Thursday 19 September 2024

Galactic Vinyl Memories #4

 We jaunt two years into the future and across the Atlantic now, to Glasgow. Love and Money's second album, Strange Kind of Love (1988) was another Gary Katz production, and in addition to the three band members, featured Steely Dan's Jeff Porcaro, Rick Derringer and an uncredited performance by Donald Fagen (although he does get an acknowledgement).

 


A lot of money was spent on this record, and it shows. It's got a really sumptuous production, and the gatefold sleeve gives off that "prestige" artist appeal. Big things were anticipated. The songs are really good, the playing is fabulous and the singer's got a fantastic voice. The title track, "Strange Kind of Love", got a lot of airplay toward the end of 1988 but it wasn't really a hit. "Halleluia Man" was also on the radio a lot but again only troubled the lower depths of the charts. The songs did a bit better elsewhere but there was no breakout hit, which must have been disappointing to Phonogram. The album's done decently enough over time, though, with 250,000 sales (according to Wikipedia). The follow-ups did less well, and I confess I haven't heard them.

The latter part of 1988 was when I moved to Scotland after completing my degree in Newcastle. I can't hear these tracks without thinking of dark nights, bitterly cold mornings, and the terrible events of Lockerbie at the end of that year. I don't think I managed to get hold of the album until early 1989. My copy still sounds great and the sleeve is in pretty good condition with just a bit of scuffing on the corners. Recommended for fans of Deacon Blue, the Blue Nile etc.



Tuesday 17 September 2024

Galactic Vinyl Memories #3

Over on my justgiving page, thanks to many kind and generous people, we've just smashed the target of raising 1000 pounds for Alzheimer's UK. I'm really stoked by this and want to thank each and everyone who has chipped in, right from the start. In fact, in celebration of hitting the goal, I put in another practise half-marathon this afternoon. It was no easier than the last one in August, disappointingly, and I really struggled after 18km, but today was certainly warmer, which didn't help.

Anyway, back onto matters vinyl. From King Crimson, we slingshot in the vague direction of Steely Dan, by way of Rosie Vela's 1986 album Zazu. Look, it's me, it was always going to end up with Steely Dan, wasn't it?


OK, but what's the connection? Rosie Vela was a model, singer and songwriter and she wrote and played on all the tracks on this enjoyable slice of synth-driven West Coast jazz-rock. Backing her was, to all intents and purposes, the core of Steely Dan - Donald Fagen and Walter Becker, with Gary Katz producing. This was an INCREDIBLY big deal at the time, because, other than one solo album from Fagen (1982's The Nightfly, which is great) there had been no music from them since the Dan's final album of their first streak - Gaucho (1980). That was an eternity in music back then and the coming of the Rosie Vela album hinted at the possibilities of more recordings to come from SD - although it would another fourteen years before that actually happened. As for the record itself, it was the only recording Rosie Vela put out and perhaps that was enough for her. My copy was bought in 1986 and remains in near-pristine condition. It's an obscure record, but not rare in any way - you can easily score good vinyl copies right now for not much money.

Oh right, the connection - sorry. Tony Levin (King Crimson, etc) plays bass!

https://www.justgiving.com/page/alastair-reynolds-1713971449990

Monday 16 September 2024

Galactic Vinyl Memories #2

 This might seem like something of an obvious choice, and indeed it is, but where do you go from Talking Heads? I could have gone with Brian Eno as a link into other artists, but I've misplaced my one Brian Eno vinyl album (indeed, I might have loaned it to someone). So it falls on Adrian Belew to link us into King Crimson, and I've plumped for my copy of their 1982 album Beat:



After disbanding in the mid-70s, KC reformed for a trilogy of three similar-sounding and similarly-packaged albums beginning with Discipline (1981), continuing with Beat, and concluding with Three of a Perfect Pair (1984). Their minimalist sleeves are respectively red, blue and yellow. Love these albums or loathe them (and they had plenty of detractors) they are what I'd call the nearest thing to a post-punk, New Wave, Talking Heads-ish kind of KC sound. All three records have some reasonably catchy and "normal" songs on them, but all three also have a more than ample share of experimental art-rock which at times only barely qualifies as music. Needless to say I am very fond of them. I bought them in reverse order, as it happens, and Beat was purchased from a Newcastle record shop in the Autumn of 1985. Adrian Belew's great weird squealing guitar sounds are all over this recording and his voice is very David Byrne-like. Bill Bruford plays drums. Tony Levin is on bass and Robert Fripp, of course, is also on guitar.

I didn't have a record player when I was away from home as a student, so my procedure after any vinyl purchase was to persuade someone else with a turntable to make me a tape which I could then listen to until I was back home. I remember that the usual candidate was a very big fan of both Madonna and Bauhaus and was not at all impressed by King Crimson, but he kindly put up with my requests. My vinyl copy is still in excellent nick and plays flawlessly.

KC went on a long hiatus after this trilogy of records and I must confess I've never quite connected in the same degree to the more recent stuff, although I did see the band perform in Cardiff a few years ago.

https://www.justgiving.com/page/alastair-reynolds-1713971449990

Sunday 15 September 2024

Galactic Vinyl Memories #1

 In order to drive some additional traffic to my Alzheimer's UK Justgiving page, in the build-up to the Cardiff Half-Marathon, I thought I'd try posting here a lot more frequently. The trouble is, in the day to day life of the jobbing SF writer, there isn't much to report. However, I can prattle on about music until the cows come home, so why not make that a feature, not a bug?

Hence Galactic Vinyl Memories #1, the first in a loose series where I dig through my vinyl connection, offer up a few recollections, and attempt to establish some tenuous connections between entries.

Our dear friend Carol (see previous post) liked Al Green, and we like Al Green too. In fact, one of my wife's dogs would be triggered into an ecstacy of howling by the sound of Al Green's voice. I don't have any Al Green lps, though, but I do have some Talking Heads, who covered Take Me To The River on their 1978 record More Songs About Buildings and Food.

I don't have that, either, but I do have Little Creatures, their 1985 album:


Which I bought pretty much the week, if not the day, it came out. I was a huge fan by then, but I'd come to them by a roundabout and belated route. After failing my "A" levels, I'd been put back a year in school. The drawback of this was seeing all my mates go off to more exciting things while I was stuck in Pencoed, but the surprising benefit was ending up with a whole year's worth of new friends, in the sixth form class I got bumped back down into. One of them was a nice chap who liked Talking Heads. Knowing I was "into" King Crimson, especially the early 80s stuff, he made me a couple of Talking Heads recordings to listen to, suggesting I'd find a lot of common ground. The albums were Remain in Light (1980) and Speaking in Tongues (1983), two scorchers that I'd consider absolutely essential parts of any TH collection. Remain in Light was the one with the hit on, Once in a Lifetime, and it's where they really started leaning into the afrobeat influences, with brilliant polyrhythms all over the place. I dug that stuff and the KC/TH crossover connection is easily made. Robert Fripp and Adrian Belew had already made contributions to TH, so there's 50% of the DNA there already.

Little Creatures is a very good album, but it represents the point where TH started to sound less interesting to me, because the sound is more traditionally pop-rock and the production is very emphatic, in that mid-80s way. I found their later records progressively less appealling, although I still liked them well enough. It's worth having, but I wouldn't put it above the Holy Trinity of Fear of Music (1979) and the aforementioned Remain in Light/Speaking in Tongues, which are ESSENTIAL.

My vinyl copy is 39 years old and still sounds fresh. The sleeve is mostly pristine except for some very light cockling on the rear. I bought it in Bridgend, either from WH Smith's or Our Price. The cover art is by Howard Finster, who also did REM's second album.

Here's a link to my Justgiving page, and many thanks for the donations to date:

https://www.justgiving.com/page/alastair-reynolds-1713971449990



Friday 13 September 2024

Carol MacLeod

 We were devastated to hear that our wonderful friend Carol, lovely wife of Ken MacLeod, passed away shortly after attending the Glasgow Worldcon.

Carol was a delight and we considered ourselves very lucky to have Ken and Carol as friends, even as distance and circumstances meant that we hadn't seen as much of them in recent years. We had hit it off as friends since meeting properly for the first time at a convention in Sweden.



Carol's sparkle comes through beautifully in this photo of the four of us enjoying a well-earned beer, probably in Upsalla or maybe Stockholm. When our subsequent travels took us to Edinburgh, we always made sure to try and meet the MacLeods and our memories of Carol will remain with us. She loved music, especially Simpy Red and Oasis, although her tastes ran far and wide.

Carol's passing was unexpected, and our thoughts go out to Ken, Sharon, Michael and all of Carol's friends and family as this most difficult time. 

Thanks, Carol, for the light you brought, for your smile and your infectious love of life. 

Your friends, Al + J