Friday, 20 December 2024

Happy - Michael Jackson

With Michael Jackson being at the top of his game in the Eighties, his former record company Motown were all too eager to make some money off his name. They re-released a handful of his songs from the Seventies, and one of them was 'Happy'. 

In order to boost sales, they made a limited edition of this single with a poster sleeve. It's a version I wanted to have for some time now, and I finally found it. The B-side is a rather more famous Michael Jackson song, 'We're almost there'. 

My collection: 7" single no. 7517
Found: Discogs.com, received 6 December 2024
Tracks: 'Happy' / 'We're almost there'

Sunday, 15 December 2024

She looked me in the eye - Poogy

The band Poogy was named after the nickname of its drummer. They participated in the Eurovision Song Contest in 1974 with a song called 'Natati la khaiai' in Hebrew. Typically for the band, the lyrics are full of unusual imagery. With humour and irony, the song deals, at least in part, with the power of love and its failure, as in lines such as 'if she refused / there's no hope', and 'Someone says that his sky is ending / When there’s enough air for a nation or two'. It has been first suggested, and since confirmed by band member Danny Sanderson, that the song also contained a veiled political protest against then-prime minister Golda Meir, and in favour of the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel.

The song ended up in seventh place. The band recorded the song in English as 'She looked me in the eye (I gave her my life)'. I ordered the single from a German seller, and it was delivered within a week!

My collection: 7" single no. 7514
Found: Discogs.com, received 2 December 2024
Tracks: 'She looked me in the eye (I gave her my life)' / 'Morris and his turtle'


Midnight train - Kim Wilde

Kim Wilde's latest offering is the second single from her forthcoming album Closer, due out at the end of January. Based on the previous single 'Trail of destruction' and this one, it seems we're looking forward to a corker. 

Still, this single didn't impress me at first - and that's not because of the song, but because of the fact that there was a lot going on in my life when this came out. I only got to play the single about two weeks after it came out (yes, I still don't do digital so I had to wait until this vinyl single arrived!) and I wasn't grabbed right away. Reading through some of the online comments I noticed the same from other people. But I have to say: repeated play absolutely helps this particular song. 

My collection: 7" single no. 7508
Found: Cherry Red website, received 29 November 2024
Tracks: 'Midnight train' / 'Midnight train (instrumental)'

Wednesday, 11 December 2024

God only knows - The Beach Boys

This is a classic song and the single is very hard to find. I can't remember when I first heard the song, and I think it didn't even make much of an impression on me back then, but as the years went by, I grew to appreciate it more and more. When I finally decided I wanted to own this single, I couldn't find it anywhere, obviously. Thank god there's online sellers now - even if they tend to charge too much for their wornout singles.

Many songwriters, including Paul McCartney and Jimmy Webb, have cited 'God only knows' as their favorite song of all time. They're not wrong: it's a beautifully crafted piece of music.

My collection: 7" single no. 7481
Found:
Discogs.com, received 30 November 2024
Tracks: 'God only knows' / 'Wouldn't it be nice'

Primary - The Cure

The Cure have finally released a new album, and it made me curious about their output all over again. Then I started to realise that I don't have all of their singles - and I'm not even familiar with all of them. I heard 'Primary' and decided that I wanted to have that single.

It was actually the only single taken from their album Faith, released in 1981. It was their seventh single, but only the second to chart in the UK after 'A forest'. It only reached number 43. The song is unusual in that both Simon Gallup and Robert Smith play bass, with the effects pedals on Smith's giving the leads a unique sound. There are no guitars (other than bass) or keyboards played in the song. 

My collection: 7" single no. 7480
Found: Discogs.com, received 28 November 2024
Tracks: 'Primary' / 'Descent'

Strange - Boney M

Like the title indicates, this single is indeed strange. In Germany, the B-side 'Felicidad' was released as a single, and it was quite successful too. However, a few months after its release, the B-side became the A-side and 'Strange' saw the light of day.

'Strange' was originally recorded by Dobby Dobson in 1969. He was a Jamaican reggae singer and producer who released over a hundred singles between the Sixties and Nineties. Dobson died on July 21 2020 from COVID-19 in Florida, aged 78.

My collection: 7" single no. 7479
Found: Discogs.com, received 28 November 2024
Tracks: 'Strange' / 'Felicidad'

Du kennst die Liebe nicht - Nena

As popular as Nena was in Germany during the first half of the Eighties, things became a lot quieter when the year 1984 arrived. Most of their singles didn't chart, and although the album 'Feuer und Flamme' reached number 2 in the German albums chart, the singles didn't fare as well. The title track made it to number 8, 'Haus der drei Sonnen' scraped to number 43 and the two remaining singles didn't even chart. 

The last single taken from the album was 'Du kennst die Liebe nicht', released in 1985. The single features a live version of the same track on the B-side.

My collection: 7" single no. 7475
Found: Discogs.com, received 28 November 2024
Tracks: 'Du kennst die Liebe nicht' / 'Du kennst die Liebe nicht (live)'

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Advertising