27 June 2024

Buddy of mine Bob White been owin' me five dollars for five years

Thursday music corner: Soul and R&B singer Moody Scott was born in Louisiana in 1944. He released at least seven singles from 1969 to 1975, on a range of labels, plus two further singles in 1983 and 1984. He also released an album, We Gotta Bust Outta The Ghetto. Scott's funky 1972 single I Don't Dig No Phoney, recorded with Dion & the Soul Brothers, provides a list of individuals whose integrity Mr Scott calls into question, either due to outtasight chicks failing to tell you about their other man, acquaintances who consistently fail to repay small personal loans, and Cadillac drivers who lack commensurately ostentatious accommodation.

Moody Scott - I Don't Dig No Phoney (1972)    


See also:
Music: Moody Scott - May I Turn You On (1971)
Music: David Batiste - Funky Soul (1970)
Music: The Stovall Sisters - Hang On In There (1971)

25 June 2024

The totemic London A to Z

If you threw a house party in London in the late twentieth century, before the smart phone rendered it redundant, you could guarantee that the following morning there would be a dog-eared copy of the A to Z [street atlas] behind the sofa, or under the coffee table, probably in a Tesco bag. Everybody had at least one. It was an essential aid in understanding London. It joined the dots and threw up obscure names printed over hitherto unexplored grids of streets: Alperton, Shooters Hill, Honor Oak, Tooting Graveney, Shacklewell, Childs Hill, Ladywell. It invited you to create your own personal map of London, discover your own secret routes, your own special places.

What might be lurking in these locations, waiting to be uncovered on a cold winter Saturday? Corner caffs with Pepsi signs. Second-hand record shops and rickety street markets. Edwardian villas which could be the setting for any number of sitcoms, or could even be the location for Elizabeth Taylor and Mia Farrow's home in Joseph Losey's Secret Ceremony. The photo of Syd Barrett leaning against a car on the back of 1970's "Barrett", has a late Victorian, monochrome backdrop which could have been any corner of London - hence, the photo romanticised just about every corner of London.

You could peruse the A to Z with the knowledge of who lived where - Sandy Denny in Wimbledon, before she moved to Muswell Hill, which was already legendary as the home of the Kinks. Arterial roads as grisly as Archway Road (Rod Stewart's place of birth) or Holloway Road (Joe Meek's studio) or Harrow Road (Mute Records HQ) could be made magic through their pop connections. 

Working out how to get from A to B, let alone to Z, was deeply intricate, slowly accrued knowledge. How do you get to Craven Cottage, or Claremont Road, or the Old Spotted Dog for a three o'clock kick off? When you put your transistor radio in a carrier bag, you remembered to stick your A to Z in there as well. 

- Bob Stanley, liner notes in Bob Stanley presents London A to Z: 1962-1973 (CD compilation), Ace Records, 2023 

20 June 2024

Let them do what they want, say what they like, be who they are

Thursday music corner: Jules Shear (b.1952) is an American singer-songwriter best known for composing 1980s chart singles All Through The Night for Cyndi Lauper, and If She Knew What She Wants for the Bangles. He also hosted the first 13 episodes of the MTV series Unplugged, which included an appearance by Crowded House and Tim Finn, amongst others. He has released 14 solo studio albums since 1983, with the most recent being Slower (2020). 

The catchy Do What They Want appeared on Shear's 2006 album Dreams Don't Count. The Youtube link below mis-labels the track as Accustomed to Clearness, another track from the album.

Jules Shear - Do What They Want (2006)

See also:
Music: Crowded House, Tim Finn & Jules Shear - Throw Your Arms Around Me (live, 1990)
Music: 'Til Tuesday - J For Jules (1989)
Music: Jules Shear - Steady (1985)