Tuesday, 24 February 2009

How can I believe? - Betsy Cook

Betsy Cook released 'How can I believe?' as the second single off her album 'The girl who ate herself'. (The first single was 'Love is the groove' but that entry in this blog has been deleted by The Powers That Be for some strange reason.) It is a beautiful ballad, and one of the best tracks on the album full stop.

Other artists have benefited from Betsy's craftmanship: Paul Young recorded 'Wonderland' a few years prior to the release of her own album, Cher recorded 'Love is the groove' and Stevie Nicks recorded 'Docklands'. All tracks were on Betsy's album too. There is not much information on what Betsy did next, but I guess she's still out there somewhere, songwriting.

My collection: 7" single no. 1621
Found: Disco Market, Den Haag, April 18, 1992
Cost: 3,5 guilders
Tracks: 'How can I believe?' / 'Look to yourself'

Monday, 23 February 2009

The model - Kraftwerk

If you should define the German group Kraftwerk with one song, this would be the one. They are known for their electronic, mechanical-sounding, almost inhuman music, but this track is proof that they were definitely capable of writing a melodic popsong.

In his book 'I was a robot', about his time in the group Kraftwerk, Wolfgang Flür wrote that his former bandmates Emil Schult and Ralf Hütter had been obsessed with the model Christa Becker and that she had been the inspiration for the song 'The model'. Apparently they weren't amused with this becoming public knowledge, so they tried to sue him. It didn't work: the secret got out.

My collection: 7" single no. 1221
Found: Record fair, Den Haag, April 22, 1990
Cost: 5 guilders
Tracks: 'The model' / 'Computer love'


Streets of Philadelphia - Bruce Springsteen

In early 1993, director of the movie 'Philadelphia', Jonathan Demme, asked Bruce Springsteen to write a song for the in-progress film. In June 1993, after the conclusion of his tour, Springsteen did so. It was recorded with Springsteen supplying almost all of the instrumentation, with bass and background vocals from his band member Tommy Simms.

The song would achieve greater popularity in Europe than it would in the United States. While it peaked at number 9 in the US Billboard Hot 100, it was a number one hit single in Germany in France. It peaked at number 2 in the UK and number 6 in the Netherlands.
I bought this vinyl single after searching for it for months - and refused to buy the cd-single. It was a hard time for vinyl single collectors: the format was becoming quite extinct during that year, numerous titles weren't even released on the format anymore. Finding this single was a sweet victory.

My collection: 7" single no. 2093
Found: Record fair, Amsterdam, April 16, 1994
Cost: 8 guilders
Tracks: 'Streets of Philadelphia' / 'If I should fall behind (live)'

Cardiac arrest - Madness

'Cardiac arrest' was taken from Madness's third album '7' (1981). It spent 10 weeks in UK Singles chart, peaking at number 14. In the Netherlands the single was officially released as a double A-side with 'In the city', although my (Dutch) copy still says 'Side 2' for 'In the city'. It peaked at number 15 in the Dutch Top 40.

The lyric of 'Cardiac arrest' tells a story of a workaholic who suffers a fatal heart attack on his way to work. The song was banned on BBC Radio 1 due to deaths in the families of two DJs. It had an effect on the record's chart position, which was lower than usual for Madness. The album version of the song ends after the second chorus with a dramatic cut to a coda representing the man's heart thudding and then stopping, however the single version replaces this with a repeat of the more optimistic first chorus, which fades out.

My collection: 7" single no. 122
Found: Disco Market, Den Haag, 1982
Cost: 2 guilders
Tracks: 'Cardiac arrest' / 'In the city'
Download: here

Love is everywhere - Cicero

My friend Puck said that I should include more good songs. 'Define good songs', I said. He replied: 'songs that I know'. Well, I'm always eager to please. Hope you like it, Puck.

David John Cicero was born May 29, 1970 in Greenport, Long Island, USA. When his parents divorced, he moved to Livingston, Scotland. He attended a Pet Shop Boys concert in Glasgow in 1989 and gave a demo tape to Peter Andreas, the Pet Shop Boys' personal assistant. Peter Andreas contacted Cicero with an offer of artist management and later when Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe heard Cicero's material, they signed him up to their recently formed Spaghetti label. His debut single 'Heaven must have sent you back to me' on August 12, 1991. This single failed to chart. The follow-up, 'Love is everywhere', produced by the Pet Shop Boys, reached number 19 in the UK Singles Chart in January 1992.

My collection: 7" single no. 2881
Found: House of Rhythm, London, October 28, 1997
Cost: 1 pound
Tracks: 'Love is everywhere' / 'Mind gap'

Der Kommissar - Falco

In a previous entry, I already wrote about 'Der Kommissar' by After the fire, but this is the original version - and it can't be beat. Johann (Hans) Hölzel was born in Vienna, Austria on February 19, 1957 and took on the stage name Falco in the late Seventies, reportedly as a tribute to the East German skier Falko Weißpflog. His first hit was 'Der Kommissar', taken from his debut album 'Einzelhaft' (1982). Besides being a hit in his native Austria and neighbour countries Germany and Switzerland, it also reached number 18 in the Dutch Top 40.

My collection: 7" single no. 1678
Found: Parkpop, Den Haag, June 28, 1992
Cost: 2 guilders
Tracks: 'Der Kommissar' / 'Helden von heute'
Download: here

Lost in music - Sister Sledge

Kim, Debbie, Joni and Kathy Sledge formed Sister Sledge in 1972 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The four sisters (sister number five, Carol, preferred to stay outside of the music business) had a reasonably successful start of their career, but by the end of the Seventies, their career went into decline. It was then that they met Bernard Edwards from Chic. The disco anthems 'He's the greatest dancer', 'We are family' and 'Lost in music', all produced by Bernard Edwards and Nile Rodgers, became the biggest hits of their career.

Their biggest hits have been re-released several times in the UK, often in newly-remixed versions. 'Lost in Music' was one of them: it reached number 17 in 1979, number 4 in 1984 and number 14 in 1993. This single is the 1984 version, which I bought in 2000.

My collection: 7" single no. 3232
Found: Beanos, East Croydon, London, October 18, 2000
Cost: 2,5 pounds
Tracks: 'Lost in music' / 'Smile'
Download: here
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