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Word In Your Ear
The Band Aid recording, the birth of the tape loop and the power of the movie theme tune
This week’s events piled into a pipe and enthusiastically smoked include …
… our memories of being at the Band Aid recording in Sarm studios, November 25 1984.
… why it was the last dance of the mass media and why nothing could have the same impact now.
… the “household name” that made all the difference.
… the real reason Bob Geldof could be involved.
… James Bond, Star Wars, Indiana Jones, the Spaghetti Westerns … how music is the real DNA of film franchises, the fingerprint that connects you with the original.
… why should a teenager know what a radio is?
… “Live vivid! Delete ordinary! Break moulds! Copy nothing!” The tortuous rebranding of Jaguar.
… what the BBC spends 95 per cent of its time doing.
… how Bee Gees’ drummer Dennis Byron unwittingly invented the tape loop.
… the appeal of inconvenient technology.
… David’s second Deep ‘70s compilation, “a dream fulfilment” – Americana, Skinny Tie music, cover versions, the outer limits of Island Records.
… plus birthday guest Mike Sketch on discovering music late in life (Dylan, Tom Waits etc).
David’s ‘More Deep 70s’ 4-CD compilation is available for pre-order now:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/David-Hepworths-More-Deep-Misunderstood/dp/B0DCGGQDNK
Find out more about how to help us to keep the conversation going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
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701. How Toyah & Robert’s kitchen show became an Xmas rock’n’roll ding-dong
24:09||Ep. 701One of our rays of sunshine in the dark days of Lockdown was Toyah and Robert’s Sunday Lunch, fizzing clips of the two of them in their Dorset kitchen, him playing off-brand rock and roll, her singing in extravagant finery, occasionally on an exercise bike. Their version of Metallica’s Enter Sandman got 8.6m views alone. One time they were dressed as bees, another re-staging Swan Lake wearing tutus. This has now flowered into an all-the-trimmings Christmas show with a full rock band touring in December. They look back here at how it started and where it’s ended up, which includes … … the teenage Fripp doing the twist at the Cellar Club, Poole. … Strictly judge Craig Revel Horwood’s reaction when Robert booed him on set. … when the “elite newspapers” declared their kitchen shows were “genius”. … where their two different audiences meet. … plans for an upcoming Fripp memoir and his 1981 King Crimson diary. … things you find in old boxes in the attic. … how the grumpier end of King Crimson’s supporters regard the “other Robert Fripp”. … what Tony Iommi and Robert Plant thought of their lockdown clips. … and what you can expect from their Christmas Party show – which involves Bowie, Blondie, Neil Young, Slade, Metallica and an inflatable penguin. Toyah and Robert’s Christmas Party tickets here:https://toyahwillcox.com/gigs/700. John Lydon on the genius of Frankie Howerd, Tommy Cooper and the fine art of Spoken Word
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