The Fun Boy Three was an offshoot
project of ex-members of The Specials; Terry Hall, Lynval Golding and
Neville Staple. After The Specials' single for “Ghost Town” peaked
at number one on the UK charts, Golding, Hall and Staple left the
band to form The Fun Boy Three.
The band had near-instant success in the U.K. with
their first few singles which all reached the Top 20 and their
self-titled debut album which reached the Top 10. The album had a
spare sound with tribal drumming and chanting, Terry Hall's
deadpan vocals and background vocal support from Bananarama. The band
also returned the favor by contributing to Bananarama's “Really
Saying Something” single.
The Fun Boy Three's follow-up and
would-be final album, Waiting , was produced by Talking Head
David Byrne. It featured full-arrangements in a significantly more
classical-pop vein. It features David Byrne on guitar and ex-Specials
trumpet player Dick Cuthell as well. Byrne's production really does
suit the songs well. And the results are a cohesive, satisfying
listen.
There are a few tangos (“The Tunnel
Of Love” and “The Things We Do”) a few socio-political songs
(“The More I See The Less I Believe” and “The Pressure Of
Life”), a few darkly comical autobiographical songs (“Well Fancy
That” and “We're Having All The Fun”), music hall via reggae
(“The Farmyard Connection”) and the bands' arrangement of “Our
Lips Are Sealed”, which was co-written by Hall with Jane Wiedlin.
It's a poignantly darker version of The Go-Go's classic bubblegummy
rendition.
All in all an awesome record. Definitely
a sleeper of an album. Highly recommended.
I.R.S. Records was one of the most
influential American record labels of the New Wave era. International
Record Syndicate was the brainchild of Miles Copeland III (older
bother of Police drummer Stewart). Copeland founded the British
record labels Illegal Records and Faulty Products in 1977 and 1978,
respectively. He had previously established a relationship with A&M
Records and in 1979 along with Jay Boberg and Carlos Grasso, made a
deal with them to distribute IRS Records.
I.R.S. was responsible for exposing the
general public at large with the likes of The Go-Go's, The Cramps,
R.E.M., The Fleshtones, Wall Of Voodoo, The Buzzcocks, Oingo Boingo,
The Fall and countless other alternative music acts of the late
1970's and 1980's.
Released in 1981, I.R.S. Greatest Hits
Volume 2 & 3 is a double-album sampler of then-current
recordings, released on the label. It personally introduced me to
several bands when I first heard it. Namely The Cramps, The
Fleshtones, The Buzzcocks, The Damned and The Stranglers. The album
features two songs by Stewart Copeland's pseudonym while he was in
The Police, rare single tracks from both Squeeze and The Police. It
features notable entries from somewhat obscure acts like Humans,
Fashion, Skafish, Payoloa$ and Patrick D. Martin. It also features
curiosities from ex-Velvet Underground cellist John Cale, ex-Damned
guitarist Brian James, ex-Squeeze keyboardist/BBC personality Jools
Holland, and BBC6 personality Tom Robinson. It contains great songs
by The Buzzcocks, The Damned, The Fall, The Stranglers, The Cramps
and The Fleshtones.
The album is inconsistently excellent
and overall is a pretty good representation of the music that I.R.S.
Records. It was a pretty important album in shaping my own musical
tastes growing up. There can't be too many better albums of it's
kind. It's a great alternative music sampler of the early 1980's.
Highly Recommended!
Here's the video review (including an awesome K-Tel-esque commercial) :
New York's The Fleshtones
are one of the longest-running CBGB's era bands. They've continued
for the last 39 years (since 1976) without a single year of
inactivity. Their blend of freakbeat soulful garage rock has always
resonated with live audiences throughout the world. In 1980 they
signed with Miles Copeland's legendary I.R.S. Records. They released
two magnificent studio albums (Roman Gods and Hexbreaker),
two EP's (Up Front
and American Beat '84),
about a dozen American and European singles and two live albums;
Speed Connection: Live In Paris 85 and
Speed Connection II:
The Final Chapter(Live In Paris 85).
The
album was recorded live at The Gibus Club, Paris, France on March 7,
1985. The band were booked to play nine shows at the club over a
two-week span, in two segments (March 5–9 and March 13–16). The
band had recorded the first show (March 5, 1985) and - at the urging
of the French division of I.R.S. Records' vice-president (and
original Police guitarist) Henri Padovani - subsequently
rush-released it to sell at the venue during their two-week stay. The
record was titled SpeedConnection: Live In Paris 85
(ILP 26412) and was only released in France. The cover art was by
famous French illustrator Serge Clerc. However the band was unhappy
with the record as lead singer Peter Zaremba had a severe case of
laryngitis the night that show was recorded.
The
band owed the American I.R.S. Records one more record to fulfill
their contractual obligations. In September 1985 the label released
Speed Connection II - The Final Chapter (Live In Paris 85)
- a recording of their third night (3/7/85) at the Gibus Club.
"Return to the Haunted House" was actually a studio
recording with canned applause taken from the live album Rock Will
Never Die by Michael Schenker Group. The same recording also later
appeared (minus the canned applause) on the AngryYears 84-86
compilation album on Impossible Records in 1993. The cover artwork
was by organist and lead singer Peter Zaremba. Both albums were
produced by ex-Strangelove Richarard Gottehrer of “I Want Candy
Fame, who had also produced albums by The Go-Go's & Blondie.
The
album contained many cover versions of songs by other artists.
"Trouble" and "Haunted House" by The Kingsmen,
"Wind Out" by R.E.M., "La La La La Reprise" by
The Blendells, "When the Night Falls" by The Eyes, "Twelve
Months Later" by The Sheep (who were actually The Strangeloves
under a pseudonym) and "Hide & Seek" by Bunker Hill.
In critical terms, Speed Connection
really only hints at what a Fleshtones show was like in the 1980's
(as sadly the horn section hasn't really been a fixture of live shows
since the mid 90's). Peter Zaremba's laryngitis is only partially to
blame for the lack of success of the record. A comparatively limp recording is
basically what mars the proceedings. Speed Connection II is
far and away the superior of the two recordings. Although both albums have nearly identical tracklistings, everything sounds slightly better on SC:II and Zaremba's voice is in fine, wild form. The band is tight
as it generally always was at the time (and still is for that
matter). R.E.M.'s Peter Buck makes a special guest appearance on two
songs on guitar and the horn section sounds nice and appropriately
sloppy. The album received uniformly excellent reviews at the time of
its' September 1985 release but the label did literally nothing to
promote it.
I'm
wondering if this is the best starting place for a Fleshtones novice
to start looking into what the band sounded like in the 1980's. This
is possibly the best representation of the band's live prowess. As it
has a loose, sloppy and sweaty soundtrack to a mid 80's party appeal.
Here's The Video Review:
Special Thanks: Joe Bonomo & No Such Thing As Was, Maxwell Max, Robert Barry Francos and Zorro Zero & The Warlocks.
2,500 Redd Kross Fans Can't Be Wrong (Sympathy For The Record Industry/1993)
Lady In The Front Row (This Way Up/1993)
Visionary (This Way Up/1994)
After the commercial
failure of Third Eye to turn Redd Kross into a houshold name, the
band left Atlantic Records and released a few UK-only indie singles.
Super Sunny Christmas was released in late 1991 in Australia on Inspid
Vinyl, Trance was released in the Spring of 1992 on Seminal Twang in
the UK and Switchblade Sister was released in Summer of 1993 on This
Way Up Records in the UK and in Canada.
Sympathy For The Record
Industry collected various tracks from those releases for the
six-song ten-inch” vinyl release of 2,500 Redd Kross Fans Can’t
Be Wrong (a spoof on Elvis Presley's 50 Million Elvis Fans Can't Be
Wrong). Highlights include the early 70's glammy “Switchblade
Sister” (which should have appeared on their then-new album
Phaseshifter), the glam/grunge rave-up“Trance” and its' B-Side “Byrds &
Fleas” co-written bv Jeff McDonald and future-wife and Go-Go
Charlotte Caffey.
Next we have the Lady
In The Front Row ten-inch single from 1993 on This Way Up
Records. The title track appeared on their Phaseshifter album
and is a slice power pop perfection. A re-recording of “Standing In
Front Of Poseur” from their self-titled 1980 debut EP. Also are a
cover of The Kinks' “Fancy” and PJ Harvey's “Oh My Lover”.
Lastly
we have the Visionary single
from 1994 (also on This Way Up). The title track, again from
Phaseshifter has a
metaly riff and has big harmony vocals from the McDonald brothers.
The B-sides are cover of The Beatles “It Won't Be Long” as
performed by Queen and a live acoustic version of “Visionary”.
These
are nice little unique starting places for the uninitiated, granted
there are better places to investigate as to who Redd Kross are.
However for the vinyl fanatic these three ten-inches (the only three
released by the band) are fine additions to any power-pop, proto-grunge, glam pop fans collection. Or just check out Neurotica, Researching The Blues or Third Eye.