JONATHAN KING
''THE BUTTERFLY THAT STAMPED, DISC TWO''
1989
CASTLE MUSIC LTD.
DOWNLOAD
DISC ONE
01 - Everyone's Gone To The Moon/0:2:21
02 - Hooked On A feeling/0:2:35
03 - Johnny Reggae/0:2:08
04 - It's A Tall Order For A Short Guy/0:2:26
05 - Living In A Fucking Timewarp/0:2:01
06 - A Very, Very Melancholy Man/0:3:37
07 - Chick-A-Boom/0:2:54
08 - Let It All Hang Out/0:2:12
09 - One For Me, One For You/0:3:04
10 - Una Paloma Blanca/0:3:07
11 - Sugar, Sugar/0:3:24
12 - It's The Same Old Song/0:2:41
13 - Old Dj's (Playing New Sounds)/0:3:23
14 - Learning The Game/0:2:10
15 - Just Like A Woman/0:3:12
16 - Rag Doll/0:2:33
17 - Flirt/0:2:01
18 - Hang On Sloopy/0:3:28
19 - The Offical Munich Olympic Games Theme/0:2:17
20 - Gloria/0:3:51
21 - Cryin' Again/0:3:43
DISC TWO
01 - (I Can't get No) Satisfaction/0:3:28
02 - The Sun has Got His Hat On/0:2:13
03 - You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'/0:3:48
04 - The Sickly Sweet Odour Of Old Rotting Teeth/0:1:35
05 - He's So Fine/0:2:46
06 - Wild World/0:4:45
07 - When I Was A Star/0:3:48
08 - It Only Takes A Minute/0:2:58
09 - Lazybones/0:2:15
10 - I say A Little Prayer/0:2:56
11 - I'll Slap Your Face/0:2:05
12 - Million Dollar Bash/0:2:11
13 - Can't Get It Out Of My Head/0:3:25
14 - In The Mood/0:3:07
15 - Loop Di Love/0:2:40
16 - Go Now/0:5:36
17 - The Kung Foo Anthem/0:2:44
18 - Do You Want To Know A Secret/0:3:33
19 - God save The Sex Pistols/0:3:01
20 - Mental Diseases/0:2:09
REVIEW
by Dave Thompson
Four sides of vinyl followed 1979's Hit Millionaire to present an effervescent portrait of Jonathan King's entire hitmaking career, from 1965's "Everyone's Gone to the Moon," through to his then-most recent excursion, re-wiring Cat Stevens' "Wild World" around the sonics of the Pet Shop Boys' "It's a Sin." And yes, he did have his reasons. Long before the likes of Weird Al Yankovic and the Heebeejeebees, Jonathan King was puncturing superstar egos with some brutal commentaries. The aforementioned "Cat Shop Hybrid" was spawned by King's conviction that the synth-kids had blatantly plagiarized Stevens' original song, while the long running squabble over George Harrison's "My Sweet Lord" was painlessly proven by King's own version of "He's So Fine." The Butterfly That Stamped is an extraordinarily well-rounded collection, neither dwelling on the hits nor overdoing the parodies in favor of illustrating every one of King's musical hats; 20-plus-years spent spotting, and then exploiting, every crack in Great Britain's musical armor. And the crasser it was, the better. King's version of "Sugar Sugar," from 1971, mercilessly employed every trick in the heavy metal songbook, right down to the sub-Hendrix guitar which warbled the hookline. "Johnny Reggae," ostensibly by the all-female Piglets, immortalized every girl who ever hung around on street corners eyeing up football hooligans. When the George Baker Selection threatened to have a hit with the implausibly bland "Una Paloma Blanca," King preempted them with an even blander rendering. A tentative Glen Miller revival was celebrated by Sound 9418's "In the Mood"; and the American success of Tavares' "It Only Takes a Minute" was echoed in Britain by 100 Ton & a Feather's psychotic, violin-led reappraisal. And, just in case you get the idea that all he could do was answer trends, King wasn't averse to starting them, either. In 1970, he took B.J. Thomas' "Hooked on a Feeling," grafted on an "Ooga-chukka" chorus, and was still laughing four years later, when Blue Swede topped the US chart with precisely the same arrangement.
The Butterfly That Stamped rounds up all these and more. And, short of going for the eight-CD box set, there's little more King you could possibly crave.
''THE BUTTERFLY THAT STAMPED, DISC TWO''
1989
CASTLE MUSIC LTD.
DOWNLOAD
DISC ONE
01 - Everyone's Gone To The Moon/0:2:21
02 - Hooked On A feeling/0:2:35
03 - Johnny Reggae/0:2:08
04 - It's A Tall Order For A Short Guy/0:2:26
05 - Living In A Fucking Timewarp/0:2:01
06 - A Very, Very Melancholy Man/0:3:37
07 - Chick-A-Boom/0:2:54
08 - Let It All Hang Out/0:2:12
09 - One For Me, One For You/0:3:04
10 - Una Paloma Blanca/0:3:07
11 - Sugar, Sugar/0:3:24
12 - It's The Same Old Song/0:2:41
13 - Old Dj's (Playing New Sounds)/0:3:23
14 - Learning The Game/0:2:10
15 - Just Like A Woman/0:3:12
16 - Rag Doll/0:2:33
17 - Flirt/0:2:01
18 - Hang On Sloopy/0:3:28
19 - The Offical Munich Olympic Games Theme/0:2:17
20 - Gloria/0:3:51
21 - Cryin' Again/0:3:43
DISC TWO
01 - (I Can't get No) Satisfaction/0:3:28
02 - The Sun has Got His Hat On/0:2:13
03 - You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'/0:3:48
04 - The Sickly Sweet Odour Of Old Rotting Teeth/0:1:35
05 - He's So Fine/0:2:46
06 - Wild World/0:4:45
07 - When I Was A Star/0:3:48
08 - It Only Takes A Minute/0:2:58
09 - Lazybones/0:2:15
10 - I say A Little Prayer/0:2:56
11 - I'll Slap Your Face/0:2:05
12 - Million Dollar Bash/0:2:11
13 - Can't Get It Out Of My Head/0:3:25
14 - In The Mood/0:3:07
15 - Loop Di Love/0:2:40
16 - Go Now/0:5:36
17 - The Kung Foo Anthem/0:2:44
18 - Do You Want To Know A Secret/0:3:33
19 - God save The Sex Pistols/0:3:01
20 - Mental Diseases/0:2:09
REVIEW
by Dave Thompson
Four sides of vinyl followed 1979's Hit Millionaire to present an effervescent portrait of Jonathan King's entire hitmaking career, from 1965's "Everyone's Gone to the Moon," through to his then-most recent excursion, re-wiring Cat Stevens' "Wild World" around the sonics of the Pet Shop Boys' "It's a Sin." And yes, he did have his reasons. Long before the likes of Weird Al Yankovic and the Heebeejeebees, Jonathan King was puncturing superstar egos with some brutal commentaries. The aforementioned "Cat Shop Hybrid" was spawned by King's conviction that the synth-kids had blatantly plagiarized Stevens' original song, while the long running squabble over George Harrison's "My Sweet Lord" was painlessly proven by King's own version of "He's So Fine." The Butterfly That Stamped is an extraordinarily well-rounded collection, neither dwelling on the hits nor overdoing the parodies in favor of illustrating every one of King's musical hats; 20-plus-years spent spotting, and then exploiting, every crack in Great Britain's musical armor. And the crasser it was, the better. King's version of "Sugar Sugar," from 1971, mercilessly employed every trick in the heavy metal songbook, right down to the sub-Hendrix guitar which warbled the hookline. "Johnny Reggae," ostensibly by the all-female Piglets, immortalized every girl who ever hung around on street corners eyeing up football hooligans. When the George Baker Selection threatened to have a hit with the implausibly bland "Una Paloma Blanca," King preempted them with an even blander rendering. A tentative Glen Miller revival was celebrated by Sound 9418's "In the Mood"; and the American success of Tavares' "It Only Takes a Minute" was echoed in Britain by 100 Ton & a Feather's psychotic, violin-led reappraisal. And, just in case you get the idea that all he could do was answer trends, King wasn't averse to starting them, either. In 1970, he took B.J. Thomas' "Hooked on a Feeling," grafted on an "Ooga-chukka" chorus, and was still laughing four years later, when Blue Swede topped the US chart with precisely the same arrangement.
The Butterfly That Stamped rounds up all these and more. And, short of going for the eight-CD box set, there's little more King you could possibly crave.