Showing posts with label The King Blues. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The King Blues. Show all posts

Wednesday, 26 June 2013

We Got Hope In Our Hearts

Joe writes: I really like this new Beach Blood single H.O.P.E. So ambitious and melodic.



H.O.P.E. has enjoyable echoes of Carter The Unstoppable Sex Machine so here's The Only Living Boy In New Cross:



(Full disclosure - I used to work with The King Blues, and Jamie from Beach Blood was in The King Blues)

Monday, 9 July 2012

The King Blues feat. Tim Armstrong - Booted Out Of Hell

Joe writes: This is my favourite track from the final King Blues album, and it features one of The King Blues' heroes, Tim Armstrong of Rancid. Big hooks and a great lyric.



My favourite Tim Armstrong track is probably Diamonds & Guns by The Transplants, and Tim owes a lot to The Clash so here's London Calling:

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

yesterday The King Blues announced that they are splitting up

Joe writes: I worked with them on the album Save The World, Get The Girl which is full of great tunes and lyrics*. Here's one of its lesser known songs, The Schemers, the Scroungers and the Rats:




And here's the poem Zane Lowe played last night to mark their departure, What If Punk Never Happened:




I will always remember the first time I heard an entire crowd shout along with the words "Viva la punk, just one life, anarchy", and the last time, when they were headlining the Roundhouse in their spiritual home of Camden a few months back.

Zane played their demo a couple of times, but didn't play them again until the guy behind the counter in his local organic greengrocer said to him "Why don't you play The King Blues instead of all that rubbish you do play?". They were a people's band.


* Footnote - after George Galloway won a by-election last week I wrote on Twitter that one of my favourite King Blues lyrics is "A peace movement needs fire in its belly, but Galloway's lapping up milk on the telly" (which he did as a contestant on Celebrity Big Brother). Someone then tweeted me asking what song this is from - good question. I think it was from an early version of Save The World, Get The Girl, and they changed it before the album came out because it was no longer topical. They may have done this at my suggestion and I wonder now if it was a mistake.

Thursday, 5 March 2009

Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley

Joe writes: I started on this thread because The Rockingbirds' eponymous 1992 debut album is being reissued on April 6th with a bonus disc. The Rockingbirds were a country rock band and so several years ahead of their time or twenty years behind it, depending which way you look at it. Restless is a great track and you can pre-order the album from Amazon.



The Rockingbirds were produced by Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley, arguably the great British production team of the eighties, which gives me an excuse to post a Langer Winstanley greatest hits of sorts. As well as being producers, they wrote the music to Shipbuilding, one of my all-time favourites (Elvis Costello wrote the brilliant lyric).

Elvis Costello - Shipbuilding (Amazon)



Robert Wyatt - Shipbuilding (iTunes)



They Might Be Giants - Birdhouse In Your Soul (Amazon)



Hothouse Flowers - Don't Go (Amazon)



The Rockingbirds - Restless (not on Amazon yet)



The King Blues - The Schemers, The Scroungers & The Rats (iTunes) (Clive Langer was involved in this one)



Dexy's Midnight Runners - Come On Eileen (Amazon)



Madness - My Girl (Amazon)



They also produced Bush. And I must get some music from Clive Langer's band Deaf School to post here.

Tuesday, 18 November 2008

Save The World, Get The Girl

Phil writes: A great title for a great album. The King Blues have succeeded in producing one of those albums where every song is worth more than one listen. They remind me, amongst others, of Billy Bragg, Mike Skinner, Lennon, Everclear, and I guess they're inspired by most if not all of the bands mentioned in What If Punk Never Happened, the tour de force which makes such a perfect final track. There's even a song which sounds as though it might be a Nizlopi cover - it isn't, of course - is there such a thing? The success here is the extent to which the influences have led to some distinctive and memorable tracks with some great tunes and clever lyrics, rather than pale imitations, as is sometimes the case. You really need to get the whole album (Amazon) but the title track is possibly as good an introduction as any.

The King Blues - Save The World, Get The Girl (iTunes)