Word #68
October 2008
Cover star – John Lennon

Word shuffle
1). P25 – A list of pop’s worst fashion crimes entitled “You’re not going out like that!” – includes tattoos (“what musicians did instead of drawing band logos on their maths books”), satin tour jackets (“essential raiment for life on the road in the ’70s or if you were a mobile DJ, a chilkdren’s enetertainer or Dabve Lee Travis”) and the winner was band t-shirts when worn by idiots (“a T4 presenter in a £400 Led Zep t-shirt! Cat Deeley in a Motorhead tank top that costs more than your house!”)
2). P2 – a full page advert for Perfect Symmetry by Keane, released on 13/10/2008.
3). P46 – Rob Fitzpatrick uses http://www.allmusic.com to investigate the most commonly used girls’ names in popular songs. The top 3 in reverse order are Louise with 409 uses (Human League, Scott Walker and Baby Bird), at 2 is Rose/Rosie with 468 (from The Albion Morris Band to The Fall) and reigning supreme is Laura with a whopping 896 (including Frank Sinatra, Johnny Mercer and Sidney Bechet.
4). P69 – a page of photos to go with David Hepworth’s extended feature on the origins of The Wire (TV show, not the leftfield music periodical).
5). P28 – the first of a two page Facetime feature on Mike Skinner by Peter Robinson . He asks Mike if he always planned to end The Streets after five albums. “Well I have been making an album every two years for ten years… And that’s the framework I’ve been working towards. The thing that scares me is that in another ten years, when I’ve got kids and a mortgage and I don’t give a fuck, I might want to make another Streets album. But once I finished the next album I’m never going to speak to another record label in my life. I’m absolutely definitely not retiring from music completely, but I don’t need record labels.”
Interesting
The 20 Best and Worst are pop’s fashion moments. In the worst category go pretending to be in the Matrix (“calf-length black leather coat, wraparound sunglasses, bumfluff goatee and a Marilyn Manson CD”), Nick Beggs’ hairbeads (“even worse than Keith Richards tonsorial refuse heap”) and piano keyboard ties (“We blame Jools Holland”). Celebrated are Frankie Says shirts (“not so much a T-shirt as a hit pop record in its own right”), Chris Lowe’s entire wardrobe (“he always pulls it off”) and (Adam) Ant gear (“more quality foolishness only available by mail order from the back pages of Smash Hits“).
Jazzie B tells us about his youth. “Back in the ’70s it was all about Bruce Lee. I had the kung-fu cult real heavy. We used to do the late-night shows at the Holloway Odeon, come out practising our kung-fu moves.”
Massive Queen fan, Kate Mossman, interviews Paul Rodgers who’s singing with the band on an upcoming tour. She asks if it’s true that John Deacon has disappeared without trace. “I have yet to meet John. I would like to. I understand his point, though, wanting to step back from life – I was very ready to do that before I met Queen, but here I am. I’m always saying, “Will he come along tonight? Tomorrow?” It’s like Waiting For Godot!”
Andrew Harrison asks “Who had time to listen to any pop music when the Olympics were on? Not me. Someone at the BBC knew what they were doing though. For the final highlights package they replayed Usain Bolt’s victories to Eric B & Rakim’s Follow The Leader, Bolt’s legs pumping away to lines like “we travel magnificent speeds around the universe” and one of the great basslines.”
David Cavanagh reviews the DVD Dennis Potter At London Weekend Television (Vols 1 & 2). “Two interviews from The South Bank Show round off Volume 2 of the seven hour compilation. On the subject of censorship (his perennial professional hazard), Potter tells Melvyn Bragg he despairs of the broadcaster’s intransigent morality and hopes that the coming years will bring independent production companies and an end to the corporations’ duopoly. And they did. They bulldozed Potter’s fields of emancipation and built a brave new reality motorway. Britain’d foremost actors now aspire to Midsomer Murders.”
Longer article
The extra curricular obsessions and interests of a range of musicians.














































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