Thursday, 26 January 2012

Another dip in the past. With Noel Edmonds.

If it’s Thursday, then it must be time for Top of the Pops.

 

LP Hartley once wrote that “the past is a foreign country; they do things differently there.” If that’s the case, then dig out your passport and join me. I’ve got us each a return ticket.

It’s early 1977 and Slade are performing “Gypsy Road Hog” on our weekly trip to the past. They would have three further Top Ten hits in the early 1980s, but it’s clear that their heyday is behind them. This is a shame because “Gypsy Road Hog” is actually a hallf-decent song.

Here's Silver Convention, a scared-looking three-piece performing a dreadful, dreadful disco song, the title of which I missed. This isn’t just disco though. This is Disco, from the land that brought us the Nazis. I think that just about sums it up.

Donna Summer – Winter Melody. By ‘77 Summer was making her name in the world of (non-Nazi) disco music, though this song is a soul ballad. The song speaks of a woman struggling to come to terms with the fact that her relationship has ended. Zzzzzzzzzzz. Bring the ugly Disco Nazis back on!

Up next it’s Jesse Green singing a song called Flip. It’s a little bit of late 70’s pop-reggae. I'm told the live version of this is really lovely. Ditch the shirt though Jesse.

It's time for the weekly appearance of Legs & Co, and this week it's Elvis they are 'dancing' to. Every week I think the same thing: "The choreographer has arranged this dance without a single listen to the song." The song is Suspicion: Legs & Co are prancing around a mock-up of the New York skyline in white dinner jackets. Eh?


Leo Sayer – When I Need You. This was a huge favourite of mine when I was nearly six, and I can see why – he’s a larger version of me in ’77: Big hair, cute little face, flares, the lot.

Thin Lizzy – Don’t Believe a Word. The first real, decent song of the night. And Phil Lynott is the first person not to mime.

And finally the Number 1. This week it's David Soul, again. Another song I loved when I was six, I can see it's faults now. He really should have stuck to knacking his back, jumping onto cars, in the pursuit of 1970's criminals.

See you next week.

Thursday, 19 January 2012

Scientific research by way of watching Top of the Pops, Part Two.

Tonight I sat with eager anticipation. Eager and keen anticipation. What was the cause of this anticipation? Well the banner headline above should steer you in the right direction - it's 1977!

Yes, 1977 has arrived on BBC Four in the form of TotP 1977. I've heard all about '77: Punk, the changing of the guard music-wise, the Queen's Silver Jubilee and the Pistols signing with EMI outside Buck House. All famous iconic images.

Gallagher and Lyle kick things off, and you know what? It's alright. In fact it's pretty good. Next up, however is Barry Biggs.

Barry bastard Biggs. Who the hell is Barry Biggs? He looks like a black Alexei Sayle, but doesn't sing as well as he does. This isn't looking good, I'm thinking. And as if to compound this feeling of dread, David Hamilton tells me with a straight face, A STRAIGHT FACE mark you, that next up is Pussycat.

Pussycat, a strange and somewhat pisspoor Dutch band. Several chaps playing several different guitars, and three women out front. And not a single looker.











Which brings me to Legs and Co. I'd heard tell of these beauties from being a small lad. "Oooh, Legs & Co. Bloody lovely" I can still hear my dad cry. Not a single bloody one of them has a pair of t*ts to their name. Shocking and frankly wrong.

Oh, and David Soul is number One. Don't Give Up On Us?

I think I will, thanks.

Friday, 6 January 2012

Scientific research by way of watching Top of the Pops.

Lately, I have been watching (so that you don't have to) an awful lot of Top of the Pops 1976 on BBC Four. As they move in to 1977, I thought it worth a few lines in retrospect:

  1. Punk couldn't come quickly enough. Which moves me to point 2:
  2. Paul Nicholas can wave that cane and dip that hat as much as he likes, as he winks like a man with a rancid sty, but nothing he does will ever stop me from believing him to be a vapid little man with very little talent. Musical theatre's gain was pop music's gain.
  3. Abba were, and always will be, sh*t. And not in a post modern, ironic way, but in a very real sh*t way.
  4.  Pussycat prove the point that no good music has ever come out of the Netherlands. Ever.
  5. Even by January 1st 1977, pop music had improved 100% from December 31st 1976.
In conclusion, I was six in 1977.

The first entry....

Welcome to my blog. It's early days, of course, but I can promise a blog chock full of intellect and humour*






*I literally cannot promise this.