Chart Music: the Top Of The Pops Podcast - #58: 23.10.1980 – Top Of The Gear
Episode Date: April 16, 2021#58: 23.10.1980 – Top Of The GearThe latest episode of the podcast which asks: has anyone ever done that to someone else’s nostrils? Really?Neither willing to go out and pissed off ...with staying in, your favourite podcast about old episodes of Top Of The Pops elects to bury its head once more into the comforting bosom of the Eighventies, so come and join us, Pop-Crazed Youngsters – it’s a many-teated beast.This particular episode of The Pops sees our Thursday-evening treat still enclagged with the amorphous goo off the chrysalis it emerged from after the Musicians Union strike of the summer. They’ve had celebrity guests, a news section, two interviews with The Old Sailor and a wedding announcement from Dollar, but this week they’ve gone too far: they’ve done a tie-in with the 1980 Motor Show and filled the studio with cars that no-one can actually see and none of the audience gives the slightest fleck of a toss about. And oh dear; the combination of the smell of new car and the sight of bored-looking women in Talbot t-shirts standing about brings on predictable changes in our host, clad in a racing driver one-piece with the zip slung low: The Living Gnasher Badge… Musicwise, it’s cast-iron proof that 1980 really was the Ken of the Eighventies. Quo tap their noses at us as they lumber into the new decade. The Nolans get ready to rip through Japan like a four-headed Kay’s Catalogue Godzilla. Andy McCluskey gets given a bass in a doomed attempt to put him off his dancing. Poor Legs & Co get stared at by blokes in cars, like a Disco version of Never Go With Strangers. The Number One is more adult-orientated rammel. And DLT goes full-on PLP with Elkie Brooks. Rock Expert David Stubbs and Taylor Parkes join Al Needham for a leaf through the Exchange and Mart of Pop, swooping off on such tangents as how rubbish it’s going to be when we come out of lockdown, how unprepared your local market was for the onset of New Romantic, Gilbert O’Sullivan’s Erotic Meat Buffet, Eighties synth-duo intermarriage, and SCREW YOU, JOANNE GREENWOOD FROM CLASS 4A.Video Playlist | Subscribe | Facebook | Twitter | The Chart Music Wiki | Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hey!
Hey up, you pop-crazy youngsters youngsters and welcome to part two of episode 61 of Chart Music.
I'm your host Al Needham, with me once again are Sarah B.
Oi, oi.
And Simon Price.
Hello, hello. So, on the block for this episode is July the 25th, 2003.
And I'm not going to lie to you, Pop Crazy Youngsters, right now,
I'm feeling like a cross between a high court judge and me mam
when I took her in for her first currer.
She said I wasn't to worry if she didn't like anything
as she already had a pan of chips cut up at home waiting for her just in case.
I'm oblivious to this era and I'm fearful of this era.
Not going to lie.
What have you got cut up waiting at home for you
if you don't get along with this Top of the Pops?
My wrists.
I mean, it's a bit stupid
because it's still Top of the Pops.
It's still pretty much the same format.
It's still number one.
Still number one.
Sort of. Asterisk.
The acts that are on tonight,
there's very little that's shit in this episode, I have to say. number one still number one sort of asterisk the acts that are on tonight then then you know
there's very little that shit in this episode i have to say but i don't know fuck all about
virtually any of them so my first question to the panel is what is the difference between the music
of 2003 and the music of today because to my mind this episode could have gone on last week i think
the answer is very little and that may just be a function of us being old farts who can't differentiate the minute
differences and shifts in pop but i do think it's an objective uh sort of real fact that sort of new
trends and changes in in music have slowed right down probably from the late 90s onwards and yeah you could pretty much parachute most of this
episode into 2021 and very little of it would seem particularly anachronistic i suppose things that
have come along since include you know that kind of mumble rap stuff that you probably expect to
see some of that going on in a more modern episode kind of emo rap and all that business but other than that boy bands
you know will always be with us and dancehall jamaican reggae inflected hits and the sort of
token metal thing and if you sort of make the uh comparative leap backwards from 2023 sort of
18 years earlier than that which would be what 1985 oh my god so much as it would have changed
wouldn't it so yeah there's there's probably a certain kind of recirculation and recyclement of of sort of influence that is now
that the sort of churn of it is steadier maybe and there's kind of more cross-pollination now
between genres and genre is composting down and down and down but you know that was happening
here it's a tricky question that's
an imponderable which i'll have to ponder for a bit longer i only said it to delay having to go
through this episode so just tell me to fuck off and we'll get on with it all right then
pop craze junk says it is now time to go way back to july of. Always remember, we may coat down your favourite band or artist,
but we never forget, they've been on Top of the Pops more than we have.
We've got intruders in the building and they're eyeing up our talent.
Oi, teacher, leave those kids alone.
It's still number one.
It's Top of the Pops.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE Kids alone. It's still number one. It's Top of the Pops.
It's half past seven on Friday, July the 25th, 2003,
and Top of the Pops, as is its want in its waning years,
is on its arse.
The falling ratings of the show and calls for its demise has been an oft-used stick,
which the tabloids have beaten the BBC with ever since the early 90s,
and the show has been locked into a pattern of low ratings,
leading to a new producer, leading to a makeover, leading to rising ratings,
leading to falling ratings, leading to another producer producer and so on and so on panel it
seems like top of the pops has been on death row for 10 years by this point what's what's the reason
for that i mean there's kind of lots of reasons and and no reason i guess primarily anything that's
been going for this long it's kind of not a natural lifespan for a show is it
you know it's like animals kind of when you see like really old animals they always look really
weird because nature kind of does them in when they're still young the show's been going for 40
years and it sort of lost its way in that profound and irreparable way that long-running things
generally do it's like the center cannot hold whatever you're doing if you've been doing it for so long that like nobody who was involved in it at the start is still involved that culture
has changed every element has changed and there are such forces being brought to bear on it that
like nothing can survive that pressure it's like the simpsons has now been bad for longer than it
was great and its legacy is completely secure and it will always have been a great show but you know it is not what it was and the same thing has happened to top of the pops
really is that everything about it has changed and there's a kind of self-consciousness when
you start to focus intently on every aspect of a thing and try to analyze and micromanage what
exactly is going wrong and what's right and what do we like and what do we not like who's the
audience what side of the bed do they get out of in the morning how many
eyelashes do they have you can end up sort of destroying things by just over analyzing them
when you start a thing there's an innocence about it and everyone is let's put on a music show we'll
have some bands that'll be lovely and then after a few decades you're like but do people still like this and why and why not and
that process i think is just like it's just death by a thousand cuts isn't it i like this idea of
tv shows having a natural longevity like animals it's like the hayflick limit do you know about
that no yeah it's this theory i i learned it from uh going to one of those gunter von hagen's
exhibitions you know where he he plastinates human bodies.
It's this theory that biological cells in an animal's body
or human body can only replicate themselves
a finite number of times and then you just conk out.
This is why immortality is not a thing.
Although there are things that do challenge that.
For example, lobsters.
Lobsters, which some types of lobster can live to be at least 700
until some arsehole catches them and boils them in a pan.
But yeah, the hayflick limit for television programmes
possibly is a thing.
I was wondering about Top of the Pops in 2003
and it had a few predators out there, as do lobsters,
but the internet was not yet really one of them.
The internet was still in its inf of them and the internet was it's
still in this infancy and youtube hadn't even been launched yet i think i'm right in saying no
so in terms of getting your visual fix of pop um the internet really wasn't killing it but what
the internet was doing was changing the way people um kind of got together as music fans and how you
construct your identity as a music fan which in the past it would always
be a consensual group effort that you would be a rude boy or a meddler or a hip-hop kid but you
would be doing it kind of in definition against everything else that was going on and it was in
the context of everything else that was going on it would still have a nod to the rest of the world
and be part of that world and it was much easier by the early years of the millennium to consume your music and to construct your tribal identity it's not just
the center cannot hold the the center wasn't even there and being looked at you know top of the pops
was originally central to to culture but it sort of didn't play that role anymore so once upon a
time you know it would gather everything in all these genres every genre every little scene it
would gather in the sort of most popular versions of that
and then amplify them and make them more popular again.
Whether you're, you know, a jangly indie band like Orange Juice
or a horrible heavy metal band like Motorhead,
it would still have the function of taking you to that next level
and then bringing you into the homes of people in shitty little towns
who don't get to see gigs.
And I think that had kind of gone by the millennium.
I really do.
Top of the Pops was one of the BBC's flagship shows
alongside things like Match of the Day and Panorama.
But none of those other shows got fucked about with
as badly as Top of the Pops did.
By the time Top of the Pops had moved out to Fridays,
the charts had moved from Tuesdays to Sundays, which meant the charts were even more out of date by the time it got on Top of the pops had moved out to fridays the charts had moved from tuesdays to sundays
which meant the charts were even more out of date by the time it got on top of the pops yeah because
i suppose cduk on itv would be less than 24 hours after top of the pops but dealing with a brand new
chart because essentially cduk was using the midweek chart wasn't it you know yeah sort of a
spoiler for the you know the sunday evening chart so yeah
absolutely um in the fast-moving world of pop um i suppose top of the pops was looking pretty stale
by the time friday came around yeah yeah and of course with countdown uk when that became a thing
it turned out the bands were more interested in being on that than they were on top of the pops
because if you can get your shit out in front of the kids on a saturday morning just before they're going into town with a pocket money
it's a better situation for them that's a very clever bit of programming it's weird how it
becomes you know it's just it's not cool anymore i mean the kind of the great thing about it is
that it was never cool in some way but it kind of was by default i think and yeah i mean it's very
snazzy at this point but the trouble is as we know as we
have experienced in in our careers once you start trying to chase an audience and pander to them
like people know when they're being pandered to yeah even even dickheads know when you know they
go wait a minute you're pandering to me i don't like it yeah um so it's kind of it's just turning that way and that's you know
it's kind of in the the death spiral it's it's the poochy stage of top of the pops isn't it this
it really is they've rasterized this episode of top of the pops by 10 percent
however there has been a steady hand on this tiller for the past six years, and his name is Chris Cowie.
Born in Sunderland in 1961,
Chris Cowie went to Rye Hope Comprehensive School,
where his English and drama teacher was Malcolm Gerre,
who came to national attention in the mid-70s
when his school production of the David Essex film Stardust
made the cover of the NME
and was filmed for an episode of the London weekendx film Stardust made the cover of the NME and was filmed for an episode
of the London weekend art show Aquarius.
After the broadcast of that programme,
Gary was approached out of the blue
by a viewer called David Putnam
who persuaded him to pack up teaching
and get involved in TV.
After Gary landed a job
as a researcher at Tyne Tees,
he would regularly get former pupils, including Coway, involved, and in 1979 Coway was filmed and interviewed at his night job, DJing at the local Mecca Ballroom for Tyne Tees' new pop programme All Right Now.
After the interview, he was approached by Angela Wanfor, the head of Time Teaser's kids programming, and invited to audition for a presenting gig.
He was immediately picked up by the station and given the job of co-presenting Check It Out, a local bi-weekly youth show,
which is best known nowadays for the interview with Public Image Limited, which they commenced by showing the band a film of local band The Angelic Up,
starts being interviewed by Coway as they took a stroll along the Tyne,
where they accused John Lydon of selling out
and being an old man,
called Public Image the worst band ever,
and stated that the Sex Pistols
would have been a hundred times better
with Jimmy Percy as their lead singer,
which led to Lydden tossing his mic at
coway and walking off set and also effing as well as jeffing after all right now and check it out
while i'm down in 1982 gary was given the job of producing a new tiny's pop show for the brand new
channel for the tube and while cowie was still working as a presenter he
also became a trainee researcher on the show and by the mid-80s had worked his way up the ranks to
become involved with tube specials and outside broadcasts in 1987 just before the tube was phased
out cowie went freelance as an assistant producer and linked up with Gary and 1-4's new
production companies, leading him to get involved with Wired, Big World Cafe, The White Room,
Jonathan Ross Presents, Channel 4's mid-90s coverage of Glastonbury and linking up with
Gary again to co-produce the first televised Brit Awards since the Fleetwood Fox debacle.
In the spring of 1997, while he and Gary were working on creating a TV version of the Pepsi chart show for Channel 5,
he was approached by the BBC to take over from Rick Blacksall as the producer of Top of the Pops
and rescue a programme that was on the verge of being axed.
Pops and rescue a program that was on the verge of being axed. Once installed as the new boss of the Pops he reinforced changes that had already been set in motion by the interim producer Mark
Wells such as phasing out the practice of celebrity guest presenters and replacing them with a pool of
Radio 1 DJs and CBBC presenters and getting acts to record performances in the studio in advance before
their new singles had been released in order to use them when they actually made the charts.
He also scrapped Red Hot Pop by Vince Clark as the theme tune in preference of crashing
straight into the first single of the night.
More importantly, he clamped right down on videos unless absolutely necessary,
telling record companies that if they wanted their acts on the show, they would have to appear on set
or not at all. This culminated in the most complaints ever made for an episode of Top of
the Pops in December of 1997, when he was told that the Teletubbies, who had got to number one that week, would be unable to appear in the studio because they never left Teletubby land.
Leading Cowey to play the video for only 40 seconds at the end.
Yeah, fuck you, Tipsy Whipsy or whatever the fuck you're called.
In May of 1998, he commissioned a new-ish theme tune, a
drum and bass version of Whole Lotta Love,
a new, cleaner,
60s-inspired branding, which he
plastered all over the set.
Then, in 2001,
the BBC decided to
push his senders out to four episodes
a week, which would require
more space at Elstree, meaning
that Top of the Pops had to squat at the
Riverside Studios for a bit and was eventually brought back to its spiritual home in Television
Centre in a studio built to Cowey's exact specifications and relaunched once again.
While Cowey was being credited for writing the ship adding on an extra three million viewers by the end of his first year his paymasters sort out new revenue streams for the pops franchising the show out to
germany france italy netherlands and turkey with the bbc version being exported to 87 countries
sometimes intact other times with a local presenter doing the links. This, alongside the Top of the Pops magazine
which was first published in 1995 as a rival to Smash's
and was selling half a million copies a month at its peak
video and DVD sales of Top of the Pops performances
and a compilation CD series
meant that Top of the Pops was bringing in an estimated £20 million a year to the BBC coffers.
In 2001, the first edition of the Top of the Pops Awards,
an attempt to give the BBC its own Brits, was broadcast,
and a year later, Top of the Pops Saturday,
a spin-off show bolted onto BBC One's Saturday morning programming, was introduced.
onto BBC One's Saturday morning programming was introduced.
However, by the summer of 2003, the viewing figures are dropping again and Cowie has been making noises about more wholesale changes.
He's already said that the top 40 is full of crap
because they're dictated by record companies
and no longer fulfils its role of providing a list
of the most popular
singles in the country possibly due to the deployment of judy zook satin tour jackets
in an era where 20 000 single sales can bag you a number one single he's pushing for the charts to
be determined by the value of sales as opposed to volume and for radio plays to have more of an influence
as they do in America.
So, yes, Chris Cowey, a man with a rock-solid pedigree
and also someone who clearly got what Top of the Pops
was supposed to be all about.
In the interview for The Guardian
to commemorate his first year in the job,
he said,
the most important thing about Top of the Pops
is that it's BBC One at 7.30 prime time.
I remember watching it as a kid and your dad would like something, your mum would like something else,
my brother and sister would like other things.
It's real family viewing.
Well, is it?
Is it now?
First of all, there's so much to unpack with that whole backstory of gary and
cowie yeah i know sorry i waffled on pop craig's youngsters but i had to get all that shit out
because the footage of the uh of the rye hope comprehensive which is uh um just outside
sunderland um their production of stardust um directed by mr gary yeah um it's there i'm sure
you'll put it on the uh on the on the definitely. But yeah, if you watch it, I mean, first of all,
you've got Russell Harty introducing it.
And I don't get it.
I don't get why NME and ITV are so interested in this.
It's what schools do or did.
I suppose you can compare it to all the fuss
over the Langley Schools Music Project, if you remember that.
So for those who don't know what, that was in 1976 and 77,
there was a schoolteacher in rural Canada called Hans Fenger
who got the children to record these enthusiastic
but very lo-fi versions of songs like Calling Occupants
and Help Me Rhonda and Space Oddity,
complete with all the sort of guileless bangs and crashes
of a typical junior school orchestra,
but performed with this real joy and charm.
And the tapes were rediscovered and released as an album in 2001.
And it kind of went viral,
and it's now considered a masterpiece of outsider music.
And it was actually performed live at the Royal Festival Hall in 2002
as part of David Bowie's Meltdown Festival with London school kids.
Instead of, what they should have done was get the middle aged survivors
of the 70s recordings
that would have been amazing but the point
with Langley schools is it was
discovered decades later and
therefore it served as an evocative
time capsule which might have been the
case with the Rye Hope Comprehensive
Stardust if the tapes had been
discovered years later but what I don't get
I'm really amazed that NME and itv gave a shit at the time what's what's that well before that they'd done a production of
tommy right and i think on both occasions they they did the stage show before the actual films
came out all right okay i think gary was seen as stereotypical 70s trendy teacher oh god isn't he
just yes fuck yeah by the way there's loads of
wrongness in that right hope thing i mean they they stage a new faces panel show and there's
a girl group who are billed as the ronettes but they sing to do run run which is a crystal song
and that really annoys me for a score but the panel has this limp-wristed gay stereotype on it
which everyone in the audience finds hilarious and there's loads of sexist objectification of the six-form girls right and the itv crew isn't exactly innocent of that
there's lots of lingering on the girl group from the neck down yes and then they interview them
about their outfits and one of the girls explains mr gary got a special person in to decide what we
should wear white jumper and a black bra so it shows through. Black hot pants, black boots and black fishnets.
Fucking hell.
A special person, eh, Mr. Gary?
A special person.
Wasn't Jules Holland, was it?
Oh, Christ.
I guess it's interesting, in hindsight,
in terms of television history,
because of that kind of Macca mafia that emerged from all this.
And first of all, Gary getting a job in TV
and then him handing out jobs to some
of his former pupils yeah why don't we have fucking teachers like that yeah exactly including
cowey of course cowey's in the cast of the right hope stardust yes and he's i don't think to look
at even he's very much gary's mini me all right so he ends up as his ex-producer top of the pops
i've got to say i can't hear the name cowie without thinking of collateral sisters on the day to day
when she goes and it was a rather cowie night for the pound it stood at 3.9 against the german
bordello that's up 0.5 against the portuguese starling and down 100 against the bitch chris
yes exactly oh and and also on on uh youtube and i'm sure you'll give this to the pc wise
on the playlist as well is the that version of, was it called
Check It Out, the show? Yes. It's basically
nosing around. At this point,
Cowie looks like Bobby Ball, doesn't he? Yes, very
much so. And obviously, I don't know about the rest of you,
but obviously I'm on Rotten's side here. Yes.
Oh, total stitcher, wasn't it?
He's been fucking ambushed by Cowie and Menci
from the Angelic Upstars, who, by the way,
doesn't look very punk with his nice centre part.
No.
But they think Rotten's sold out because his new band isn't punk and because they've moved
on and made their music more complex, which is bollocks.
I mean, I'm on Team Rotten all the way.
Yes.
Oh, incidentally, Cowie's co-presenter, if you close your eyes, sounds exactly like Lauren
Laverne, which is disconcerting.
I suppose she would, obviously, coming from that town, but yeah.
He's not averse to nobbling a famous act,
as we're going to see on this episode, actually.
Something very similar happens later on.
I think the thing with Cowie is he's that sort of very confident
chancer and hustler of the sort I'm sure we've all met a hundred of
in the industry.
They're not all called Crispin. some of them are just called Chris like these are the guys who are always going to
be our bosses and they'll be dead friendly to us and then as soon as they turn their backs we don't
exist to them that's who that's who Cowie is he's a yep he's an operator isn't he you know people
like that get shit done but you know they are remarkably ruthless I think he also said it's
really important that there are things in top of the pops that one group of people should like shit done but you know they are remarkably ruthless i think he also said it's really
important that there are things in top of the pops that one group of people should like
and another is alienated by then it swaps around the reason the program is doing well is because
we embrace that idea that pop music is diverse top of the pops to some extent is a program for
people who don't necessarily like music don't necessarily buy cds
and who aren't necessarily still part of youth culture but if they only dip their toe in the
water of that culture once a week they watch top of the pops now these are very fine words but
they're buttering no parsnips with me and it's all down to the bbc's decision to move top of the
pops to fridays we can't move away from it's all down to the BBC's decision to move Top of the Pops to Fridays.
We can't move away from it
because when that happened,
the concept of family viewing is just gone
because your mum's always going to want Coro on.
In 2003, the highest rating programme in the country
was the episode of Coronation Street
where Richard Hillman,
the Weatherfield mass murderer, drowned.
That got 19.4 million viewers,
and that is a colossal amount for this century.
You know, England's got to lose in a final
for those kind of numbers nowadays.
Yeah, I guess they weren't even trying to.
This is the first radio ad you can smell.
The new Cinnabon pull-apart only at Wendy's.
It's ooey, gooey, and just
five bucks with a small coffee all day long. Taxes extra at participating Wendy's until May 5th.
Terms and conditions apply. This is the first radio ad you can smell. The new Cinnabon Pull
Apart only at Wendy's. It's oo's ooey gooey and just five bucks
with a small coffee all day long taxes extra at participating wendy's until may 5th terms and
conditions apply you compete on a level footing with coronation street they weren't even thinking
well some people will just almost on a coin toss decide which to go for it's very much all right then combination
street has millions and millions of viewers and we'll just skim off another three million off the
top who are pop kids yeah you know as his comments for people who still want to dip a toe into music
well he's talking to someone like me in 2003 and people like me in 2003 are either already in the
pub on a friday evening or getting ready to go to the pub.
Friday night is not a night for watching telly.
You've got to have a major life-changing event
to keep me in the house on a Friday night.
Were you watching it, Sarah?
Because we're slightly different ages.
I don't think I was.
I don't know what else I was watching.
I wasn't watching Corrie at that point.
That was a thing that I saw when I was a kid because everybody watched it but um yeah no I
I wasn't I just I don't know it said nothing to me about my life at that point I guess I mean he's
a solid choice to oversee a music program but the problem is it's top of the pops which is more than
a music program judging by the interviews he's given since he took over he's clearly a paid up member of the campaign for real music although the insistence on live performances
has been relaxed he's he's clearly not keen on miming is there there's a video on youtube of him
giving viewers a guided tour of the top of the pop studio which is quite revealing isn't it yeah
for a start i quite like i mean he's obviously
been given a big budget because yes everything everything behind the scenes looks the same as
front of scenes as it is everything's white plastic no more darkness yeah unless unless
the darkness is on yeah yeah exactly yeah yeah david stoves wouldn't be able to give his usual
spiel about the darkness in the corners of the screen here because there isn't any yeah
it's a bit sort of corova milk bar from clockwork orange meets the mondrian it's a bit mondrian as well yeah
and yeah he's been given a big budget by the look of things um and the whole thing is this sort of
labyrinthine complex there's an actual bar called the star bar which we're going to come to later
oh god and there's the top that pops magazine off is right there in the middle of it it's not farmed out somewhere else and as he's walking about he he has got that trendy teacher energy
hasn't he he's got a phil redmond energy of middle-aged men with in a suit but with long
hair which is always a bit of a red flag yeah yeah um there's a bit there's a bit where he
goes into the control room and he fades up a bit of puddle of mud who are that dreadful third wave grunge band puddle of mud with two d's yeah yeah and and he goes pretty good huh which which it
plainly is not and uh oh and he makes a point of telling us that one of the top of the pop stages
that night will later be hosting one of my favorite bands i saw them the other night
foo fighters yes yes dad you're very trendy we get it it's a little bit weird this
isn't it it's like hey gang welcome to my gaff people are very at ease now with the whole branding
thing which i first started to become cognizant of when the maker went under and it's like well
they kept the brand alive artificially for like a month yeah thanks like keeping the the adverts bit wasn't it was the um yeah the museo bit and kind of grafted it into the NME with the logo on it which is like
remember that time when they they managed to grow a human ear on a guy's arm
they could like transplant it onto it so it kind of gives me the heebie-jeebies a bit I just sort
of have brand PTSD from that so it's like ah it's it's the Top of the Pops brand. Oh, no, it's basically it's all over at this point.
Yeah, I don't know.
I suppose what he was doing was kind of, in that respect,
was similar to what Conor McNicholas was doing with NME,
turning it into this monolithic brand that went across several platforms.
And I think it's quite clever.
He's made it into this syndicated international franchise.
Yeah, he's IKEA-ified, I guess.
Yes, exactly.
It's flat pack, it's kit form, it's modular.
So they had exactly the same stage, exactly the same backdrop,
whether it's in Germany or Italy.
So if a band couldn't make it to the London studios,
they could perform in one of the continental studios
and the footage would be patched into the main show,
which I strongly suspect happened in one of these cases
we're going to see, by the way.
So, yeah, it is this sort of modular,
flat-packed IKEA version of Top of the Pops.
I think it is quite clever as a business model.
Yeah, yeah.
You've got to handle that.
That's the problem, though, isn't it?
Because people don't want to watch a business model.
No, I know.
When we were young, we didn't go away
and go, fucking hell, what an amazing business model that was.
No, true.
But I think he's made a good decision
by focusing on live, or at least, you know,
mimed performance rather than videos
because you could see videos pretty much fucking everywhere
at this point.
Yeah.
Whereas this footage, which has got what he hoped
would become iconic, top of the pops backdrop,
that Mondrian white plastic stuff everywhere,
so that when that gets resold around
the world or you know for all time really right until the present day people will look at it as
oh there's there's so and so i'm not going to sort of spoil a very famous star who appears in this
episode but there they are on top of the pops rather than just there's the fucking video that
we could see anywhere so i think that that was kind of smart i guess it was but i i kind of
missed the videos there's just a um, you know, as we know,
you can get some spectacular feats of artistry in pop videos
and things that we still talk about now and we still remember.
And, you know, and when you hear the music,
that's the image that comes to mind.
I mean, there's, you know, there aren't really any,
apart from maybe Frankie, like what music is there now
where the first mental image that comes to mind
is a Top of the Pops performance as opposed to a video I've that maybe now that I've said that
that's very controversial isn't it but do you know what I mean there are lots from the past
I but I I do see what you mean and I suppose he's made a rod for his own back there because
essentially by shunning the artistry and the excitement and the spectacle of videos
you then have to make sure that pretty much every episode of your show has got something equally fucking memorable but yeah which you're not gonna
get you're just not and so it's like there's a variety to it which which is now lacking which
does which makes it more monotonous when everything is a performance i think that was and also there's
the idea everyone now there's the whole thing of everything being curated you know it's like if you
literally everything it's like i've curated this fucking sandwich that i'm having for lunch but
it's like it's curated videos it's like somebody has chosen that like i would always trust that
someone had had a choice in like well there's five videos i'm going to pick this one to show
to the people you know so you you would get a sense that somebody wanted you to see it you know
but i mean i'll tell you what the just as a side note the having the magazine office like right in the
studio i guess it's convenient in some ways but it just reminded me of uh i had a brief writing
gig in an office in the middle of soho and it was above a you know a strip club and so at like five
o'clock in the afternoon you could just hear this weird rattling noise which i realized was like
the the pole it was a pole as the weight of a woman
kind of hung off it amazing it's quite distracting when i worked at paul raymond we were right next
to the windmill and the only thing we could hear in the afternoon was the theme tune to take the
high road because that's what all the strippers used to watch no way on the tea break yeah i'm
gonna say they were stripping to that music that's a challenge you
know that's that's there's a warm-up yeah yeah we'll just be there tapping away and all of a
sudden you're just there we go yeah there we go strippers are having a break god bless them
your hosts tonight born in paris in 1976 liz bonin relocated to dublin at the age of nine with her
parents and ended up studying biochemistry at trinity college after graduating she joined the
irish girl band chill but apparently the world didn't need a celtic spy skills at the time
and after they were dissolved she went into television presenting the rte kids
program the den telly bingo and the irish fashion show off the rails in 2002 she relocated to london
and became an entertainment correspondent for rise channel 4 short-lived digital clock
nomenclatured breakfast show which once registered a rating of zero viewers
one morning luckily one of the few people who were watching rides was chris cowher who offered
her presenting gig in may of 2002 and she's now part of a rotating talent pool which currently
includes edith bowman colin murray reggie Yates, Sarah Kaywood and Richard Bacon.
Her partner this week, born in Northwood, West London in 1981,
Fern Cotton was the daughter of a sign writer and an alternative therapist
who was also a distant relative to Bill Cotton, the former controller of the BBC, who destroyed Ruby Flipper in 1976 because a black
man lifted a white woman up once. At the age of 15, she began her presenting career when she won
a competition to become a TV presenter and was given a spot on the GMTV kids show The Disney
Club, moving to CITV in 2000 to present draw your own tunes and the kids
computer show mass a year later she was approached by cbbc to present the kids science show eureka
while also doing the citv kids art and craft show fingertips eventually replacing danny Bear in the Saturday show, the replacement for Live and Kickin' on BBC One.
It was only a matter of time before she was funnelled
into the Top of the Pops presenting team
and she made her debut in February of this year.
This is her sixth appearance on Top of the Pops.
Wow, chaps.
By this time, as Morrissey might have said, in order to present Top of the Pops. Wow, chaps. By this time, as Morrissey might have said,
in order to present Top of the Pops,
one must, by law, possess a fanny.
As we've discussed before, from the mid-90s,
the gender balance of Top of the Pops presenters
has completely swung the other way.
Why is that?
I do like this quote that I dug out of an interview
with Chris Cowie, where apparently he had a look at every male DJ on Radio 1 and decided they were all too ugly to become a presenter.
So that's possibly one reason.
Well, that really is turning things on its head from where it used to.
That used to be a positive plus.
If you look terrifying and creepy, then, you know, hey, welcome aboard.
Here are some naive young girls you can slip your arm around on screen.
They're all right, aren't they?
They look good together.
I mean, it's a very, it's, they're very professional and they're very kind of, they're slightly too professional in a way that makes me wince a little bit.
I'm kind of pulled in two directions with Top of the P pops where i get frustrated with it for being so shonky and then when they make it
less shonky it's like but that's not top of the pops at all it's supposed to be slightly crap i
mean liz bonin's certainly no thicko and fern cotton has been doing this sort of thing for
eight years by now so they are professional but you wouldn't necessarily call them pop people
would you they've definitely gone for know, it's presenters above all else
rather than, you know, nerds of any sort or, you know.
But Liz Bonin is really great.
She has gone on to do a lot of nature stuff,
doing a BBC programme called Animals in Love
where she hung out with some bonobos and tickled them.
Oh, my God.
I think this should go in a um in a complete what you're
saying oh my god like this is going to be because we all know i i don't know if people do know about
bonobos they're the they're the apes that just have sex all the time but on this occasion they're
not they're just they're young ones they're being tickled by a delighted liz bonin and it's very
wholesome content indeed and yeah she's really. And she's very telegenic.
And also, apparently she turned down FHM when they were like,
hey, Liz, hey, Liz, do you want to come and do us a spread?
Do you want to do that thing where you pull one side of your pants
way down over your hip?
And that's the thing, isn't it?
And she said, nah, you're all right. No, you're all right no you're right so fair do's
yeah i like them i have to admit um i'd never heard of liz bonin until watching this episode
of top of the pops the other day yeah she completely passed me by somehow um i know
she mainly makes nature programs now she's sort of basically being groomed as the new attenborough
but i don't really watch those those shows so she's brand new. You hate nature, don't you? I hate nature.
You hate nature.
You hate nature.
You hate nature, don't you?
God.
See, once we popped, we can't stop with the Dexys references.
Yeah, so she's brand new to me.
But I've got to say, I could not be more impressed by her.
I mean, for a start, there's her backstory.
Yeah, she's mixed race of west indian heritage um trina dad on her mum's side martinique on her dad's side and growing up
mixed race in a country as white as ireland i can't even imagine i mean people shouted the n
word at her on the streets in dublin when she was a kid and to to have the strength not only to come
through that but to actively put yourself
in the public eye takes a sort of streak of steel i would say and we've seen what happens to high
profile women of color in the media repeatedly of late i mean with the way alex scott and naga
manchetti have been treated so there's there's that for starters and you know liz bonin is just
she's obviously really smart and obviously just really sound.
I mean, she also, as well as the Bonobo thing you mentioned,
she made the BBC documentary Meet a Threat to Our Planet,
and she doesn't eat meat.
She does loads of environmental campaigning
and she publicly had a pop at Boris Johnson over single-use plastics.
So, you know, she put her head above the parapet there.
She publicly supports Black Lives Matter and all of that. So, you know, she put her head above the parapet there. She publicly supports Black Lives Matter and all of that.
So, you know, she's obviously really sound.
And on this Top of the Pops, she's a warm, likeable presence.
It doesn't hurt that she has that Irish accent in which she could basically read out a statement telling me that I've been sentenced to death and it would still sound lovely.
And because she's brand new to me, and maybe this is unfair, Fern Cotton, not brand new to me,
And because she's brand new to me, and maybe this is unfair, Fern Cotton, not brand new to me,
she has the disadvantage of having made a very bad first impression on me back in the day,
whereas Liz Bonin's brand new.
I strongly took against Fern Cotton when she first emerged.
And I can't rewrite history.
I can't pretend I didn't.
For me, she, around that time, was the walking embodiment of a certain cultural shift that I hated.
Around the turn of the millennium, there was a watershed moment where this kind of abyss opened up it wasn't just
a generation gap but i would say a gap in values and attitudes and it was marked out in geographical
terms by the shift between people who socialized in camden and soho and people who socialized in
hoxton and shoreditch and in verbal terms between people who had never ever or would always use the word sick, right?
So there was this new, as far as I, this is how I saw the time,
I'm just sort of, you know, channeling my then self,
but there was this proudly vacuous post-modern, post-everything mentality
among the hipsters of East London,
where everything was held at arm's length in implied quotation marks as tongs, you know, and everything was just a bit of East London. Where everything was held at arm's length. In implied quotation marks as tongs.
And everything was just a bit of a laugh.
And they were taking over radio.
They were taking over TV in the noughties.
You had your George Lamb and your Nick Grimshaw.
And you had what Stuart Lee called.
Those Russell comedians they have now.
And yeah right at the front of all that.
You have Fern Cotton.
With her mean little downturned mouth.
And her dead shark
like eyes and i i really thought she was the embodiment of everything that was wrong with
the noughties i thought she was vacuous and thick and just one of those renter presenters
who were colonizing the telly and in many ways looking back my my dislike is irrational because
that's how tv works right yeah it's not as if I was ever likely to end up on TV myself,
partly because I didn't come up via the NME to BBC fast track,
but rather the Melody Maker road to nowhere.
But I was never someone who was dying to get on TV because I thought about it, right?
And I used to talk about this with friends.
And I thought, I hate nearly everyone on TV.
I scream at it.
I throw things at it.
I think everyone on TV is a cunt so why am i
going to be any different if i'm on there so i there's a moment in a episode of friends i recently
re-watched right when they're all sat around um watching the gellers high school prom video and
they're all laughing because monica used to be fat and she she goes, shut up, the camera adds £10. And Chandler says, so how many cameras were actually on you, right?
And what I reckon is, not only does the camera add weight,
but it adds loathsomeness.
Unfairly sometimes.
I really think the very act of pointing a camera at someone
and thereby you're giving them access to invade your living room
and get all up in your face, right,
immediately makes them ten times more hateable than
if you just met them in the pub because you're like who the fuck are you know fuck off who are
you yeah what are you doing up in my face in my living room and yeah when when you look into it
fern cotton has done a lot of admirable things so her um her happy place podcast and the related
books speak up about mental health and and and she's written a vegan cookbook, which obviously I approve of, being
a tree-hugging meat dodger.
She's done loads for good causes.
She's not vegan, though. No, I know.
She's pescatarian. But it doesn't matter.
Like me. Yeah, but by putting the book out there, she's
making it easier for people to be
vegan. But we agree on that, me and Fern.
Fish are cunts, aren't they?
Fish are cunts. When's a fish
ever rescued a child from a well never
oh man i remember the first time i went to glastonbury um i bought a badge that said
fish have feelings too just because i thought it was hilarious but but yeah um and the other
thing and i know i drove on about this sort of stuff, but at least she wasn't privately educated, you know,
which makes her a bit of a rarity in the broadcast media, it really does.
And plus, on a humanitarian level, we have to feel pity for her
regarding this sentence on a Wikipedia page.
Yes.
Oh, no.
Cotton dated Ian Watkins, front man of the band Lost Prophets, in 2005.
I mean, just when you thought Billy piper had some horrors lurking
in that catalog of exes yeah i really um i i really i did want to say like it doesn't matter
it's not like she's ever going to hear this but i hope she's okay yeah i really do and the thing
is this right even if i did find her dead-eyed and vacuous as a tv host so what it's not as if
she's any worse than the dlts or the Anthea Turners of previous
generations on that score right so I'm not going to say that I've made my peace with her to the
extent that I'll ever willingly watch or listen to any of her shows for enjoyment but you know I
can just make the decision to quietly avoid her work without getting so enraged by it as I was at
the time and so I do regret going so overboard and and letting it get me so annoyed
at the time not that she'll ever have been aware of my ire or even my existence you know but I want
to apologize sorry once you start apologizing I know she's caught me on a good day you know what
I mean because I another day I might have doubled down but you know there we go no it's true though
you can just and it sounds really wet isn't it it's like well No, it's true that you can just, and it sounds really wet, isn't it? It's like, well, if you don't like it, you can just not look,
you can just turn away.
But it is true.
You can just go, it's all right, you know, go live your life
and I'll live mine and we good.
Well, now more than ever, if it's 1977, it's a different matter.
But, you know, now you can just not watch stuff.
Satisfying your musical needs tonight,
Benny Benassi,
The Coral,
D-Side,
Beyonce,
and the official Top of the Pops Top 20.
But first, one of the songs of the summer.
It's Wayne Wonder.
Come on, time for the props. So, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, academy judges leading cotton to drop a pink floyd reference and bonning to utter the show's
well-worn by now catchphrase it's still number one it's top of the pops we're then thrown into
the 10th and penultimate top of the pops theme the drum and bass remix of whole lot of love
by ben chapman which has been going for five years now I mean they really should have done a dubstep remix of
Yellow Pearl after this but you know
yeah nice bit UK Garage
I mean already we're you know only sort of
15 seconds into the episode and there's quite
a lot that's annoying isn't there yes
I mean for a start Cotton can't
even get the Pink Floyd lyric right which
no wow me up and
yeah these kind of sinister figures that man
and woman they cut to as if we're meant to know who they are
It's just assumed but we'll come to that
But the thing with the credits
The whole lot of love
Is that halfway through it
They spoiler the whole show
By telling you what's coming up
Now Al I know you know the kind of twists and turns
Of Top of the Pop's history inside out
And there were certain phases in the sort of classic era
when they did this.
I don't like it when they do.
I don't think any of us do really, do we?
No, no, no, no, no.
I like the surprise of somebody I don't fucking like
and it's going to piss me off when they come off.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah, because, you know, after that,
there's going to be something that you do like.
Yes.
If your tagline is, it's still number one, it's Top of the Pop,
stand behind that and go right
what we have chosen for you tonight you're going to like enough of it that it's worth your while
and you know the point is that you know we know what we're doing yeah it's just such a
disappointment where it's like no don't touch that dial well i literally just put the show on
it's you know 7 31 and two seconds like no no, wait, don't go away. I'm not going anywhere.
What?
During my Top of the Pops watching phase,
I used to be absolutely militant about not looking at the telly pages
in the newspapers because they'd spoiler it and say,
oh, here's who's presenting it,
and here's two or three people that could be going on.
It's like, no, I don't want to know.
You did the lightly lads thing, but with Top of the Pops.
Exactly, yes.
Yeah, I mean, it's like everybody you know we've
all squeezed a christmas present occasionally but that's you don't open them all on christmas eve
unless it's you know unless you're in some scandinavian countries where that's what they do
yeah yeah and also these two that also is a mark of of kind of weird desperation like here we've
got something completely different for you yeah isn't anything
to do with top of the pops well i thought i was gonna watch top of the pops what yeah it's almost
like saying um this is top of the pops and it's number one but if if you don't like it um there's
other stuff here it's really so needy it's so needy yeah and and do you think they're just
shitting it because you know it's uh combination Street starting on the other side. Yes. And that's purely, you know, the fact that Bonin and Cotton are stood there announcing the start of Top of the Pops
means that there'll be some people on the sofa saying,
oh, oh yeah, that's Coronation Street time, time to switch over.
Yes.
So they're sort of leaping in there.
No, no, no, don't go anywhere, please.
Yeah.
Is it that?
You know, I guess it is.
I feel bad for them, too, obviously, being in that position, having to toe that line, you know is it is it that you know i guess it is i feel bad for them to obviously being in
that position having to toe that line you know and say that and mangle that line because they're
good aren't they on in cotton they're all right no simon bates though so i miss the authority
and gravitar of bates he'd certainly told you not to watch coronation street because it it may
contain northern swear words to be To be fair he is prettier.
Eventually they introduce us to one of the songs of the summer No Letting Go by Wayne Wonder.
Born in Buff Bay Jamaica in 1972 Von Wayne Charles began his dancehall career at the age of 15
as a member of the Metro Media Sound System.
After coming to the attention of Sly Dunbar,
he eventually linked up with King Tubbe
and recorded a slew of records,
including a cover version of Rick Astley's
Never Gonna Give You Up.
But when Tubbe was shot dead in 1988,
he eventually linked up with the producer Lloyd Pickout Dennis
and recorded his debut lp
no more chance a year later he moved to penthouse records and did cover versions of fast car by
tracy chapman hold on by on vogue and forever young by alphaville eventually linking up with
label mate buju banton and co-writing Murderer and Boom Bye Bye with him
for which he can eternally fuck off.
Fuck off.
By the end of the century,
he made a dedicated turn towards R&B,
setting up his own label Sing So
and working with Foxy Brown and Lisa Left Eye Lopez,
eventually picking up a worldwide deal with Atlantic Records.
This is the lead-off single from his new LP No Holding Back which came out in March. It crashed
into the charts at number five a month ago, spent three weeks there on the bounce, then dropped to
number seven but this week it's nipped back up again to number three and here he is on stage.
One of the five stages in the Top of the Pop studio actually,
all named after crew members
and Wayne and his chums were on the biggest stage of all
called Chris after Chris Cowan.
For sake.
Chris.
It's a bad choice because that stage is looking very sparse isn't it well yeah just one man and
a dj and a couple of dancers yeah and he's not really kind of prowling and owning the stage in
a very charismatic way not to me anyway he's having to go at a little prowl and trying to
like work the crowd and stuff you say he's prowling about but only in the style of a kitten that's
just getting used to a new home and sees its reflection for the first time.
You can see like how kind of low down the stage is as well.
I quite like the look of it.
I mean, it's a massive kind of lighty-uppy.
I mean, it's a little bit local nightclub, isn't it?
It's a bit sort of, you can see the headlines in the sort of local free sheet.
Local nightclub installs new floor and it lights up.
I love that.
local free sheet local nightclub installs new floor and it lights up i love that but overall the whole uh production is is not it doesn't set anything on fire does it no i love a lit up dance
floor you know i mean obviously it makes us think if we're of certain vintage or even not of uh of
the billy jean video and of course saturday night fever particularly the um the the front cover of
the album yeah yeah yeah yeah it's got a long, there's a storied history.
I'm sure there's a, you know, there's a long read
in the history of the light-up dance floor.
And what was the club as well?
It's in the Common People video.
Oh, yeah, Eve's, where smashing happened.
Eve's, yeah.
Smashing.
Yes.
And I dare say that we've all been to clubs where smashing happened.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, that is where the common people video was filmed and yeah i loved it that was uh the main selling point apparently it was um where um christine keeler used to go
with profumo on on this sort of secret dates in the 60s or at least that was part of the selling
point and she'd like put a chair in the middle of the dance floor and sit on it funny yeah yeah
exactly yeah yeah yeah it's storied history it's great but um yeah and wayne wonder is is kind of a
very small footnote in in this now it's funny watching this seeing this guy who um clearly by
his sort of chart position and and his uh status at the top of the show uh was at least fleetingly
a big deal because you know as i said it's my job in 2003 to have a handle on what was going on pop-wise.
But I've honestly never heard of him until we looked at this episode.
I saw the name and my first thought was, you know, Stevie's son.
Like Damien Junior Gong Marley or Enrique Iglesias.
Yeah.
No, he was called Wayne Wunder because he spent lots of time at school
sitting there and pondering things.
Right.
And reasoning.
Wayne Ponder would have been.
Yes, yes.
And Lazarus.
That's what it should have been called.
Yeah, sadly, he's got nothing to do with
what we must call the ebony and ivory hitmaker.
But yeah, the name, it does sound like a piss take, doesn't it?
Like some really on-the-nose comedy character
from a second-rate sketch series.
You know, like somebody who's watched the day-to-day
and thought, oh, we can do that.
And they, I know, we'll call a pop star Wayne Wonder.
That would be hilarious.
Oh, it's like somebody, or maybe, you know,
a friend of Philomena Kunk, who's like,
no, I've been, no, I had a wonder about that.
And I thought it was shit.
Yeah.
The other thing about this set is that he's got on a sort of blue and white track suit,
which kind of really coordinates, but also with the kind of general blandness of the track
and the performance serves as quite effective camouflage.
Yes.
So you can hardly tell there's even anyone there visually as well as orally.
He's in a blue puma track suit and a white t-shirt looking very sports casual.
Yeah.
He's gone and got himself an urban
starter kit hasn't it which consists of some decks a dj with dreadlocks and movable arms to do all
the gestures they do when when they put on a record and got fuck all else to do for the next
few minutes yeah and uh two honeys with a z on the end in batty riders. Yeah.
Very tight cycling shorts.
I mean, if he'd had a bit more pocket money,
he could have got himself a bouncy car
and some youths doing some graffiti on a wall
and then spinning on their backs.
Or indeed a bouncy castle.
Yeah.
Yes, that'd be even better.
It's funny you mention it being a starter kit
and being budgetary issues, because Puma, right, all right, it's funny you mentioned it being a starter kit and and being uh uh budgetary issues because
puma right all right it's all about perception and maybe i'm not a sportswear aficionado anyway
so i'm the wrong person to ask but i always thought puma was a bit kind of third division
do you know what i mean yeah well it's we could spend hours talking about this ever since krs1
had a go at mc shining for wearing whack Puma sneakers,
I've always been an adios boy.
So yeah, I understand what you're saying.
At least it's not fucking Umbro.
No, but the thing, that's it to me.
Puma is only just a step above
what your mum gets you for Christmas
when she's got it wrong.
Gola.
Yeah, or she's gone to like Woolworths
and got their own brand thing
that's got two stripes instead of three or whatever
yes
there's a really good article
about this
in the Beastie Boys magazine
Grand Royal
which is really hard
to get hold of now
but somebody's archived
most of it online
about the birth of Adidas
or I'm going to say Adidas
right
because that's what
we said in the 70s
and that's what Run DMC
say themselves
and Puma
because it was two brothers
a bit like Lidl and Aldi now, isn't it?
It's these sort of feuding German families.
Why aren't you fighting each other over the difference between Lidl and Aldi?
That's coming. That'll happen. Trust me.
You boys and your sports wares.
Just as long as it's Velcro, I'm good.
I don't understand why Velcro has not...
It's one of those things, it's like, you know,
finally we've got the electric car now,
but it took a really long time because it was being sort of suppressed and everything.
Who was suppressing Velcro?
Velcro is the best...
Big shoelace.
That's who's suppressing it.
Big shoelace.
Big shoelace.
That's who.
Fat lace.
Anywho, Wayne Wonder, that guy.
You remember that guy?
Yeah.
So, shall we get
onto the song
okay
it's so based
around
the very
solidly head bopping
Diwali rhythm
yes
by
I love it when
white people say
rhythm
that's I'm not
yeah but it would
be whiter still
for me to say
rhythm
wouldn't it
I think we should
lean into it
based on the
Diwali rhythm
I believe I think we should say it in the whitest way i think we should lean into it based on the diwali rhythm i
believe i think we should say in the whitest way possible we should really lean into the whiteness
do you just say rhythm or do you really commit to go redeem um i i don't know i would refer to
corrupt fm on on this however they would do it you know based on duality which is a loop a loop created by a
jamaican producer steven lenke marsden yes well done it's something that you kind of can't
it's really hard to fuck it up because it's just solid thing um this actually would appear
in two weeks time as the foundation of uh-oh brackets never leave you close brackets by lumidy which
is the famous one where it's sort of slightly out of key but in a really compelling way
and that was massive and um you know if you don't twitch one muscle or another to it something has
gone wrong and you should probably see a doctor um and also this it would form the uh backbone of
rihanna's debut single in 2005 yes in. So in a couple of years' time.
Yeah, Bond replay, yeah.
Which is a fucking banger.
Get Busy by Sean Paul.
Get Busy by Sean Paul, yes.
Feet, sorry, Feet Sean Paul, obviously.
Sorry, yes, of course.
To give him his full name.
Basically, the noughties are the noughties Feet Sean Paul,
let's get it right.
And they were better for it.
The thing with that riddim, I'm going to say riddim,
that riddim is that, yeah,
it was inspired by the Indian Feast of Lights, Diwali.
So I don't know how exactly, maybe sort of Bollywood kind of.
Are we saying Diwali right?
Oh, are we?
Diwali.
I don't know.
But yeah, the thing is there was a whole compilation in 2002
on Greensleeves called Diwali, all using the same beat,
which, I mean, I'm trying to imagine, I've not listened to it,
but imagine listening to that all the way through.
And the thing is, No Letting Go is on there.
So it's already a year old by the time it's a UK hit.
So if this is the waters you're swimming in musically,
if this was your thing, you must be thinking,
oh, fucking hell, not this rhythm again.
I don't know.
But most notoriously used a year later in Dirty Kaffar
by Sheikh Tara and the Soul Salah crew,
which was a jihadi rap video,
which basically stated that Tony Blair, George Bush,
the BNMP and Ariel Sharon
should be chucked on a massive bonfire and 9-11 was dead good
and there should be more of it.
But the problem is, it's a fucking tune.
I mean, bad people, good music.
Yeah.
Hey, man, you've got to separate the art from the artist, man.
Yeah, I mean, this is very soft and weedy and um nothing oh yes very slight very slight it's
meant to be a sort of lovely kind of sit on the beach think about your woman kind of thing but
also it's a bit the point isn't the lyrics obviously but like
yeah there's nothing to the lyrics oh lovely lady i like you oh it's fucking colon isn't it kicking the sun yeah girl i'm so
glad we've dated oh wow you old you old charmer wayne um mr ponder why haven't we mated this
sounds a little bit it's a bit of a confusing thing as well because it's like oh we're in love
we're sitting on the beach we're drinking daiquiris it's all good but there's trouble in paradise they
say good things must come to an end but i'm optimistic about being your friend though i made you cry by my doings with keisha and anisha
but that was back then doings fucking hell that's such a non-r word that is my non-r used to use
that word all the fucking time whenever she ran me a bath when i was a kid she she'd always used to say oh make sure you go all around your doings sorry carry on so
is he is he just sneaking in he's just slipping in a little confession of infidelity well no he's
bragging on um inter the song just goes to show that reggae and its offshoots have absolutely
withered on the vine by the turn of the century you know if you discount sean paul
i mean he was expected to be a breakout reggae dancehall star in the 90s but he's gone and taken
the r&b shilling here hasn't he and from now on reggae is just going to be something that you can
bolt onto your record or your mobile phone advert for a bit of urban credibility which is fucking
weird because in the 90s reggae or at least pop reggae, was huge.
Yes.
You know, everything from, you know, Shaggy and Red Dragon
and Chacodemus, and it was enormous.
Like, every summer, there'd be four or five
just inescapable pop reggae songs.
But yeah, by the time we get to 2003,
it's very much sort of Lego or Meccano or Bolton, isn't it?
Yeah. It's your standard male R&B thing here, isn't it?
There's a bit of gangster milkman whistling
at the beginning, and he's
dedicating it to the ladies.
There's a bit of shouting
from the DJ who
goes, you know, come on London
or whatever. Top of the pops.
Very offensive to people from Macclesfield
who are tuning in. What about their issues?
What about their needs? Level up
the North, DJ. Fuck's sake.
We've spoken before about how
certain pop and dance records
have some rap bolted
onto them. But you could basically shrink down
everything that Wayne Wonder does on this track.
Just call it some reggae
and just stick it in the middle of a Nelly Furtado
single or Shakira single or just whatever.
I don't know if they'd want it, but you know.
Yeah.
R&B is a strange genre anyway,
because the men always have to sound like soft lads
who go on about the ladies.
We're almost always cat shit.
There's obviously some brilliant exceptions to that rule.
But the truly great R&B is almost always made by women,
even if all what they
usually have to say is your skin so what you're looking at me for you fucking trump piss off
you know there's huge gobs of female r&b which is essentially no money no fanny i suppose the
comparison that's staring us in the face here if we're looking at a guy who started out as a
producer before having hits in his own right and he's wearing dark glasses and all of that is R. Kelly he's kind of
like trying to be a sort of reggae R. Kelly by doing this yeah it's not very good is it he's
flat as a fucking pancake isn't he yeah he's singing over a backing track obviously so either
he's got no in-ear monitor so fair enough can, can't blame the guy, or he's just a legit terrible singer.
I don't know.
Well, the thing is that I always notice this just because I had, like,
because I had a few singing lessons one time and so I sort of know how to do it.
So you can just hear that everything is coming out on, like,
the last 10% of each breath.
Yeah.
Which is, like, just don't do it to yourself.
It's actually really easy to, like, not do that.
And he can't not sing, but there's this unpleasant thing of like, it doesn't sound relaxed.
It makes you feel tense because you're just kind of like, breathe, breathe, breathe, you know.
And it's just, it is unpleasantly sort of just a tiny bit discordant.
If you're going to be discordant, like really go for it.
Like the Lumidi track is so much better than this, even though she's way, way off.
Which apparently wasn't her fault.
She maintains that it was recorded to a completely different backing track
and then the producer just slapped something else on.
But whatever it is,
it's one of those weird things that just sort of works.
And this doesn't really.
And if he hasn't got an in-ear monitor,
can't they spring for that?
Have they spunked all the money
on the fucking lighty-up dance floor?
We've already talked about the branding.
Even the record labels on the records
that are spinning around on the decks.
Top of the Pops logo.
Oh, yeah.
Slapped right on them.
Yeah, like it's the Wigan Casino.
They're trying to hide the fact that it's way wonder, no letting go.
That pot of history, though.
Jesus Christ.
King fucking Tubbe, reduced to producing Stock Aitken and Waterman songs at the end of his life.
Fucking breaks your heart, man.
Like the whitest thing.
King Tubby meets Sonya Uptown.
But, you know, Jamaica did have this kind of long tradition
of doing that, going right back to people covering the Beatles,
you know, Marcy Griffiths in that brilliant version
of Don't Let Me Down.
But, yeah, I mean, it's just something
that was just a standard thing.
They would churn them out.
They would hear what's coming on the airwaves
over from the mainland US.
And quite often they'd be easy listening or country tracks
and then somebody like, I don't know,
Johnny Nash or whoever would just churn out a cover of it.
So I can see why they did it.
I'm sure King Tubby's heart wasn't in it necessarily.
Yeah, but the difference is, Simon,
back then when they did cover songs like that,
more often than not, they made them better
or at least equally brilliant in a different way.
As pedestrian and generic as the lyrics to this song are,
at least they're a cut above something else in his back catalogue,
which you have touched upon.
Boom bye bye in a batty boy head,
rude boy no promote no batty man,
dem halfie dead, this not a deal guy
come near we then his skin we must peel burn him up bad like an old tire wheel so that's not from
no letting go that's from the as you mentioned the notoriously homophobic single boom bye bye
by bujji banton which uh wayne wonder apparently wrote so if that's true wayne wonder can once
again absolutely go fuck himself and uh
yeah i think maybe we've uh wasted plenty of our breath on the arsehole already well i mean he did
say in an interview budger banton said the standard get out clause number one the bible reckons it
right and number two oh it's about a pedophile actually that was in living in the area oh no no
yeah so there you go so he's conflating
gays and pedophiles oh that's okay then as long as he's only conflating somebody's sexuality
with crime great yeah yeah fine that's fine anything else to say about this um the dj um
yeah god bless him bless him he's he's giving it the old college try but he kind of goes take it
to the bridge and the you know which is not all that at all i mean i guess you know this is not a moment to do your james brown thing really it's like just just leave
it mate you've done your job you've pretended to lift an arm and put it on the fucking record
that's it that's your job just stand there now yeah you've earned your 50 quid yes but i mean
personally i know this may be a personal thing but when i hear somebody say take it to the bridge
the next thing that my brain wants to hear is dirty babe uh-huh that's what i want you know i don't want to hear more of this yes
you know why would i want that also there's sort of slightly embarrassing fade out the dj's like
yeah top of the pops london we love you top of the London again and fucking oh i know it's it's
where they were though to be fair yeah but they all do that though don't i know it's terrible
we all feel terrible about it people have gone out on stage at glastonbury and said london oh well that is
embarrassing which is quite funny actually but yeah there's that sort of slightly uncomfortable
moment of like demi silence while wayne brings the vocals to a close and the dj goes tab of the pops
london we love you and then everyone just like oh is it over now okay. And then everyone's just like, oh, is it over now? Okay, yay. And yeah, it's just a little bit,
it's a sad end to a sad start.
Yeah, and the reason for that is
it's because the song is so fucking slight,
but it's got that rhythm.
And you just think, oh, well,
this is going to kick off any minute now.
He's doing his soft ass bit,
but it's really going to kick in
and it's going to get proper
and some arses are going to be shook.
And it never happens. It doesn't really have a dynamic or structure as such so when he says
take us to the bridge that you think you're looking around for a bridge you're looking around
it's more like a step a style a ledge to the ledge so the following week no letting go dropped three
places to number six the follow-up bounce there, that's when you have your bouncy castle,
got to number 19 in November of this year, and he was done as a chart act.
By the middle of the decade, he'd gone back to covering rubbish 80s songs in a UB40 styler,
including a cover of Hold Me Now by the Thompson Twins,
which was on some Adam Sandler film
I haven't bothered to watch.
And when he appeared in the identity parade
of Nevermind the Buzzcocks,
he revealed that he had gone into business
at home selling yams.
He was still gigging and everything,
but he was selling yams on the side.
Makes a change from T-shirts
and knocked off CDs, isn't it?
Well, the trick is to give them away
for free like you know the darkness with their pizza just uh yes a bit of free food yeah maybe
if you had the puma logo burned into them or something yeah i think like a sort of halloween
lantern just carved in there yes i think he and we are the hosts of two mr p's in a podcast the
educational podcast where you don't actually learn a thing no instead we explore the weird wonderful
and downright hilarious things that happen in school from people actually doing the job we
reminisce on our own time at school, funny things we experience each
day and of course we share your hilarious stories from the chalk face. So if you work in a school
or just want a nostalgic trip down memory lane, sit up straight, fingers on lips and get ready for
the lesson. Moving on up into the top three, it's Tropical Tati Wayne Wonder.
Next up, a band who must be huge fans of the old sunblock.
Featuring a member of metal maniac Slipknot, these guys decided to form a band just to show that they have a fun side.
Now, I don't know about taking them home to meet the parents, but with their own take on the Billy Idol classic white wedding, it's the Murder Dolls.
After Wonder gets described as Tropical Totter by Bonin,
she describes her next act as a band who must be huge fans of the old sunblock and that she didn't know if she'd want to take them home to her parents.
It's Murder Dolls with White Wedding.
Formed in Des Moines, Iowa in 1994,
the Rejects were a metal band put together by the guitarist Nathan Jordison,
better known as Joe Air, who had also played in local bands The Have Nots and Anal Blast.
In 1995, Jordison was invited to play drums with a new local group, The Pale Ones,
who eventually renamed themselves after one of their early tracks, Slipknot.
And by the time they finally signed a record deal in 1998 the Rejects were shelved.
By 1999 with Slipknot's debut LP becoming the fastest selling metal LP in American chart history
and well on its way to going double platinum, Jordison developed a hankering for side projects
again and was up for resurrecting the Rejects. To this end, he linked up with Wednesday 13,
the lead singer of Frankenstein Drag Queens from Planet 13,
and Trip Eisen of the New York metal bands Dope and Static X,
eventually changing the name to Murder Dolls.
They recorded a demo,
which became their debut LP, Right to Remain Violent in early 2002,
and the video from its main track, Dead In Hollywood, featured a guest appearance by Marilyn Manson,
repaying Jordison for his appearance in the video for Tainted Love,
and it got to number 54 over here in November of 2002.
This is the follow-up, a cover of the Billy Idol single, which got to number 6 over here in November of 2002. This is the follow-up, a cover of the Billy Idol single,
which got to number six over here in August of 1985,
and it's crashed into the chart this week at number 24.
And as they've been in the country last month,
touring with Stone Sour, another Slipknot offshoot,
they popped in to get Summit in the can
for this episode of Top of the pop so yes here we go
a prime example of a pre-record job the way wonder one was uh was pre-recorded as well you can kind
of tell by the way they cut back and forth from the acts to the presenters so yes sarah in a
previous chart music you you mentioned that you like slipknot you saw them did i'm evil panto i
think was the uh the phrase yeah
they were never going to be my faves you know i was not their their audience but i did get it
after a bit i mean i realized that you know forgive me if i've told this before but seeing
them at reading i realized what they were about and who they were for and what they're doing is
actually brilliant and very clever not clever in a cynical way clever in a very sort of emotionally intelligent way because they realized what the runnings was which is
kids and they were like a kid's party band it's like these are grubby teenage boys on their first
duet reading without their parents this is reading is like legendarily a kind of really gruesome kind
of uh rite of passage as it was at the time a metal crash exactly it's a metal crash what they did
at one point was get the whole crowd this was on the main stage so you know however many thousands
people got everyone to to crouch down they're like oh go crouch right down to the ground um
and eventually so everybody did this and it was hilarious to see everyone just sort of hunkering
down like like rabbits and then jump the fuck up and so everyone just sprang
into the air and it was like this is so perfect they understood that these are still kids they're
still children they're just sweary grotty children lurching upwards into adulthood against their will
it's play the fuck away it's play the fuck away and that's there is a great sort of truth in that
because it's like yeah yeah, adulthood is terrifying
and being a teenager is extremely intense
and very frightening in and of itself.
And you can't do anything about it.
And, you know, there are a lot of young people
who feel that they cannot handle it.
They're going to look for ways out,
which can be very dangerous.
And Slipknot was saying to them,
hey, it's OK, listen to this shit,
do some screaming. Connect
with other people who feel
the same as you and know that we see
you and we love you in all your grubby
adolescent grottiness and just
try to rupture your throat in some way with
the ah of everything and
you'll feel better, you know, and
tomorrow will be another day and I think that's
really beautiful. That's like life-saving shit
and that has value beyond whatever musical value.
I don't actually know how well thought of Slipknot are.
Apparently in the last, because they're still going.
And there's a kind of resurgent, actually turns out Slipknot were really good thing.
But it's so far outside of what I know.
I just don't know enough about metal.
But, you know, this is life-enhancing, life-saving shit,
which is the
best you can hope for for music so i knew who that was for the murder dolls i don't know who it's for
maybe there's an audience for it in the same way that there's a type of horror film fan who will
watch any old shit with fake blood in it doesn't have to be good on any level just give me a hundred
weight of horror just stick the horror channel on oh what you know that's not me by the way sorry christ no
it's a cartoon schlock nonsense yeah they did actually appear in an episode of dawson's creek
as like the halloween party band yes it would make sitcom parents of the time furrow their brows
that is what it's for it's a sort of a trash nonsense isn't it really yeah i
agree with sarah about horror films um i'm you know i imagine we may have similar tastes in that
you know you get people like rob zombie uh who's obviously from a similar world um making films
called house of a thousand corpses and for me house of one corpse is always going to be a better film
yeah you know what i mean maybe house of no corpses but an implied one you know that you know that that's my kind of
horror uh rather than you know uh gallons and gallons of blood it's interesting listening to
sarah's thoughts about uh who slip not of four and what they mean to those people because i was i was
on the bus the other day and there was a young couple sat in front of me.
They're about 14 years old
and the girl had like half green, half black hair
and the boy had a studded dog collar on
and they were kissing while keeping their COVID masks on,
which was both sweet and weird.
But they were basically the same sort of emo kids
you might have seen on any bus and in any shopping centre
any year in the last 20, right?
And it occurred to me that they weren't even alive
when this murder doll's appearance happened.
Fucking hell.
That's funny, isn't it?
But also that their 2003 equivalents would have been watching this
shouting fucking yes in the same way that we
uh you al me and neil shouted fucking yes in 1983 when twisted sister came on right because there
will always be an appetite for this kind of band among a certain kind of teenager yeah if they
catch them at just the right age and in other years it might have been aiden or motionless in
white or black veil brides or Black Veil Brides or
whoever's on the front of Kerrang right now I don't know I haven't looked in a while
the murder dolls served a role and here's where I have to state an interest I know one of the
murder dolls oh yeah one of one of them's a mate AC Slade who's on guitar one of the guitarists
he's on he's the one on the far left of the screen. And he's been in loads of bands, including Joan Jett's Blackhearts
and his own band, Trashlight Vision.
And I got him to DJ for me at Stay Beautiful once, actually.
But I can't remember how we got to know each other.
I mean, through a mutual friend, maybe.
But we bonded over a shared love of the Manic Street Preachers,
which seemed really unusual for an American meddler, you know.
In fact, I once took him to see the Mannix in Cambridge,
and I got him backstage, and I introduced him to Nicky Wire,
who seems quite excited himself.
And of course he was, because Nicky Wire's from the Valleys,
and he's got that inner meddler, you know, that inner Kerrang kid.
And Nicky Wire's always going to be more impressed by A.C. Slade
from The Murder Dolls than if I'd introduced him to the bassist from the Young Knives or the Good Books or whoever.
Do you know what I mean?
So I got in touch with AC about this episode of Top of the Pops to see what he remembered about it.
And his answer might seem a little bit confusing and misremembered but I'll come back to that.
Here's what he said. Oh yeah, I was part
of that. One memory was that we performed
it entirely live, which is very
rare on TOTPs.
This really pissed off the other bands that performed
that day. One of those bands
was Marlon Manson. He was
supportive of the band until we
started to do well. So there
was some awkwardness between our
two bands but no drama or anything yeah but the energy of a live band is always more impactful
than band who plays to backing tracks that's not a diss or put down to the other bands it's just
an observation and makes me glad we fought to play it live right so back to me now now as we know um
marilyn manson is not on this episode however there's no evidence that murder dolls are in the same studio
as Liz Bonin and Fern Cotton.
They just cut to and from screens.
And because of that, we talked about the syndicated,
flat-packed IKEA nature of Chris Cowie's Top of the Pops.
It's entirely possible that the murder dolls did record
on the same day as marlin manson yeah
whether i mean it turns out it was in london but it might as well have been italy or france or
germany you know one of these top the pops outposts and and manson's um clip just got used
on a different show so if if ac says he recorded on the same day as marlin manson he probably did
you know what i mean you kind of got to remember if marilyn manson's about yeah yeah so so that's a little insight into how the how the show was put together and also just the slight
beef between these kind of icons of that era and so so the lineup uh that we're looking at it's
a.c slade on guitar eric griffon on bass ben graves possibly not his real name on drums
wednesday 13 on vocals and joey jordison on the other guitar yeah and I guess it was perceived
as being Joey Jordison's band and can I just make the obvious joke I'll never forgive him for that
handball in 1977 Sarah's now completely baffled by this I mean Slipknot were very much not for me
and I I did I I really appreciated what Sarah said about them. And I, you know, I get it. But at the same time, I, you know, I wasn't the target audience.
I saw them at the Reading Festival in God knows where, probably the same year.
And I just found it so kind of basic and reductive and stupid.
But, you know, yeah, I know that's what it's meant to be.
But anyway, I had a lot more time for Murder Dolls myself.
And, you know, Murder Dolls in some ways
are part of this lineage that runs from Alice Cooper
through things like The Misfits and The Cramps,
you know, just mucking around with horror for fun.
And for me, all right, I admit,
the Billy Idol cover they're doing there,
it's a bit redundant because it's a song
that has a brooding menace to it anyway.
And you don't make it more menacing
by doing a heavy metal death scream in it
you just screw your face up and raise a fist at appropriate moments yeah yeah um usually when he
says shotgun exactly because the thing about mechel is if you're going to be a lead singer
you've got to have proper fucking pipes and he's just got a wet straw of a voice he does a bit the
thing with the original is that um there's some modulation to it because he's just got a wet straw of a voice. He does a bit. The thing with the original is that there's some modulation to it
because he's sort of doing the murmuring kind of,
hey, little sister, what, you know,
and then kind of, you know, revving it at a certain point.
But this is just like proper hairball singing from the...
Hey, little sister!
It's proper Eric Cartman.
Hey, little sister, what have you done? Just full, full gravelly screamy bit the whole way through and
everything is whacked up to that setting which i understand like i laughed i did enjoy this in
spite of myself um there's also the what i always bang on about the kind of american stagecraft
which is full in evidence here yes you know which is just i love to see a guy you know spin around and point his guitar
and it's like good old wednesday just properly going for it at the top screamy um register of
his of his voice the whole way through it's what you call a death growl i guess the whole way
through and it doesn't help that with his dreads he just looks like a fucking potato that's been
left in the cupboard for two years now that's a horror film i would like to see what happens to the demon potato that's been left in
the cellar oh my god it's alive the singing is not the point of this is it i mean his breath
his breath control on this is so bad he actually takes a breath in the middle of the word sister
which is it's not the place to do it mate i took
right against this record i was no fan of billy idol but by about this time i was accepting him
as part of the canon because in the 80s a lot of people thought billy idol was rod vicious
he'd gone to america and sold out he's called billy idol like he literally called himself billy idol what do
what do you people expect of him like it's kind of a thing i fucking love billy idol he was so cute
he was so cute and ridiculous he was great i mean fucking hell by 2003 is there anything
that makes you feel more old than hearing a song that was part of your life when you were a teenager
being used as a cover version for kids
who probably never heard it before fucking hell but there's another interesting compare and
contrast here between this and the performance of twisted sister in the last episode twisted
sister had far less tools in their presentation armory like just a couple of flash parts
and this lot have got you know they've got the fucking works haven't they have they they've
got their logos massively by the side which is it's like a toilet sign for women in a coffin
with horns and in a coffee yeah better lighting better costumes but not feeling it debatable
whether they got better costumes really i mean d schneider i don't know if you can beat that but
that's for another episode we've already done. No, I think
they look fucking awesome here, I'll be honest with you.
Yeah, I'm enjoying the look. I mean, first of all, as for
the song, you know, yeah,
the cover version doesn't do much for me.
I had more time for their own material.
That single you mentioned, Dead in Hollywood, in particular.
But yeah, I think they
look amazing. I mean, for one thing,
right, black, white and red is
a colour scheme you can't go wrong with,
which is a fact that is known by Manchester United, the Third Reich and the designers of pretty much every vampire movie poster ever.
Just black, white and red.
It works.
And shiny black as well.
You've been waiting years to compare Man United to the Nazis, haven't you, Simon?
No comment.
And, you know, they are wearing some fucking
killer clobber here, I would say.
Several of them have got the same
sort of stack-heeled goth boots I was wearing
myself at the time.
Wednesday 13 is in this fucking
awesome black PVC jacket
thing with white piping
on it. I would wear the shit out of that.
He's got a tie on, hasn't he? He's got a PVC tie.
Yeah, I know exactly where you could buy them from
Corporate goth there
And there's a medical red cross on the arm
Which is a big plus
Nice
Thank you
Yeah if someone gets a nosebleed
Or does their ankle in
In the front row
We can go out and sort them can we
Yeah exactly
So I mean I'm not the target audience for this
Because I'm too old
Even in 2003
Yeah
But if I was those kids on the bus
That I saw the other day
Or the 2003
equivalent i would have been bouncing off the fucking walls with excitement at this i'm absolutely
sure of that yeah fair enough i probably uh when i say i didn't know who this was for then yeah of
course that would be who it was for in a similar way to slipknot because um joey jordison who uh
actually passed away last month um yeah I was looking up, you know,
kind of a lot of tributes to him,
a lot of people who were very, very sad.
And something that he said was,
this was when he was in Slipknot,
but he said, our music is so personal.
Each person that's bought one of our records,
I have something in common with each one of them,
which is just beautiful.
I mean, that's like, I think they were very,
all of them were very sincere in that and very earnest and really wanted to,
you know, reach the kids.
So, you know, this, even though I didn't quite get that from this, it took me a long time to get it from Slipknot.
Because, you know, there was a lot of gnarly, schlocky stuff in the way of it.
And I was like, what the fuck is this?
But I can appreciate this on that level too.
I can see that there is that thing.
It's a gang you can join, you know.
Which one of Slipknot was he?
Because they were like the fucking metal village people, weren't they? They all had like one in the mask. there is that thing it's a gang you can join you know which one of slipknot was he because they
were like the fucking metal village people weren't they they all had like one in the mask he was
number one which is they all had each had a number he was number one his mask was like the the pretty
one i'm not sure what it was and they had various they had different versions of the masks kind of
throughout but he always had a variation on it's like the comedy tragedy mask but just the sort of
because like the emoji uh no expression one did he have like his dreadlocks coming out through little holes like it was a
colander one of them had that no no he had like very lank sort of sort of just very straight hair
over the top he had to stop drumming because he had um transverse myelitis which is where your
spinal cord swells up it's really really nasty um but um he did before that
he did all sorts of he had like an amazing drum rig where they'd strap him to it and it was in
the shape of pentagram he would do a drum solo and it would tip up and rotate and everything
apparently he's you know technically a really good drummer but to me it does just sound like
it's like angry wasp dancing on a tin of seven up type drumming he's a typical metal muso you know a band the
size of slipknot by 2003 they can afford to take their time between albums but he just wants to
play man yeah so you know why not start another band no resurrect your old band this is that you
know they yeah and also for the pop craze youngsters it's it's a great way to see people
in massive bands in a more intimate venue even though they're going to ignore your request for people equals shit.
Yeah, everybody seems pretty happy.
I did just want to add to this.
This track is from the special edition of the album Beyond the Valley of the Murdered Dolls.
And I just wanted to read in full the track listing of this album.
Please do.
I can't do the voice.
Well, I could do the voice, but then I wouldn't be able to do the rest of the podcast so you know slip my wrist twist my sister dead
in hollywood love at first fright people hate me she was a teenage zombie die my bride grave robbing
usa 1976 66 dawn of the dead let's go to war dressed to depress kill miss america be movie
scream queen motherfucker i don't care crash crash let's fuck i take drugs white wedding Let's Go To War, Dressed To Depress, Kill Miss America, B-Movie Scream Queen, Motherfucker I Don't Care, Crash Crash, Let's Fuck, I Take Drugs, White Wedding, Welcome To The Strange, I Love To Say Fuck.
Oh my god, Let's Go To War, because the Manic Street Preachers had a song called Let's Go To War just a few years after this.
I'm claiming it's because I introduced those two, you know.
Oh, the cross-pollination of murder, toss and muck.
But, yeah, it's a fun trash thing,
and I did chortle all the way through it,
and I loved all the PVC strides.
Yeah, it always comes back to the trousers, doesn't it, Sarah?
Trousers are important.
The leggy Mountbatten of chart music.
Hey, and at least they actually played it live.
They're not like those bent cunts who aren't fucking real.
Yes.
Like those bent cunts who aren't fucking real.
Yes.
So the following week, White Wedding dropped 18 places to number 42.
A few weeks later, Murder Dolls were put on hold while Slipknot recorded their next LP, Volume 3, The Subliminal Versus.
They reunited at the end of the year for a tour of Europe,
but were then put on hiatus due to
other band commitments reunited in 2010 for the lp women and children last but by which time
jordison had developed acute transverse myelitis a spinal inflammation which temporarily caused him
to lose the use of his legs which led to him leaving or being fired from Slipknot in 2013
depending on who you talk to. Although plans were drawn for a re-reunion of murder dolls at the end
of last decade it never came off and as we've already mentioned Joey Jordison died in his sleep
at the age of 46.
All right then, Pop Craze youngsters.
We're going to lob this manky potato into the compost bin and knock it on the head for a while
and come back at your heart tomorrow.
So, on behalf of Sarah B b and simon price i'm al
needham thanks for listening see you tomorrow stay pop crazed
sharp music Hello, I'm Alex Lynch, and this is Out of Character,
a podcast about sketch and character comedy.
Oh, you're not a wizard.
No, I'm not. I am. I've got a beard.
Oh, yeah, he's right. He does have a beard, actually.
In this show, I chat to writers and performers
from the world of sketch and character comedy.
And I sort of couldn't believe what I was seeing.
Like, I couldn't believe anything could be that good.
That moment of self-hatred is your rehearsal.
That's what you've been doing it your whole life.
Find out what made them venture into it.
Yeah, I mean, just getting that DVD in and binging through those
was just some of the most profound comedy joy of my life.
I spent my whole childhood being... Getting that DVD and then binging through those was just some of the most profound comedy joy of my life.
I'd spent my whole childhood being, I'll be honest, a dick.
Talk about their characters.
And it just made me really want to, like,
make her move with her pelvis, basically.
Maybe meet some of their characters.
Because she's actually only got one leg,
and that's why she's been hot pink.
I don't know what to say. She's quite terrifying.
That is correct.
And generally just shoot the breeze and more importantly, have a laugh.
It's all an act, Alex.
I'm horrible.
I'm an horrible person.
That's so good.
Recorded entirely in the first lockdown.
The most joyous bit of idiocy.
And Twitter was full of just people going,
that's awful or that's brilliant.
That's Out of Character with me, Alex Lynch.
Hello, I'm a spider.
That was nuts, which it was.
Coming soon, wherever you get your podcasts.