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Showing posts with label nick lowe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nick lowe. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 July 2016

Let The Day Begin...Let The Day Start!: Day 210 Nick Lowe (2)

16 All-Time Lowes - Nick Lowe
Demon Records
Released 1984



Don't need a special day to post good music and any day is a good day when it comes to the music of Nick Lowe.

Here's a kind of Best of Compilation from 1984 that contains 16 of his finest tunes! A nice mix of singles, B-sides and album tracks.  Enjoy.

Let The Day Begin...Let The Day Start!

Thursday, 9 June 2016

Let The Day Begin...Let The Day Start!: Day 161 - Nick Lowe

Labour of Lust - Nick Lowe
Radar
Produced by Nick Lowe
Released 9th June 1979
UK Chart #31
US Chart #42



Based on Tracklisting for 2011
Yep Roc Records Version
(Track 7 - Skin Deep is missing as it doesn't appear to be on You Tube)

Personnel
    Nick Lowe – bass and vocals
    Dave Edmunds – rhythm and solo guitars and backing vocals
    Billy Bremner – rhythm and solo guitars and backing vocals
    Terry Williams – drums


Additional personnel
    Huey Lewis – harmonica on "Born Fighter"
    Bob Andrews – Oberheim on "Endless Grey Ribbon"
    Elvis Costello – backing vocals on "American Squirm"
    Bruce Thomas – bass on "American Squirm"

    Pete Thomas – drums on "American Squirm"

Labour of Lust was Nick Lowe's Second Studio album released by Radar. His debut, Jesus of Cool had done pretty well reaching #22 in the charts and had given Lowe a Top 10 Single with I Love The Sound of Breaking Glass (it peaked at #7).

It was recorded and released at the same time as Dave Edmunds' Repeat When Necessary and has basically the Rockpile band playing back-up.

Two singles from the album reached the chart, first Crackin' Up (#34) and secondly Cruel To Be Kind (which has the distinction of reaching #12 in four different countries - UK, Canada, USA and Australia!).


 American Squirm (originally not on the UK album release but was included on the US version) which was released inbetween those singles didn't chart, which is a shame because it's a fantastic single I think. It is probably better known for the B-Side which is the song that Nick had written for Brinsley Schwarz back in 1974, What's So Funny 'Bout Peace Love and Understanding


The song is credited to Nick Lowe and His Sound which in fact was Elvis Costello and the Attractions.



Nick Lowe actually has a great reputation as a Producer having given his hand to a number of the early singles and albums from Stiff Records.

When it comes to the songs on Labour of Lust Nick Lowe penned most of them but on the single Cruel to be Kind he must have been digging in his archives as the song was originally recorded for the final album 'It's All Over Now' (and album that didn't see the light of day until 1988 and then it was withrawn quickly) for Brinsley Schwarz and it was a Co-write with guitarist Ian Gomm and then on Love So Fine saw a collaboration with the Rockpile team. Switchboard Susan is the only song that's not his own and that was penned by Micky Jupp (a former Stiff artist that Lowe had produced for).


Let The Day Begin...Let The Day Start!

Thursday, 17 March 2016

Rewind: Quiet Please... The New Best of Nick Lowe (2009)

Quiet Please... The New Best of Nick Lowe
Proper
Released 17th March 2009


Quiet Please... The New Best of Nick Lowe is a 49 track career spanning collection of songs written by British songwriter Nick Lowe. As well as his solo work, it also features many of his collaborations with the likes of Rockpile, Brinsley Schwarz, Paul Carrack and Little Village. The compilation was released by Proper Records in the UK and Europe and by Yep Roc in the US. The collection was compiled by Gregg Geller.

Nick Lowe has always been one of my favourite songwriters, he's pretty handy as well when it comes to producing and has worked with a very diverse bunch of artists down the years. His work on some of the early releases put out on Stiff Records, and his labour on many albums by Elvis Costello often overshadow his own abilities to pick up a guitar and craft a fine tune a song or two of his own.

I loved this collection when it came out because for many folks who were not maybe big fans of his work there was a whole raft of great music gleaned from his career. Having them all in one place gave the opportunity to really see just how gifted he was/is. 

I'm sure I've put this up before somewhere but heck, it's always worth another spin.

Wednesday, 23 December 2015

8 Days of Christmas #7: Nick Lowe


Seeing that I am not a huge fan of Christmas Music, I do like some of course but I honestly cannot abide the constant playing of it from October to December!! My custom has always been to begin playing Christmas Music a week or so before the event, that way I do not tire of it (and I don't play it on repeat!!).

There's a few Classic Christmas albums like Spector's 'A Christmas Gift For You''The Beach Boys' Christmas', B.B. King's 'A Christmas Celebration of Hope', The Blind Boys of Alabama's 'Go Tell It On The Mountain', 'Dig That Crazy Christmas' by Brian Setzer Orchestra, any Johnny Cash Christmas album, but the one I like coming back to is Nick Lowe's 'Quality Street'. It only came out two years ago and although not a smash hit as such, for me it will be always be considered one of the classic Christmas Albums.






Friday, 11 December 2015

Gems From My Collection: The New Favourites Of... - Brinsley Schwarz (1974)

The New Favourites Of... is the sixth and final album by Brinsley Schwarz and is one that I've only recently got digitized and on the computer. It's a real cracker that includes the first recording of Nick Lowe's What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love & Understanding.

It has been released in CD before, back in 2001(I don't have a copy of it at all) and that was by a German label Repertoire Records (they included a number of bonus tracks: I've Cried My Last Tear, (It's Gonna Be A) Bringdown, Everybody and There's A Cloud In My Heart).

After their demise Brinsley went to play on the final tour for Ducks Deluxe and then he, Bob Andrews and Martin Belmont of Ducks Deluxe joined up with Graham Parker to play in his backing band The Rumour.

Nick Lowe teamed up with producer of the last album, Dave Edmunds, and they formed Rockpile. Lowe would also go on to have some minor success as a solo artist and also as a producer for Stiff Records and in particular Elvis Costello. Lowe's 1979 hit Cruel To Be Kind was originally recorded for a final album that went unreleased by Brinsley Schwarz.


 The New Favourites Of... -  Brinsley Schwarz
United Artists
Produced by Dave Edmunds
Released 1974

Personnel
    Brinsley Schwarz - Guitar, alto and tenor sax, vocals
    Ian Gomm - Guitars, vocals
    Billy Rankin - drums
    Bob Andrews - Keyboards, alto sax, vocals
    Nick Lowe - Bass guitar, acoustic guitar, vocals
    Carlos Luna - Harmonica




A1     (What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love & Understanding
A2     Ever Since You're Gone
A3     The Ugly Things
A4     I Got The Real Thing
A5     The Look That's In Your Eye Tonight
B1     Nows The Time
B2     Small Town Big Guy
B3     Trying To Live My Life Without You
B4     I Like You, I Don't Love You
B5     Down In The Dive     4:52



Monday, 23 November 2015

45RPM: #67 American Squirm - Nick Lowe (1978)



Between October - December 1978 (not totally sure of the date as some sites just have October, others have 24th November and others still 1st December! - the November one seems reasonable to me but honestly I have no idea!) Nick Lowe released his third single for Radar Records. He previously released three singles and an EP for Stiff Records before jumping ship with Jake Riviera to the new label. He had the first release on the label with I Love the Sound of Breaking Glass which reached #7 in the charts, follow-up Little Hitler didn't trouble the charts and neither for that matter did American Squirm which is a real shame because whilst it is a pretty decent track it would have been worth buying for the B-Side alone! American Squirm was not included on the UK release of the album Jesus of Cool but did feature on the US release.

Don't you just love it when you've bought a single and you flip it over to hear what the B-Side is like (around the time of the whole Punk/New Wave scene the emphasis on good B-Sides really came to the fore) only to be blown off your feet because it is actually way more superior to the A-Side? The B-Side of American Squirm did just that! Credited to Nick Lowe and His Sound it is remarkable because the band playing is actually Elvis Costello and The Attractions performing a song that Nick Lowe had written and released in 1974 with his band Brinsley Schwarz.

I do not say this lightly and I will say it loudly with great confidence:

"(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding is quite possibily The Greatest B-Side Ever to have been released!"



A-Side: American Squirm


B-Side: (What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding - Credited as Nick Lowe and His Sound (But it's Elvis Costello on the Vocal and The Attractions as backing band!)

Friday, 26 June 2015

Rewind: 2007 - Nick Lowe Releases 'At My Age'

Released 26th June 2007
Proper (UK)
Yep Roc (US)
Produced by Nick Lowe and Neil Brockbank



Thursday, 19 March 2015

Alphabet Beats #077: L is for....Lowe as in Nick

L is for....


Live BBC4 Sessions 2007


Quiet Please...The New Best of Nick Lowe

I am certain that somewhere there is an unpublished list of Songwriters/Artists who are greatly under-appreciated just because they never had singles smashing the #1 spots (infact he only ever had four singles make the charts in the UK and only one got into the Top Ten!) and albums that moved by the truckload. I am sure that one of the names on that list is Nick Lowe!

He began his musical career in 1967, when he joined the band Kippington Lodge, along with his school friend Brinsley Schwarz. They released a few singles on the Parlophone record label as Kippington Lodge before they renamed the band Brinsley Schwarz in late 1969 and began performing country and blues-rock.

After leaving Brinsley Schwarz in 1975 Lowe began playing bass in Rockpile with Dave Edmunds.

A noted figure in UK pub rock, power pop, punk rock and new wave scenes, Lowe has recorded a string of well-reviewed solo albums. Along with vocals, Lowe plays guitar, bass guitar, piano and harmonica. He is best known for his songs "Cruel to Be Kind" (a US Top 40 single) and "I Love the Sound of Breaking Glass" (a top 10 UK hit), as well as his production work with Elvis Costello, Graham Parker, The Damned, Dr Feelgood and others. Lowe also wrote "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding", a hit for Costello.

The Albums (*incomplete)
    Jesus of Cool (1978, UK) (released in the US as Pure Pop for Now People)
    Labour of Lust (1979)
    Nick the Knife (1982)*
    The Abominable Showman (1983)*
    Nick Lowe and His Cowboy Outfit (1984)*
    The Rose of England (1985)*
    Pinker and Prouder than Previous (1988)*
    Party of One (1990)*
    The Impossible Bird (1994)
    Dig My Mood (1998)
    The Convincer (2001)
    Untouched Takeaway (Live) (2004)
    At My Age (2007)*


Singles/EP's/Anything Else We Could Find that's Good!
 

Thursday, 14 August 2014

Rewind: 1976 Nick Lowe Releases 'So It Goes' on Stiff Records





On August 14th 1976 funded by a £400 loan frpm Lee Brilleaux of Doctor Feelgood, 'So It Goes' by Nick Lowe became the first record released on Stiff Records. The label's marketing and advertising was often provocative and witty billing itself as "The World's Most Flexible Record Label". Other slogans were "We came. We saw. We left", and "If It Ain't Stiff, It Ain't Worth a ****"




Wednesday, 11 December 2013

Stiff Records - The Early Years Part Two 1977





BUY 10
A-Side: Neat Neat Neat.

Released on 18th February 1977, the 2nd single from The Damned coincided with the release of the very first British Punk album, and the debut LP for Stiff Records - 'Damned Damned Damned' (SEEZ 1). The single didn't reach the charts but the album did get to a respecatble #36 on the Chart.


BUY 11
A-Side: Less Than Zero.

The debut single from Elvis Costello came out 25th March 1977 and would also appear on his debut album 'My Aim is True' (SEEZ 3) - released two months later.

The song was also involved in Costello's infamous performance on Saturday Night Live on December 17, 1977. Following pressure from his record company to play the song on the show, Costello began to play the song, but he stopped after only a few bars, saying that "there's no reason to do this song here." He then launched into an unannounced performance of 'Radio Radio', a song he had promised not to play. As a result, he was banned from the show until 1989.


BUY 12
A-Side: England's Glory.
B-Side: Dream Tobacco.

'England’s Glory' (BUY 12) was Max Wall’s first single, released at the princely age of 69.  He’d spent the 30s and 40s working the music hall circuit and, by the 70s, was enjoying quite a renaissance.  John Cleese openly acknowledged Wall as an influence on him and the Python’s Ministry of Silly Walks.  He found a new, younger audience when he joined Mott The Hoople’s Rock ‘n’ Roll Circus tour.  And he won rave reviews for his forays into straight acting, with The Guardian declaring “Max Wall makes Olivier look like an amateur.”
A true eccentric, Wall played King Bruno the Questionable in Terry Gilliam’s Jabberwocky.  And right up until his death in 1990 he never owned a telephone, preferring instead to attend his local phone booth at 1.00pm every weekday should he receive an incoming call.
'England’s Glory' - written by Ian Dury, one of his ‘list’ songs à la Reasons To Be Cheerful - was Stiff’s first venture away from punk and pub rock.  The first physical evidence that this record label could do something other than surf a musical wave or try and break new acts.  It was the single that first defined Stiff as a variety act in itself.  But for all this, it failed to sell in spectacular fashion, the label’s first true stiff.  But it was revived soon after to appear on a compilation album, the appropriate titled, Hits Greatest Stiffs.


BUY 13
B-Side: Quickstep.

This is probably one of my favourite singles of the early Stiff Records catalogue.

The Adverts had been on the go since 1976 and their first big break came when they got a deal with Stiff and in April this classic Punk single was released.

" I wonder what we’ll play for you tonight
Something heavy or something light
Something to set your soul alight
I wonder how we’ll answer when you say
‘We don’t like you – go away
Come back when you’ve learnt to play"

The Adverts went out on tour with label mates The Damned and Stiff, as was their forte came up with a classic tour poster:



BUY 14
A-Side: Alison.

The second single from Elvis Costello didn't even dent the chart and yet it is, in my honest opinion, one of his finest.

 
BUY 15
A-Side: Red Shoes.
B-Side: Mystery Dance.

'Red Shoes' is another that for some strange reason totally escaped the charts and yet Elvis found himself on Top of the Pops performing it!


BUY 16
This Side: Whole Wide World.
That Side: Semaphore Signals.

This little ditty is easily in my Top Ten Favourite Singles ever released. Released in August 1977 as a single but it had appeared first on the Stiff Album 'A Bunch of Stiffs' (SEEZ 2). The reasoning from Stiff behind this was that Eric had gone fishing and it had taken them 2 weeks to track him down to get into the studio to record a b-side!
Nick Lowe features on Guitar and Bass on This Side as does drummer Steve Goulding of Graham Parker and the Rumour. On That Side featured Ian Dury on Drums!
The song itself was written by Eric after he had fallen out with his girlfriend.


BUY 17

Stiff Records demonstrated their craftiness with the release of the debut single by former Kilburn and the High Roads frontman Ian Dury. Two months after it was released it was deleted after 19,000 copies were sold. "We're a record company not a museum", they expalined. What they didn't tell anyone was that they immediately planned to release it in France and soon shops in the UK were loaded with boxes of the single!


BUY 18
A-Side: Problem Child.

Issued in September 28 1977, 'Problem Child' was a preview of the up and coming second album 'Music For Pleasure' produced by Pink Floyd's Nick Mason! The single failed again to reach the charts. The single also featured new guitarist Lu Edmonds.


BUY 19
A-Side: Suffice to Say.

Liverpool based band who got signed to Stiff after their debut performance at Eric's in Liverpool supporting Elvis Costello.

 
BUY 20 
B-Side: Blame It On Cain (Live)/Mystery Dance (Live).

Stiff's first Top 20 single in the UK and of course Elvis Costello's first hit single after three previous attempts. The single spent 11 weeks on the chart.


BUY 21

Originally recorded by Tony Orlando in the 60's, the final Stiff single by Nick Lowe failed to make any impression on the charts.


BUY 22
A-Side: Police Car.
B-Side: On Parole.

Former Pink Fairie Larry Wallis' debut solo single. At the time he was an in house producer for Stiff Records. On the single he is backed by two members of Eddie and the Hot Rods - Paul Gray on Bass and Steve Nicol on Drums.
Both songs here are probably better known by the cover versions: Motorhead doing 'On Parole' and The Members doing 'Police Car'. But I've always had a soft spot for Larry's version.


 BUY 23

My favourite Ian Dury single. Gene Vincent was one of Dury's musical heroes and it is said that the death of the rock and roll legend in 1971 forced Dury to start taking his position in Kilburn and the High Roads more seriously.


BUY 24
D-Side: Don't Cry Wolf.
D-Side: One Way Love.

Issued on 11th December 1977 this was the final single of The Damned for Stiff and for the line-up that featured Brian James and Lu Edmonds. The band would split in 1978 and would then get back together again in 1979 where they would enjoy far greater chart success than their first couple of years of output.

The first 5,000 copies of the single were in Pink Vinyl, though I have to say I can't ever recall seeing a black vinyl one apart from in pictures!


There are a number of other releases from 1977 that do not have the BUY catalogue numbers and I will have a look at some of them in the next post.

Monday, 9 December 2013

Stiff Records - The Early Years Part One 1976


I've been listening to some early material by Nick Lowe and Elvis Costello and it got me thinking about Stiff Records and maybe doing a post about the early days of the label and including some of the fascinating music (and maybe even some of the non-fascinating music) that they released between 1976-1979. And so here it is.

We begin at the beginning. Dave Robinson and Jake Rivera received a £400 loan from Lee Brilleaux of Doctor Feelgood to start 'The World's Most Flexible Label' and on August 14th 1976 they released the first of many great singles.

Nick Lowe had recently departed Brinsley Schwarz and this was his first solo outing for which he was paid the princely sum of £45 to record two songs.



BUY 1
A-Side: So It Goes.

Fortunately for Robinson/Rivera the single went on to sell 10,000 copies via specialist shops and mail order.


BUY 2

The Pink Fairies (featuring Larry Wallis) had been around in the early seventies as part of the psychedelic scene and were responsible for performing many free shows. By the time Stiff released this single (the Fairies first for three years) they had only been back together a year or so after performing a one off reunion show at the Roundhouse in London in 1975 (they originally disbanded in 1973).




BUY 3
A-Side: All Aboard.
These two links are not actually the original Stiff Records recordings but live versions of the songs performed by The Roogalator vocalist Danny Adler from a concert in 2010 (I think).

With it's 'Meet the Beatles' cover artwork The Roogalator were nothing Beatlesque, but merely another Pub Rock band who had been doing the rounds since 1972. The single 'All Aboard' was a one off release for the band on Stiff Records.



 
BUY 4
B-Side: Styrofoam.

Sean Tyla was another Pub Rocker who had been around since the early 70's. He had been a member of Ducks Deluxe before they split in 1975 and Tyla signed a one single deal with Stiff in 1976. To date he is still playing live with reformed versions of both Ducks Deluxe and the Tyla Gang.




BUY 5
B-Side: Caravan Man.

Lew Lewis was a Canvey Island man who had played in The Southside Jug band with pre-Feelgood members Lee Brilleaux and John B. Sparks. He had also played with Eddie and the Hot Rods, leaving them due to a fall out with management. This was his first solo outing and the band backing him was Doctor Feelegood.

Stiff Records fortunes were about to change for the better with the release of their 6th single. It would be the first British Punk Single and it was by a Croydon based band The Damned.




BUY 6
A-Side: New Rose.
B-Side: Help.

Nick Lowe produced the single as he would the first British Punk Rock Album, 'Damned Damned Damned' (released on the 18th February 1977). The single also became the first Stiff single to reach the charts, even though it was just the lower reaches - #81!




BUY 7
A-Side: Another World.

The first non-British artist on Stiff Records was former Television and Heartbreakers member Richard Hell along with his backing band the Voidoids (that featured future Ramones drummer Marc Bell aka Marky Ramone). It's a mystery to me that one of the great songs of the whole Punk/New Wave movement, Blank Generation,  is reduced to merely a b-side! Though saying that, Sire Records had the right approach when they released it in September 1977 as the lead single off of the 'Blank Generation' album.




BUY 8
A-Side: Silver Shirt.
B-Side: This is the World.

Sean Tyla produced the one and only Stiff single by Nottinghamshire based Plummet Airlines. They were another Pub Rock band who had been doing the rounds in the early 70's and got a break with a John Peel Session in 1976. Various members of the band would go on to other groups like The Darts, Brainiac 5 and The Pogues.




BUY 9
A-Side: Leaving Here.

United Artists Record label had prevented the release of the debut single because the band were still under contract to them (and the label were refusing to release the debut album). It was then released on the French label Skydog.

Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Nick Lowe - Quality Street (2013)



Anyone who knows me will be fully aware that Christmas Music is something I find quite unappealing (and I don't like listening to any Christmas Music before at least a week before the event) but I'm going to have to change my mind for just one record! The brand new Nick Lowe album 'Quality Street' is a real smasher.

When approached by his label about making a Christmas album Nick Lowe's response was, "rather snooty and quite negative. I didn't want to soil my reputation", he told Uncut magazine. "But that feeling lasted about thirty-six and a half seconds, before I came to and thought, 'Vulgar, tawdry commercialism? Yes, please, when do we start?' Seriously, I thought, 'Wait a minute, this could be really good fun."

Listening to the album you can hear just how much fun it was.

From Nick Lowe's Website:
Quality Street: A Seasonal Selection For All The Family is a twinkling blend of traditional hymns, forgotten gems and Lowe originals. From the opening rockabilly-charged "Children Go Where I Send Thee" and the comfy hush of "Christmas Can't Be Far Away," the record includes the beatnik bop of "Hooves on the Roof" (written especially for the project by Ron Sexsmith), Roger Miller's wistful classic "Old Toy Trains," before wrapping up with a ska-flavored take on "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Every Day." Of course, it's all performed in Nick's singular style and, as Nick would say, "in a sleigh-bell free zone!"



  

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