Chalkhills, Number 121 Tuesday, 11 December 1990 Today's Topics: Re: Chalkhills #120 Chalkhills #120 Drummers Re: Chalkhills #120 Record Collector Magazine Article
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Fri, 7 Dec 90 17:05:36 -0500 From: Rotund For Success <jsd@gaffa.mit.edu> Subject: Re: Chalkhills #120 >From: Emmanuel Marin <MARINP92@frecp12.bitnet> >Subject: XTC in France > >OK First of all hello everybody, and First hello of France, since >I think I must be the first French to join this list. Bonjour! (OK, that's all the French I know...) >So I am here reading all kinds of titles that I 've never heard of >(let's say I am proud of my live 'Nigel', but I am unable to find >BeeWAX or Jules Verne etc.. I even do not know what they are|), hearing >about videos..(The French system is SECAM, The English PAL, and US again >something else no?) Yes. The US television system is NTSC. Some wags claim it stands for "Never Twice the Same Colour." Beeswax is an LP of b-sides that used to be packaged with the Waxworks LP (a collection of a-sides). I don't think they sell it any more, except as a used item. You can get most of the things on it by buying the CDs. And of course, the wonderful new Rag And Bone Buffet collection. >Of course I am unable to participate to the 'What are they saying?' questions: >I am not English native speaker. (BTW, When you don't understand the lyrics >I can told you Travels in Nihilon is the worst XTC song ever) Even if you do speak English, it's just as bad! (Although "I Need Protection" and "Take This Town" are also driving me crazy). Maybe I'll attempt a French translation of "Nihilon" on Monday... >Before to end just a question : In Paris , I have seen a strange little box >Oranges & Lemons being sold. I dont know what it was : it has the size >of a large playing cards box ,and i first thought it was a tape >as in the mid-60's (I mean not a tape as now but a large wheel -shame >I don't know the word).Can someone help me ? This was probably the 3" CD set. It was basically the same as the album, except that it was spread out across three small CDs, and two tracks switched places. >From: Emmanuel Marin <MARINP92@frecp12.bitnet> >Subject: Ghost titles (are going to kill me) > >This morning I have bought 'Big Express' on CD. > 6.RED BRICK DREAM > 7.WASHAWAY > 8.BLUE OVERALL >I open the box.okay it is written too on the CD. >I open the boolklet. okay there are the lyrics of these three songs. >BUT THEY ARE NOT ON THE CD |||||||| C'est terrible!! I've never heard of this before - even the American version has the three extra songs. Perhaps you could tell us the label and catalog number of the compact disc? I'm sure John wants to put that in his discography (along with a warning: stay away!) Those songs are great... tant pis! >I should have see something was wrong because there was not written >'3 additional tracks that were not on original LP' on the CD. It doesn't say that on my CD. It just lists the songs on the disc as if they were part of the regular album. +---------------------- Is there any ESCAPE from NOISE? ---------------------+ | | |\ | jsd@gaffa.mit.edu | ZIK ZAK - We make everything you need, | | \|on |/rukman | -Fight The Power- | and you need everything we make. | +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Mon, 10 Dec 90 12:55:19 GMT From: toby@hce.computer-science.manchester.ac.uk Subject: Chalkhills #120 In this month's Q there's a review of a new album by a band called (I think) Cud, produced by former (sic) XTC guitarist Dave Gregory. ???? FORMER ????? Toby
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Mon, 10 Dec 90 14:47:08 EST From: poole1@husc9.harvard.edu (Geoffrey Poole) Subject: Drummers Good to hear that XTC are recording again. I haven't been able to find the _Record Collector_ article, unfortunately. Did it say who is drumming on the forthcoming album? I'd love to see Ian Gregory get the call. I loved his playing on the Dukes albums. At the top of my wishful thinking list, though, is Stewart Copeland. I think he'd make a fantastic addition to XTC's music. Maybe he could even be persuaded to dissolve Animal Logic. Probably just wishful thinking, though..... Geoff
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Tue, 11 Dec 1990 20:05:01 PST From: John M. Relph <chalkhills-request@chalkhills.org> Subject: Re: Chalkhills #120 Emmanuel Marin <MARINP92@frecp12.bitnet> says: >(BTW When you don't understand the lyrics >I can told you Travels in Nihilon is the worst XTC song ever) Actually, since the song is about nihilism (a doctrine that all values are baseless and that nothing is knowable or can be communicated) it doesn't really matter what the words are. And it's definitely not the worst XTC song ever. > i first thought it was a tape >as in the mid-60's (I mean not a tape as now but a large wheel -shame >I don't know the word). A reel-to-reel tape. >PS : Do you know if XTC ever toured in France ? Yes, they did, a number of times. According to my sources, they played the following dates in France: Paris, Paris Theatre, March 28, 1978 Paris, Bataclan, December 18, 1979 Paris, L'Empire, (month/day unknown) 1979 Toulon, (venue unknown), August 26, 1980 Lyon, Palais d'Hiver, Match 17, 1982 Paris, Le Palace, March 18, 1982 The last concert was videotaped for broadcast on French TV, but Andy left the stage because of a paralysing attack of stage fright, right in the middle of the first song, "Respectable Street". That song and the sound check were captured on video, and I must say it is a very sad and disturbing thing to watch. . . . Tom Paluzzi <paluzzit@merrimack.edu> sez: >Hi! I'm relatively new to the band and to the lyrics and I was wondering >what's available on the list as far as lyrics, discography, and bootlegs are >concerned. The list itself, that is, Chalkhills proper, maintains a detailed discography and a lyrics database. Information concerning known "released" bootleg or other unofficial recordings may appear in the discography, but their sources are unknown. Chalkhills does not distribute bootleg or other unofficial recordings nor does Chalkhills know of sources for these recordings. Individual subscribers may have further information on bootlegs, and the want ads in _The Little Express_ and _Limelight_ may also have information on these recordings as well. Dave Datta, maintainer of the discography archives and numerous discographies of other bands had this to say on the subject: ANY BOOTLEG MATERIAL LISTED IN THIS DISCOGRAPHY IS NOT AVAILABLE. I WILL NOT ASSIST ANYONE IN OBTAINING COPIES OF VIDEOS, LIVE BROADCAST RECORDINGS, OR ANY OTHER UN-OFFICIAL PRODUCTS. DUE TO SUCH REQUESTS, I HAVE REMOVED THE SOURCES OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION. PLEASE DO NOT ASK. The maintainers of the Bremerton, Washington, XTC Discography say: For copies of these [recordings] please solicit your wants in either "The Little Express" or "Limelight". . . . Duane Day <duane@ebay.sun.com> muses: > "Extrovert". > However, an acquaintance of mine named Dave >Bendigkeit is credited on _Skylarking_; Dave's a really great jazz >trumpet player. > it might easily be Dave on "Extrovert" >as well. Any way of finding out, short of asking Andy? . . . Emmanuel Marin <MARINP92@frecp12.bitnet> mourns: >This morning I have bought 'Big Express' on CD. >I have had it already on tape (recorded on a LP from a friend-hopefully- >see later why) but on the sleeve there were 3 more titles that I have never >heard of before. >BUT THEY ARE NOT ON THE CD !!!!!!! Terrible. A travesty. Please send Chalkhills all the catalog information about this CD so we can warn other XTC fans, including record company, catalog number, year of release, etc. -- John
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] Date: Tue, 11 Dec 1990 21:08:01 PST From: John M. Relph <chalkhills-request@chalkhills.org> Subject: Record Collector Magazine Article The first part of a recording history of XTC found in the November 1990 issue of the U.K. magazine _Record Collector_, by Gary Ramon: XTC are one of those quintessentially English bands who, like the Kinks before them, enjoy more popularity in America than at home. Having progressed from punk-rock origins, the Swindon band have issued ten albums in their own right -- two under their psychadelic alter-ego the Dukes of Stratosphear -- plus an armful of classic pop singles, many of these in highly collectable editions. When we last featured them back in 1982, XTC were about to embark on their ill-fated world tour, which proved to be their last real concert dates. In that same article, we valued their debut 45, "Science Friction", at #3.50 [pounds Sterling]: today, that same disc, complete with picture sleeve, is worth 70 [pounds]! For this update, which pays particular attention to overseas rarities, we journey to Swindon to jog the memory of the group's guitarist Dave Gregory. The band's roots date back to the mid-60s when Dave began taking an interest in playing guitar. Around 1967, he formed a school band which, by the end of the decade, had acquired the name The Pink Warmth (inspired by a petrol ad on TV!). This psychadelic group performed irregularly at various youth clubs in Swindon, one of which providing the meeting-place between Dave and 15-year-old Andy Partridge, who'd just taken up the guitar. Over the next few years, the pair met up at various guitar shops, where they auditioned new models and traded the leading rock riffs of the day; but it wasn't until 1979 that they actually teamed up in the same band. Dave takes up the store: "Andy met Colin Moulding in the early Seventies. He wasn't in a band or anything; he was just a rock fan, though with a bit of coaxing from Andy, he decided to learn bass guitar. It was a case of, `you hair's long enough, you can be in my band!' Through Colin, Terry Chambers joined on drums. They were augmented by a short-lived guitarist Steve Phillips, and basically grew up together learning to play. In those early days, they couldn't play very well -- none of us could -- but they played very loudly and put off a lot of people around town!" By the mid-Seventies, after constant practising and playing, the band improved. Aided by Andy Partridge's rapidly-developing songwriting, and billed as the Helium Kidz, they became an exciting live act. One witness compared their early performances to watching a 3-D `Marvel' comic with bright primary colours come to life on stage. However original they were, the band couldn't single-handedly shake the mood of the mid-70s, when the music industry was virtually monopolised by guitar or keyboard virtuoso acts. Within a year, that ethos would be broken by a new breed of guitar groups. In 1976, the newly-christened XTC, now with Barry Andrews on organ, obtained a handful of gigs at `The Affair' in Swindon. Having established themselves locally, the band next looked to London and booked some club dates. With the capital buzzing to the sound of punk-rock, XTC quickly became seen as part of a second new wave, alongside Elvis Costello, Squeeze and the Police. Virgin picked up on the group, hastily arranging a recording session with produced John Leckie at Abbey Road studios around August/September 1977. A debut 45, "Science Friction", was rush-released on 7th October, complete with limited edition picture sleeve. . . . There was also a 12" edition, "3-D EP", which boasted a third track, "Dance Band". This was kept on Virgin's catalogue until the end of the decade, and isn't that hard to find . . . "Virgin assumed that Swindon was a hotbed of musical talent," Dave recalled, "and so they decided to put on a show to see who else they could sign! By this time, I was in an R&B band called Dean Gabber & His Gaberdines and, as well as us, there were about eight other Swindon bands doing this show for the benefit of the A&R men, but nothing came of it. I think XTC was a one-off!" The second single, "Statue of Liberty", [was] issued on 6th January 1978 . . . "White Music", their album debut, followed soon after, and was met with critical acclaim, prompting one journalist to call it: "the equivalent to eating sherbet dip!". With well-crafted songs, it confirmed that the band's unique brand of high energy pop, laced with a steam-powered organ sound, put them into a different league from their contemporaries. After the group set off on a tour of Europe supporting Talking Heads, Virgin released a third single, "This is Pop?", backed by the non-LP "Heatwave". . . . By August, XTC were back in Abbey Road studios recording the "Go 2" album, issued two months later. The first 15,000 copies came with a 5-track 12" EP called "Go +", featuring dub versions, plus a two-sided gatefold insert which included a map of Swindon! . . . Overseas pressings didn't include the bonus 12" initially; instead the disc had an extra track, "Are You Receiving Me?", not included on U.K. pressings. This song was subsequently released in its own right as XTC's fourth single on 27th October. To promote the LP, the band toured the States -- again with Talking Heads -- but on returning, Barry Andrews announced his intention to leave. He had been far from happy with the inclusion of just two of his songs on "Go 2" and left to record several solo singles, enjoy a brief spell with the League of Gentlemen, before eventually settling with Shriekback. Back in Swindon, Dave Gregory got the call from Andy Partridge requesting him to join the band. An audition was quickly arranged at the group's rehearsal studios on the outskirts of town, and on 27th January Dave became a fully-fledged member. "I think it was a question of learning some new songs and re-designing the band again, but I seriously didn't think I'd last more than one album!", recalls Dave today. The new line-up debuted 12 days later on a session taped for Radio 1's Andy Peebles, after which they began work on a new single, the first to be written by bassist Colin Moulding. "Life Begins At The Hop", coupled with an off-the-wall Partridge instrumental "Homo Safari" (the first in a series of six instrumentals), was issued on 4th May 1979, the first 30,000 appearing on clear vinyl with a gatefold insert inside a plastic printed sleeve. Rarer still are edited DJ-only copies, again on clear vinyl. . . . The song's up-tempo 60s flavour took the band to within four places of the Top 50, close enough to warrant an appearance on "Top Of The Pops".
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] If you are interested in buying, selling, or trading used CD's or other recorded media, send a message to the used-music-server@cs.ucsb.edu with the subject "HELP". If you are interested in a 10,000 Maniacs mailing list, send a message to dkb@cs.brown.edu. If you would like a list of all discographies available from the discography server, please send a message to datta@vacs.uwp.wisc.edu. If you would like to receive a list of all known music- oriented mailing lists, please drop a line to <chalkhills-request@chalkhills.org>. . . . For all administrative issues, such as change of address, withdrawal from the list, discography requests (last update 27 November), back issues, etc., send a message to the following address: <chalkhills-request@chalkhills.org> Any and all views expressed in Chalkhills are those of the individual contributors only.
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