jamespowers said:Heheheheh! That is why they are still around and Spandau Ballet are where? Who are they following now? lol
I have to admit that I liked their first Album with True on it. The well dressed similarity is where it ends though. Their style is totally different. I could just see Spandau Ballet singing Wild Boys---yeah right.
Regards,
J
Lincsong said:I was the only teenager in the 1980's who listened to Frank Sinatra.[huh]
Salv (on Robert Palmer) said:He'd always been in R&B bands since the early 60's starting when he was 15. He replaced Jess Roden in The Alan Bown Set in 1969, then joined a jazz-rock band called Dada where he met Elkie Brooks They formed a pretty good Brit R&B band called Vinegar Joe, and recorded some scorching soul/funk/R&B stuff in '72/'73. The only track of theirs that I can remember was a single called Black Smoke From The Calumet which was a fantastic slab of Brit soul. His early solo stuff was recorded with New Orleans funk legends The Meters, with help from Lowell George of Little Feat. Singles like Give Me An Inch and Every Kind Of People were excellent, but they came before his huge success with Addicted To Love and were very different from the later solo stuff.
nightandthecity said:I was born in 1949 myself and I was playing in post-punk bands at the time. I played occassionally with the Mekons and one of the regular members was then in his 40s.
Posted by NightandtheCity:
A surprising number of early 80s pop/rock figures were in their thirties. Though having said that I can only think of Debbie Harry off hand.
Senator Jack said:I didn't realize we had so many ex-punks in the lounge. Comes as quite a surprise. I'm still waiting for a Jam reunion, though it looks like that isn't going to happen, and it would be great if The Damned and The Sex Pistols would swing through the States again. Saw the Pistols on the first reunion tour in 96 but missed them in 2003 (They played Trump Casino? Who knew?)
...
Regards,
Senator Jack
Salv said:I wasn't really a punk but I liked a lot of punk and post-punk music, and a lot of early UK punks came from the soul/funk scene that I was part of. I did manage to see the Pistols in 1977, in Plymouth in Devon, during their secret tour, and that was an incredible gig. I saw most of the major bands in '77/'78 - The Jam, The Clash and, my favourite band, Buzzcocks (I saw them a few times) - but missed The Damned. New Rose is still one of the best records to come out of that period, along with Buzzcocks Boredom and The Cortinas Fascist Dictator.
Quigley Brown said:These guys, too....
jamespowers said:Our House and Welcome to the House of Fun.
Salv said:I have to say, I'm very impressed! I always wished I'd bought more Mekons records - the only one I have is Where Were You on Fast from 1978. When were you with them?
nightandthecity said:... must have been around 1982-86. They had a girl played the fiddle, I forget her name, and I depped for her. The Leeds music scene was very close knit back then, there was a lot of depping between bands.
"Where Were You" is my fave! Great record.
jamespowers said:Ok, I might as well get esoteric here as well. Name the song done by The Bugles. The video was the first played on MTV.
Bonus points for the one done by The Vapors as well.
J