Archive for the ‘Music’ Category

Wired For Sound

Friday, January 7th, 2022

The first record shop I remember was at Garden City. I believe it was called Sound World, and it was there I bought my first vinyl 7″ record (which I still own today) when I was ten years old. It was a retail store in a shopping center, which meant it was clean and not-scary for a little tyke like myself, and I loved it. I used to flip through the records almost at random, entranced by the cover art. I sometimes asked the clerk to put a particular single on, since this was pre-muzak and shops usually played their own records over the PA. I collected the weekly singles charts (which were nicely printed for people to take) and often looked at but never actually bought a poster. I always wanted the large poster of the album cover art for Borrowed Time by Diamond Head, and was surprised when many years later I visited a friends house (MS) for the first time and saw it on his wall!

Since we frequented Garden City I seemed to visit Sound World almost weekly, and many of my early purchases were made there. I had a brief flirtation with 7″ vinyl, but when Bernard and I got tape players for Christmas in early 198X we both switched to cassettes. I bought lots of then, mostly with my paper route money. Looking back, it feels like that’s what almost all my money went on! Around 1984 I discovered the ability to order records from catalogues, and this opened up my world in unimaginable ways. I learned there were other records even beyond what was stocked in the shop, and never looked back. In that year I ordered Forever Young (the album) by Alphaville from the David Jones record counter and when it arrived it changed my life.

Ordering music became routine, and much of my mid to early Depeche Mode collection – which is downstairs in this house right now – was obtained via ordering since often the shops wouldn’t stock it by default. Sometimes I felt I knew more about using the ordering system that the clerks that worked in the stores, and looking back on it – writing numbers on little pieces of paper torn out of a ticket book and waiting for them to call to say it’s in stock – it seems very quaint. But it worked, and I loved it.

As I grew older I found stores further afield, and by my middle teenage years Bernard and I would regularly hit the ones in the Newcastle CBD. I don’t recall the names now, but I remember them older and dirtier and more mysterious than my mall haunts. They’d have records that seemed to go back to when my parents were kids, and the posters on the walls suggested times long past. But often they also had more eclectic selections, and when I got into new wave and – particularly notable for me – UK import stuff, these were the stores I kept returning to.

When dad went to Germany in the 1980s I asked him to bring me back some Alphaville singles (which I couldn’t even order in Australia) and he succeeded in spades bringing back a trove of them. Even better was that he’d kept the packaging – for a store called Saturn in Hamburg – and he had also picked up an encyclopedia catalogue. I was absolutely astonished by the minute print in the page after page of listings (all in German of course) and used to dream of visiting the place! I think we entertained the idea of even trying to order something from the catalogue, but never actually did.

When I was about 16 or 17 there was a little shop on Hunter Street hidden in a small arcade that was a good place to pick up singles and (in later years) CD singles, and was often my go-to for the latest Depeche Mode or Erasure releases. There was a tiny cafe next door that sold good sausage rolls, and I’d often spend time looking through the records then stopping for a roll and a coke, eating it on a flimsy table outside next to the glass storefront while looking through my purchases. I recall one of the clerks one time calling me ‘captain’ when I bought something, because I was in uniform and had my captains badge on. Looking back on that shop it seems the owner must have had music tastes similar to mine, since it carried very different music than the typical store in those days. It closed before I left Australia though, and I recall being disappointed the day I stopped by to find it gone.

It was around that age when I took my first solo day trip to Sydney for shopping. If I go to a city now (say New York) just for shopping, music doesn’t even enter the equation, but in those days the trips were exclusively for record shopping! There were a great many very specialized stores in the Sydney CBD and I used to hit them all. At first it was Redeye, Phantom and Waterfront, but toward the early 1990s Metropolis, Galaxy and Underground (and occasionally Utopia) were added to my schedule. These were all heaven for collectors like myself: places where you’d actually see the latest variant 7″ or 12″ releases by my favourite bands (in original sleeves!) not to mention the records covered in NME. It was in these stores that I bought most of the Nick Cave, Depeche Mode, Erasure and Sisters of Mercy vinyl I still own today. Every trip I’d buy enough that I could barely carry it, and my day would be endless visits to record stores punctuated by McDonalds and the obligatory stops in the arcades on George Street.

In fact it was in Redeye that – on a whim – I bought a record by a band I’d never heard of based on the cover art alone. That purchase of Dawnrazor by Fields of The Nephilim back in 1987 probably changed my life as well. In 1989 I was in a Sydney record shop (with SMC) the moment the earthquake hit Newcastle, which was another pivotal event in my life.

I went to Sydney very often in the late 1980s and early 1990s; probably once a month. The train was free for me in those days, and I loved the ride as much as the shopping. Sometimes Bernard came too, or I went with friends, or I met a friend down there (the mysterious CRS, who probably deserves her own blog post one day…). I apologize if you ever came with me and was bored/exhausted as I dragged you around endless record shops for 12 hours!

Used record shops were another favourite of mine, and Rices on Hunter Street was a popular stop after school back in the SFX days. It was an incredible location for vinyl and CDs (and books) and almost impossible to go into without walking out with some treasure. I feel it was the first used record shop I ever visited, which is extraordinary considering how great it was. But in Sydney as you walked toward to the CBD from Central Station you walked right past two stores – Lawsons and Ashwoods – that made Rices look like a hole in the wall. These places were always dense with people and had an incredible diversity of books and records that seemed to completely change every time I visited. I remember they were hot and smelled of old paper, and it was often frustrating trying to find order in the seemingly chaotic sorting. But I persisted, and many times I’d find something I was interested in and hide it so I could pick it up on the way back to the station at the end of the day 🙂

In an indirect way, KLS and I met over records. We were both collectors, and discovered each other via a record collecting message board for a particular band. When she visited Australia back in the 20th century I took her to all my usual haunts and I don’t even think she was bored (based on the fact she later agreed to marry me)! One of my favourite record shop anecdotes is from that trip: KLS and I were resting our legs on a long bench outside Metropolis, which was a dance/alternative store in a Sydney underground arcade, reading through a free entertainment newspaper. The back cover was an advert for a Right Said Fred concert, and when I glanced at the guy sitting next to me on the bench I was astonished to notice it was a guy from the band! He looked at me, and then at the advert, gave me a massive smile, and walked away. Not a word was said 🙂

Even when I came to America I used to frequent record shops, albeit mall ones in those days. By then they sold movies as well, and the size of the stores dwarfed the ones I was used to from my youth, and I loved visiting them and browsing the stacks. But record shops were famously one of the earliest victims of the changes the internet brought the world, and by the early 00’s were all but dead in the USA. In a very short time they closed in all the malls, and then everywhere. Standalone music shops were suddenly gone, and the joy of browsing the new releases or the used bins went with them. The vinyl resurgence has caused things to change a bit in the last decade, and some stores have returned, but I still think the days of a record shop in every mall are lost to history

So many happy memories of times spent in record shops. Is it the same for you?

Troll Pop

Tuesday, June 16th, 2020

This is a troll:

They’re toys that have been around for decades and are beloved by almost everyone especially my brother. While he’s never actually said anything about them, I know he adores troll toys.

Something else he loves is the K-Pop band Red Velvet, shown here:

You can imagine how excited he must have been when he heard that these two things he loved had combined into one! Yes my friends, Red Velvet were ‘in’ the recent Trolls film:

I don’t doubt Bernard threw caution to the wind and ran to the cinema to see this film but since I loathe trolls and am ambivalent toward Red Velvet I barely gave the movie a thought. However a particular piece of licensing did catch my eye, and that was these Oreos:

Green-cream Oreos with glitter and popping candy?!? This is what it means to live in the 21st century!

So many cookies with delicious sugary cream. Don’t you just want to try one? You can even enjoy them in four different designs:

What are they like? In a word: heavenly. The slightly chemical taste of the cream is completely overridden by the astonishing experience of the poprocks and the thought that even though it’s not visible you’re eating glitter as well:

During lockdown I religiously bought a pack of these every two weeks and we wolfed them down like starving beasts. Alas they are now gone from our stores, another victim of corona. They’ll never be forgotten.

If you happen to find a pack on shelves in your area don’t hesitate to buy them. These are by a very wide margin the best Oreos ever, and highly recommended 🙂

Air Port Panic

Sunday, July 8th, 2018

In Inverness, a quick search on the information superhighway led me to a used game shop only a few hops and skips away from where we were staying. Of course we wandered over, and found a most intriguing and messy little shop full of records and games.The walls were decorated with album sleeves, mostly examples of 1970s Top Of The Pops ‘cover girl’ compilations like this:

There were loads of records and singles, and even a few cassettes. Disorder was the name of the game, and actually finding anything specific would have been a matter of luck. And yet I reckoned there were treasures in the boxes, and had I not been overseas I may have dug a bit through the vinyl.

Happily the games were sorted, but unfortunately 99% of them were 16 bit or older. I spied a few old Spectrum and CPC computer games, and may have even purchased them if they hadn’t been lacking their sleeves. There were no signs of actual 8-bit computers, or magazines from the 1980s. It looked like I would depart without making a purchase.

And then I saw this:

Its an LCD handheld from 1982! The last game in Bandai’s LCD Solarpower series to be precise, and one of the very few released outside of Japan. I’d never heard of this series of games before, and was intrigued to find that they rely completely on solar power to run.

The Japanese box (mine didn’t come with the box) also shows how it has two layered screens for a very subtle 3D effect. This works well and makes the screens look busier than in the Game & Watch units from Nintendo.Unfortunately the technology requires actual solar power, and doesn’t function at all under artificial lighting!

Furthermore, it’s incredibly difficult to get good photos due to how reflective the screen is, but here’s my best attempts:

Air Port Panic is ridiculously difficult to the point where I suspect it’s slightly buggy. The action seems to lag the processor slightly and you seem to die moments before being hit by a projectile. But this can be accounted for somewhat, and success – reaching the hijacked plane in screen one and reaching the terrorists in screen two can be achieved with practice.

Sadky it’s not much fun, and not just because of the stupid difficulty. You also need to be standing in direct sunlight to play, and even then can hardly see the screen. I can see – impressive tech aside – why Bandai didn’t beat Nintendo in the early 80s handheld wars 🙂

I paid a mere £15 for this gem, which is considerably less than I see then for on eBay. As a game I’ll rarely return to it, but as another for the collection it was a happy find!

(So many…) Afternoons in Utopia

Thursday, November 2nd, 2017

Back in 1984 we received a cassette tape from Germany with two different albums recorded on it. On one side was 4630 Bochum by Herbert Grönermeyer and on the other side was Forever Young by Alphaville. The Grönermeyer album was quickly forgotten, but Alphaville changed my life.

The album is a 1980s classic now, although in those days it made little inroad into English-speaking countries. I’ve listened to it so many times I can’t imagine a life in which I didn’t know the songs by heart, and the tapestries of the melodies and lyrics have been instrumental in shaping my impressions and thoughts of Germany, The Cold War, aging and the loneliness of memory. For it’s delightful (“Sounds Like A…“) melodies and dance-floor beats the lyrics are often sad and bittersweet. That spoke to me at that age like few albums before had. Forever Young was packaged nostalgia for a twelve-year old that barely knew the word, and to this day I can’t listen to it without being brought back to my early teen years.

The title song in particular is probably my favourite song of all time. If I could be anything, I’d be forever young.

Two short years later everything changed when Alphaville released their followup album, Afternoons In Utopia.

I bought this one on vinyl at Sound World in Charlestown Square the day it was released in late 1986. I only knew it was coming because of the ‘coming soon’ whiteboard behind the counter, and knowing nothing about the album aside from a name presumably expected more like Forever Young. I was blown away by what I got.

Afternoons is as close to a concept album as Alphaville has ever made, set in a future world of magic engineers and talking dolphins and exotic locales to visit and simply to enjoy life in. It starts with a limerick-riff on relativity (that didn’t make sense to me until many years later) and dives straight into an ode to Greenpeace disguised (of all things) as a fantasy story. What follows are incredible (and I mean that literally) songs about following ‘magnet mages’ for idyllic meetings with a lover in a ‘lightdome’ (“Dance With Me“), Martian easter and ‘Maomoondogs’ (“Afternoons in Utopia“) and the aforementioned talking dolphins (“Sensations“). This is a masterpiece of an album, every song iconic and memorable in it’s own way. Shortly after I bought it my love – my obsession! – with the album eclipsed virtually all others, including Forever Young. I’d proclaim my endless love for Black Celebration (by Depeche Mode) to friends, but in private listened to this more than anything else.

Even on an album where every song is a classic one song – “Lassie Come Home” – stood out. It’s a long, soft ballad with eerie lyrics, melancholic music and a achingly sad vocal. Many years later I read an interview with Marian Gold – singer, writer, musician – in which he was asked about the (weird) lyrics and basically said they meant whatever you wanted. I can’t say exactly what they mean to me, but it’s always been something special.

In these days dad went to Germany for a few weeks and – at my request – purchased for me a collection of Alphaville 7″ singles. I also wrote to Marian Gold and received a handwritten reply! It is one of the great regrets of my life I no longer own any of this, having gifted it to MMC before leaving Australia. I also remember – 31 years later – dad wrote me a letter from Germany and signed it ‘Universal Daddy’ referencing one of the songs on this album 🙂

The Breathtaking Blue, released in (Australia in) late 1989, was the ‘difficult third album’. I was well into my ‘goth’ phase then, but still loving (as I have never stopped loving) ‘Afternoons’. It always was going to be an impossible album to follow up, but at the time The Breathtaking Blue fell even short of my tempered expectations. I had no idea at the time that this was because of friction in the band, but many of the songs lacked the impact of the first two albums and despite many listens weren’t growing on me.

As the years passed I would revisit this album many times though, especially in light of Dreamscapes and Crazyshow (see below), both of which included alternate takes of songs on this album or material originally cut. These days some of the tracks including the first single (“Romeos“, which features Noah Taylor in the video) and the beautiful “For A Million” are amongst my favourite Alphaville tracks.

And then I moved to America. This was, as I sad, when I gifted my collection away. I kept the CDs of course – I still loved the band – but I had to divest myself of many things I loved before I left and a big chunk of my vinyl album collection was included in that list. I immediately regretted it, but what was done was done.

Prostitute was released in 1994. This was a difficult album for me to obtain, since it wasn’t originally released in the USA and this was pre-internet. I bought it via a phone order from a seller in Goldmine magazine and it took ages to arrive. But as soon as I listened I knew it had been worth it.

Prostitute brought with it an experimental sound – far less synth – and once again represented a marked changed from the sound of the previous album. The songs were as crafted as they had been on Afternoons, but without the spacey lyrics and sound. More conventional, slightly overproduced, but distinctly Alphaville; I loved this one almost from the very start. Standout tracks included the wistful “Ivory Tower“, the nearly-perfect “The Impossible Dream” and the celebratory “Euphoria” – which was a nod to Lassie Come Home in style and album placement. One of Alphaville’s more unusual albums, this one is perhaps more for the already-a-fan.

However… this album was a massive failure. Easily their lowest-selling album, the lack of interest was attributed to the new sound and the band (or rather Marian, because Alphaville always was mostly Marian) return to synth music for the next album.

Salvation was released in 1997. This was a return to sound for the band – a return way, way back. Evocative of Forever Young in fact, with strong lyrics and sharp melodies. The drum machines and synth sounds were back in force, and Marian’s voice was as strong as ever. At the time I found the songs immediately likeable, and in fact was surprised by how good the album actually was. There are many good songs here, and standouts include “Wishful Thinking” (played at maximum volume this is mind-bending), “New Horizons” and this albums Lassie Come Home, “Pandora’s Lullaby“. One of Alphaville’s best albums.

Shortly after the release of this album the band split with their long-time record label Warner, and created their own label. What followed were two very unusual releases that were sold (in the USA) via an independent record store named A Different Drum: Dreamscapes (in 1999) and Crazyshow (2003). Both of these were extremely limited, marketed at fans, and came autographed by Marian. I of course purchased both, and with the receipt of these sets my Alphaville fandom entered the next level.

Dreamscapes (1999) was an 8-CD release limited to a few thousand copies. With 124 songs over almost ten hours of music, this is an encyclopedic collection of alternate versions, outtakes, b-sides, cover versions, remixes and many (over 40) brand new songs. This was the first place I ever heard Marian’s solo albums, or the alternate version of Forever Young, or the b-sides to singles I was never able to obtain. I devoured this set for years and in doing so imagined a world where songs like the trippy “Mysterion” had been the ‘Lassie Come Home’ of an actual album.

This cornucopia is heaven for an Alphaville fan, but for many years was unattainable. Never physically reprinted, prices for the set crept up and up on places like ebay, and it wasn’t until iTunes over a decade later that fans could once again purchase many of these songs. My set is still a treasure, and even at $400+ on ebay I’m never selling 🙂

Crazyshow (2003) was the ‘sequel’ to Dreamscapes and served up (in a velvet box no less!) 4 more CDs of rarities and new material.  It was expensive and even more limited than Dreamscapes (only 2500 copies!) but I got mine and once again loved it from the first play. Some of – if not the – very best Alphaville songs can be found on this release including the sublime “Return To Paradise” and (the ‘lassiest come home’ song) “On The Beach“.

The thing with both of these releases were that as much of a reward for longtime fans as they were, they were also a cause of frustration for those that couldn’t get their hands on them. There were of course reasons for this, one being the age-old saga of a band disenfranchised with record companies and struggling to go their own way, but it wasn’t perhaps ideal. Alphaville settled into a cycle of touring and playing their old songs, and – for me at least – became a band that existed (albeit beautifully) only in the past. They were touring, but never near where I lived (very rarely in the US at all!), and they certainly weren’t releasing new music.

And then came 2010…

Catching Rays On Giant (2010) was 13-years in coming (not counting the limited sets) and once again represented a change in sound for the band from the exclusively synthpop sound of Salvation. The album was highly anticipated though, since Alphaville had undergone somewhat of a renaissance during the intervening years, helped by the entry into the zeitgeist of the single Forever Young (which had been covered by several big names and featured in prominent advertising) and the bands success as a touring band. It also helped that the album was good, and that Marian hadn’t lost his talents both in writing or singing. Overall the tone is lighter than before, but Marian hasn’t completely abandoned his cynicism as can be seen in songs such as “The Things I Didn’t Do” and the (carryover from Crazyshow) “Carry Your Flag“. A solid album and one of my favourites.

In the years following the band continued to tour, and (apparently) went into the studio a few times to craft a followup. Lineup changes happened and – tragically and unexpectedly – long-time band members passed away. This had the expected effect of delaying new material for a long time, and it wasn’t until earlier this year that the long-awaited seventh full Alphaville album was released.

Strange Attractor (2017) was polarizing from the start. The sound was very different, and some songs sounded different enough from each other as to seem like they were different bands. You can hear the seven years and multiple line-ups that went into this one, and many of the reviews I read – both from professionals and fans – were either openly critical or measured in their praise.

I myself would say this is their weakest album overall, and perhaps the first Alphaville album that contains songs I’d happily push the skip button past. And yet this is ironically also one of their strongest albums due to two specific songs. The first is “A Handful Of Darkness“, a beautiful ballad that brings us back to 198X in both performance and delivery and seems is as ‘Alphavillian’ a song as one could hope for. The second is the Lassie Come Home of the album, the mighty, mightyBeyond The Laughing Sky“.

Alphaville sings a lot about death, about memories of those that have passed, and about the desire for them to have never left. Beyond The Laughing Sky is as powerful a song as Marian has ever written on this theme, and I can only imagine that the deaths of two of his closest friends during the intervening years made it all-the-more personal. His deliver is incredible, the lyrics are heartbreaking, and this song – the last on the album – is for me so perfect it could easily have been the last, and maybe even best, song the band would ever release.

But it won’t be, because even at 63 Marian isn’t giving up yet. He’s already working on a new album (called Thunder Baby) which I imagine won’t be out until 202X and – if the past is any indication – will once again herald a new sound for the band. What that sound will be I wouldn’t begin to guess, but as with everything else they’ve released for the last 31 years I’ll be there to listen the day it is released.

Bonus Game Included (on c-side)!

Thursday, April 13th, 2017

Back in 1983, Pete Shelley (ex-Buzzcocks) released his second solo LP called XL1. Despite having great success with his first album, mostly due to the hit single Homosapien, this followup wasn’t very successful. And yet it was a bit of a landmark album for a very unusual reason:  the album came with a piece of ZX Spectrum computer software.

For those unaware, games were often distributed on tape in those days. Rather than using digital media, computers often input data via an audio signal, which therefore meant using cassettes or (much less commonly) vinyl records to distribute software. This was the heyday of the 8-bit games industry, and more cassettes containing software were being sold than containing music. It was a natural idea for a band to include software on a record… but Pete Shelley was the first to do it.

While the program was nothing more than a visualizer, it may have been the very first visualizer! The idea was you’d load it up on your spectrum and start it playing at the same time as the record, and then watch the pretty visuals play out on the screen while you sang along with the lyrics. Here’s the whole thing on Youtube (remember the software itself was silent):

Here is a fascinating account of the production of the software by the guy that made it. I particularly like how they put out a lock-groove on the vinyl version to save speakers (and ears!) since the raw audio of the code is just screeching white noise. Amusingly, in researching this post i found a forum post where someone described returning the cassette to swap it for the version without the game since he hated having to fast-forward through the screeching sound of the software every time he listened to the album 🙂

I can’t find any reports on whether this was a success, or even made a ripple in the games/music industry. I’m sure it was a novelty, but I wonder how many Pete Shelley fans made use of this even in those days? Either way it hardly set a precedent, and I know of no other examples of a band including visualizers on their albums…

In the early 1980s text adventures were a big deal, and successful enough that there was even a ‘do it yourself’ program called The Quill that allowed anyone to make their own game. One such person that did was Dave Greenfield, member of the band The Stranglers. He wrote a game called Aural Quest that was included at the end of side two of the (cassette only) versions of their 1984 album Aural Sculpture:

It’s a long-ish game (for a text adventure) in which you play the manager of the band as they tour around the world (starting in the UK, via Europe to Tokyo and eventually Brisbane) and get into misadventures. It was apparently quite challenging and since it was mostly ignored by the gaming press in those days players must have had a terrible time beating it without assistance. Here’s a video of a playthrough:

As best I can tell, this was the first and quite possibly only game actually included on an officially released album. Certainly it was the only game released on an album in audio format; if software was ever included these days it would be as a digital file on the CD. (Let’s ignore for the fact that even CDs are mostly dead…)

As a last curiosity, how about the Thompson Twins game? They were a synthpop band from the early 1980s, and in 1984 a ZX Spectrum game based on their single Doctor Doctor was released on flexi-disc only as a promo attached to a computer games magazine:

The game was a graphic-adventure, quite short and apparently quite bad. It lives on via emulation and you can see a full playthrough of the c64 version on Youtube:

This release is remarkable for many reasons:
– The fact that it was ever made in the first place
– The fact that it was only distributed as a free magazine promotional item
– The fact that it was distributed on vinyl disc rather than cassette

This last fact is notable: users would have had to record the disc onto cassette first before being able to load it into their computers. This wouldn’t have been difficult, but is just an unnecessary step and is probably what led to flexidisc software distribution never catching on! (Wikipedia has a good article on this game including the development, and additional research suggests the oft-delayed c64 disc version is extremely rare these days.)

I was a Thompson Twins fan in those days. I would have played this! I suspect the flexi was stripped from magazine covers in Oz though, and I can barely believe any Australian readers sent off for the c64 disc? Adam… did you?

And that’s that. I became curious about the idea of 8-bit band-related software-on-albums a while ago and this post has been percolating for some time. But despite my attempts this is all I can find. There were of course unofficial items (such as  Jethro Tull and Beatles adventures written on The Quill) and actual games based on bands (Frankie Goes To Hollywood) but none of these were distributed by the band or on vinyl record.

However… there was another unusual method of software distribution in the 1980s, in some ways even stranger than including code on vinyl albums. Maybe that’ll become a future post…