Showing posts with label The Style Council. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Style Council. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2019

The 1985 Listening Post - The Style Council - Internationalists

The Style Council - Internationalists


#154
May 9 1985
The Style Council
Internationalists
Genre: Smooth Pop
4.5 out of 5


Highlights:
All Gone Away
Internationalists
With Everything to Lose
Shout to the Top
Walls Come Tumbling Down


We are listening to the American version because it includes a great single which was not on Our Favourite Shop, the UK release. 
Weirdly this album is even more eclectic than their first but also more cohesive. 
It’s also much much more “adult”. Like it’s aiming straight for the post-mod swinger with the giant stereo console housed in a credenza. 
Sometimes it’s cloying and dull (“The Lodgers”), other time it crackles (“Luck”) and, still others it’s perfection (“Shout to the Top”).

Monday, January 28, 2019

The 1984 Listening Post - The Style Council - Cafe Bleu

The Style Council - Cafe Bleu


#57
March 16 1984
The Style Council
Cafe Bleu
4.25 out of 5

Highlights:
Mick’s Blessing
The Whole Point of No Return
The Paris Match
My Ever Changing Moods*
You’re the Best Thing
Headstart for Happiness


A spectacular way to open the record, “Mick’s Blessing” tells you all you need to know about what you’re gong to get into here. The band can play, they’ve got the songs and they can’t wait to show them to you.
It’s a smart open because it’s followed directly by the brilliant coffee shop entry, “The Whole Point of No Return”, which, to me, show the bridge between the Jam’s frenetic mod-punk take and this moody-mods. It’s possible that Paul Weller is (one of) the greatest songwriters of the 20th Century but his disdain for that celebrity and inability to sit still keeps him from being the household name in America that he might’ve been. 
Perhaps it’s the preponderance of instrumentals (Side One has three!) that kept audiences away. But Paul doesn’t care. He’s making the music he loves, music he grew up with, the soundtrack to a Europe vacation and he’s doing it with style. 
At least on Side One. 
Side Two opens with Hip Hop. You read that. “A Gospel” which is…let me put it this way…it’s no “Ant Rap”. Ugh, atrocious. 
There are other missteps here as well, like the R&B Big 80’s Dance Jam Track, “Strength of Your Nature”.
However it fully recovers. 


But, make no mistake. Like Body and Soul, which came out the same week, the air waves are being deluged with music for your grandparents. 


*the version on the Apple Music release is the mellow, piano & vocal version, which could pass as a demo. For the full effect, seek out the single. 


Monday, January 14, 2019

The 1983 Listening Post - The Style Council - Introducing The Style Council

The Style Council - Introducing The Style Council

1983 Housekeeping
The Style Council
Introducing The Style Council
3 out of 5
Highlights:
The Paris Match
I have very strong memories of the Style Council’s album being released. But not this one, I don’t think. I think it was Cafe Bleu that my roommate Eli was excited to get. He was a fan of the Jam, if I recall. “Eton Rifles” was a song he edited to show his ability to be on the college radio station. I should’ve listened more. Eli had really good taste. Has.
So, I adore Cafe Bleu. I was just listening to it last month. Found the album in a bin on the shelf during house cleaning. Fired it up on the Sonos. Loved every second. But this is the first time with the first album.
It doesn’t start out promising. Much in the way that the Blue Eyed soul of Wham!’s first album earlier in the year was a bust, “Long Hot Summer” is mediocre at best. It sounds like it was recorded in his apartment on a 4 track. And it’s long, man. Thankfully, the classic “Headstart for Happiness” kicks in and we are on a better path. This almost demo version will be prettied up in the future, fortunately.
This whole thing is a sketch for what would come. It includes a club mix of a mediocre track, for fuck’s sake. No one needed a club mix of “Long Hot Summer”.
I think we could’ve all passed on this and been none the wiser.