It Starts With a Birthstone...
'To boldly go where no blog has gone before....
Friday, January 17, 2025
500 Greatest Albums of the 1980s ... Ranked! # 126 The Dream Syndicate - The Days of Wine & Roses
* For an excellent account of the record an its context, see this Uncut Magazine review
1985 Singles # 35 Eurythmics
Eurythmics were really getting inyo their stride in 1985. A Pop mindset with attitude.Shiny videos wit sass and attitude demanding the Yankee Dollar. It was good to have something of reliablility and quality in the charts. Statements if pride and resilience, substance on daytime radio in response to much mush and mindlessness. Would I Lie To You was a another stylish punched home run into the stands to get the crowd on their feet.. If it were that easy others would have done it.
Song(s) of the Day # 3,976 The Weather Station
January remains something of a trial regardless if how we approach it. For me, leaving a hearth and home, elderly parents the length of the country one short week ago, back to work, lessons to plan and teach.
A best friend struggling with health elsewhere.. Meanwhile outsude my window the sun is struggling to show its face outside the window in the darkness.
It's a consolation to have a new Weather Station album Humanhood to listen to on my headphones as my bath runs. Tamara Lindeman (for Weather Station is she), is a doughty, resilient talent. A box to box performer who knows her craft and gufts.
The Joni Mitchell comparison is inevitable and plain here, but that's ni slur o defecit. You can't beat a bit of Joni. This is a record of vitality and health. Another winner. Humanity strikes back.
Thursday, January 16, 2025
Best Ever Albums - 2,000 - 1,001 - 1,689 Keane - Under The Iron Sea
500 Greatest Albums of the 1980s ... Ranked! # 127 Tears For Fears - The Hurting
Hammersmith was a bus ride away from my family home in South West London. Still my favourite part of that city. Even now, I dream about being on that and other local bus routes. I went to this on my own. Not ready for a girlfriend to share a particular teenage rites of passage with at this moment. Thompson Twins and Tears For Fears were both set to embark on what turned out to be sustained assaults on the British and global pop charts which would bear decidedly mixed fruit though we were none of us to know that at the time. The pop world, particularly in Britain was about to change, reflecting the times. Undoubtedly for the worse. I'll brook no arguments with that.
Tears For Fears first. I had quite a bit of time for them at round about that point. Their debut album The Hurting was out and I'd bought it. All exaggerated teenage mannerisms and psychodramas but I was a bit like that at that moment and still have the diaries to prove it. Late developer as I said.
I'm listening to it now. I'd maintain it's a reasonable record but that may be my teenage self confusing me. Still, some fine melodies, magpie thievery and the title track, Mad World and Pale Shelter, some opening salvo. The singles are generally the ones that stand the test of time best. I stood a few rows back from the stage in my John Lennon specs and curly mop of hair, probably swaying slightly. Lost in irredeemably teenage thought.
The record overcomes me now eventually in terms of it's non-stop angsty projections, particularly when the pace drops. Some tracks actively repel me. I no longer have a Holden Caulfield fixation. They had tunes but little depth. Still, they were right for me at the time. I enjoyed them and they were probably one of the best support bands I've ever seen, all these years later.'
1985 Singles # 36 The Colourfield
What Terry did next. Departing Funboy Three and Ska for the song and the acoustic guitar. Thinking Of You is still the kind of song you'd always be pleased to hear coming out of your radio or from the jukebox at your local. Teery of course always brought Terry to the table. The best kind of Pop Star,
Song(s) of the Day # 3,975 Bridget Hayden & The Apparations
Bridget Hayden & The Apparations. A great name for a band. Cold Blows The Rain, s great name for a record. The kind of New Folk / Old Folk albums that's been back in vogue with an enormous vengeance these last few years.It's the end of the world as we know it. And we feel fine.
It's hardly celebratory stuff for the most part. Folk certainly can be if we're talking dancing round the maypole fare on the first Saturday of the month of May. But as we've just got beyond the midway poinr of Janiary and the Post Christmas blues may not all have departed quite yet Cold Blows The Rain, ticks my boxes with the sun yet ro show signs of itsclimb outside m dsek at the window of my flat.
A mix of traditionals and originals in the grand tradition. This grounds itself on the Yorkshire Moors and is appropriately foreboding and atmospheric. Album of the month for January in Uncut Magazine. And not without reason.
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
500 Greatest Albums of the 1980s ... Ranked! # 128 Prince & The Revolution - 1999
Best Ever Albums - 2,000 - 1,001 - 1,690 Joni Mitchell - Clouds
1985 Singles # 37 Bryan Adams
Music was changing in tems of its focus in 1985 though I didn't realise it. immersed in my rich experience of vitality, beauty and youth in the Swiss Alps. Musically Madonna, Prince, Springsteen and Michael Jackson ruled the roost. All fantastic in their own ways but personally I was more interested in guitar toting romantic refuseniks. R.E.M, The Smiths, The Go Betweens.
Bryan Adams never particularly turned my head though I didn dance to Run To You, his breakthrough song of sexual betrayal when it played in a Saturday night in the Italian disco in town where I went with my colleagues and friends.It was his notable New Wave moment and it helped make his name and he moved off to blander arena lighters aloft material. It still makes my toes tap.
Song(s) of the Day # 3,974 Imaginary Family
'We are rough around the edges.Almost finished prototypes.'
Miles Davis famously didn't like the term Jazz as a descsiption for the area of activity which he was involved and engaged in all of his adult life.He preferred Social Music. Labels are notoriously slippery. In music and and generally just as lists of preferences ot sexual or mental mindset descriptions can be.
But as human beings we need some ways of arranging the things we listen to and read, just as supermarkets need systems for arranging their products on shelves. Otherwise shopping would be a particularly feverish and demented social activity,
Take Imaginary Family's fascinating Builders, Believers the first newly released album that's really blown me away un 2025. The moniker of Joanna Issele, born in the French Alps, working out of Ghent singing in English. This is glorious Art.
In the Spotify bio for the project, the music here is described as Indie Folk expanding to a broader music palette. This will do. Listening to Builders, Believers is an experience akin to watching a film at the Arts Cinema. Reading a short story. Eating a rich soup at a local cafe.
Listening to it as I wrote this I experienced a range of emotions. Just as we do as we do within a short timespan as human beings. By turn I found myself engaged, reflective, intrigued, moved. In short, this is a rich and splendid cultural experience which relaxed me and just set me up nicely for the day ahead. It's highly nuanced art. Looks like 2025 is up and running on It Starts With a Birthstone,
Tuesday, January 14, 2025
1985 Singles # 38 John Fogerty
I'd had a Saturday job at Tesco Home & Wear in Teddington High Street and then a shift in the months approaching Christmas in 1984 and I'd invested. In an excellent assembled stereo bought in Richer Souns off the Tottenham Court Road.In records
I'd discovered The Doors, NeilYoung, Patti Smith and Television. Also in Creedence, getting muself in a greatest hits collection where virtually every song was spun gold. Going back beyond The Understones and Buzzcocks. Discovering the Pre Lapsarian origins of the guitar bands I was getting into. Haight Ashbury, Monterey and Woodstock,
John Fogerty made a surprising comeback in 1985 and I read about it.. In Rolling Stones magazines pn the shelves of Newagents on the High Street of Locarno. I bought a copy of Centerfield when I got back to England in the Summer. It had some great tunes.
The one thing John Fogerty could be relied on was excellent, stripped back guitar tunes of beauty and simplicity, harking back to the Golden Days of Rock & Roll. The man was a mythic figure. An Old Testament prophet..
500 Greatest Albums of the 1980s ... Ranked! # 129 ESG - Come Away With ESG
Song(s) of the Day # 3,973 Bridget Mae Power
Bridget Mae Power's Songs For You, a set of spartan, stripped down covers of Roy Orbison, Television, Neil Young and Cass McCombs tracks that take the songs as the point of departure and sails off to surprising and easeful shores..
Strangely emotive and affecting. his makes a mindful listen, taking me from six to half six with easy and compoulsive grace and making me wish to go back to the source. Job well done.
Monday, January 13, 2025
Best Ever Albums - 2,000 - 1,001 - 1,692 Jim O'Rourke - Eureka
500 Greatest Albums of the 1980s ... Ranked! # 130 John Cale - Music For A New Society
1985 Singles # 39 The Housemartins
Song(s) of the Day # 3,972 Moscow Puzzles
'Loose, raw and organic Post -Rock from the coral prarues if Iowa.' Let's face it, just what you were hoping for on a Monday. Rather bleak where I am I have to say.
Moscow Puzzles rather magnificent instrumental.forty minute album Vast Spaces of the Interior might do something to shake you from January torpor. This kind of commitment is admirable frankly. Superior jagged engagement.. Stakhanovite endeavour.
Sunday, January 12, 2025
500 Greatest Albums of the 1980s ... Ranked! # 131 Billy Bragg - Talking With The Taxman About Poetry
Best Ever Albums - 2,000 - 1,001 - 1,693 Band of Horses - Everything All The Time
1985 Singles # 39 Billy Idol
Billy Idol was never the most convincing of the Bromley Contingent. Hamf Kureishi went to school with him and depicts him in Buddha of Suburbia as a teenage hippie who went to Sussex University, saw Punk coming along and jumped onto its bandwagon with indecent haste. Heading straight to the barbers.Then into London.
That permanent cartoon pose. The upraised upper lip. It's all a bit daft. But Billy was probably the one of that circle that went on to make the most money. White Wedding was the moment of his rebirth in The States..Rock & Roll as permanent pose. It still sounds great.
Song(s) of the Day # 3,971 Explosions In The Sky
Explosions In The Sky am instrumental Post Rock band from Austin Texas. Their soundtrack to American Primeval a Netflix film in the Revenant vein which looks worth watching.
What you get here is atmosphere and iy might be one to sit and listen to on headphones in the dark as I'm doing, waiting for the sun to rise wherever you are.
Saturday, January 11, 2025
1985 Singles # 40 Depeche Mode
So we're at theTop Forty. The mark of success. the charts rundown when they were announced on Tuesday lunchtimes on Radio One and then again more formally on Sunday afternoons. l lost track of this after 1985 largely. I became more interested in Sonic Youth and Mantronix as I moved out until the world with a vague,undirected thrill.
I was excited most of all I suspect. About what was coming next. What was around the corner. But the charts still meant a lot to a lot to a lot to a lot of people. Including me. It meant everything to have one of 'my bands' featuring there. Maybe meaning they'd be on Top of the Pops on Thursday evening. But 1985 marked the point at which I made my move. From hearth and home to the outside world and the charts became more marginal as they became irrelevant to my thinking. Became more negligible despite Morrissy's Last Stand. I knew what I liked. It was the year of Live Aid.
My culture was in decline, though we didn't know it. 'My Bands' featured in the charts towards the end of the Seventies and early Eighties. They were the charts and The Culture. Interventions from the likes of Rene & Renata, Captain Beaky and Shaddapa Your Face were the abberations. Keeping the likes of Blondie and Squeeze from their rightully deserved Number Ones. I remember when Bob Geldof ripped up a picture of John Travolta up when the Bootownn Rats usurped Grease at Number One with Ratrap in 1978. It mattered. It was a teenage game played out in the charts, the music papers and magazines and TOTP. Us V Them.
A gradual transition toom place in the early Eighties. 'My Bands,' the Punk and Post Punk bands fell from favour one by one, had had their chartmoment and disbanded or made their move to The States to try to make it there. A thankless task. The Cure and Depeche Mode were notably the British bands who made the signiicant and lasting breakthrough.
Mode featured less among the bands I considered mine from now on. even as their commercial star rose. I thought the lyrics were daft, even though at this distance what they were doing musically seems masterful. Jackie meets S&M. and leather and painted nails.
1985 saw them holding ground with a Mute singles compilation on the market whie they plotted their next move. It felt like younger sister stuff to me. My own younger sister I suspect wasn't paying too much attention herself. She had discovered The Triffids. The Jesus & Maty Chain. Bobby Gillespie. Ranting in the NME about the American guitar invasion. Showing off his leather trousers and Chelsea Boots and banging on about Aftermath. Buffalo Springfield, The Byrds. And errm Public Image Limited.
Song(s) of the Day # 3,970 The Rolling Stones
Rolled Gold the remarkable Stines compilation was one of my formative buys in the early Eighties. In some respects it's all you need. It tells the whole story. But I dutifully bought the great albums; Exile, Sticky Fingers, Some Girls, Let It Bleed, Out of Our Head. hey. I was an NME reader. I do what I'm told to!
I listen to them less. I don't respect Mick and Keith much and don't really care what they have to say. They're 'Yesterday's Papers.' Yesterday's Men .I lusten to The Beatles much much more. But play Rolled\Gold. It's still steeped in datk, magical lore. Every single track.Molten. Gold is right.
Friday, January 10, 2025
500 Greatest Albums of the 1980s ... Ranked! # 133 Young Marble Giants - Colossal Youth
Best Ever Albums - 2,000 - 1,001 - 1,695 The XX - I See You
1985 Singles # 41 The Stranglers
Towards the end of my time at Casa Locarno Tim a friend from home came out to stay with me for a few days. Guests were not allowed to stay in the house so we had to smuggle him in and out to the attic at the top of the building where we hung sheets. He bedded done on the wooden boards.
Tim brought with him a cassette of Aural Sculpture, The Stranglers album from 1984. We listened to it in my room. Golden Brown and Strange Little Girl a coupe of years earlier had marked out the beginning of the big sea change for the band. They had mellowed over time by now and set their co-ordinates for the charts and Radio 2.
Neither of us complained. It was a great record. Skin Deep the big commercial number had hit the upper reaches of the Single Charts. No Mercy made a lesser splash. Let Me Down Easy was less memorable still, but was still clearly The Stranglers. The middle of the road Men In Black.
Song(s) of the Day # 3,969 SGO
Brisbane's SGO on the evidence of latest album One More Year sound nothing, but nothing from that city's favourite sons and daughters The Go Betweens. Instead they sound remarkably like a marriage of convenience between Slowdive and New Order. With a dollop of Allvays sprinkled in for good measure.
Not being the hugest fan of Slowdive, in fact quite the opposite, this led to an unconvinced listening experience for me. Slowdive are the prominent influence visible on here leading to a slightly sopirific disengagement on my part. I'll give it 4..
Thursday, January 9, 2025
Best Ever Albums - 2,000 - 1,001 - 1,696 The War On Drugs - I Don't Live Here Anymore
500 Greatest Albums of the 1980s ... Ranked! # 134 Husker Du : Warehouse Songs & Stories
1985 Singles # 42 Pale Fountains
Pale Fountains had fantastic songs and spirit but they weren't managed or handled well and made a negligible critical and commercial impact It's only now that their leader Michael Head is getting his proper due. The Pale Fountains songs are for the most part are not fully realised or slightly over embellished, admirable as they often are, They seemed to always just tail off just North of the Top Forty so that's where they find themselves here. Nevertheless, the best stuff is generally slightly off the beaten track.
Song(s) of the Day # 3,968 Chinese American Bear
Chinese American Bear/ Out of Seattle and although not remotely in the image of Nirvana in any respect, you do get the sense that they do a thing which Kurt might have appreciated to a certain degree,
Latest abum Wah !!! apparently is a mando pop /rock duo creating bilingual ear candy. It's jolly and springy highly likeable fuzzy felt Outsider Pop Music. Probably not too great for the teeth but I imagine not bad for the soul..
This is a record that becomes more more-ish the longer it spins. Not an album that deserves to be explained so much as enjoyed..
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
Best Ever Albums - 2,000 - 1,001 - 1,697 The Misfits - Walk Among Us
500 Greatest Albums of the 1980s ... Ranked! # 135 Genesis - Duke
1985 Singles # 43 The Farmer's Boys
'When you're young, you don't especially think of yourself as being young. You're just alive and everything's interesting and you don't think of things in terms of age because you're not conscious of it.'
Richard Hell
Song(s) of the Day # 3,967 Steven R. Smith
I featured Steven R. Smith's marvellous Olive last year and he's back. With an entirely contrasting but equally splendid new album Triecade.
Smith is an American musician, instrument builder and printmaker with connections to the Jewelled Antler Collective. Triecade is a gently, rolling pastoral collection of atmospheric and calming instrumental pieces. Ut's beautiful.
Psychedelic Folk apparently if you need pigeonholes and tags. It's just an inspiring listen that doesn't really need labels. Classical in its mien in many respects. It's just a wonderful world to don headphones for; immerse yourself in and reflect on the light playing on the trees and natural life outside your window,
Tuesday, January 7, 2025
500 Greatest Albums of the 1980s ... Ranked! # 136 Cocteau Twins - Blue Bell Knoll
Best Ever Albums - 2,000 - 1,001 - 1,698 The Last Shadow Puppets - The Age of Understatement
1985 Singles # 44 The Redskins
Song(s) of the Day # 3,966 Magdalena Disk
The time of year where things start slowly in the Pop World and a relativetaly sedate commencement to my working year has allowed me to listen to the much lauded Magdalena Disk album Imaginal Disk a number of times.
I'm finally getting round to posting about it, Magdalena Disk are an Alternative Pop duo from Miami though they're based in Los Angeles.There's much debate on the band's Wikipedia page as to whether they're Alternative Pop or just New Pop. As if it matters
'Plus ce change. Plus le meme chose. le meme chose.' To my untrained ears it sounds much like an old school Pop Album of the sort that Madonna and Cyndi Lauper were pumping out when I was just a lad. All fine and dandy too. Both of them had streaks in their hair too. But the Pop is what makes this stand out.
Monday, January 6, 2025
The Sound of Being Human - How Music Shapes Our Lives # 6 Kraftwerk