Monday, March 14, 2011

REVISITING AN OLD POST FROM MAY 2007


I noticed the other day that a Greatest Hits compilation by Scritti Politti has been issued. It's not one that I'm going to rush out and buy given I already have most of the original albums, but then again the marketing men have insisted on a couple of new tracks so I might shell out the pennies.

I hope you don't mind, but thinking of Scritti Politti made me want to share again a piece I put together back in the relatively early days of TVV. I've edited it down as it refered to other things going on around the blog a the time in question - those were the days when I wasn't so busy at work that I did the pieces one at a time on the day in question instead of doing what I am today (Sunday 13 March) and spending hours at the PC putting the next two weeks worth together in one sitting.

GREAT UNACKNOWLEDGED ALBUMS OF OUR TIME (Part 6)
(originally posted on 6 May 2007)

Can it really now be 25 years since this underrated masterpiece hit the record racks? It seems so...

Scritti Politti, which in effect was really just a vehicle for the talents of Welsh-born singer-songwriter Green Gartside had been kicking around as a band since the late 1970s. Gartside had a reputation in the music press as a left-wing intellectual, which was maintained with the release of the debut single Skank Bloc Bologna which was regarded as a pro-feminist song that attacked the way that much of society expected young women to conform to a lifestyle of dull humdrum work and then raise families.

I never actually liked the debut single and still don't listen to it much today. If there was ever such a thing as free-form new wave, then this was it. The production values were non-existant, the vocals are lost amidst all sorts of sharp and abrupt changes in rhythm and you couldn't really dance to it. So I never thought I'd pay much attention to Scritti Politti again.

A couple of years later, I picked up a free cassette with the NME which featured a Scritti Politti song entitled The "Sweetest Girl". It was absolutely gorgeous and as far removed from Bologna as you could imagine. It's not quite a ballad, not quite a full-blown radio friendly pop-song. It was driven along sedately by a piano and a drum machine and a fantastic near-falsetto vocal performance by Green.

It was later released as a single on Rough Trade Records and topped the indie charts. I remember buying the single and after listening to the a-side a couple of times flipping it over to something called Lions After Slumber - a funk/rap number that just blew me away. I spent many many hours trying to decipher the lyric......

Into 1982 and another single came out in the summer. It was called Faithless. And it was joyful, soulful and with a hint of gospel. Three completely different song styles, and every one of them on heavy rotation.

And yet another single appeared later in the summer - a double a-side effort entitled Asylums in Jerusalem/Jacques Derrida - this time there were hints of reggae kicking around as well as a more pop-orientated feel. By now, I was itching for the album to appear.

It was a really brave move to call it Songs To Remember as it left Green (as he was by now calling himself) open to ridicule. It turned out not to to be an outlandish statement. The track listing was:-

01 : Asylums in Jerusalem
02 : A Slow Soul
03 : Jacques Derrida
04 : Lions After Slumber
05 : Faithless
06 : Sex
07 : Rock-A-Boy Blue
08 : Gettin' Havin' & Holdin'
09 : The "Sweetest Girl"

There's not a bad track on this album. My only gripe at the time was the fact it had only nine songs, of which only four were brand new. The new songs showed further musical talents, especially on the jazz-tinged Rock-A-Boy Blue which featured a lengthy double-bass solo.

I thought I was in a real minority falling in love with Scritti Politti in 1982 as I don't recall them having any real chart success - certainly none of the singles did anything. So I was surprised to learn in doing a wee bit of research that Songs To Remember sold enough to reach #12 in the UK album charts.

Green was now a man in demand, and he signed a huge deal with Virgin Records. Within two years he was a bona-fide pop star crawling all over the UK and US charts with a succession of pop singles that were typical of that decade - synthesiser-led, big big production sounds and topped-off by expensive videos with Green wearing designer clothes and expensive haircuts. These hit singles, and the subsequent album Cupid & Psyche weren't all that bad compared to an awful lot of the drivel that dominated the charts at the time, but the joy and beauty of the debut album had been left behind.

My vinyl copy of Songs To Remember was pretty much unplayable by around 1990. The only time I heard any of the songs was when they came up on any compilation cassette tapes that I had made up over the years. It wasn't until 2001 that I again got to hear all of the album in its glory when it was finally given a long-delayed release on CD. It still sounded incredible and timeless. And...........it came with a lyric booklet, so I quickly discovered discovered that I had gotten about 85% of the words to Lions After Slumber spot-on......

I suppose you all know that Scottish popsters Wet Wet Wet took their band name from a line from the song Gettin' Havin' & Holdin'.....well if you didn't, you know now....

Incidentally, if anyone has a 12" copy of Faithless, would they be kind enough to turn it, and the instrumental b-side into a couple of mp3s and fire them over to me by e-mail. It was a single that I used to own....but someone borrowed it and never returned it (I know who they are, but I've lost touch with them....).

25 years ago eh? I'm getting on a bit.

March 2009 Update

Someone was kind enough to send said mp3s over, but since then I've found a second-hand copy during one of my browsing sessions (albeit the b-side has a huge jump on it after about 30 seconds!!).

The versions of the songs on the 2001 CD were all digitally remastered, and rather than share those with you, I've gone back to the vinyl rips, from the 12" singles:-

mp3 : Scritti Poiltti - The "Sweetest Girl"
mp3 : Scritti Politti - Lions After Slumber
(Rough Trade Records RT 091)

mp3 : Scritti Politti - Faithless (Triple-Hep N' Blue)
mp3 : Scritti Politti - Faithless (Part II)
(Rough Trade Records RT 101)

mp3 : Scritti Politti - Asylums In Jerusalem
mp3 : Scritti Politti - Jacques Derrida
mp3 : Scritti Politti - A Slow Soul *
* totally different mix than is on the LP
(Rough Trade Records RT 111)

Bonus track

mp3 : Scritti Politti - Jacques Derrida (7" edit)


Happy Listening.

5 comments:

Essay Writer said...

The topic that your blog deals with demands lots of research. Thanks to you who has provided the intricate information in simple words.

ximeremix said...

I must add that the tracks on the 7 inch and 12 inch versions of Faithless are all different.
RT 101
Faithless (7" version) 4.13
Faithless II 3.57

RTT 101
Faithless (Triple Hep 'N' Blue) 9.39
Faithless II (12" version) 9.46

(And all are different from the LP version)

But you have it all down anyway, JC: One of the best albums to come out of the early eighties; an LP that was NEVER off my turntable (well, maybe a couple of times to make way for D> Mode); and LP that cannot be played anymore - but I still keep it (mainly for the artwork - subtle and understated.

xxC

Echorich said...

Green Gartside is the epitome of a pop music one off! There is NO ONE remotely like him. Sure he has a bit of a familiar mad genius temperment that we see occasionally in music, but the idea that the same artist wrote songs like Skank Bloc Bologna, Wood Beez (Pray Like Aretha Franklin) and Boom Boom Bap is really quite rare.
The two new songs on the greatest hits collection are pure Scritti, right down to the partnership with David Gamson. They will remind of Cupid and Psyche '85 but are certainly more mature.
And back to Skank Bloc Bologna, this track, over all others is what comes to mind when anyone mentions Rough Trade Records to me. More than The Smiths, more than The Raincoats, Stiff Little Fingers or Swell Maps.

Christian Kerr said...

Twenty-nine years on and I still play this album and find it fresh and beautiful.

Anonymous said...

thanks
from italy :-)