Author: electricityclub (Page 12 of 416)

“I don’t like country & western, I don’t like rock music… I don’t like rockabilly! I don’t like much really do I? But what I do like, I love passionately!!”: CHRIS LOWE

“Good taste is exclusive”: NICK RHODES

Lost Albums: THE OTHER TWO & You

Following the ‘Technique’ album released in early 1989, NEW ORDER were in something of a state of flux.

Bernard Sumner had already opted for what was planned as a solo album but became ELECTRONIC after meeting up with Johnny Marr, then a free agent having left THE SMITHS. Peter Hook responded with the fittingly named REVENGE. Even the band’s manager Rob Gretton had his own adventure with Rob’s Records. But what of Stephen Morris and Gillian Gilbert, THE OTHER TWO?

Having soundtracked the BBC’s comedy drama ‘Making Out’ and youth culture show ‘Reportage’, the NEW ORDER couple had been composing and stockpiling various sketches and instrumentals pieced together at their home studio near Macclesfield in the event of future commissions, as happened later with ‘America’s Most Wanted’.

However, following the Italia 90 World Cup song ‘World In Motion’ which was supposed to start the process towards making the follow-up to ‘Technique’, Gilbert and Morris found themselves with time to kill having turned down a film soundtrack to accommodate the now false start. ‘World In Motion’ had actually mutated from the ‘Reportage’ theme which Gilbert had mostly written, so Factory Records’ Alan Erasmus suggested that some of this stockpiled material could be released as an album.

In a 2011 interview, Stephen Morris told ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK: “They start off as these things for TV, you get really attached to them and you twist one or two of them into being songs. Some of them never turn into songs but you get persuaded by the record company or someone that you have to get a singer! So we tried to get a singer and then Gillian ended up doing it which is great, she’s really good at it.” – that singer they tried to get was actually Kim Wilde!

But when that idea never got beyond a meeting, Gilbert took on the role of lead vocalist, helped along the way with some singing lessons. The brilliant debut single ‘Tasty Fish’ released in late 1991 was superbly catchy and had The Kylie Factor. But with the ongoing problems at Factory Records, the single never made it to many shops and stalled at No41 in the singles chart.

The subsequent album which had actually already given a catalogue number of Fact 330 never got released on Factory as planned, while the couple’s attentions were turned to NEW ORDER for what was to become ‘Republic’, produced by Stephen Hague. In the fallout that came with talk of London Records buying Factory out, the iconic Manchester record label collapsed and NEW ORDER signed with London direct.

THE OTHER TWO ‘& You’ finally appeared in late 1993 on London Records seven months after ‘Republic’ and had been tweaked from its original Factory configuration by Stephen Hague. Opening with a new version of ‘Tasty Fish’, although Hague’s additional production neutered the dynamics of the original Pascal Gabriel single mix, the song still stood out, a well-deserved hit if ever there was one, but not to be.

Following it was the dancey DUBSTAR of ‘The Greatest Thing’, a joyous music statement about the power of love. Its sampled acoustic guitar lines could easily have been represented by Peter Hook’s bass and highlighted the couple’s contribution to NEW ORDER, despite some reports to the contrary.

‘Selfish’ made it three in a row for the start of THE OTHER TWO ‘& You’; rich in synthetic strings and lively but unobtrusive machine driven rhythms. Gilbert’s resigned vocal about “someone I hate” reinforced to the inherent melancholy in a fabulous song with an exquisite understated quality. On the moodier electro-acoustic strum of ‘Movin’ On’, it wasn’t difficult to imagine Sarah Blackwood and the usual cup of tea, with Gillian Gilbert’s singing lessons proving effective and highlighting her as actually the best technical vocalist in NEW ORDER.

With soundtracks having been their main compositional forte during this period, there were naturally instrumentals; the uptempo pulse of ‘Ninth Configuration’ wouldn’t have sounded out of place as a NEW ORDER B-side circa ‘Technique’, ditto ‘Spirit Level’, although the eerie interlude ‘Night Voice’ pointed more towards filmic ambience.

Meanwhile the widescreen synthpop of ‘Feel This Love’ foresaw a future Stephen Hague produced act called TECHNIQUE; a female electronic pop duo comprising of Xan Tyler and Katie Holmes, they were to name themselves after the NEW ORDER album and later morphed into CLIENT featuring Sarah Blackwood! The charming ‘Innocence’ with its lovely OMD-styled string melody embraced a subtle Italo house staccato, but closing the album was the brilliant ‘Loved It (The Other Track)’.

With its hypnotic digital slap bass and club friendly vibes, it had been composed to celebrate the opening of The New Factory, a building in Charles Street which became a white elephant and ultimately contributed to Factory Records’ collapse. Featuring cut-up speech from the likes of the late label co-founder Tony Wilson shouting “Any one of you miserable musicians want any more pills?” as well members of NEW ORDER deadpanning “Not my idea!” and “Are you sure?”, time has made the track an amusingly ironic musical document of that carefree Factory period.

Better than REVENGE but not consistently soaring to the heights of the ELECTRONIC debut, THE OTHER TWO ‘& You’ did however show that Gilbert and Morris had often been overlooked in the NEW ORDER story.

Over the following years, work continued on THE OTHER TWO’s second album ’Super Highways’. It eventually surfaced in 1999 and was perhaps less immediate than its predecessor. The realisation of their original guest female vocalist idea came to fruition with Melanie Williams from Rob Records signings SUB SUB on the excellent ‘You Can Fly’ and the very DUBSTAR sounding title track.

Gilbert sang on the lovely orchestrated electropop of ‘The River’ while there were also various experiments in drum ‘n’ bass like the mighty ‘One Last Kiss’. However, the record had been overshadowed by the reunion of NEW ORDER with their triumphant comeback gigs at Manchester Apollo and the Reading Festival in 1998.

Family matters led to Gillian Gilbert departing NEW ORDER before the guitar heavy ‘Get Ready’ was released in 2001. The void left the band in a much tenser masculine environment and the sad untimely death of Rob Gretton in 1999 left the now well-documented conflicts between Bernard Sumner and Peter Hook without a referee.

Fast forward to today, Gillian Gilbert is back in NEW ORDER and the electronics have returned in style on 2015’s ‘Music Complete’ released on Mute Records. “I’m on all the best records” she amusingly quipped to Q magazine on her return. And now, THE OTHER TWO ‘& You’ gets a well deserved reissue, revamp and reappraisal on Rhino.

But if NEW ORDER hadn’t made a return in 1998 and THE OTHER TWO had been able to be a full-time occupation, could they have been as successful as DUBSTAR or SAINT ETIENNE? “No, we’re completely the wrong kind of people!”, Stephen Morris said adamantly. “I’ve tried but it never works… we’d never be popstars!”


‘THE OTHER TWO & You’ is reissued by Rhino in CD + digital formats, vinyl LP available exclusively at  https://store.neworder.com/gb/new-order/the-other-two/

https://www.facebook.com/TheOtherTwoOfficialMusic/

https://twitter.com/The_OtherTwo

https://twitter.com/gillian_gilbert

https://twitter.com/stephenpdmorris


Text by Chi Ming Lai
31 May 2024 reworked from an article originally published 29 February 2020

PETER BAUMANN Phase By Phase – The Virgin Albums

Peter Baumann is best known for being a member of the classic line-up of TANGERINE DREAM.

Joining in 1971, together with Edgar Froese and Christopher Franke, the trio produced a run of imperial albums released on Virgin Records including ‘Phaedra’, ‘Rubycon’, ‘Ricochet’ and ‘Stratosfear’ which exemplified The Berlin School, a sub-genre of otherworldly electronic music whose other exponents also included Klaus Schulze, Manuel Göttsching and Florian Fricke.

Baumann’s father was a composer and conductor, so it was almost a given that he would take an interest in music and he began playing organ in covers bands. A chance meeting with Christopher Franke at an EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER concert in Berlin led to an invitation to replace Steve Schroyder in TANGERINE DREAM.

With Edgar Froese having already released his first solo album ‘Aqua’ in 1974, it was suggested by Virgin Records that Baumann could follow suit. Already thinking ahead on his own terms, he had commissioned the Berlin-based electronics company Project Elektronik to build a customised modular synthesizer system which used toggle switches rather than cables to enable faster re-routing during live performance; its controller keyboard was designed by Wolfgang Palm, later to found PPG who would become known for their Wave series of synthesizers.

Photo by Jerome Froese

Written in the baking Summer of 1976, ‘Romance ‘76’ comprised of two contrasting suites. In the first half, ‘Bicentennial Present’ showcased strong synth lines and hypnotic rhythmic backbones in a move towards melody away from the cerebral soundscapes of ‘Phaedra’ and ‘Rubycon’; Baumann can even be heard chuckling to himself while performing it. Sparse heartwarming sequencer passages provided a fitting backdrop to ‘Romance’ while ‘Phase By Phase’ continued with the minimal template albeit in a more bubbly fashion and adding church bells!

The second half was more experimental and organic featuring female vocals and the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra and Choir conducted by Peter’s father Herbert in Munich. With cello, violins and choirs, ‘Meadow of Infinity (Part One)’ was eerie, dramatic and off the beaten track using electronics only for effects, before segueing into ‘The Glass Bridge’ which brought percussion and woodwinds into the equation before returning back for the ominous Part Two reprise of ‘Meadow of Infinity’ where electronics returned alongside the sombre orchestrations.

But all was not happy within the TANGERINE DREAM camp. Baumann’s confidence had increased to the point that his sharp contributions on the Project Elektronik system during live shows were now outshining Franke’s Moog. Creative and musical tensions were at a high during the trio’s two US tours in 1977. After completing work on the subsequent live double album ‘Encore’, Peter Baumann left TANGERINE DREAM.

Baumann began producing other artists such as Italian artist Leda on her album ‘Welcome To Joyland’ and applied his sequenced knowhow into a more song-based format. The record featured a combination of throbbing electronics and high pitched vocals in acknowledgement of ‘I Feel Love’ which had been signalling the future of pop. Although at the time he felt ‘Welcome To Joyland’ was “too commercial”, it had a profound effect on Baumann and the development of his aesthetic.

As a result, 1979’s ‘Trans Harmonic Nights’ was something of an interim record, mostly comprising of shorter instrumental compositions using mysterious melodies and occasional vocoder textures pointing halfway towards conventional pop vocal phrasing. To open, ‘This Day’ brought in guitar and vocoder alongside drones and sequences. Wolfgang Thierfeldt provided drums on ‘White Bench & Black Beach’ in another sign of adopting less experimental considerations while its strident synthlines recalled Vangelis.

Using harpsichord, ‘Chasing The Dream’ offered mediaeval resonances before pacey pulses took hold on the climax while with vocodered vocals, ‘Biking Up the Strand’ sprang a surprise as a bouncy waltz. ‘Phaseday’ though was perhaps more of what was expected from Baumann as ‘Meridian Moorland’ piped along stridently in a more abstract manner. The fabulous ‘The Third Site’ presented pacey barrage of electronics with spikey overtones nut an even bigger surprise came with a real flugel horn from Bernhard Jobski to accompany the percussive mantra and folk-like overtures of ‘Dance at Dawn’.

Today, ‘Trans Harmonic Nights’ remains something of an underrated electronic gem that clearly connected to TANGERINE DREAM before the start of Baumann’s adventure in pop with ‘Repeat Repeat’. Throwing in his lot with the-then burgeoning Neue Deutsche Welle movement, the album was recorded in New York and at Compass Point Studios in The Bahamas.

Signalling a complete departure from TANGERINE DREAM, it was co-produced by Robert Palmer, fresh from the critical acclaim for his more synth and art funk driven 1980 album ‘Clues’. Using musicians such as keyboardist Carsten Bohn, guitarists Ritchie Fliegler and John Tropea, and drummer Mike Dawe, the ‘Repeat Repeat’ title song was a quirky commentary on popular culture that could have come straight off ‘Clues’.

Listening closely to his then-Virgin Records label mates, ‘Home Sweet Home’ offered a detached cross between SPARKS and MAGAZINE while ‘Deccadance’ sounded as if aliens had landed in a Weimar Cabaret. More guitar driven, ‘Real Times’ continued Baumann’s Russell Mael impression but also recalled Eno’s ‘Here Come The Warm Jets’ era.

As its title suggested, ‘Brain Damage’ was mad and fun while with its reggae inflections, ‘Kinky Dinky’ was a homage to CAN. Declaring “I love money, I love cars, I love TV too”, the detached ‘Daytime Logic’ was an absorbing rhythmic excursion that almost funked! Meanwhile, ‘Playland Pleasure’ was totally SPARKS and what the Mael Brothers might have sounded like had they adopted the synths but not gone disco with Giorgio Moroder. With some neo-flamenco drama but without the acoustic guitars, ‘What is Your Use’ made its presence felt both percussively and synthetically to close.

Enjoyable but very much of its time, the conclusive overview of ‘Repeat Repeat’ is that Robert Palmer was able to realise some of his more synthesized ambitions that were not able to be put in place for ‘Clues’. For Baumann, he got to play the pop star although ultimately he was not able to come up with anything quite as memorable and anthemic as say Peter Schilling with ‘Major Tom’ or Nena with ’99 Luftballons’. Whatever, this album was a shock to TANGERINE DREAM fans and an even bigger surprise was to come.

Ending his tenure with Virgin Records, Peter Baumann caught the attention of Arista Records whose founder Clive Davis had signed Barry Manilow and would later give Whitney Houston her first record contract. The resultant Italo and Europop flavoured album ‘Strangers In The Night’ included an electronic disco cover of the title song made famous by Frank Sinatra and confused TANGERINE DREAM fans even more!

Baumann retried from composing but remained in music, founding his successful Private Music label in 1984 which was later bought by BMG in 1994. Among the roster were notable names including Andy Summers, Ravi Shankar, Carlos Alomar, Suzanne Ciani, Yanni and TANGERINE DREAM.

Although Peter Baumann briefly rejoined TANGERINE DREAM in 2015 and released The Berlin School inspired ‘Machines Of Desire’ in 2016 on Bureau B, in 2019 he launched his new project NEULAND with another former member of TANGERINE DREAM, Paul Haslinger; with seemingly no further activity on the NEULAND front, Baumann continues his work for The Baumann Institute which he founded in 2009 “dedicated to exploring the nature of awareness and its relationship to human health and well-being.”

What ‘Phase By Phase’ captures is a fascinating period in which Peter Baumann never rested on his laurels and took creative risks. Because of the gaps running decades in his back catalogue, his contribution to electronic music is perhaps underrated, especially within the family tree of the band with whom he made his name. This new boxed set should help put things right.


‘Phase By Phase – The Virgin Albums’ is released as a 3CD box set on 7 June 2024, available from https://www.cherryred.co.uk/product/peter-baumann-phase-by-phase-the-virgin-albums-3cd-box-set/

https://www.bureau-b.com/peterbaumann.php

https://www.discogs.com/artist/54855-Peter-Baumann


Text by Chi Ming Lai
29 May 2024

KNIGHT$ + STEVEN JONES & LOGAN SKY Live at The Fiddler’s Elbow

Fresh from dazzling thousands of dancing Goths at Wave-Gotik-Treffen, KNIGHT$ brought their Hi-NRG act to London for an intimate show. Celebrating five years since the release of the debut KNIGHT$ album, ‘Dollars & Cents’, the crowd were treated to a play-through with bonus cover songs.

Hi-NRG and its Italo Disco relatives have fallen out of fashion since their peaks in the 1980s, which is a pity. PET SHOP BOYS, TRANS-X, Divine, Lime and Sabrina created evergreen party tracks around the 136 BPM sweet spot, but the style loved by aerobics instructors and visitors to Fire Island eventually made way for trance and techno. That’s progress, but the joy of octave basslines, synthesised hooks, and glorious pop vocals transcends the trend time-line.

The evening began with a rare live set from Steven Jones and Logan Sky. The duo were brought together through the intercession of Steve Strange, and their cinematic pop is inspired by his legacy. Their opening song, ‘Polaroids,’ is a direct reference to the Visage front-man’s way of looking at the world. Things quickly moved darker with the danceable ‘Black B-Sides,’ which called to mind early PSYCHE.

‘Rotating Angels’ and ‘Lovers & Losers’ reinforced the compelling darkwave touches they are capable of. ‘Come Back Tonight’ demonstrated why good songs matter more than cult followings of granny-aged groupies. Despite their lack of live practice, Jones and Sky are bounds ahead of many of the acts who insert themselves into tour programmes or fill out festival line-ups. They even write the songs they perform.

James Knights’ ability to bring out the soul in his voice certainly adds to the appeal of a KNIGHT$ show. Throughout the night, there were moments of raw power that required checks to ensure that Martha Walsh or Evelyn Thomas hadn’t taken his place. Working the crowd into a tizzy with songs like ‘What’s Your Poison?’ and ‘Alligator,’ his affection for the genre was impressed into the show.

The inclusion of the PET SHOP BOYS’ ‘Heart’ and YAZOO’s ‘Goodbye 70s’ gave an appreciative nod to the giants of dance music from the days before “EDM” was something sold by Live Nation to frat boys.


KNIGHT$ ‘Dollars & Cents’ is available as a pistachio coloured vinyl LP, CD + download from https://knights101.bandcamp.com/album/dollars-cents-album

KNIGHT$ opens for CHINA CRISIS on the following 2024 live dates:

Isle of Wight Strings Bar (31 May), Bristol Thekla (26 September), Lancaster Grand Theatre (1 November), Bury The Met (2 November), Birmingham Hare & Hounds (14 November), Oxford 02 Academy (29 November), Cork Sea Church (6 December), Dublin Opium (8 December)

http://knights101.com/

https://www.facebook.com/Knights101/

https://twitter.com/JPSKNIGHTS

https://www.instagram.com/knights101/

https://open.spotify.com/artist/07xFYhAkgObJY8VBkIy1O4

Steven Jones & Logan Sky ’Come Back Tonight – The Remixes’ is available at https://www.beatport.com/release/come-back-tonight-the-remixes/4466309 while their back catalogue including the albums ‘Sacred Figures’ and ‘European Lovers’ is available from https://etrangersmusique.bandcamp.com/

https://www.etrangersmusique.com

https://www.facebook.com/etrangersmusique/

https://www.instagram.com/stevenjonesmusic/

http://www.logansky.co.uk/

https://twitter.com/LoganSky

https://www.instagram.com/logan.sky/

https://open.spotify.com/artist/2q5h7vR5Z3JbI1zyeedcRP

This article was originally published on Cold War Night Life at https://www.coldwarnightlife.com/2024/05/25/its-a-rich-mans-world-knight-live-in-london/


Text by Simon Helm
Photos by Chi Ming Lai
26 May 2024

JULIA-SOPHIE numb

Photo by Siobhan Cox

After almost achieving mainstream success as a member of rock band LITTLE FISH who later morphed into the dreampop combo CANDY SAYS, Anglo-French singer-songwriter Julia-Sophie Walker retreated into DIY music making as a solo artist.

Reconnecting with her Gallic roots, disillusionment with her musical past and the disaster of Brexit artistically drove the Oxford-based musician and producer into creating music for the sake of making music, resulting in two enticing EPs ‘y?’ and ‘</3’ issued respectively in 2020 and 2021. 2022’s ‘it feels like thunder’ EP continued the progression but now comes the long awaited debut long player from Julia-Sophie entitled ‘forgive too slow’. As the title suggests, it is a contemplative body of work as reflecting on past relationships.

Trailing the glorious album is ‘numb’, a marvellous avant pop set piece which begins over a subtle rhythmic rumble with a stark haunted monologue reminiscent of Polly Scattergood’s spoken word contribution to Chris Liebing’s ‘And All Went Dark’. But then the track takes an about turn with a frantic gallop displaying an electronic affinity with independent artists such as EMIKA and VANBOT as sung and spoken passages alternate with the growing intensity.

As our heroine declares “I’ve been crying whilst you’re asleep”, a concluding barrage of unsettling cut-up voices highlights her state of mind. The superb video itself illustrates the fractured narrative as grainy shaky images of the seaside are fast cut to point towards cerebral self-destruction.

While Julia-Sophie’s musical journey remains embroiled in pain, the catharsis is leading to hope and her artistic fulfilment with an intriguing electronic sound that combines emotional unease with airy beauty.


‘numb’ is from the album ‘forgive too slow’ which will be released on 26 July 2024 by Ba Da Bing Records as a baby blue vinyl coloured LP + download, pre-order direct from https://badabingrecords.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/juliasophiex0x

https://twitter.com/juliasophiex0x

https://www.instagram.com/juliasophiex0x/

https://juliasophie.bandcamp.com/

https://open.spotify.com/track/03yhkDlEfhwul9E55dNoB7


Text by Chi Ming Lai
24 May 2024

DREAMKID Daggers

DREAMKID is the alter ego of South African musician Ryan Morris who has gained a sizeable following through his colourful social media presence.

Following the release of his 2022 self-titled debut on Outland which featured the adrenaline filled instrumental ‘Officewave’, DREAMKID continues the half vocal / half instrumental template on its follow-up ‘Daggers’. Inspired by vintage video games, action movies and the American West Coast to create his own neon lit fantasia, The DREAMKID USP has been using TikTok and Instagram to host POV reels of him doing unlikely synthwave style covers of NIRVANA, METALLICA, SMASHING PUMPKINS and GREEN DAY alongside takes of songs by today’s pop songstresses like Taylor Swift and Billie Eilish.

As Maurice Ravel once put it: “Whatever sauce you put around the melody is a matter of taste. What is important is the melodic line”. Morris’ flamboyant force of personality has attracted a different and younger audience to synth but can he sustain their interest with full length material of his own making rather than one minute snippets of other people’s songs?

So after a quick ‘Good Morning LA’, the ‘Daggers’ title tune sparkles and pumps along with a processed Trans-Atlantic drawl, synths taking the place of guitars in its various MTV rock inflections. If ‘Daggers’ reflects the daytime, then ‘Chrissy’ is an instrumental that immediately captures the night with bursts of actual guitar in amongst the keys.

A yacht rock duet of hopeful reconciliation with synths, ‘Take Me On Tonight’ features Mason Musso of Emo band METRO STATION, although the impassioned combination of voices won’t be to everyone’s taste. The energetic ‘Alleyway Fistfight’ is highly enjoyable, an excellent instrumental in the vein of ‘Officewave’ with a solid bassline as its backbone. Meanwhile, the inevitable sax bursts into ‘Hard Copy’ for a typical retrowave interlude.

‘She’s Gone’ is not a Hall & Oates cover but DREAMKID musically does as his moniker suggests and although ‘Street Lights’ offers classic synthwave motifs, Ryan Morris’ vocal style has a polarising effect and it’s fair to say it is like Marmite to the ear. But ‘Kids Of The Valley’ is poptastic romp that would make a good theme to a TV series of the same name; it has so much potential that Carly Rae Jepsen really should cover it…

Photo by Marcus Maschwitz

‘Oceanside Homicide’ is clearly influenced by the ‘Top Gun Theme’ but adds some FM-84 resonance for another fine instrumental. ‘The Highway’ offers another classic synthwave instrumental complete with mighty electronic drum fills, bendy solos and percussive rests. The nocturnal drive on ‘The Highway’ ends on the coastline to soothe in the ‘Waves’ before concluding with some heartfelt ‘Hometown Memories’ from deepest childhood.

In true synthwave / retrowave style, the instrumentals come over as the most appealing on ‘Daggers’. At 14 tracks though, the album is a bit long and this may prove to be challenging bearing in mind DREAMKID’s more recent followers having been weaned on minute long reels. But the drive and enthusiasm from Ryan Morris is loud and clear for all to hear and see; DREAMKID has delivered a second album that will not disappoint those who loved his debut.


‘Daggers’ is released by Outland on 31 May 2024 and available to pre-order across all digital music stores as well as physical options on Bandcamp, which include a limited-edition graffiti green vinyl LP and green or black cassettes and digipak CD at https://hypeddit.com/dreamkid/daggers

DREAMKID performs live at Colours in London’s Hoxton Square on Friday 31 May 2024 in an album release show with support from THE LAST CONCORDE – tickets are available from https://www.ticketweb.uk/event/dreamkid-colours-hoxton-tickets/13337853

https://www.facebook.com/dreamkid83

https://twitter.com/dreamkid83

https://www.instagram.com/dreamkid83


Text by Chi Ming Lai
21 May 2024

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