Tuesday, June 28, 2016

An Eighties Challenge, Day Five

The fifth day of the Eighties Challenge I've been set, a selection of seven hand-picked tunes from that fine decade, gently buffed to a shine and hot-glued onto the web.

Whilst some bands had the legs to make it through the decade, more or less intact, not all were so lucky. Wikipedia has a handy selection of 'year in music' pages that list the hits but also the casualties, the bands that either disbanded or imploded. Such is the way of things not all of these bands stayed dead, they festered for awhile, sometimes feuded publicly, then reformed, with more or less the original line-up, usually for financial reasons. If this sounds cynical then, well, that's the music business for you.

Today's band have split, reformed, split again, reformed again, had members sacked, replaced, re-hired and sacked again. Back in the mid-eighties they looked like a bunch of fashion models and public school boys, which they possibly were, who wore cricket jumpers and blazers. The lead singer not only helped co-produce their debut album but was also credited on the liner notes for art direction and styling of the sleeve. They covered Roxy Music, they had the Artists Against Apartheid logo printed on their releases, they were terribly right on. They released a string of singles that had some success, one featuring the dulcet tones of Belinda Carlisle, whilst their biggest hit was used on the soundtrack for a dystopian sci-fi film that starred Mark Hamill (and flopped so badly at the cinema that the producer went bankrupt). Today's band is, of course, Then Jerico.

I toyed with picking Big Area, the big hit from the bad movie, but that would perhaps have been a wee bit too obvious a choice (plus I couldn't find the promo with clips of Mark Hamill and Bob Peck in an Edgley Optica on YouTube, maybe I just imagined seeing that on Top Of The Pops). Instead I've plumped for The Motive, a track from their debut album, 'First (The Sound of Music)', the LP of which I still have. The video ticks a lot of Eighties boxes, with back projected footage, slow motion and moving camera shots, with the added bonus of lead singer posing. Lovely.

Some years after their big success I got see to Then Jerico up close and personal at The Wedgewood Rooms (though they were billed as Then Jerico II and were basically a vehicle for lead singer Mark Shaw to belt out the hits, aided on stage by the silent, brooding and be-jacketed figure of Andy Taylor). Yes, that Andy Taylor, him from Duran Duran and The Power Station. Andy Taylor who noodled away on his guitar whilst simultaneously puffing away on a home-made cigarette of some description. Come to think of it I think I've got the set-list here somewhere. err.. but I digress. Here then, from 1987, is The Motive.. the nights come down and moments glow, the rats go by and by...


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