Arcadia presented themselves for the first time with their debut single 'Election day'. But they were no debutants: the trio consisted of three members from the band Duran Duran, and guest vocals on this track were provided by Grace Jones.
This extended version showcases those vocals even better, while adding some elements to the track that were not on the single and album versions.
My collection: 12" single no. 176
Found: Record Exchange, London
Cost: 1 pound
Tracks: 'Election day (Consensus mix)' / 'Election day', 'She's moody and grey, she's mean and she's restless'
When Kim Wilde was about to release a compilation album in 1993, there was a need for a hit single. Not convinced that they had a hit single among their newly written material, the Wildes set about searching for a song to cover. Eventually they decided on Yvonne Elliman's Saturday Night Fever hit 'If I can't have you'.
Although not as inspired as the 1986 cover of 'You keep me hangin' on', Kim's version of 'If I can't have you' certainly gives the old song a kick up the arse, and it was rewarded with good chart placings: the single reached number 12 in the UK singles chart and number 23 in the Dutch Top 40.
My collection: 7" single no. 2042 Found: Wreckastow, Rotterdam, October 23, 1993 Cost: 10 guilders Tracks: 'If I can't have you' / 'Never felt so alive'
'Onverstoorbaar' ('Unstirred') was one of the six new tracks on the Frank Boeijen Groep's 1990 live double cd, 'Hier komt de storm' ('Here comes the storm'). It was, however, the only new track to be recorded live, as the other five were recorded in the studio. Hence, no studio version of 'Onverstoorbaar' exists - but still the single was titled 'Onverstoorbaar (live)'.
Personally, I thought this track represented everything which made the band so great: a great melody, a lyric that clicks on an emotional level, and sounding full and lively. Most people did not agree with me: the single did not chart.
My collection: 7" single no. 1362 Found: Free Record Shop, Den Haag, December 8, 1990 Cost: 6 guilders Tracks: 'Onverstoorbaar (live)' / 'Hemel en hel'
'Million miles away' was released as the third and final single from Kim Wilde's 1992 album 'Love is' in Europe and Japan. The track was a remixed version of the album version. The sleeve featured a photograph of Kim that looked a lot like a photograph of Marilyn Monroe made a few decades previous.
It was very hard to get hold of this 7" vinyl: most shops didn't stock the format anymore, and although this single was made in Holland, I finally found a copy almost a year after its release in Austria!
My collection: 7" single no. 1933 Found: Vienna, July 6, 1993 Cost: 30 Schilling Tracks: 'Million miles away' / 'The light of the moon (belongs to me)'
In 1991, Black recorded a duet with another A&M Records artist, Sam Brown. The track 'Fly up to the moon' was included on Black's 1991 self-titled album and was released as the third and last single from the album. The lyric includes a quote from the T.S. Eliot poem 'The hollow men': 'This is the way the world ends / Not with a bang but a whimper'. Except Sam Brown actually sings '...but with a whimpy'.
The single also included two bonus tracks on the B-side. 'You lift me up' was re-recorded years later by Colin Vearncombe on his 2000 album 'Water on snow'.
My collection: 7" single no. 1694 Found: London, 1991 Cost: 2 pounds Tracks: 'Fly up to the moon' / 'You lift me up', What you are'
While in the Netherlands a live version of 'Verjaardagsfeest' was released as the first single from the Frank Boeijen Groep's 1990 live album 'Hier komt de storm', the Belgian record company opted for 'Het antwoord' ('The answer'), the studio version of which was released as a single in 1983.
The live version from the album was edited by fading out at the end. The single did not chart, but it did become quite a rare item, as it wasn't released in the band's home country.
My collection: 7" single no. 4169 Found: Chelsea Records, Antwerpen, November 7, 2009 Cost: 2 euro Tracks: 'Het antwoord (live)' / 'De prijs (van Jan Arends) (live)'
'Who do you think you are?' was released as the second single from Kim Wilde's 1992 album 'Love is' in Europe and as the third single in the UK. The lyric of the song was written by Kim and were an observation of stardom and what it can do to people - and it was as much a comment on herself as it was on others.
The single reached number 49 in the UK singles chart and number 58 in Germany.
My collection: 7" single no. 1687 Found: Melody Maker, Den Haag, July 17, 1992 Cost: 6,5 guilders Tracks: 'Who do you think you are?' / 'I've found a reason'