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Conference marvin::uk_music

Title:The UK Music Conference
Notice:Welcome (back) to UK_MUSIC on node MARVIN.
Moderator:RDGENG::CROOK
Created:Mon Mar 28 1988
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1381
Total number of notes:39269

852.0. "Another 70's tosh note." by WELCLU::GREENB (Only losers take the bus) Tue Jun 11 1991 18:12

    I've heard one or two tracks by Sparks on the radio recently, and quite
    enjoyed them.
    
    Am I beyond help, or should I offer to buy all Mikef's Rush albums off
    him?
    
    Bob
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
852.1JUMBLY::OCONNORDamp fine weatherTue Jun 11 1991 18:421
Was it `this note ain't big enough for the both
852.2Or...BAHTAT::SUMMERFIELDCOh no, its a boo...Tue Jun 11 1991 18:462
    Or maybe "I'm going to beat the note"
    
852.3XSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormTue Jun 11 1991 19:3019
    Bob,

    I looked at the original 70's Tosh note (before my time) and saw
    your plea for the chords to 'Shang-a-lang'.

    I actually witnessed the latest Rollers line up play this and all
    their other hits (yes I'm not afraid to admit it) a few weeks ago.
    Well there was nothing good on TV... excuses...etc

    Of the originals, Eric, Woody and Alan remain. Eric looks a bit tubby,
    Woody is going bald, but despite maintaining the record of being the 
    least fashionable band on our planet for the last 15 years, people 
    forget that they *can* actually play. 

    I still don't think I'll be buying any albums, mind you...

    Dave 

852.4IGETIT::BROWNMMy underpants are festooned with HorseflyTue Jun 11 1991 20:311
    Now maybe I should be buying some records by Sparks...
852.5Sugar Baby Love!!!!ARRODS::OHAGANBKiller BobTue Jun 11 1991 21:1815
    Flintlock, yes them, who counted a "Tommorow People" member in
    Mike Holloway amongst their ranks, must surely be the yardstick
    to measure 70's tosh by. You knew you'd made it in dem days when
    "Look-In" ( Ed Stewpot,  style guru and main man ) ran a dedicated
    cartoon strip for your band. This lot even had customised Flintlock
    jumpers; totally fab but not as genius as Rollers' tartan or 
    Rubettes white caps and suits. 
    
    Whilst on the subject of "Look-In" picture strips, another band who
    made it cartoon wise was Slik. Oooer! Who remembers the baseball boots
    and braces look then? Never taken Midge Ure seriously since then 
    I'm afraid. How did he ever get into The Rich Kids, Thin Lizzy, and
    Ultravox after that?
    
    Barry.
852.6WELCLU::GREENBOnly losers take the busWed Jun 12 1991 11:267
    They were playing Sparks down the Subterrania last night. Another band
    who I detested at the time but later came to realise were pretty cool
    really (not that I'd really want a whole album by them).
    
    Bob
    
    p.s. Barry, I don't like your p-name. Please change it.
852.7JUMBLY::OCONNORDamp fine weatherWed Jun 12 1991 12:389
    Midge Ure was in Thin Lizzy ? Strange.

    Wasn't he in an early line-up of the Sex Pistols ?

    Questions, questions.

    - Tim
    
852.8Hard to believe i know.UFHIS::TLACEYA crime in the wink of an eyeWed Jun 12 1991 12:424
    
    
    	I think he filled in for part of a stateside tour
    	when one of the many lead (!!!) guitarists quit.
852.9CASEE::MERRICKStone me, what a lifeWed Jun 12 1991 13:573
    Re -1 Correct. He replaced Gary Moore who was fired. The connection
    between Thin Lizzy and Midge Ure was the management company.
    Morrison/O'Donnell, who also looked after Ultravox.
852.10Soundtracks\BAHTAT::SUMMERFIELDCOh no, its a boo...Wed Jun 12 1991 15:149
    A friend was playing ABBA - The Album recently which brought back fond
    memories of an incredibly silly (ie almost totally pointless) film.
    Namely that awesome box-office blockbuster ABBA - The Movie. Anyone one
    out there remember this screen gen, or others such as Xanadu starring
    Olivia Newton-John ?
    
    Better still, what 70s soundtracks have folks got?
    
    Balders _who_cant_get_the_lift_scene_out_of_his_mind_
852.11What a warped mind I have!NEWOA::SAXBYA house! My kingdom for a house!Wed Jun 12 1991 15:206
852.12All together = ?BAHTAT::SUMMERFIELDCOh no, its a boo...Wed Jun 12 1991 15:309
852.13ARRODS::WHITEHEADJThe weak are never freeWed Jun 12 1991 15:4510
   I've got a lot of ABBA videos at home, including the Movie.

   I've also got the ARRIVAL, SUPER TROUPER and THE ALBUM on record,
   plus a special album called Gracias Por La Musica which has 10
   ABBA songs on recorded in Spanish.  Also, ABBA THE COLLECTION on 
   cassette.

   My brother and I are some of ABBA's greatest fans.

   Jane.
852.14ROCKY::QUICKComics? Pffffffffttttttt!Wed Jun 12 1991 16:497
852.15ARRODS::WHITEHEADJGoldy the GoldfishWed Jun 12 1991 16:5311
852.16Elvis rulesRUTILE::BERNARDde-constructionWed Jun 12 1991 18:532
There's an ABBA fan club in Peron (France). Some really weird people there.

852.17Ron and Russell rule OKSBPEXE::DOUGLASSBetter to burn out than fade awayWed Jun 12 1991 19:3813
	
	Re : Base Note ...

	Bob,

	I have a couple of Sparks albums in the cupboard ...  Kimono My House
	and Propoganda I think .... 

	Maybe I'll get them onto cassette and listen to them in the car one
	morning   ....  I used to like "Kimono" a lot.


	Paul (ex_bopper)
852.18WELCLU::GREENBOnly losers take the busThu Jun 13 1991 11:145
    More 70's (maybe not such) tosh.....
    
    Does anyone remember the Doctors of Madness??
    
    Bob
852.19Doctor, doctor, please (UFO)HAM03::BRUEHLYou've got nothing on meThu Jun 13 1991 11:4510
    
    I remember:
    
    The Doctor Of Medics
    
    But this was one of the 80's, I think.
    
    |PETER|_needs_no_doctor
    
    
852.20WELCLU::GREENBOnly losers take the busThu Jun 13 1991 12:3012
    Not quite, Peter! The DoM were around in the mid-70's - they were a bit
    too late for glam, and a bit too early for punk, so they kind of missed
    the bus in both directions so to speak.
    
    They were led by a blue-haired chap called Kid Strange, and had an
    extremely wild violinist called Urban Blitz, as I remember. I also
    remember seeing them at the Marquee, and I think they had a couple of
    lps out, but they sank without trace pretty soon after the so-called
    'new wave' broke. It's unfortunate, because I thought they had a
    certain something (mainly they were a bunch of raw and noisy fellows).
    
    Bob
852.21JUMBLY::OCONNORThey Might Be GitsThu Jun 13 1991 12:4910
    Back to Sparks. They weren't tosh. "This Town" would still sound
    strange in today's charts. IMO.

    Another good single from that period was `Rock On' by David Essex. The
    last I heard of him he was in a West End musical.

    - Tim (and Bob thinks I can't stand Abba coz it's not `cool'...it's all
           coming out now.)
	   
852.22WELCLU::GREENBOnly losers take the busThu Jun 13 1991 13:168
    Looking back on it, Tim, I have to agree about 'Rock On'; it's a
    masterpiece of pop production.
    
    I quite liked some of Steve Harley's Cocky Rabble stuff, too.
    
    Bob
    
    p.s. Cool is as cool does.
852.23CASEE::MERRICKStone me, what a lifeThu Jun 13 1991 14:075
    The Doctors of Madness featured Dave Vanian for a time after Urban
    Blitz left. They broke up around '78. I saw tham at the LSE, and I
    think term "awful" summed them up quite well. Lots of hype tho'...
    
    Ken
852.24ARRODS::WHITEHEADJNo hay que llorarThu Jun 13 1991 14:423
   Dave Vanian....I remember Dave Vanian.....swoon.

   J.
852.25WELCLU::GREENBOnly losers take the busThu Jun 13 1991 15:0510
    Blimey, Ken, I never knew Vanian was a member (of the DoM, that is). I
    thought they were a bit good when I saw them, but that was with the
    original lineup.
    
    At the time (75-6), they were, for me, a good antidote to all that
    Eagles/10cc/Steely Dan/ELO stuff (heresy, I hear you say) - something a 
    bit rough and raw with some edge, a definite precursor to the goings on 
    over the following couple of years.
    
    Bob
852.26CASEE::MERRICKStone me, what a lifeThu Jun 13 1991 18:309
    re -1. I don't think he was with them very long. It was in the period
    between the Damned and the Doomed if I remember correctly. 
    
    There was some truly wonderous music around 75-76 - Wigan's Chosen Few,
    Johnny Wakelin, Typically Tropical, Picketywitch, Laurie Lingo... s'funny 
    how much rubbish stays in your memory.
    
    Ken
                                                                 
852.27The Osmonds = YeauchBAHTAT::SUMMERFIELDCOh no, its a boo...Thu Jun 13 1991 20:0422
    Does anyone know what year Fiddlers Dram had a chart success with
    'The Day We Went To Bangor'. A truly awesome classic that ended life as
    music to a butter advert, which was more than it deserved.
    
    And does anyone remember Tery Wogan and the Brighouse & Rastrick Brass
    Band doing the 'Floral Dance'. Actually that may have come out in 1980,
    but the instrumental version was earlier.
    
    And what about 'Amazing Grace' by some Scottish Pipe Band. Truly cosmic
    the way that got into the charts.
    
    And Jasper Carrot with 'Funky Moped'. Or Roger Whittaker with 'The Last
    Farewell'. Or Little Jimmy Osmond with 'Long Haired Lover From
    Liverpool'
    
    God, to think I grew up with all this dross being played. Imagine what
    someone influenced by that lot would grow up to be. Luckily I was
    already into Tull, Genesis, ELP, etc...
    
    Still, they were all unfogettable songs. Unfortunately.
    
    Balders
852.28CHEFS::PRICETBurning Me Out From The InsideThu Jun 13 1991 20:139
    
    >God, to think I grew up with all this dross being played. Imagine what
    >someone influenced by that lot would grow up to be. Luckily I was
    >already into Tull, Genesis, ELP, etc...
    
    Over to the ponderers on this one
    
    HHHMMMM HHHMMM
    
852.29JUMBLY::OCONNORThey Might Be GitsThu Jun 13 1991 20:3510
     >>   Over to the ponderers on this one

     Isn't that "I'm the ponderer..I'm the ponderer...I'm goin' round and
     round and round and round..."

     Naaah I didn't like that much either...

     - The Third Man
     
852.30IGETIT::BROWNMforty-one days to go!Thu Jun 13 1991 20:389
    re-2, someone growing up through the 70's would turn out like me!  I
    have `Amazing Grace' by Band Of The Black Watch, and some other
    Bagpipes hit.  How about `Kung Fu Fighting' by Carl Whatsisface?
    
    How we ever got from liking Slade, Wizard, Gary Glitter, Alvin Stardust
    etc. to House music and the Happy Mondays I'll never know. ;-)
    
    
    matty 
852.31And when I say love, I mean LOVEXSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormThu Jun 13 1991 22:3410
    How about Ray Stevens and "The Streak".. you won't find a memory
    much more painful than that, I'll wager

    Dave

    I've bought quite a bit of 70's Tosh in recent years, that I never
    really appreciated at the time.. (well I never had money to buy 
    records then anyway) T.Rex and Alice Cooper, for example. And I'm
    even on the lookout for some old Barry White hits.
852.32MARVIN::WARWICKTrevor WarwickFri Jun 14 1991 02:143
    
    I can better that. "Seasons in the Sun" by Terry Jacks was *definitely*
    the worst record of the '70s. Well, maybe.
852.33CHEFS::PRICETBurning Me Out From The InsideFri Jun 14 1991 11:593
    Re - a few
    
    No the Ponderers are characters on Vic Reeves Big Night Out
852.34RUTILE::MACFADYENI feel better if my laundry's doneFri Jun 14 1991 16:257
    Re .32: I'll second that. For revolting sentimentality combined with an
    irritatingly memorable hook, "Seasons in the Sun" is the song I most
    wish to forget but cannot. Worse even than Joe Dolce's "Shaddap you
    face" (which might just be 80s tosh).
    
    
    Rod
852.35Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep!WELMTS::GREENBThey *Do* Be GitsFri Jun 14 1991 16:391
    
852.36Saturday Morning LustYUPPY::OHAGANB"Killer Bob"Fri Jun 14 1991 16:4116
No mention of Sally James? ( unless in 70's tosh MKI ) The undisputed 
Queen of Saturday Morning T.V.in the 70's and a figure which would
cause a million lads to eat their cornflakes with trembling hands
(God! where's the Bromide?) Looking back on it our Sal seemed to
take on the appearence of a rather gorgeous Biker-Bird, ( well motor-
cycling female does'nt have the same ring does it? ) what with those
denim waistcoats and heavy metal T-shirts ( A very tight fitting
Judas Priest one comes to mind ). I wonder what she's doing now?
Probably owns a farm in Wales and listens to Keith Jarrett L.P.'s
in the evening.

Barry.

p.s Bob, the p-name goes next week as last respects to the greatest T.V.
show of all time.
 
852.37Are you ready for the Ballroom Blitz?HAM03::BRUEHLYou've got nothing on meFri Jun 14 1991 17:5721
    
    Does anybody remember The Sweet?
    
    A Top Ten Hit Band from the 70's.
    
    The last thing I've heard about them was, that they did some new songs.
    But this was a couple of month (or years) ago!
    
    So are Andy Scott and Mick Tucker are still playing together?
    Is Brian Connolly still always drunken?
    The last information, I've heard about him was, that he was in France
    doing a holiday for tasting all the French Cognac. At least he was seen
    lying drunken in a barrel of those alcoholic fluid.
    Was he able to swim? Or is he drowned?
    And what's about Steve Priest? He left the band a lot of years ago,
    and was never seen again, till this time.
    
    Is anybody able to tell some news?
    
    |PETER|_the_70's_in_his_minds
    
852.38Re .37ROCKY::QUICKFoxtrot Oscar, dogbreathFri Jun 14 1991 18:1210
	I have some friends who played for them a while ago... apparently
	there are TWO versions of the Sweet, one is Brian Connelly plus
	whatever musicians he can get to put up with his drunken tantrums,
	the other is the rest of the original band plus whichever singer
	they have this month... apparently both refuse to give up claim
	on the name, both do all the old numbers, and Connelly wont talk
	to the rest and vice-versa... very rock'n'roll eh?

	JJ.
852.39Are you ready Steve?ARRODS::OHAGANBNasty man in a denim jacketFri Jun 14 1991 18:2610
    Really can't give anything new on this band. I do however remember that
    I got the shock of my life when I bought a second-hand copy of 
    "Strung Up" a few years back. Apart from the pop classics there's
    some really good stuff there, "Burn on the Flame" etc. And they 
    were a pretty good live band too from what's on the in-concert sides,
    especially "Someone-Else Will" complete with rather dodgy lyrics for
    a so called pop band. 
    
    Barry.
     
852.40!!!SRFSUP::BERZERfire walk with meFri Jun 14 1991 19:5515
    STOP THIS!
    
    I hate you all for reminding me of those awful songs that dominated
    the airwaves in my elementary/jr. high school days!  You clicked on
    that annoying little radio in my head that replays only the worst
    music of all time!  eeeeeeekkk!
    
    re: what happened to the kids who grew up on this stuff
    
    I've notice an enormous increase in the murder-for-no-reason (not
    gang related either) rate in the last year amongst people this age 
    group.
    
    -Vicki_born_in_the_60s  
    
852.41You should read articles he's written...JUMBLY::OCONNORMake Hay Not WarFri Jun 14 1991 19:586
    Vicki, does you intolerance have anything to do with Julian Cope
    really being an old hippie ? -;)

    - Tim
    
852.42ggggrrrrrrrSRFSUP::BERZERfire walk with meFri Jun 14 1991 20:423
    re: - Tim
    
    Oh, Tosh to you too!
852.43JUMBLY::OCONNORMake Hay Not WarFri Jun 14 1991 20:579
    Actually Vicki I've heard the first two sides of J.C.'s "Peggy Suicide"
    and it went down okay. I wouldn't want to rubbish an artist before
    hearing his stuff...very poor practice that.

    - Tim

    P.S. Here comes the weekend!
    
852.44Its a middle-aged rampageXSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormFri Jun 14 1991 21:0211
   Re: Brian Connolly

   I saw a sober Brian being interviewed on TV a short while ago, he was
   a real mess. He was shivering all over. Either he's got Parkinsons
   disease, or he's really messed up with drink/drugs. 

   I think that Sweet were much bigger in Germany than in the UK for some
   reason, which is why they've been there so long.

   Dave
852.45XSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormFri Jun 14 1991 21:086
   Under all the Glitter and make-up, Sweet were a pretty heavy rock and
   roll outfit, check out almost any Sweet album after 1973. Only REAL
   Sweet fans know this, of course....

   Dave
852.46Sweet Fanny AdamsHAM03::BRUEHLYou've got nothing on meMon Jun 17 1991 11:5014
    
    I know all about the heavy Sweet stuff, and have to say, that
    those music was better for them as the ChinChap stuff.
    I was a big fan for years and have got all their albums.
    I think the best ablum was "Give Us A Wink" which is really pretty
    heavy. And "Off The Record" is also a very good album, but more
    poppy than "Give Us A Wink".
    
    They did a heavy stuff, years ago. Today I hear heavy bands, which
    will ever get the power and drive, which Sweet always had have.
    All in all, I'm still missing them.
    
    |PETER|
    
852.47CHEFS::BRIGGSRThey use computers don't they?Mon Jun 17 1991 13:328
    
    
    Ahh Ah! Vicki. That that rings a bell!
    
    How about 'White Horses' by Vicki! Theme to kids program of same
    name.
    
    Richard
852.48Dads's Army.WELCLU::BWALKERCome on you Hatters.Mon Jun 17 1991 19:053
    How about Clive Dunn singing "Grandad" was that in the 70's.
    
    Barry
852.49WELMTS::GREENBThey *Do* Be GitsMon Jun 17 1991 19:294
    Unfortunately (for a memory I thought was long since dead and buried)
    you are correct, Barry. Thanks for reminding me.
    
    Bob
852.501 million women can't be wrong!JUMBLY::OCONNORMake Hay Not WarMon Jun 17 1991 19:373
    And then there was Barry White. Maybe we should start a Late Night Tosh
    note. 
852.51SHAPES::WILLIAMSJ1Don't blame me.......Mon Jun 17 1991 20:194
    Hey?  Barry White (hey baby, lets make sweet music) was brilliant.
    None of this tosh stuff with Bazza.
    
    julia
852.52MARVIN::WARWICKTrevor WarwickMon Jun 17 1991 20:455
    
    My wife came up with another truly terrible song.
    
    "Billy don't be a hero", by Paper Lace. I still think T. Jacks gets my
    vote though..
852.53ARRODS::WHITEHEADJHeaven fell that nightTue Jun 18 1991 11:494
   Seasons in the Sun was, and still is, a brilliant record.  I've got
   the record at home....anyone want to borrow it!!!

   Jane.
852.54I Drove My Tractor Thru Your HaystackBAHTAT::SUMMERFIELDCOh no, its a boo...Tue Jun 18 1991 12:0712
    re .52
    
    Didn't Paper Lace also do that other atrocious song The Night Chicago
    Died, or something similar.
    
    I haven't seen any mention of the Wurzels yet. Has everyone forgotten
    their classic; I've Got A Brand New Combine Harvester (I'll Give You The
    Key). Or the one about the blackbird. Mega stars or what...
    
    More to come later.
    
    Balders
852.55WELMTS::GREENBThey *Do* Be GitsTue Jun 18 1991 12:154
    Am I in the right decade to mention 'One Day At A Time', by, errrm, 
    whoever?
    
    Bob
852.56Praise the Lord, More ToshBAHTAT::SUMMERFIELDCOh no, its a boo...Tue Jun 18 1991 12:317
    Re .55
    
    Lena Martel (sp?) is the name you're looking for. The song charted in
    the late 70s. A bit of a christian song from what I remember. Was the
    refrain something like 'One Day At A Time, Sweet Jesus...'
    
    Balders                                                   
852.57ARRODS::WHITEHEADJEscort meTue Jun 18 1991 13:014
   And not forgetting....Grandma, We Love You, by the St Winifred's
   School Choir, or summat like that.

   Bart.
852.58where's my class ??JUMBLY::OCONNORMake Hay Not WarTue Jun 18 1991 13:0816
   ...making good use of the things that we find... - Wombles

   Nananananananana  - Cozy Powell
   Coo-ca-choo - Alvin Stardust
   Uptown Uptempo Woman - this wasn't Barry Manilow but it sounded even
                          worse. Yeuccccch!
   Wonderful Tonight - Eric Clapton  (everyone's a target)
   Silly love songs - Wings
   Everything by a band called America - this band made `seasons in the
   sun' sound like early Iggy.

   More on `the decade that style forgot' later...

   - Tim
   
852.59Desolation BoulevardHAM03::BRUEHLYou've got nothing on meTue Jun 18 1991 13:2012
    
    I do like to waste a few more words about The Sweet.
    
    Does anybody know, what they're currently doing? I haven't heard
    anything on Steve Priest for a couple of years.
    I've seen both Sweet live. One Band was together with a totaly drunken
    Brian Connolly. The other Band cointained Mick Tucker and Andy Scott.
    Pretty good gig. But no word on Steve.
    
    Anyone?
    
    |PETER|
852.60WELMTS::GREENBThey *Do* Be GitsTue Jun 18 1991 13:513
    That were Randy Edelman, Tim.
    
    Bob
852.61Euro Nightmares.ARRODS::OHAGANBDays of Speed and Slow-time MondaysTue Jun 18 1991 16:2917
    Can't remember her full name, Sheila something, from France I think,
    and she had a minor hit with "I lost my heart to a Starship Trooper".
    Almost recall the video being some sort of romp through some futuristic 
    set in a tight tinsel-foil space suit. Very tacky, very Boystown-ish 
    and the sort of thing Amanda Lear would have been proud of. 
    
    And there's another one from that period, could've been early eighties
    mind you. Again the full name escapes me but his first name was Patrick
    and was another one of those Euro-Disco-Pop criminals. The song was
    called "Born to be Alive", remember the chorus? "Cause we were born...
    born... born to be alive." Born to be buried alive more like. His TOTP
    appearances usually had him jaunting around in a suit holding a walking
    cane. I remember at the time thinking that Joan Collins and crowd would
    be boogy-ing the night away at Stringfellows loving this sort of
    garbage. 
    
    . 
852.62One Europe = One Load of ToshBAHTAT::SUMMERFIELDCOh no, its a boo...Tue Jun 18 1991 16:4913
    Wasn't there a guy from Belgium called Plastique Betram (I probably
    got the name completely wrong) who had a hit called something like Cest
    Pan Pour Moi (again, sorry about the spelling ). Truly trash.
    
    And let's not forget that busty Euro wench who had a hit with Do It, Do
    It Again (?). Correct artist and title anyone.
    
    Actually, you could probably devote an entire note to Euro Tosh.
    
    God help us in 1992
    
    Balders
    
852.63UBOHUB::FIDDLER_MTue Jun 18 1991 16:557
    Starship Trooper - wasn't that by Sarah Brightman, of Lloyd Webber
    fame?  I saw a clip on tv recently.  very funny.
    
    Ca Plan pour Moi - classic trash.  loved it.  Not as good as Jilted
    John - Gordon is a moron.
    
    Mikef
852.64WELMTS::GREENBThey *Do* Be GitsTue Jun 18 1991 17:013
    Jilted is not tosh in any decade. That one's a minor classic.
    
    Bob
852.65I agree BobUBOHUB::FIDDLER_MTue Jun 18 1991 17:031
    
852.66CHEFS::PRICETBurning Me Out From The InsideTue Jun 18 1991 17:116
    How can anyone knock Jilted, we had an art teacher called Mr Gordon at
    the time, that song caused some mirth and several hours detention for
    some people.
    
    Tim
    ---
852.67JUMBLY::OCONNORMake Hay Not WarTue Jun 18 1991 17:1319
    Euro trash: "Ding Ding A Dong" - a winner in '74 I think. Denmark was the
    country responsible.



    "When you're not feeling alright,
    Everthing is uptight, (!)
    Try to sing a song that goes
    `ding, ding a dong'...
    Sing a song you can sing it,
    Maybe you can dig it, (!)
    Even when your lover is gone, gone ,gone...
    ...sing ding ding dong!"  (!!!)

    classic euro_trash. 

    - Tim
    
852.68CHEFS::PRICETBurning Me Out From The InsideTue Jun 18 1991 17:366
    - Tim 
    
    you certainly seem to be an expert =8*)
    
    Tim
    ---
852.69WELMTS::GREENBThey *Do* Be GitsTue Jun 18 1991 17:363
    not '74, Tim. That was the year of 'Waterloo' by Bjorn Again
    
    Bob
852.70JUMBLY::OCONNORMake Hay Not WarTue Jun 18 1991 17:414
    You're right. They weren't winners. It was just a `memorable' song.

    - Tim  (classes at 6.30!)
852.71Stig Anderson (R.I.P.)ARRODS::OHAGANBDays of Speed and slow time MondaysTue Jun 18 1991 17:446
    They also took part in 73(?) when Agnetha was pregnant. I know this 
    because I've got that Harry Edgington book at home. 
    
    ABBA's biggest fan (6ft 5").
    
    
852.72Teach-In were Dutch...AYOU52::PAULCwaiting to see the sunriseTue Jun 18 1991 18:0312
852.73I can't remember their nameHAM03::BRUEHLYou've got nothing on meTue Jun 18 1991 18:228
    
    I do remember a Band which members were dressed up like animals, with
    masks and costumes. I think they have had a very short peroid of
    success. Does anybody know, what I'm talking about?
    
    `think it was around `73-`75.
    
    |PETER|
852.74JUMBLY::OCONNORMeet The Monster TonightTue Jun 18 1991 18:320
852.75 why can't I delete my previous note ?BONGHY::OCONNORMeet The Monster TonightTue Jun 18 1991 18:371
    surely not the wombles of wimbledon common ?
852.76Underground, overground, wombling free....ARRODS::WHITEHEADJToo breathless then to wonderTue Jun 18 1991 18:420
852.77BONGHY::OCONNORMeet The Monster TonightTue Jun 18 1991 20:062
    Can anyone remember that `Deck of Cards' song ? Extreme rubbish.
852.78For PosterityXSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormTue Jun 18 1991 21:0813
   A friend of mine actually collects "dud" records such as these. His
   collection is really awesome. Its a great hobby really, most of his
   singles cost 10p in a bargain bin. He has them all - St Winifreds
   School Choir, Lena Martell, Joe Dolce... Rupert and the Frog Song...

   There's no hope from him really, these are all the records he actually
   owns... really!

   The real 'gem' in the collection is the "Action Man" theme tune record.
   Hands up all those who had an Action Man.....!!

   Dave
852.79It's near Luton innit?YUPPY::OHAGANB"Killer Bob"Tue Jun 18 1991 21:127
    "Saturday Night Beneath the Plastic Palm Trees" by The Leighton
    Buzzards. Viewed by aficionados of decent New (old) Wave with the
    same warm respect Sonia commands from a Extreme Noise Terror fan. 
    
    Gawd!                                                            
    
    Barry.  
852.80WELMTS::GREENBThey *Do* Be GitsWed Jun 19 1991 11:404
    OK, who were that bunch of dodos who did such 'classics' of tosh as
    'Aye Aye Aye Aye Moosey'? Am I in the right decade here...?
    
    Bob
852.81Last night I heard my mamma singing a song.....MIACT::RANKINEWed Jun 19 1991 12:4810
    Mentioned earlier.. but 'Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep had the the worst
    single of the decade. The problem was it was quite catchy, and you
    could always hear people humming or whistling it ...much as I hated it
    I sometimes caught myself humming a few bars......aaaaaargh.
    
    I also felt that 'Jilted John' was a minor classic..as was 'Whole Wide
    World' by Wreckless Eric which had a great line about a Pacamac
    (remember them ???
    
    Paul
852.82One of the 4 Rough MenWELMTS::GREENBSigh & ExplodeWed Jun 19 1991 13:356
    Yes indeed Paul! I have a vid of Wreckless Eric doing 'Whole Wide
    World'. What a corker, too. It must have been from the Stiff tour of
    the time, as Ian Dury is playing drums, and Davey Payne is in there
    too.
    
    Bob
852.83MasterpieceXSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormWed Jun 19 1991 15:488
   Jilted John recorded a whole album.. the single is just one Episode
   in a story that starts with a "pre-pubescent" John and ends with him
   getting over the loss of a girlfriend. 

   Its called "True Love Stories". Buy it (if you can find it)!

   Dave
852.84CHEFS::IMMSAadrift on the sea of heartbreakWed Jun 19 1991 16:157
    I've read the entire file and cn find no mention of the birdy song or
    viva espana
    
    Thank god
    
    
    andy
852.85OK, Andy, just for you....WELMTS::GREENBSigh & ExplodeWed Jun 19 1991 17:144
    How about 'The Birdy Song', or 'Viva Espana'? Or, for that matter, 'Una
    Paloma Blanca'?
    
    Bob
852.86The British Abroad..tut! tut!YUPPY::OHAGANBa little money and a take-away curryWed Jun 19 1991 18:253
    "Agadoo" by Black Lace. Need I say more.
    
    Barry.
852.87CHEFS::PRICETBurning Me Out From The InsideWed Jun 19 1991 18:301
    No please don't =8*)
852.88How dare you, you cad !BAHTAT::SUMMERFIELDCOh no, its a boo...Wed Jun 19 1991 20:2114
852.89PonyFORTY2::ETHERIDGEAnyone want a lemon finger?Wed Jun 19 1991 20:419
    Shurely shome mishtake ref.
    
    "Agado, do, do, push pineapple, shake the tree.."
    
    Yours sincerely,
    
    Echo.
    
    (Bringing you the truth the way it is.)	8^P
852.90swinging seventies, eh?MIACT::RANKINEWed Jun 19 1991 21:2211
    Re last few
    
    were they all 70's toons ??
     It doent seem that long ago, flares, oxford bags, platform sole
    'Simon' shirts, tank tops.
    
    I remember the Who doing various football grounds supported by Alex
    Harvey, Streetwalkers, Ozark Mountain Daredevils to mention a few...a
    great day out, in 74 (?) I think.
    Paul
    
852.91To Help You On Your Way??KIRKTN::ISUTHERLANDThu Jun 20 1991 08:073
    
    RE:.80 
    	They were called Modern Romance.
852.92WELMTS::GREENBSigh & ExplodeThu Jun 20 1991 11:083
    What is a Simon shirt?
    
    Bob 'Loon Pants' Green.
852.93NEWOA::SAXBYA house! My kingdom for a house!Thu Jun 20 1991 12:094
    
    Surely Agadoo was an 80s 'song'?
    
    Mark
852.94TURB0::artThu Jun 20 1991 13:485
was the one that went: "the guy in the chip shop thinks he's Elvis"
from the 70's?


...Art
852.95Kirsty McColl.NEWOA::SAXBYA house! My kingdom for a house!Thu Jun 20 1991 13:506
    
    No.
    
    Mark
    
    
852.96Shut Up !BAHTAT::SUMMERFIELDCOh no, its a boo...Thu Jun 20 1991 18:5713
    Just remembered another classic:
    
    Whispering Grasss - Don Estelle and Windsor Davies
    
    Just appaling, especially Windsor Davies doing his Sargent Major bit
    all the way through.
    
    What I want to know is, who the hell bought enough of this trash for it
    to make it into the charts. Don't tell me there were that many 'It Aint
    Alf Hot Mum' fans around.
    
    Balders
    
852.97CHEFS::PRICETBurning Me Out From The InsideThu Jun 20 1991 19:035
    What about "On the trail of the lonesome pine"  or whatever it was
    called by Laurel & Hardy
    
    Tim
    ---
852.98Stan Laurel is GodJUMBLY::OCONNORWho do you tawk to ?Thu Jun 20 1991 19:041
    20s tosh Tim.
852.99Dont knock StanODDONE::FIDDLER_MThu Jun 20 1991 19:111
    
852.100Yeah, Leave 'im aloneBAHTAT::SUMMERFIELDCMelt in your brain, not in your handThu Jun 20 1991 19:141
    
852.101More painful memoriesXSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormThu Jun 20 1991 19:2918
 Remember all those Judge Dread records.. I think Jim Davidson's dad must
 have done them.

 Didn't Arthur Mullard and Hylda Baker do version of a song from "Grease"..
 Mind you the original wasn't much better.

 Then there were the wombles. 

 Loop-Di-Love by Shag. 

 Benny Hill driving the fastest milk cart in the west.

 Juke Box Jive by the Rubettes. An all-time-low that one.

 Disco Tex and his Sex-O-Lettes

 "Convoy". What was all that "rubber duck" business about?
852.102CHEFS::PRICETBurning Me Out From The InsideThu Jun 20 1991 19:341
    Whoops seem to offended a few people, sorry
852.103BEAGLE::WARDThu Jun 20 1991 20:4117
    But what about all those marvellous "videos" they used to show on
    TOTP ???   Remember, those were the days when 10 bob was a big budget
    production.
    
    I seem to recall Slade and Gudbye t'Jane (even remembered the spelling,
    good eh?) being filmed in a hospital because Dave Hill had broken his
    ankle.   And how about Barry White with his only (mercifully) number
    one, being filmed on a Townsend Thoresen car ferry between Dover and
    Calais ?   Or Rod Stewart's Sailing which involved him wandering up
    and down a quayside in East London ?   Or the Stylistics' You Make
    Me Feel Brand New (I think - it was no.1 too) filmed on a roof top
    somewhere in America ?   Or any Abba video ?
    
    I'm sure there are some more ...
    
    Ray
    
852.104Tales from the LochsideMIACT::RANKINEThu Jun 20 1991 20:4824
    Re back a few..
    
    A 'Simon' shirt was a casual shirt, usally pullover type, but with a
    collar anf a few (quite large) buttons. It was made out of T-shirt type
    cotton, short sleeved, and had a button or two on the sleeve. They were
    actually made by a company called Simon, and as they became popular,the
    company started putting the simon label in visible areas eg on the
    breast pocket or on the, by now, quite full-up sleeves. I think they
    were popular in the summer of 74 ??...as it was after the Ben Sherman
    Ox blood DM's and moonstomping era for me...a nice, comfy,casual wear
    shirt did not match the Slade classics of the time, and all the buttons
    got in the way of the braces.
    Also very popular in Glasgow was Arthur Black shirts...made to measure,
    made to your own design/colour scheme/material...very expensive, so you
    had to get a few mates to go with you to pick it up as there were
    always a few razor boys hanging outside trying to convince you that you
    should donate the shirts to their favourite charity ie them.
    
    Still back to music..remember all those Slade hits with misspelt titles
    like Mama weer all crazee now, and others wot i cant remember
     
    Ah nostalgia he sighs, feeling the stab scar on his wrist..those were
    the days ?????
    Paul
852.105Kernockers anyone?YUPPY::OHAGANBa little money and a take-away curryFri Jun 21 1991 15:2919

>> Juke Box Jive by the Rubettes. An all-time-low that one.


Away with you, you heathen! This was the Rubettes finest 3 minutes. 
Actually I heard this in a pub last week and had to restrain myself 
from launching into the seventies dance which sent a million Oxford
Bags flapping on youth club dance-floors across the country. Does
anybody remember it? God knows what it was called but you basically
put your left foot forward, crossed over with your right, stepped back
and repeated the process for eternity. I remember Mud used to do
this one a lot. Technically, not as difficult as the Footsie :-)
but then to do that it helped considerably if you were a member of
the Olympic Gymnastic floor exercise team. 

O'H  

 
852.106Done to "Shadoogie" on stageUNTADH::HAZELMillion-to-one chances crop up nine times out of tenFri Jun 21 1991 15:478
> God knows what it was called but you basically
> put your left foot forward, crossed over with your right, stepped back
> and repeated the process for eternity.
    
    Sounds like (one of) the "Shadows Walk", invented by the group of the
    same name.
    
    Dave Hazel
852.107Skeletons in the cupboardEUSEBE::STURTPsycho milkmanFri Jun 21 1991 16:1026
    Good note this.
    
    Some of these horrors are not as shameful as you may think.
    
    I remember his Godship, Elvis Costello, doing a cover version of Abba's
    "Knowing me, knowing you" on one of his mid-80's tours. Such hommage
    from the deity must mean that Abba were in fact a fine group.
    
    And that Belgian clown Plastic Bertrand's "Ca plane pour moi" was also
    covered by the emminently respectible Captain Sensible under the title
    "Jet Boy, Jet Girl", when he was part of a group called the Chron Jets
    - I think.
    
    "Seasons in the Sun" was truly terrible, but the original French
    version was penned by the immortal, but dead, Jacques Brel - much liked
    by Scott Walker and Julian Cope - under the title "Les Moribonds".
    
    "No Charge" was pretty awful, tho' I can't remember who sang it or
    when.
    
    And as for the Rubettes...What was the name of the blow-dried face
    geyser who did all the high singing and had a hit on his own but was
    never part of the group?
    
    Ed. 
                                           
852.108ARRODS::WHITEHEADJFri Jun 21 1991 16:508
   Re last re Rubettes

   Can't remember his name, but I went to school with a girl whose Dad's
   best friend was in the Rubettes!

   A claim to fame to be ashamed of!

   Jane.
852.109Tosh indeedCASEE::MERRICKStone me, what a lifeFri Jun 21 1991 18:154
    re: 107  Jet Boy, Jet Girl was by The Softies, which featured
             Capt Sensible and was released by Chiswick
    
    Ken 
852.110WELMTS::GREENBSigh & ExplodeFri Jun 21 1991 18:194
    Who did that appalling song 'Beach Baby'? True tosh of a type that only
    the 70's could produce.
    
    Bob
852.111BEAGLE::WARDFri Jun 21 1991 18:358
    "Beach baby, beach baby, lying there on the sand, give me something
    that I can remember ..." -- haven't a clue ...
    
    From the famous summer (1974) when Terry Jacks and Charles Aznavour
    were number one.   The summer too when TOTP was on strike for four
    or five weeks (while C.Az. was at no.1).
    
    Ray
852.112Another claim to fameAYOU52::PAULCwaiting to see the sunriseFri Jun 21 1991 18:386
852.113BURYST::edmundsJoking apartFri Jun 21 1991 18:484
"No charge" was by J J Barrie.
I thought First Class were a German band???

seventies pop consulant
852.114And there's more..VOGON::MORGANI'm no hippy, I LIKE violenceFri Jun 21 1991 19:025
    I think a number of the First Class personnel also were members of
    White Plains and Edison Lighthouse etc. etc.
    
    Rich
    
852.115WELMTS::GREENBSigh & ExplodeFri Jun 21 1991 19:045
    Oh yeah, all that 'Love Grows Where My Rosemary Goes' and 'Julie Julie
    Julie Do Ya Love Me?' tosh. None finer.
    
    Bob
    
852.116BEAGLE::WARDFri Jun 21 1991 19:1515
    Further wonderous videos:
    
    Rolling Stones, It's only Rock'n'Roll which featured the band playing
    in a tent that slowly filled up with soap bubbles (vaguely Kenny
    Everett-ish that one);
    
    Police, Walking on the Moon which had the lads playing in front of
    (you've guessed it) a Saturn V rocket;
    
    Gilbert O'Sullivan, Claire in which Gilb rolled about in a field
    with a three year old girl (his manager's daughter as I recall);
    
    Wow!   I need the weekend to think of more ...
    
    Ray
852.117Jet boySCOAYR::AMOONEYFri Jun 21 1991 19:178
    
    
    
    re.107  'Jet boy,jet girl' was a song covered by a band called Chron
            Gen,but I can't remeber Captain Sensible being in the line up.
    
    
                                    
852.118Where's my Mungo Jerry sideburns?YUPPY::OHAGANBa little money and a take-away curryFri Jun 21 1991 20:4814
    No mention of Kenny yet? Something called "Do the Bump"(?). The band
    that gave us Keith Chegwin and then sank without trace, what a damn
    shame eh? Oh, and here's another reason why children should'nt
    be allowed to make records...Our Kid. Makes you want to go and fetch
    that axe from the garden shed does'nt it?
    
    Lest we forget...Leif Garrett, from the other side of the pond. Lovely
    chap, from the West Coast 'n all, would've looked even better through 
    a telescopic rifle lens. 
    
    O'H.
                                  
    
     
852.119ASICS::EDMUNDSJoking apartFri Jun 21 1991 22:148
    All true. But then look at the cars we had then (remember the DAF
    varidrive?), the clothes we wore and - dare I say it - the computers we
    had.
    
    It's called progress, and a lot of it, whilst not brilliant, wasn't so
    bad at the time.
    
    K.
852.120so says the bibleHPSRAD::ARTHUR50,000,000 Elvis fans can't be wrong!Fri Jun 21 1991 22:475
Re: a few back

Elton Motello did the original version of "Jet Boy" in 1978...but not too
original since he just put the words over Plastic Bertrand's "Ca Plane Pour
Moi"...Chron Gen may have done it but much later...Ed
852.121Ee, ee, ee, ee, ee, the Martian Hop.....ARRODS::WHITEHEADJNo submission to treasonMon Jun 24 1991 12:114
   I heard a brilliant song last night: The Martian Hop, but I can't
   remember who it was by.

   Jane.
852.122IGETIT::BROWNMLightbulb! Lightbulb!Mon Jun 24 1991 15:0610
    re-1,  I heard that!  It was great.  
    
    They also played this record that I thought was The Orb.  I was jumping
    up and down shouting "They're playing The Orb, they're playing The Orb".
    Then when the music went different - "It's a remix, it's a remix". 
    Then Freddie Mercury started singing and realised it was `Flash' by
    Queen.  The Orb had sampled about 2 minutes of Queen.
    
    
    matty
852.123CHEFS::PRICETBurning Me Out From The InsideMon Jun 24 1991 15:155
    Thats a *big* confession Matty, liking a Queen record, you'll be buying
    Richard Marx and Michael Bolton records next =8*)
    
    Tim
    ---
852.124It wasn't The Cockney Something-or-others, was it?AYOV27::DROBBThe world is on its elbows and kneesTue Jun 25 1991 13:584
    I'm not saying that it was 'tosh' - more like a 'novelty' job - but,
    who had a hit in the 70's with "Nice Legs (Shame About The Face)"?
    
    - Dougie
852.125FORTY2::ETHERIDGEAnyone want a lemon finger?Tue Jun 25 1991 14:063
    Was it 'The Monks'?
    
    Eck.
852.126It effects the brain...SUBURB::DIVERLTue Jun 25 1991 16:076
    
    This might be a feverish delusion brought on by too much sun(!!!),
    but I thought this was by Madness.
    
    Leonie.
    
852.127UBOHUB::FIDDLER_MTue Jun 25 1991 16:124
    naahhh, not Madness, definitely The someone or other.  Could have been
    the Monks, or Jags.
    
    Mikef
852.128It was the Monks!KIRKTN::ISUTHERLANDTue Jun 25 1991 16:141
    
852.129CHEFS::PRICETBurning Me Out From The InsideTue Jun 25 1991 16:251
    Definitely the monks
852.130Novelty Island!YUPPY::OHAGANBa little money and a take-away curryTue Jun 25 1991 16:3110
    Here's a fine slab of novelty for you. Hands up who remembers "Telephone
    Man". "You can put it in the bathroom, you can put in the hall"...etc
    etc. Sung by a sort of female Finbarr Saunders in her best 0898
    sugary telephone voice ( ahmm and that's a guess ;-) ). 
    
    Did'nt Paul Young make a record about toast? Possibly 80's to(a)sh(t)?
    
    O'H
    
     
852.131ASICS::EDMUNDSJoking apartTue Jun 25 1991 16:465
852.132Meri WilsonAYOU52::PAULCwaiting to see the sunriseTue Jun 25 1991 16:486
852.133More Hands Up.YUPPY::OHAGANBa little money and a take-away curryTue Jun 25 1991 17:1112
    re .131 
    
    Sorry Sir,
    
    That should've been "to(a)s(t)h." Whilst in the vicinity of Sirs,
    hands up who remembers "Yes Sir, I can Boogie"? Performed by a
    couple of Spanish (?) ladies who'd obviously graduated from the
    Jane Birkin school of the heavy breathing judging by the intro.
    Tosh supreme.
    
    Judge Dredd (spot the connection)
    
852.134Yuk!UBOHUB::ROBERTSRRichard Roberts, EIS: 849-3209Tue Jun 25 1991 17:215
    Ah Baccara... "Yes Sir I can Boogie"
    
    Pure unadulterated sludge. I even hated then - and I was only 7!
    
    R|tch^d
852.135JUMBLY::OCONNORHoliday for plywoodTue Jun 25 1991 17:4610
    re .133
    >> Jane Birkin

    Just this weekend I heard the original of "Je T'Aime" which was
    (over)done by Brigitte Bardot. It's a masterpiece of heavy breathing.
    Very funny.

    - Tim
    
852.136I'm not so sure now!!!KIRKTN::ISUTHERLANDTue Jun 25 1991 18:343
    
    RE:.130
    	The lady in question was called Sue Wilkinson.
852.137BEAGLE::WARDTue Jun 25 1991 18:471
    "Yes sir, I can boogie, boogie voogie .."
852.138A hustlerAYOU52::PAULCwaiting to see the sunriseTue Jun 25 1991 19:266
852.139Sorry.Meri Wilson is correct.PAKORA::ISUTHERLANDWed Jun 26 1991 16:224
    
    	Re:-1
    		Yes you're right.I got a bit mixed up.
    							
852.14042443::PRICETBurning Me Out From The InsideWed Jun 26 1991 16:288
    
    The first record I ever got was Sugar Sugar by the Archies, a bunch of
    Cartoon animals, tosh to the nth degree.  Luckily I retain my
    credibility a it was bought for me by my parents a I was about 3 at the
    time =8*)
    
    Tim
    ---
852.141to tosh or not to tosh!YUPPY::FELLMMary Fell @HHLWed Jun 26 1991 16:4010
    How dare you say Sugar Sugar was tosh!!!:-):-)
    
    This was the first record I ever bought with my own hard earned
    pocket money!! and therefore holds a special place in my record
    collection - bottom of the pile I think!!:-):-)
    
    Mazzer
     
    
    
852.142The musical influence came very earlyHAM03::BRUEHLYou've got nothing on meWed Jun 26 1991 17:0710
    
    My first step into music was by The Sweet. I've bought all their tapes,
    as I haven't a record player at that time.
    
    After getting one I left The Sweet and went out to get my first self
    bought album: Tubular Bells by Mike Oldfield. What a musical change
    at the age of 13 Years.
    But I still like this great album.
    
    |PETER|
852.143Planet MungoYUPPY::OHAGANBa little money and a take-away curryWed Jun 26 1991 18:318
I'm sure there's a first single/album topic...but what the hell! I think
the first single single I bought was "In the Summertime" or "Lady Rose"
by sideburn kings, Mungo Jerry. However this is not tosh...

...anything by David Soul is."Silver Lady" and "Don't give up on us baby";
songs to cry into your three-stars tank top to. 

O'H.
852.144"Who are we supposed to be today?"UNTADH::HAZELMillion-to-one chances crop up nine times out of tenWed Jun 26 1991 18:344
    Tosh of the Seventies: Bay City Rollers, whose music was really made by
    session musicians.
    
    Dave Hazel
852.145Are you sure?XSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormWed Jun 26 1991 18:537
>>    Tosh of the Seventies: Bay City Rollers, whose music was really made by
>>    session musicians.
  
  I beg to differ.. the Rollers played all their own stuff.

  Dave
852.146YesUNTADH::HAZELMillion-to-one chances crop up nine times out of tenThu Jun 27 1991 11:0015
    Re. .145:
    
    Yes, I am sure. There was a programme on one of the BBC Radio stations
    a year or two back (Radio 2 or Radio 4, can't remember which), in which
    this phenomenon was discussed. The program talked about more than one
    band, but the Rollers was the one I remembered most clearly. There was
    one of their hits on which they insisted on playing their own music,
    but most of it was done by session men.
    
    Cliff Hall, who now plays keyboards for The Shadows, was one of the
    session men involved in the Bay City Rollers records. This fact is
    documented in, among other places, The Shadows' biography, written by
    Mike Read.
    
    Dave Hazel
852.147SUBURB::TUDORKLaboratory ladySun Jun 30 1991 23:328
    Having read through the whole note, someone has just mentioned one bit
    of tosh I was going to nominate - "In the Summertime".
    
    Others missed so far are Bobby Goldsboro"s "Summer the First Time" and
    "Honey" and Althea and Donna's "Uptown Top Ranking".
    
    I notice everyone is being very restrained about the Osmonds (en masse)
    and David Cassidy - speak for themselves I suppose.
852.148I know you've all been waiting with bated breath for this....WELMTS::GREENBTwo weeks to go....Mon Jul 01 1991 11:564
    Martian Hop (mentioned earlier) was a classic bit of 60's tosh by the
    Ran-Dells.
    
    Bob
852.149RIVAGE::GATESMon Jul 01 1991 12:049
    How about The Floral Dance by some psychopathic orchestra? I haven't
    seen this one mentioned, but it must rate high on the lists of tosh.
    Judging by the amount of notes here it seems that the 70s generated
    more tosh than 60s or 80s. Who bought all this stuff? Maybe tosh
    was fashionable and I missed it completely :-(
    
    Also, what about Chas n Dave? Cockney tosh!
    
    Barry.
852.150NEWOA::SAXBYA light bulb lasts longer?Mon Jul 01 1991 12:144
    
    Don't you STILL buy it Barry? :^)
    
    Mark
852.151Instant KudosYUPPY::OHAGANB"Dreaming of Monday"Mon Jul 01 1991 15:3924
    
>>    Also, what about Chas n Dave? Cockney tosh!
    
>>    Barry.


I once saw Chas and Dave live at the Dominion ( Please, don't ask how )
and the best thing about it was their drummer, the bloke that looks as
if he's Jimmy White's dad and wears  a pork-pie hat, who launched into 
drum solo with accompanying special-effects lighting. Honest, I do
not jest. This went on for a few minutes and beleive me this chap knew
his way round a drum-kit; impressed I was. After that the whole thing
turned into a GWAR/TUBES/VENOM type routine. Chas returned to the stage
in his 25" stack heels and leather cod-piece with protruding six inch nails
whilst Dave stormed on wearing nothing but a Ted Nugent style loin-cloth,
a pentagle daubed in blood across his chest. They then played their latest
single backwards and it went something like "Oh Satan, market trader from
Hell, lead us into your infernal kingdom of Clacton".

O'H.

p.s some of the above may not be true.

852.152SUBURB::TUDORKLaboratory ladyMon Jul 01 1991 15:576
    Re -1
    
    I LIKE OHAGANB's sense of humour:-)
    
    The British answer to Alice Cooper eh?
    
852.153I love the Dead?YUPPY::OHAGANB"Dreaming of Monday"Mon Jul 01 1991 16:459
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
>>    The British answer to Alice Cooper eh?
  
Egad! Must admit the old eyes are looking similar to Alice's this 
morning. Must frighten the wife first thing, poor soul. Must go, 
I can feel one of those baby skewering moods coming on.

O'H ( Alice to you )
852.154C'mon Bob - You must know this !!VULCAN::SMITHP1Another pn successfully paraphrasedMon Jul 01 1991 19:497
	Come on you lot....the worst piece of tosh ever, must be...

	"Grocer Jack" by (not a clue - but weren't they the same lot that 
			  did "I'm only a poor little sparrow" ??)

		p1
852.155ASICS::EDMUNDSJoking apartTue Jul 02 1991 02:236
    "Grocer Jack" was actually called "Excerpt from a teenage opera", and
    it was by Keith West.
    
    I'm pretty damn sure it was in the sixties too, not the seventies.....
    
    Keith
852.156WELCLU::GREENBTwo weeks to go....Tue Jul 02 1991 11:286
    It was indeed a true bit of 60's something, although I'd prefer to
    think of it as 'kitsch' rather than 'tosh'.
    
    SmithP1, nil point.
    
    Bob
852.157VULCAN::SMITHP1Half man, half fish, half squirrelTue Jul 02 1991 13:135
	60's eh !! Amazing ! I obviously never heard it first time
	around. It was always being played in the Golden Lion opposite
	the Crescent, made everyone (well me anyway!) scream with annoyance.

		p1	
852.158nulle ?JUMBLY::OCONNORHoliday in a big oak boxTue Jul 02 1991 13:2212
    Re .147

    >> "Honey"

    The reason that "Honey" isn't mentioned in this note is that it's 60's
    tosh. Maybe we should have a 60's re-releases tosh note.

    Kate Tudor nul point.

    - Tim

852.159A record collection with a high tosh quotientAYOU52::PAULCwaiting to see the sunriseTue Jul 02 1991 15:3819
852.160woodwork squeaks...JUMBLY::OCONNORHoliday in a big oak boxTue Jul 02 1991 17:1012
   .149 is a brave man.

   Actually the guy that share's a house with me has truckloads of it.

   He's got "Rollin'" (BCR), Rubettes "Where It's 'at" and about 15 Marc
   Bolan albums (not ALL good shoorely) among other memoribilia. He's got a
   glitter-pop video and as well as this he's got Gary Glitter posters in
   the kichen and Roy Wood on the cistern. Really.

   - Tim
   
852.161JUMBLY::OCONNORHoliday in a big oak boxTue Jul 02 1991 17:111
    whooops! that should read .159 is a brave man.
852.162Back to tosh, back to reality.YUPPY::OHAGANBIronhorseTue Jul 02 1991 17:264
    I don't know how this man made it into my thoughts but here goes,
    Barry Blue. 
    
    
852.163andXSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormTue Jul 02 1991 18:493
Flintlock.

852.164more about them on 852.5YUPPY::OHAGANBIronhorseTue Jul 02 1991 20:491
    don't say that word.
852.165supersonic magazine41174::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormTue Jul 02 1991 21:2739
   The Tomorrow people.. that brings it all back. 

   I've just been browsing through an old copy of "Supersonic".
   Here's an extract...

   In '74 it was Donny, in '75 it was the Rollers. In 1976 its gonna be....
   WHO? 

   (there then follows a page of bands full of spotty 15 year olds, 
    recognise any of these..?)

   Moone Brothers, Frenzy, Bilbo Baggins, Flintlock, Flame, Slik, Glyder, Gang.

   The Top Pops News Stories from March 1976..

   Gary Glitter has a sunken octagonal marble bath installed in his new home.
   The marble is imported specially from Italy.

   Elton Johns' hair transplant operation is a flop.

   Leo Sayers' Wisdom teeth removal operation is a success!

   David Paton denies rumours that he's about to leave 'Pilot'.

   Donny is definitely NOT engaged.

   John Rossal leaves the Glitter band to pursue a solo career. (John who?)

   Slik's first record has been written by the same team that wrote Kenny's 
   "Fancy Pants".. 

   (this is considered to be a good omen which means obvious fame and fortune 
   lies ahead. Theres even a picture of Midge Ure before he even needed to 
   start shaving)

   Competition: Win Woody's Shorts.

   Next Issue: Win a Kenny Bump Suit! Meet the Rollers in America!
852.166SUBURB::TUDORKLaboratory ladyWed Jul 03 1991 01:526
    Thank you Tim - it must have been a re-release.
    
    Since I was of an age to remember "Andy Pandy" but not "Muffin the
    Mule" I was probably too young to remember it the first time round.
    
    Still think its tosh/kitsh/naff, and definitely un-groovy.
852.167I really love my ...TelevisionARRODS::OHAGANBRecognise your age its a Teenage RampageWed Jul 03 1991 15:446
    
    Who can forget Mike (Cue Supersonic) Mansfield?
    
    O'H.
    
    I'm off to start a 70's tosh T.V note on UK_TV.
852.168BEAGLE::WARDWed Jul 03 1991 16:253
    Didn't somebody "famous" used to play in Bilbo Baggins ???
    
    Ray
852.169don't knowXSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormThu Jul 04 1991 15:5711
>>    Didn't somebody "famous" used to play in Bilbo Baggins ???
    
Well.. do any of these names ring a bell..?

Fid Liddle, Colin Chisolm, Jimmy Devlin, Tosh McIntosh, Brian Spence.

They came from Edinburgh, and once toured with Mud. Same management as the
Bay City Rollers.

Dave
852.170JUMBLY::OCONNORSomone's fishin' in my pondThu Jul 04 1991 18:551
    `tosh macintosh' you say...
852.171useful bit of info, no 546532XSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormFri Jul 05 1991 02:2110
Some tosh trivia for you...

We all know what happened to Midge Ure, but two other members of Slik
went on to form a band called the Zones. One of them also played on
Simple Minds' first Album.

The Bay City Rollers original name was The Saxons.

Dave
852.172JUMBLY::OCONNORSomeone's fishin' in my pondFri Jul 05 1991 17:0510
    Elton John Wrote Good Songs Shock!

    I listened to "Honky Cat" (1972) by Elton John and it still sounds
    really good. It's ripe for a cover (by someone) methinks. Good ole-time
    honky-tonk piano and lopsided melody. It could chart again. (honest
    kidz -;)

    - Tim
    
852.173Earth Shoes for the earESGWST::RDAVISWhy, THANK you, Thing!Sat Aug 03 1991 10:4854
    I don't know how many of these contaminants made it across the Atlantic
    to poison your eels, but since someone was disgusting enough to remind
    me of "Beach Baby"....
    
    - "Midnight at the Oasis" by Maria Muldaur. One of the few American
    songs to really attempt a sympathetic treatment of Arabic culture.
    
    - That pellet of circus horse manure by Leo Sayers, the street mime of
    pop music.
    
    - "Behind Blue Eyes" by the Who. Making Roger Daltrey sensitive was the
    worst mistake Townshend ever made.
    
    - "My Girl Bill". To confirm everyone's fears about the Heartland of
    America, my Missouri compatriots actually had long arguments over the
    supposed ambiguity of this song.
    
    - The solo career of Ringo Starr. He was supposed to be the least
    talented OF THE BEATLES. Think about it.
    
    - Linda Ronstadt's flatclubfooted renditions of songs originally done
    by people who knew how to sing.
    
    - "Shaving Cream". If they had to re-release a '40s song, couldn't they
    have made it Charlie Parker?
    
    - "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Old Oak Tree" by Tony Orlando (the
    only man who ever wanted to be the next Sonny Bono) and Dawn.
    
    - Chicago, Kansas, Boston, Journey, Rush, Yes, gawd, if a band doesn't
    even merit a definite article how can they merit radio airtime?
    
    - "Mandy" and "I Write the Songs" by the King himself.
    
    - Eric Clapton's "I Shot the Sheriff". He probably couldn't even wake
    the sheriff up.
    
    - "Uneasy Rider" by the Charlie Daniels Band.
    
    - "Signs", "One Tin Soldier", "Louie Louie" (no, not THAT "Louie
    Louie"), and a dozen more truly pewling "political" numbers.
    
    - The Steve Miller Band. "The Joker" is bad enough, but if you've ever
    heard him cover Robert Johnson, you'll know why some people think Mick
    Jagger sounds authentic.
    
    - Name your favorite Crosby Stills & Nash tune.
    
    I can't go on.  This is why we listened to "Raw Power"...
    
    But I must say that Elton John's "Saturday Night's Alright for
    Fighting" is better than anything Paul McCartney did.
    
    Rage, 32 and showing it
852.174WELCLU::GREENBStill vaguely hereSat Aug 03 1991 12:024
    Thank you, Rage. Indeed, most of that stuff made it over here, and I
    feel culturally enriched for it.
    
    Bob 
852.175ARRODS::WHITEHEADJThe fear of feeling hopelessnessMon Aug 05 1991 13:5511
re< Note 852.173 by ESGWST::RDAVIS "Why, THANK you, Thing!" 
>
>    - "Shaving Cream". If they had to re-release a '40s song, couldn't they
>    have made it Charlie Parker?


   Who recorded this then? because Caesar the Boogieman, an obnouxious
   git on our local radio station, plays this song about three or four
   times a night.

   Jane.
852.176Joggin' the memorySRFSUP::BERZERempire of the senselessMon Aug 05 1991 19:1913
    >- "Midnight at the Oasis" by Maria Muldaur. One of the few American
    >songs to really attempt a sympathetic treatment of Arabic culture.
     
    I had the dubious honor of attending elementary school w/ Maria
    Muldaur's daughter; I think her name was Jenny.  We were 10 or 11
    when this song was popular.  The main thing I remember about Jenny
    was that she always had the coolest clothes and the latest whatever.
    She was the first (and probably only) in our school to own platform
    tennis shoes.  I thought she was so *cool*.  And needless to say,
    everyone was envious of her wardrobe.
    
    -Vicki
    
852.177Lock up your daughtersXSTACY::PATTISONA rolling stone gets the wormMon Sep 16 1991 15:336
	Kenny's "The Bump" has been re-released in a sort of n-n-n-n-nineteen
        remix, and is soaring up the dancefloor charts (it says here).

	If it works, the Bay City Rollers must be next.....
	....you have been warned.
852.178exANNECY::HUMANI came, I saw, I conked outFri Jun 05 1992 18:405
    "Shaft" 
    
    Right On. We all got shaf*** with that one, eh?
    
    c, martin
852.179COMICS::WEGGSome hard boiled eggs and some nuts.Thu Oct 29 1992 17:2211
    	 I guess this is the right topic for this...
    
    	 I saw an ad on TV last night for a new compilation LP -
    	 "Nicey and Smashee's Poptabulous Collection". 
    
    	 All the best tosh, including, of course, "2-4-6-8 Motorway",
         and my all time favourite of all time "You 'aint seen nothin yet".
    
    	 Can't wait to get it, mate.
    
    	 Ian.
852.180ARRODS::WHITEHEADJThe return of BarkerThu Oct 29 1992 18:341
    Yeah, absolutely tobaccotastic mate!
852.181TRUCKS::WARDRMon Jan 18 1993 13:483
    So what about Sounds of the 70's on BBC2 on Saturday night ??
    
    Ray
852.182ARRODS::WHITEHEADJAfter all you're mineMon Jan 18 1993 15:015
    Excellent entertainment.

    Quote from the Radio Times: If you can remember the 60s you weren't
    really there; if you can remember the 70s you should have been 
    somewhere else.
852.183Sha-la-la-la-push-pushTRUCKS::WARDRMon Jan 18 1993 15:1620
    For those of you who missed it, the following songs were featured on the
    first part of this ten part series - most of the clips from TOTP:
    
    T.Rex		Hot Love
    Sweet		Blockbuster
    Slade		Mama Weer All Crazee Now
    Gary Glitter	I love you love me love
    Suzi Quatro		Devil Gate Drive
    Donny Osmond	Puppy Love
    David Cassidy	the other side of I Am A Clown (it was a double'A')
    Mott The Hoople	Roll away the stone
    Alvin Stardust	Jealous Mind
    Bay City Rollers	Bye Bye Baby
    Mud			Tiger Feet
    
    It was worth it just to see The Goodies sequence - how to be a perfect
    pop star - Gary Glitter's chest, Alvin Stardut's glove, Rubettes' cap,
    Lyndsey de Paul's dress - and all on Tim Brooke-Taylor - wonderful ..
    
    Ray                           
852.184brilliantKRAKAR::WARWICKCan't you just... ?Mon Jan 18 1993 16:3625
This was a real nostalgia trip for all us
late-twenty-and-early-thirtysomethings. Watching it brought back a lot of
memories. With the benefit of hindsight, I found the following things
interesting:

- A lot of of the "pop groups" of the time seemed to have one notably
outrageously dressed and/or effeminate guitarist (e.g., Mud, Slade, The
Sweet). The bloke from Mud was particularly resplendent in a kind of giant
flared white dressing gown, with large silver baubel earrings.

- The Osmonds, David Cassidy and the BCR really were crap, I was right at
the time.

- I thought the song that has survived the best was Roll away the stone, by
Mott the Hoople. Tiger Feet by Mud also went down well. Their dancers were
clearly an early inspiration for Bez.

- Nicey and Smashie are rather understated, compared with some of the early
'70s Radio 1 DJs.

Next week there are more of the dangerous rock'n'roll outfits - David Bowie
etc.

Trevor
852.185WIZZER::WEGGSome hard boiled eggs and some nuts.Mon Jan 18 1993 16:5210
852.186WOTVAX::GLYNNPThe man with a sarcastic voiceMon Jan 18 1993 16:548
    
    Well, I was only 3 in 1973 and I remembered most of the bands and
    songs.  I must admit the early '70's weren't really my favourite bit,
    but there was some good kitsch to watch.
    
    Anybody spot Lloyd Grossman?
    
    Paul
852.187Bye,Bye Baby...KERNEL::MACLEANA pure dear,in a wicked worldMon Jan 18 1993 17:115
    
    Pure Dead Brilliant! - I'd forgotten how GOOD The Bay City 
    Rollers were!!!..I felt quite patriotic!..or is that Idiotic ??!
                    
    Sandie.../ 
852.188WIZZER::WEGGSome hard boiled eggs and some nuts.Mon Jan 18 1993 18:4716
852.189WOTVAX::GLYNNPThe man with a sarcastic voiceTue Jan 19 1993 12:2010
    >    >> Anybody spot Lloyd Grossman?
    
    >    No - which bit was he in? I know he performed as "Jet Bronx and
    >	The Forbidden", but I didn't see them on Saturday's show.
    
    He was on for about 10 seconds after one group saying something along
    the lines of "Now that's what I call rock music, Loud, raucous and
    so, David, whose house is this?".  He had hair then, lot's of it.
    
    Paul       
852.190ARRODS::OHAGANBBeat on the Brat wit a Baseball BatTue Jan 19 1993 14:469
    Watching Donny walk down front for a mauling by the girlies was
    just too much for me. There was one such gal sporting a dreadful
    Seventies hairdo, now ressurected by assorted media and pop darlings,
    and wearing the ultimate in chic seventies fashion, the tweed overcoat
    with leather (usually PVC) lapels. I almost fainted. 
    
    barry.
    
    p.s. Pity they did'nt play the brilliant "Crazy Horses".  
852.191WELCLU::GREENBTwo dot one twoThu Jan 21 1993 20:1410
    Whoever it was earlier who said the BCR were crap was dead right. so
    was blummen Cassidy and Donny. The rest of the stuff was dead good,
    though, even if I didn't think so at the time (I was 16 in '72, I
    liked, erm, serious music, like).
    
    What typified the good stuff for me was the use of the overly cranked
    up guitar sound (Mud, Slade, Mott, Suzi Q, T.Rex etc etc). Surely punk
    rock owes more to this stuff than maybe it realises.
    
    Bob
852.192BONKIN::BOYLETony. Melbourne, AustraliaFri Jan 22 1993 05:135
    Although not strictly "musical" I think Pans People from TOTP deserves
    a mention here. 
    
    What was the name of the "dancers" that they were replaced with?
    
852.193Bring back Brutus Gold FlairsKURMA::SWRIGHTFri Jan 22 1993 06:256
    I think they were replaced by  "Hot Gossip"   along with Sara
    Brightman....
    
    
    I still can't forget that group "Kenny"  they had a song called
    "Do the Bump"   They were the Flair wear Kings..!!!
852.194MENOW::PACENHere comes the twistFri Jan 22 1993 11:484
    Not quite. "Hot Gossip" were the dancers on the Kenny Everet Show.
    "Legs and Co." were the TOTP replacement for "Pan's People".
    
    ~sam.
852.195KERNEL::SMITHERSJLiving on the culinary edge....Fri Jan 22 1993 12:3610
    Oh yeah, Pans People.  I remember writing to the Dail Mail Junior
    Readers page when I was about 10 complaining that they couldn't 
    dance and that my gran could probably do a better rendition with 
    the aid of her zimmer frame.
    
    It got published and I got a couple of quid out of it.
    
    Ahhhhh, fame and fortune at such an early age.
    
    julia (autographs at a price)
852.196KRAKAR::WARWICKCan't you just... ?Fri Jan 22 1993 12:484
    
    I always used to enjoy the Daily Mail junior letters on Saturdays. The
    rabidity of the right-wing sentiments expressed would have made Mrs
    Thatcher blush.
852.197Tosh AnthemsXSTACY::PATTISONForce the hand of chanceFri Jan 22 1993 14:337
   Who remembers this 70's 'anthem' ...

   'Put yourself in our hands .... and together we will take on all 
    the world' - Judas Priest

   No thanks, I'd rather listen to the Osmonds.
852.198WELCLU::GREENBTwo dot one twoFri Jan 22 1993 15:153
    Where did 'Ruby Flipper' fit into all this?
    
    Bob
852.199Living After Midnight, Rockin to the Dawn...ARRODS::OHAGANBMisty Green and BlueFri Jan 22 1993 17:1819
>   Who remembers this 70's 'anthem' ...

>   'Put yourself in our hands .... and together we will take on all 
>    the world' - Judas Priest

    Yeah, I remember the video for that one. Rob Halford kitted out,
    it appeared, by World of Leather and being all dominant with that
    bull-whip. If that was'nt bad enough they went and did it all again
    in the form of "United". 
    
    Great band though (says without a morsel of shame). Twin guitars, 
    Halford camping it up astride a Harley Davidson, songs with titles 
    like Beyond The Realms of Death, Exciter, Grinder, Tyrant, Metal Gods, 
    Hell Bent For Leather (indeed); Heavy Metal panto at it's best. You
    shoulda been there.
    
    barry. 
          
852.200Hidden messages...YUPPY::ASHLEYSMITHrevolution starts at closing time...Fri Jan 22 1993 18:017
    Careful Barry, make sure you don't play the Priests' backwards as they
    could seriously damage your health. Something along the lines of...
    ...burble..burble..Kill yourself with a chainsaw...burble ..burble..
    or so claim some of our more eccentric friends from across the
    Atlantic.
    
    Andy
852.201WOTVAX::BLKPUD::WATTERSONPBy eck it's parkyFri Jan 22 1993 18:175
852.202Not the green manalishiWOTVAX::FIDDLERMLe singe est dans L'arbreFri Jan 22 1993 18:394
    re-1
    Errr...Not Judas Priest...
    
    Mikef 
852.203ARRODS::OHAGANBMisty Green and BlueFri Jan 22 1993 19:068
    Those dance troupes were dreadful. My everlasting memory of them
    was of one Travolta lookalike who had a penchant for string vests, 
    perspiration and inane toothy grins when the camera was nearby.
    The use of a whistle was standard around that time too. See
    COBBLERS::JAZZ_FUNK/ESSEX_SOUL for more on that. 
    
    barry.  
     
852.204ARRODS::DUTTONSMon Feb 15 1993 19:1612
    I meant to say - did anyone see the black-music "Sounds of the 70s"?
    First up they had Aretha Franklin and Bill Withers - suitably brilliant 
    and much like you'd expect to see them now - then some predictably 
    berserk disco acts, and eventually ...
    
    The Jacksons, on Top of the Pops.  Out the window went any idea that 
    they used to be sane!  Michael jiggled around like a battery hen trying 
    to lay an egg while the rest did their idiotic "Rockin' Robin" formation 
    dancing like there was someone out the back with a cattle prod... 
    
    The guitar sounded suspiciously unplugged-in; the small audience looked 
    bored and tired and under-dressed, and they kept glancing at the monitors.
852.205Punk in the 70sKRAKAR::WARWICKCan't you just... ?Mon Mar 22 1993 20:3139
Another excellent edition of Sounds of the Seventies on Saturday. After Glam,
Disco, Soul, Dinosaurs came..... Punk Rock !

It was surprising to see how little the bands actually went in for the
safety-pins and bondage gear image. The Buzzcocks in particular looked like
their Mums had dressed them, and as for Feargal Sharkey's parka...

Several of the bands were shown playing on the TV show "Something Else", one
of those "yoof" style programmes with embarrassed teenage presenters making
laughable attempts at reading autocues. The Jam tried very hard to generate
some enthusiasm amongst the audience, which seemed to consist mainly of
sixth-formers wishing they were at home listening to Yes.

The Damned played "Smash it Up" like they'd consumed several months worth of
speed in one evening. The Stranglers were very old. Their song was "Hanging
Around" recorded live at Surrey University, and ended with Hugh Cornwell
shouting at the students to "fuck off, because they'd never represented the
*true* voice of Guildford". Well, that really told THEM, didn't it.

However, Joy Division topped (ha) the lot with an electrifying version of
"Transmission". There was some other punk retrospective film on TV last year
in which Joy Division also did far and away the best performance. I think
maybe knowing that Curtis killed himself a few months later adds a certain
poignancy to it.

Clash		-	Tommy Gun
Buzzcocks	-	Sixteen again
Damned		-	Smash it Up
X-Ray Spex	-	(can't remember)
Stranglers	-	Hanging Around
Siouxsie & B's	-	Love in a Void
Magazine	-	(can't remember, but not Shot by Both Sides,
			since that was the only decent song they ever
			recorded)
Jam		-	Eton Rifles
Undertones	-	Jimmy Jimmy
Joy Division	-	Transmission

852.206JURA::PELAZ::MACFADYENnod your head to thisMon Mar 22 1993 21:548
> Magazine	-	(can't remember, but not Shot by Both Sides,
>			since that was the only decent song they ever
>			recorded)

Ha! That's *your* credibility blown, Warwick.


Rod
852.207SAC::LANG_HButton up your overcoatTue Mar 23 1993 00:386
    re .205/6
    
    The Magazine track was Definitive Gaze from the excellent "Real Life"
    LP...and I think the X-Ray Spex tune was "Identity".
    
    H
852.208SAC::LETCHER_PBargain basement BritainTue Mar 23 1993 09:523
    Correct on all counts.
    
    Piers
852.209AYOV11::SROBERTSONTue Mar 23 1993 11:234
    Was it Magazine,which I think it is,or the Buzzcocks that did the
    excellent Spiral Scratch E.P.?
    The only track name I can remember is Boredom - anyone remember the
    rest of the tracks 'cause the whole E.P. was excellent - I'm sure.
852.210ARRODS::WHITEHEADJA teacup in a stormTue Mar 23 1993 11:441
    Was Billy Currie (of Ultravox) in Magazine?
852.211SAC::LANG_HButton up your overcoatTue Mar 23 1993 12:266
    re .209
    
    It was the Buzzcocks who did "Spiral Scratch"..I'm now trying to
    remember the other tracks...nope..its gone!!!
    
    H
852.212ARRODS::OHAGANBTue Mar 23 1993 12:285
    re .209
    
    No it was the Buzzcocks who released "Spiral Scratch". 
    
    
852.213SAC::LANG_HButton up your overcoatTue Mar 23 1993 12:339
    re .209 
    
    ..okay...Its filtering back....
    
    "Breakdown" was one track along with "Boredom".
    
    Any other takers?
    
    H
852.214WELCLU::GREENBI'm sick of parking cars.Tue Mar 23 1993 15:304
    Ummm, was there a track on Spiral Scratch called 'Time's Up'? It's hard
    to remember, as I had the ep nicked at a party many years ago.
    
    Bob
852.215KRAKAR::WARWICKCan't you just... ?Tue Mar 23 1993 16:3812
    
> Ha! That's *your* credibility blown, Warwick.
    
    Never knew I had any, Rod. 
    
    If I remember, I'll dig out my copy of Spiral Scratch tonight. I know
    there are four tracks on it. I think this was the only thing they ever
    released while Howard Devoto was still in the band. If I've got it
    right, the next single was the immaculately titled "Orgasm Addict", and
    he'd buggered off by then.
    
    Trevor
852.216AYOV16::SROBERTSONTue Mar 23 1993 18:422
    RE.214 - Funny I also had my Spiral Scratch stolen - along with all my
    other punk records.
852.217SAC::LANG_HButton up your overcoatTue Mar 23 1993 19:2614
852.218only joking...JURA::PELAZ::MACFADYENnod your head to thisTue Mar 23 1993 19:353
I've got plenty of copies of 'Spiral Scratch", anyone want to buy one?


852.219Rare Recors?AYOV16::SROBERTSONWed Mar 24 1993 11:286
    Rare records of that time I had were - Something Else with Silly Thing
    on the Bside before Silly Thing came out - ironic that - the silly
    things made a mistake and you got something else on the bside.
    Also I was told that David Watts and Suspect Device were also rare on
    paper labels as these were the first 500 pressings - can't think of any
    others.
852.220Those spiral scratches in fullKRAKAR::WARWICKCan't you just... ?Wed Mar 24 1993 14:042
    
    Boredom, Time's Up, Breakdown, Friends of Mine.
852.221WELCLU::GREENBI'm sick of parking cars.Wed Mar 24 1993 20:084
    I also seem to remember each track is listed as being 'First take, no
    overdubs', or 'Second take, guitar overdub' etc. Marvellous.
    
    Bob
852.222SAC::LETCHER_PBargain basement BritainWed Mar 24 1993 20:465
    I have the first 47 7" Rough Trade singles.
    
    Just thought I'd share that with you.
    
    Piers
852.223KRAKAR::WARWICKCan't you just... ?Mon Mar 29 1993 13:3511
    
    It was the turn of the Americans on Sounds of the '70s this week. Alice
    Cooper, New York Dolls, Iggy Pop, Patti Smith, Tom Petty, The Ramones,
    Blondie, Talking Heads, Bruce Springsteen. Perhaps not surprisingly,
    Bruce was *not* playing in the OGWT studio. And The Ramones sure were
    ugly, weren't they ?
    
    Next week it's the UK post-punks. Boomtown Rats, Elvis Costello, Simple
    Minds etc. I can't wait.
    
    Trevor
852.224Pretty pleaseARRODS::DUTTONSMon Mar 29 1993 14:191
    Did anyone by any chance happen to tape -.1?
852.225KRAKAR::WARWICKCan't you just... ?Mon Apr 05 1993 16:5126
Sounds of the Seventies went out with a bang on Saturday night. As I mentioned
in .-something, this was the post-punk/New Wave edition.

Ian Dury	- (Missed the start of the programme)
Police		- Message in a Bottle (live)
Boomtown Rats	- Rat Trap (TOTP)
Elvis Costello	- Oliver's Army
Simple Minds	- Chelsea Girl (OGWT)
Kraftwerk	- Autobahn (TOMORROW'S WORLD!!!!!!!!)
Human League	- Path of Least Resistance
Special AKA	- Too Much Too Young (OGWT)
Madness		- Night Boat to Cairo (OGWT)

Interspersed between the tracks were the usual cuts from bizarre TV, such as
Ask the Family. There was a bit from a very strange drama programme where a
very young Robert Powell and a couple of other people were being very
unconvincingly attacked by intelligent rats in a kitchen. Anyone know what
that was ?
    
Prize for the strangest haircut would have to go to Jim Kerr. Or was it a wig ?

Kraftwerk really were featured on Tomorrow's World in 1975, presumably because
of their high-tech electronic instruments. The voice-over said that next they
wanted to replace their keyboards by "jackets with electronic lapels that can
be played by touch". Now that, I would have liked to see.
852.226A programme before its timeMIACT::WALLACEjohn wallace @ bbpMon Apr 05 1993 19:416
    The young Robert Powell featured in a 70s series called Doomwatch, a
    near-future science fiction series. Can't remember much more than that,
    but it could be what you describe.
    
    regards
    john
852.227toxic avengers circa 1972LARVAE::IVES_JOne i-node short of a file systemThu Apr 08 1993 19:0810
    Doomwatch was about a group of scientists who investigated ecological
    disasters, which I suppose is as topical as ever. The usual episode
    went something like :-
    
    large petro-chemical firm is secretly dumping waste into the water
    supply of a small welsh village community, who are starting to grow
    second heads. Powell and the boys come in and sort everything out.
    Special effects strictly of the Dr Who/Blakes 7 variety. there was a
    film about mutations in the orkneys or something. I think the series
    ended when Robert powells character was killed off.
852.22870s TotP on UK Gold (yeeurrrch)MIACT::WALLACEUnder new managementThu Jul 08 1993 16:2210
    Fans of 70s tosh who have cable or satellite should know that UK Gold
    is currently replaying 70s editions of Top of the Flops. I accidentally
    saw a bit of one yesterday, wasn't real interested but left it on in
    the background, and next thing I noticed, OTWAY and BARRETT were on the
    telly, with a truly live performance of "Cor baby that's really free".
    
    One of these days I must get to see Otway and Attila.
    
    regards
    john
852.229Beware of the flowers, 'cause I'm sure theyre gonna get you yeah!WOTVAX::STONEGSo hard, finding inspiration....Thu Jul 08 1993 17:5015
    
    re:- Otway & Atilla
    
    John, you certainly should go and see them, they've been one of the
    star attractions at Glastonbury for the last few years, and last years
    "Cheryl the rock opera" was truly amazing!
    
     I bought this on CD at the festival this year, and the theatre group
    ('Cross Eyed Theatre') which I do Tech/lights etc for is hoping to do
    it later this year.
    
    Also, Otways 2000th gig is sometime in November - the 6th?? - at the
    Astoria in London.
    
    Graham  
852.230All together with the Floral Dance..!!PAKORA::SWRIGHTThu Jul 08 1993 18:405
    I thought the Darts were Funny on TOTP last night.... especially
    the Big Psycho one who looks like the Mad Man from TAXI..!!!

    I of course could not contain myself when "The Floral Dance" came
    on at the End credits...!!!!
852.231FORTY2::BOYESMy karma ran over my dogma.Thu Jul 08 1993 19:143
> the Big Psycho one

Den Heggerty?
852.232ARRODS::WHITEHEADJ...gone away.Tue Jul 20 1993 20:127
    Pure 70's tosh:

    Tonight, BBC1, 9.30pm, a documentary about ABBA.  Followed by the French
    & Saunders (not funny) episode with their ABBA spoof, then about 12.10am
    tonight/tomorrow morning on BBC1, ABBA in concert (Wembley 1979).

    Set your videos and get your flares and platforms out!!!!!!
852.233WELCLU::HEDLEYConquistador Instant LeprosyWed Jul 21 1993 12:114
I saw it and it was great!  Now where can I get some of those silver
platform boots...

Chris.
852.234Perhaps we should have an ABBA topicARRODS::WHITEHEADJ...gone away.Wed Jul 21 1993 12:4227
    Oh memories.  Most of the clips shown I remember seeing when they were
    broadcast!  15-20 years later their music is still good fun to listen 
    to, especially the early stuff (Bang-a-Boomerang, That's Me, When I Kissed
    the Teacher, Tiger) and a lot of "classics" recorded in Spanish for the
    South American market such as Chiquitita, Mamma Mia, Reina Danzante (Dancing
    Queen).

    I've *never* been ashamed to say I like ABBA!

    However, I must dispute Lowri Turner's assertion that ABBA needed to be
    paid millions to wear those clothes!  It *was* the fashion back then
    and lots of singers/groups were wearing the same sort of thing.  Some
    people were worse than ABBA, although I've never got over Agnetha's 
    outfit for the 74 Eurovision when they won Waterloo - the silver platform
    boots and flared blue trousers that only went as far as the knee.
    But Lowri Turner was right when she said that nobody wanted to be Annifrid,
    all the girls wanted to be Agnetha, and my father still fancies her to this
    day.

    But in the interview at the end with Bjorn and Benny, it was shocking to
    see how old they're looking, especially Benny who's 46, Bjorn is 48.  Come
    to that, Annifrid is also 47 and Agnetha is 43.  Shows how long ago 
    it all was.

    Aaah, long live ABBA!

    Goldy.
852.235WOTVAX::GILLILANDPNot very Tuna-friendlyWed Jul 21 1993 14:283
    Which one was Annifrid and which one was Agnetha?
    
    Phil Gill.
852.236ARRODS::WHITEHEADJDum dum diddleWed Jul 21 1993 14:303
    Agnetha was the one with long blond hair.  Annifrid was the one whose 
    hair varied between dark brown, burgundy and red.  She had a different
    hairstyle in almost every photograph/video.
852.237KERNEL::SMITHERSJLiving on the culinary edge....Wed Jul 21 1993 14:4216
    OK, I'll come out of the closet - I really enjoyed the nostalgic trip
    last night.  So much so, it might have to be a trip to the shops soon
    to buy their Greatest Hits.  What a shame the girls have not done so 
    well now (Agnetha lives on a farm counting ex-husbands, and the other 
    is heavily into "Environmental issues").
    
    Can anyone remember who did the cover version of the song, The Day 
    Before You Came.  I think Erasure did it recently but there was 
    another group/singer who did it a couple of years back.
    
    Any ideas?
    
    julia
    
    
    
852.238ARRODS::WHITEHEADJDum dum diddleWed Jul 21 1993 15:192
    Blancmage (Neil Arthur and Stephen Luscome) covered "The Day Before You
    Came" sometime in the mid-eighties.
852.239I was there!UPROAR::PLOWMAND&quot;don't phone, it's just for fun&quot;Wed Jul 21 1993 17:196
    Well I'm not ashamed to say I like Abba, and I liked them even more
    then, in fact I was there, at Wembley in 1979 with my Mum and sister!  
    Mmm, wonder if the program's worth anything now... ?!
    
    Debs.
    
852.240No accounting for tasteWOTVAX::GILLILANDPNot very Tuna-friendlyWed Jul 21 1993 22:5410
 >> But Lowri Turner was right when she said that nobody wanted to be Annifrid,
 >> all the girls wanted to be Agnetha
    
    `s funny that, `cos I always fancied Annifrid more. Did anybody go and
    see the movie? I remember queuing in the rain outside Birmingham ABC
    for it. They showed it on TV last year. The songs were great, but what
    a crap story.
    
    Phil Gill.
              
852.241I am behind you, I always find you, I am the Tiger!ARRODS::WHITEHEADJDum dum diddleThu Jul 22 1993 12:339
    ABBA The Movie, shot in Australia, with a not very good story interspersed
    about a wimpy journalist who has to secure an exclusive interview with
    ABBA before they leave Australia and he always manages to get to each
    location late.  But eventually "bumps" into them in a lift and Bob's
    your Auntie's live-in lover.

    Excellent film, I saw it when it was released at the Southend ABC in 
    1977/78 and "acquired" a copy a few years ago.  I still watch it now
    and again.
852.242Long live ABBASBPEXE::DOUGLASSChewing on life's gristle .....Thu Jul 22 1993 18:0518
  As I watched the program, I couldn't believe the animosity and mickey-
  taking from Lowri Turner ... who is she ?   

  The proof of the ABBA popularity is the number of songs/tunes to which 
  everyone can 'humm along' with no problem .... Dancing Queen, Mama Mia, 
  Waterloo, The name of the game  etc etc 

  I would not have counted myself a fan until I watched that program ... now 
  there is no doubt .... I am.


		Paul  (an Annifrid lecher)


   PS: Julia -- "what a shame the girls have not done so well" ... I think you
       will find Annifrid is married to a seriously rich financier which could
       be how she finds the time to be 'heavily into environmental issues'
852.243oh no it isn't..UPROAR::PLOWMAND&quot;don't phone, it's just for fun&quot;Thu Jul 22 1993 19:518
    Paul
    
    Re "married a seriously rich financier which may be how she can.."
    
    I think you'll find they're all (still) multi-millionaires so Annifrid
    probably uses her own money.  So there.
        
    Debs.
852.244KERNEL::SMITHERSJLiving on the culinary edge....Thu Jul 22 1993 21:089
    That's interesting, cos I got the impression from the programme 
    that they all lost their millions ploughing the money into dodgy 
    ventures.  The only reason the chaps have got some dosh is because
    they continued writing/recording.  
    
    Maybe Annifrid wasn't so daft as she looked.
    
    julia
    
852.245Inane grinWOTVAX::GILLILANDPNot very Tuna-friendlyFri Jul 23 1993 14:586
 >>   Maybe Annifrid wasn't so daft as she looked.
    
    Yes, much as I fancy her, as I watched the tape of the concert I
    couldn't help thinking STOP SMILING YOU DAFT COW!
    
    Phil Gill.	
852.246ARRODS::OHAGANBnotes from hellFri Jul 23 1993 18:207
    Bono to Benny and Bjorn live on stage at the end of "Dancing Queen";
    
    "We are not worthy"
    
    How true.
    
    barry
852.247VAXCAT::GOLDYDon't call me MurielTue Feb 11 1997 14:3442
    UK News Electronic Telegraph Tuesday 11 February 1997 Issue 627

    Sweet singer Connolly dies aged 52
    
    By Alison Boshoff, Media Correspondent 

    BRIAN Connolly, 52, the leader of Sweet, the "glam-rock" band that
    outraged 1970s parents by appearing decked in glitter and caked in
    heavy make-up, died yesterday from kidney failure.

    The half-brother of the late actor Mark McManus, who played Taggart in
    the television detective series, Connolly enjoyed the excessive
    lifestyle of a 1970s rock star. At the height of his success he had
    eight cars, a yacht and a mansion, but was most recently living in a
    council house and drawing unemployment benefit.

    He made no secret of the rock-and-roll lifestyle he had enjoyed,
    saying: "They were wild, crazy days and nights, but booze was my
    downfall rather than drugs."

    Sweet sold 50 million records worldwide, with a No 1 in England,
    Blockbuster, and a No 3 in America, Little Willy. They had other hits
    with Wig Wam Bam and Ballroom Blitz. In 1974 the band ended their
    association with the RCA songwriters Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman and
    the hits dried up. Connolly left Sweet in 1979, but did not enjoy solo
    success.

    He renounced alcohol after two heart attacks. While recovering from the
    second, his heart stopped six times. Doctors said it was miraculous he
    had survived. Connolly was planning to revive the band for a stage show
    next year, but he had another heart attack in January. He died in
    hospital in Slough, Berks.

    The singer Suzi Quatro said: "They were great days, when music was fun.
    But Brian did live the rock-and-roll lifestyle. Some people didn't know
    how to separate that and real life. But I admired the way he went out
    there. He wasn't in good condition, and he had the shakes, but he still
    wanted to do it."

    Sweet's guitarist Andy Scott said: "Everybody's image of Sweet was
    Brian. It was what he was put on this earth for."
    
852.248POMPY::LESLIEAndy Leslie, DEC man walking...Tue Feb 11 1997 15:571
    Poor, sad, bastard.  I saw him on Ch4 recently. Poor, sad, bastard.
852.249KERNEL::PARRYTrevor ParryTue Feb 11 1997 16:399
    The article implies that he's not been performing recently, however,
    he toured the year before last.  I saw him at the Anvil.  The bass
    player used to work in Modern Music in Basingstoke.
    
    It was sad to see the state he was in, but he could still sing well.
    
    Blockbuster was the first single I bought.
    
    /tmp
852.250and a voice at the back......CHEFS::CROSSAIt ain't loud enough, punk!Tue Feb 11 1997 17:045
    This all brings back memories of childhood TOTP viewings. Very sad
    indeed.
    
    
    			Stretch.
852.251WOTVAX::STONEGMagician Among the Spirits.........Tue Feb 11 1997 19:444
    
    Same here, I still have the singles.... sad indeed.
    
    G.
852.252VAXCAT::GOLDYDon't call me MurielWed Feb 12 1997 12:063
    I think "Fox on the Run" was the best. That was Sweet, wasn't it?
    
    Goldy.
852.253So when does The New Wave Of British Glam start?CHEFS::CROSSAIt ain't loud enough, punk!Wed Feb 12 1997 12:438
    >>I think "Fox on the Run" was the best. That was Sweet, wasn't it?
    
    I believe that's correct. I'm more of a "Ballroom Blitz" kinda guy.
    
    
    
    
    			Stretch.