Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Difficult Listening 14 - British Isles weirdness

In Records > Show & Tell.
Records1346 of 2752Difficult Listening 15 - The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah BandGeorge Harrison 'All Things Must Pass'
11
Love it
0
Like it

MALKEYMALKEY loves this.
MyCountryMyCountry loves this.
SEAN68SEAN68 loves this.
sklo42sklo42 loves this.
BenBen loves this.
CaperkidCaperkid loves this.
racer4fourracer4four loves this.
iggyiggy loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
EZaEZa loves this.
vetraio50vetraio50 loves this.
See 9 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 7 years ago

    artfoot
    (367 items)

    This is by no means a comprehensive list or even the weirdest of the music that has come from the British Isles, just a few that have managed to stick in my record collection. They all may have more familiarity to folks in the UK but in the US they got little of the exposure they deserved. Presented here in a reverse chronology (because I like the cover of the first album) they are -

    1 - INCONTINENT by Fad Gadget (1981). Frank Tovey knew he had a weak heart and he was likely to die at an early age. He also knew that he didn't have the dedication (he called it "co-ordination") to be a musician. So, he dropped out of music school, studied with mimes and clowns, and taught himself about synthesizers and sequencers. He adopted the stage name Fad Gadget in the late 1970s and started the industrial revolution. Depeche Mode and all those droning techno-pop bands that quickly followed owe it all to the dark and often dangerous shows by Fad Gadget.

    2 - DANDRUFF by Ivor Cutler (1974). Ivor Cutler, longtime president of The Noise Abatement Society, is possibly most remembered as Buster Bloodvessel, the bus driver in The Beatles "Magical Mystery Tour" movie. Part music, part poetry, part storytelling, this album has 45 tracks of astonishing observations.

    3 - ELECTRIC SHOCKS by Roger Ruskin Spear (1972). Best known as a member of The Bonzo Dog Band, Roger Ruskin Spear played saxophone and taught 3-dimensional art. This is one of those rarely heard gems-of-an-album - I'm still undecided about Patrick Moore but otherwise, there is not a bad track on it.

    logo
    Records
    See all
    70s Soul Jazz/Funk 45 - Anubis - Ecology - Salt City - VG++ rare!
    70s Soul Jazz/Funk 45 - Anubis - Ec...
    $1,675
    Ike Quebec Soul Samba Blue Note 4114 Mono Vinyl LP First Press 1962 EX
    Ike Quebec Soul Samba Blue Note 411...
    $124
    THE JIMI HENDRIX EXPERIENCE Electric Ladyland 1/2/2/2 TRACK Superb COVER & AUDIO
    THE JIMI HENDRIX EXPERIENCE Electri...
    $129
    Bruce Springsteen
    Bruce Springsteen "Born To Run" scr...
    $1,630
    logo
    70s Soul Jazz/Funk 45 - Anubis - Ecology - Salt City - VG++ rare!
    70s Soul Jazz/Funk 45 - Anubis - Ec...
    $1,675
    See all

    Comments

    1. EZa EZa, 7 years ago
      Interesting...Great names: Incontinent, Dandruff, Electric Shocks!
    2. iggy iggy, 7 years ago
      Excellent! I was hoping for some of these posts lately. Love it!
    3. MALKEY MALKEY, 7 years ago
      just fab harry the first image just instantly reminds me of the film the wicker man with edward woodward summer isle oh memorys
      thank you kind sir !!!!!!!!

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.