side; the record company refused to throw it away as a B-side and the rest is history ]   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L8s9dmuAKvU

And of course there is what some might disparagingly call 'the outhouse'... Ringo Starr.  I love him.  I think he is cool.  Most people think he's a crap drummer.  I just think he is cool.  And a good drummer.  He has a distinctive playing and singing sound, and he influenced the way drums are set up and played, including his grip.  Ringo Starr is not to be flippantly disregarded.  And he's released some pretty cool little pop tracks too.  So I'll go all revisionist and say that Ringo is actually the best solo Beatle of them all.  Choke on that NME and MOJO.  LOL.







It's All Down To Goodnight Vienna  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kcv7_QCJzkw

 

Plug It In:  The Occupants


If you haven't already, check out THE OCCUPANTS (features former members of COG).

Am really liking their track I'VE BEEN THINKING.  Has a hint of Genesis to it.

Album out soon.! 



Plug It In:  Cold Mailman


If you haven't already, check out COLD MAILMAN.

Am really liking their track MY RECURRING DREAM.

Album HEAVY HEARTS out NOW! 



Official Website : http://www.coldmailman.com/


Plug It In:  Group Love


If you haven't already, check out GROUP LOVE.

Am really liking their track WAYS TO GO.

Album out Sept 2013.