Record Store Day 2019: Second Look

My eyes are pretty rubbish because the Royal Glamorgan Hospital don’t think I have a squiggly line in my left eye…

Anyway, it turns out that when I sorted the wheat from the chaff in my original post on the best picks ahead of this year’s Record Store Day, I missed LOADS! So, here’s the best of the rest….

Bananarama: Remixed Volume 1/Drama/Viva

The English girl group who started at the beginning of the 80s and have gone on to be one of the biggest girl groups ever, consolidate with the success of their reunion tour of 2018, with a trio of special vinyl releases this RSD, before the release of their next album as a duo, “In Stereo”(out end of April).

“Drama” and “Viva” were 2 of the albums Bananarama released during their noughties renaissance. Played to death at gay bars across the world, these packages include the amazing Buzz Junkies remix of their cover of Three Degrees hit, “The Runner”, along with “Love Don’t Live Here” and “Hypnotic Tango”. The remix 12″ is a selection of new mixes of pre-SAW-era tracks “Aie a Mwana” and “Cruel Summer”. One to look out for!

Brian May New Horizons

This latest solo track from the greatest mainstream guitarist of all time (in my opinion), is a little bit lacking in structure. Maybe one for the hardcore lovers of the poodle-haired one.

Fatboy Slim Right Here Right Now

Fab new remix collection of the 1999 top 2 hit!

Fleetwood Mac Fleetwood Mac Alternative

As per the last couple of deluxe Fleetwood Mac re-releases from the Warner Bros. years, a special release of the alternative takes from their eponymous 1975 album, has been extracted from 2018’s deluxe editions. The phenomenal set preluded “Rumours” and features classics like “Rhiannon”, “I’m So Afraid” and “Say You Love Me”. Someone’s got to keep Lindsay Buckingham’s income going now that he’s been sacked from the group he helped become megastars.

John Lennon Imagine Raw

Just like the Fleetwood Mac, the bonus disc from 2018’s rerelease of Lennon’s 1971 solo album, is separated for a special Record Store Day vinyl release of its own.

Kaiser Chiefs Oh My God

This is a special rerelease of the original version of a track which would become a top 10 hit 2 years after its original 2004 unveiling. Mark Ronson would have a hit with the track in 2006, with Lily Allen on vocals.

Purple Disco Machine The Soulmatic Remixes

I’ve featured his tracks on Tim’s Top 20 regularly since I discovered his reimagination of Man2Man’s “Male Stripper” upon release in September 2018. A selection of remixes from the Italian DJs 2017 album get a special purple vinyl release on 13th April!

South Park The Movie: Bigger, Longer and Uncut OST

21 years after the release of the cultural phenomenon at the cinema, the superb soundtrack to “Bigger, Longer and Uncut” is being released in a super deluxe vinyl format, including a book and postcards featuring 2 of the 4 main characters (a fab money-spinning tactic there…) 10 of the copies will also have a signed photo from South Park’s creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker. They’re going to kill my bank balance, you bastards!

Antoine Dodson ft. The Gregory Brothers Bed Intruder

Remember the guy who was interviewed in 2010 for a news report on a girl from the “Projects”, who was almost sexually attacked? He was the brother and he advised viewers to hide their kids and hide their wives. Some clever dick over at the Autotune the News team turned the interview into YouTube gold and the track, along with several other selections from the team are being released on physical media for the first time this Record Store Day!

OK, I don’t think I’ve missed any of the highlights from the 500+ selection of records out especially for the UK’s Record Store Day’s participating stores. There are a few locations around me where I may be able to get my hands on some of these records. There’s the Red House in Aberdare, Diverse Vinyl in Newport and of course, the supposed oldest record store in the world, Spillers in Cardiff.

If you’d like to look at the records I mentioned in my original post, click here.

Tim’s Top 20 has been uploaded. See if Jess Glynne has made it 2 weeks at the top by clicking here.

COMING SOON:SMASH OR GASH #002. I’ll review the new single releases later today, with a special review of Marina’s new digital album “Love”.

Tim’s Top 20 Number 86

Westlife received the title of “Song of the Week” on the inaugural “Smash or Gash” review feature on this site. It now does what their previous song didn’t and that’s enter straight at number 1. Meanwhile, “Hello My Love” manages to climb in its 12th week on the chart.

Amazingly, 2 of the 3 weakest tracks, according to the reviews last week have 2 highest new entries on the chart. “Hustle” is the 2nd single from P!nk’s forthcoming album “Hurts 2 B Human” and it’s a bit of a non-event, but at the same time not offensive either (unless you have a problem with the word “fuck”, that is). Ciara’s new single was slightly downgraded in my review due to it not really going anywhere. But, I think it’s the mixture of middle-of-the-road, major key 90s-ness that has turned “Thinkin Bout You” into a bit of an earworm as the week’s gone on. I still think it will flop on the international charts though.

Further new mixes of “Body Funk” help Italian DJ Purple Disco Machine climb back into the top 3 for after a large drop from the top slot last week. A new compilation album from him arrives at the end of April.

Ariana Grande and regular collaborator Victoria Monet share the performer credit for the first time on a single on surprise release “Monopoly”, which is currently in the itunes top 10 in the UK after 3 days of release. The song doesn’t appear on her latest album “Thank U Next” and it’s unknown at this time whether it’ll appear on Ariana’s next album, which will no doubt come out by summer.

COMING SOON: On my next blog post I’ll be reviewing this week’s new song releases as well as a special review of Marina’s new digital album release of “Love”.

On next week’s TT20, will Little Mix’s “Woman Like Me” become the first track since Kesha’s “Woman” in early 2018, to score 20 weeks on the chart? It’s taken a battering on the rundown this week, with the biggest drop within the chart (down 14 places to number 20) so we’ll have to wait and see.

Also, I’ll be updating my Record Store Day picks in another blog post, as the annual event takes place in just 1 week from now.

Thanks for reading. Please subscribe and I’ll catch up with you soon!

Tim’s Top 20 of Q1 2019

1. WESTLIFE – HELLO MY LOVE (54 plays)
2. Little Mix- Think About Us // LM5 (40 plays)
3. Marina- Handmade Heaven // Love + Fear (38 plays)
4. Calvin Harris & Rag n Bone Man- Giant (33 plays)
5. Dido- Friends // Still On My Mind (28 plays)
6. Unperfect- Gots To Give The Girl (27 plays)
7. Jax Jones & Years and Years- Play (23 plays)
8. Adelphi Music Factory- Javelin (22 plays)
9. CamelPhat- Breathe (21 plays)
10. Avril Lavigne & Nicki Minaj- Dumb Blonde // Head Above Water (20 plays)
11. Purple Disco Machine- Body Funk (19 plays)
12. Jess Glynne- No One // Always In Between (19 plays)
13. Francis Rossi & Hannah Rickard- I Talk Too Much // We Talk Too Much (19 plays)
14. Pink- Walk Me Home // Hurts 2 B Human (18 plays)
15. Emma Bunton- Baby Please Don’t Stop // My Happy Place (17 plays)
16. Zedd & Katy Perry- 365 (15 plays)
17. Dido- Give You Up // Still On My Mind (10 plays)
18. Francis Rossi & Hannah Rickard- Maybe Tomorrow // We Talk Too Much (10 plays)
19. Ariana Grande- Break Up With Your Girlfriend // Thank U, Next (10 plays)
20. That Kid- Take It Off (10 plays)

Tim’s Top 20 Number 85

So, it might look like a weird scenario at the top end of the chart. 2 re-entries right into the top 2 after an unspectacular set of results prior. Well, the main reason Jess Glynne and Zedd have suddenly appeared where they have is due to the stellar remix packages that have started to be released over the last 2 weeks. The Zedd remixes are particularly amazing: fast, ferocious, all with enough supersonic whooshes and vocal fudgery to wow any listener with a pulse.

“No One” has suddenly plonked itself at number 1. It musically sounds similar to her beaut of a UK number 1 smash “Hold My Hand” but, my main reservation with this song was the lyrics to be honest. I’m unsure how healthy it is for a song in the mainstream to effectively be telling listeners you need someone else’s approval to validate you. Maybe I’ve misinterpreted the lyrics or, not been listening to them properly. If you have made an alternative interpretation I’d be intrigued to know what it is.

Midweek, it looked like Will Young was going to earn his first number 1 on my chart since, well, probably as far back as “Leave Right Now” on an earlier incarnation of TT20, 16 years ago! It wasn’t meant to be and the shock WTF reaction at how great Louise’s first single in 18 years is, didn’t help either. The is-she-isnt-she-footballer’s-wife-ex-Eternal member’s “Stretch” is the highest new entry of the week, at #3, with Will Young, ahem, right behind her…

I don’t know what happened for it to take until a Missy collaboration, to be sleeping on the recent releases from the Meghan Trainor-esque Lizzo, but rap-product placement often works, as in this case. The sassy “Tempo” is surely not going to be a one-off song to be appearing soon in this chart.

Little Mix, once again, hog 20% of the chart, with tracks from their latest album “LM5” and hold the longest-running entry of the week with “Woman Like Me”.

Westlife are teetering on the borderline with “Hello My Love” but, it’s not all lost as they are likely to enter very highly next week with their new single “Better Man” which, I hate to say, was co-written by Ed Sheeran, as was the former hit.

COMING SOON:

I’m launching aseries of blog posts, highlighting the new song releases Dorothy’s mates and I would probably be most interested in….tentatively-titled “New Music FriGay”. Read first listen reviews of the tracks of the week, in anticipation of their arrival on future editions of Tim’s Top 20.

Tim’s Top 20 Number 84

There’s another big overhaul on this week’s chart, following a positive response to Status Quo founder, Francis Rossi, and duet partner Hannah Rickard’s new album “We Talk Too Much”. Tracks from the album, which sadly missed the top 50 this week in the UK album chart, make up a quarter of this week’s TT20.

“We Talk Too Much” is Rossi’s first new album since the death of the other face of Status Quo, Rick Parfitt, whose posthumous solo album hit the top 5 last April, and the first studio album to feature Rossi since Quo’s “Aquostic 2” in 2016, for which Rickard featured as violinist. This is how the latest team-up occurred. “We Talk Too Much” sounds like…if 80s Quo did country without the sad songs about someone’s man doing the dolly down the road’s daughter’s cousin behind her back rather than coming home for supper.

Dido’s dominance dwindles a bit this week, however she stil holds 2 spots on the chart this week, 1 of which is another track taken from the new album “Still On My Mind”. She is due to tour the world later this year.

Once again, Xenomania’s new girl group Unperfect’s debut single “Gots To Give The Girl” returns to the chart on the strength of another new batch of remixes being released, this time from the production house itself. Although the group are not quite making waves in the UK yet, they have hit Mexican radio charts and are releasing a 2nd single very soon.

At 6 and 7 are songs which sound like other big songs (but what doesn’t a lot of the time?) Rita Ora is on a 2nd song called “RIP” and this song sounds like “Tip Toe” like Jason Derulo. Daya’s “Insomnia” is like Kylie’s “Can’t Get You Out Of My Head” which is certainly no insult. Hopefully both tracks have some traction on streaming and download sites soon.

COMING SOON:

Will Young has brought out a song that sounds like a 2012 Rudimental song without the whine of Sam Smith over it.

The Lighthouse Family are back with an UPBEAT song!

Britney Spears Album Rank

So, I saw a tweet from Gay Times earlier this week, linking to a feature on their website, ranking Britney’s 9 studio albums to date. I felt compelled to start a rank-off (I said rank) with the long-running publication, as their columnist, Daniel Megarry reckoned “Glory” was the best she’s managed in her whole 21-year recording career…

Anyway, without further ado…

9 Britney Jean (2013)

I won’t be too mean and say the album is a f*cking embarrassment, shambles, Myah Marie’s debut album proper etc. However…

There was an air of excitement around the launch of this album, particularly when Britney returned to the public eye for the first time since she’d topped the charts worldwide with the Tulisa-penned “Scream and Shout”, 9 months before her appearance in the Nevada desert one September morning in 2013. She was there, with a gaggle of Britney-alikes to announce the announcement of her Vegas residency! Also, there was news that will.i.am was the executive producer on the forthcoming album, which Britney herself proclaimed to be her most personal album to date…if I didn’t think someone had been drugging her before……

Logic should have said something was going to be wrong with that statement… a “most personal” album, executive produced by a man, who had become famous the world over for taking any trace of personality out of the big-mega-radio-smashers he produced.

There was no reason for any PR to tell Britney to tell her interviewers, that the album was going to be that meaningful. She had been the queen of bops for 14 years by that point. However, her fans would have liked to have heard her voice on more than just one song, the Sia-penned “Perfume”. If and when Britney is heard on the rest of the album, she’s been layered numerous times with effects and/or Myah Marie, the controversial “backing singer” who was given a more prominent role on Britney albums by 2013.

The backlash was obvious: upon hearing the album, it tanked in the charts, with her lowest peaking album to date in the USA (#4) and even worse in the UK (#33). Team Britney realised the mis-step as well. Other than the one saving grace on the album, the top 10 hit “Work Bitch”, no other song was performed from “Britney Jean” on the Piece of Me residency by the time the next album was released just 2 years later.

5/10

8 Circus (2008)

This album was out in a flash; a clever piece of damage control on Team Britney’s part. I’ve mentioned Team Britney a few times, implying I don’t think Britney has been capable of doing anything herself. This isn’t her fault particularly. The way she has been put out there since the ambulance incident of January 2008, has suggested she has become more of a pop puppet since then, than when she was on top of the world in 2000/01.

The album came a year after the release of “Blackout” and sounds like its weaker sibling. Danja was on hand for the album’s best deep cuts, including “Kill The Lights”. The album also had a perfect collection of singles “Womanizer”, “Circus” and “If U Seek Amy”, all accompanied by killer promo videos. The best song otherwise, was relegated to “bonus track” status, the garage-band-lite “Amnesia”. I think the reason why the song works so well is it’s one of the few songs Britney doesn’t sound electronically perfect, in fact she sounds so out of tune in parts, it’s refreshing! The rest of the album is either filler, unheard of on any Britney album since her 1999 debut (“Blur”, “Phonography”) or it’s verging on cringeworthy (“Mmm Papi”, “My Baby”, raise your hands). However, the damage was controlled successfully and a major tour went without a hitch if we ignore the Australia episode.

6.5/10

7 …Baby, One More Time

From reading articles on this album and its singles, I seem to be in the minority of people who think the Stop! Remix of “Crazy” is superior to the original mix, as featured on Britney’s debut album. It’s appearance would have been welcome on a hypothetical reissue of this collection.

Like with many pop debuts, a lot of shit was thrown at the wall to see what would stick. No surprises, it was the Max Martin songs which shone the most (the title track, “Crazy”, “I Will Be There”) and would shape the sophomore album. Her first single carries the collection well enough on its own to not be further down this chart.

Other notable songs: “Born To Make You Happy”, “From The Bottom Of My Broken Heart”.

7/10

6 Glory (2016)

A lot of fans regard this as part of the “Holy Trinity” of Britney albums, along with “In The Zone” and “Blackout”. I can only assume that is because it’s the first album in recent history where Britney sounded like a human rather than a humanoid.

This is Britney Spears, a girl/woman who made a brand for herself by being affiliated with songs that you danced hard to, shoved a straw behind your ear and pretended to have a microphone to lip-sync in (just me?…) I don’t know anyone who bought into the brand for her vocal acrobatics. Her tone is enough (this is no excuse for Myah though!). They should have just let the music do the talking.

Instead, what we were given as an apology for “Britney Jean”, was a collection of MOR songs which wouldn’t have sounded wrong on a Justin Bieber album. No surprises then, that the same writers that he used on his most recent album were drafted in to create most of “Glory”.

There were some high points, don’t get me wrong; “If I’m Dancing” (WHAT A SONG!), “Private Show” (yes, I’m the one who likes “Private Show”), “Do You Wanna Come Over”, the modern day sibling of “Toxic”.

Although Britney’s worst selling album to date (this can be somewhat attributed to the collapse of the physical album market against her aging core fan base), “Glory” served the purpose of telling people Britney is still around, to a small degree…but not enough that she needs to carry on down this route for the forthcoming 10th album. Please bring Danja, Max and Bloodshy & Avant back!

7/10

5 Britney (2001)

I was bought “Britney” for my 16th birthday, by which point the song “I’m a Slave 4 U” had been the only single from this album. I therefore didn’t hold much hope that this album would be a patch on her previous collection, “Oops….”

For all the bitching the stans do about Britney’s team, the more I type, the more I realise how much of Britney’s career has been successful because of the team who are now so derided.

This album was the one where she started to become a woman (“I’m Not a Girl”…) and was loosely the soundtrack to Britney’s only feature film to date, “Crossroads”. It was also the last album for 10 years that Max Martin and his writing team at Cheiron were involved with. Bubblegum was out and Janet Jackson mk2 was in.

For me, it took until I was 22, to get into this album. Then it all clicked. The collection has a lot of of-its-time sounds in the form of tracks like “Lonely”, “Boys”, “Slave” but also one of Martin’s best compositions “Cinderella”. Word has it the upcoming Britney musical will feature this track which is excellent news! This is also the last album where you really hear “sweet” Britney, in the form of “When I Found You”.

A great album, even if it took me 6 years to realise it.

7.5/10

4 Oops! I Did It Again… (2000)

This is one of those albums I remember where I was the first time I listened to it- the listening post in Our Price, Burton-on-Trent. It was like an eargasm, hearing the first growling note of “Stronger”, coming straight off the back of the “innocent” on its title track, without a stop for air, before it abruptly hushes….just stops, in fact. Like WTF?!

Unfortunately, I didn’t have enough pocket money that day to buy the album there and then. Sad times.

When I did finally have the album in my little Boots CD micro system, I was overjoyed. The best bits of “Baby, One More Time…” stretched across 15 songs, courtesy of Max and co. It takes 9 songs to hit a bump in the road (“Where Are You Now”)…Before then the listener is treated to all the singles, including “Lucky” and “Don’t Let Me Be The Last To Know”, plus a cover of the Stones’ “Satisfaction” and Britney speaking to her friends on the phone in somewhat unnecessarily forced segues into the next songs.

In hindsight, having Britney change tact for the 3rd album was probably the best career move. I don’t know that a 3rd collection of bubblegum gems would have worked in the long run, especially knowing how fickle us pop fans can be in our formative years.

8/10

So my Holy Trinity of Godney goes like this:

Blackout, Femme Fatale, In The Zone. But, in which order?

So, let’s start with the common favourite…

3 Blackout (2007)

I’ll be honest, the music is probably ever-so slightly better on this album than my #2. However, sentimentality has come into play with this one.

What a perfect urban/pop crossover album. Saying that, when the album was released, I connected to it about as much as Britney seems to have done with “Britney Jean”. I was much more invested in Girls Aloud and my first boyfriend.

As I mentioned in my recent post on the 8th anniversary of the leak of “Femme Fatale”, it’s only been recently I’ve appreciated just how shit a time Britney must have been having during the post-Kevin, pre-Vegas years. So, the trips to the hairdressers, the hospital and the umbrella shop all now shape the way I listen to “Blackout”. The song that always makes me the most emotive, is “Break The Ice”. This was released as a single not long after Britney looked like she was going to do something catastrophic to herself, not helped by the fact the promo video was an animé film, which ends halfway through the song. I always now think about the what ifs, get quite sad but, this feeling helps me really feel the song more as it plays.

Other highlights are “Gimme More”, “Piece Of Me”, “Radar”…actually it might be easier to mention the lowlight, “Ooh Ooh Baby”, which ironically seems to have been the inspiration for the perfect “Womanizer”.

I get why this album is adored by the gays fans so much. If it weren’t for sentiment, I’d put it at the top of my list too.

9.5/10

2 In The Zone (2003)

This was a massive surprise. After still not being enamoured by the whole not-a-girl phase, all I could go on, in a time before I had a computer to listen to any leaks, was the first single, “Me Against The Music”. The single was picked up during my lunch break when I was a trainee accountant, from Woolworths if my memory serves me correctly. The Rishi Rich remix was also perfection.

But, even-so, could one single really be enough for me to be ready for what I was about to experience?

2004 would become the year I saw Britney live for the first time, she’d become a bad bitch in the news and, I’d batter my copy of “In The Zone” through constant plays. I think the only other albums that would get a look in that year would be Scissor Sisters’ debut and Anastacia’s “sprock” album.

“Toxic” was perfect, obviously. Bloodshy & Avant were the producers of the moment (and would become Galantis years later) and Cathy Dennis was the songwriter of the time, responsible for “Can’t Get You Out Of My Head” for the real Kylie, “Don’t Stop Movin'” for S Club 7 and “Anything Is Possible” for Will Young. The combination of this songwriter with these producers also created Rachel Stevens’ debut solo smash “Sweet Dreams My LA Ex”. We’re all glad the other singers rejected “Toxic” though.

This album was so good because it, like its predecessor, “Blackout” felt a bit darker than what had come from Britney previously. The vocals on “In The Zone” were less processed, the tracks were mainly co-written by Britney for the first and (to date) the last time. It has her apology to Justin, “Everytime”, which she managed to mime on piano during the Onyx Hotel Tour. Queen of Faking It! ❤

It also helped that this was the year I went from a Britney fan to a Britney stan. The press started going to town on her but, at this time time she seemed to relish in it. I remember shortly after her quickie wedding to Jason Alexander, she was in a newspaper stating she was planning to get one up on Justin Timberlake, after he’d managed to forge a solo career with significant help from the diss track “Cry Me A River”, and beat the levels of success he’d managed the previous 12 months.

Oh and she sang about her hand as well.

9.5/10

1 Femme Fatale (2011)

I’m not going to say much about this album here as there’s plenty of detail in my post, celebrating the 8th anniversary of its leak here.

However, this is my favourite Britney album, because it’s just got the best writing and production team (personal lives aside) in Max Martin and ** ****. It had just enough will.i.am, Ina Wroldsen and Darkchild thrown in for good measure. I’m a stereotypical gay to a certain degree, therefore I love the album for its saturation in autotune. The vocal effects are part of Britney’s legacy after all.

It has “I Wanna Go”.

Enough said.

10/10. I’d give it 11 if that wasn’t stupid.

So, it’s over to you now. In which order would you rank Britney’s 9 albums? Let me know in the comments below.

Tim’s Top 20 Number 83

So, this week there are 5 new entries, 5 re-entries, 5 climbers and 5 droppers. This, of course, means there’s a brand new #1.

But, let’s begin by mentioning the influx of entries from Dido. She has the most entries on this week’s chart with 5 tracks, all taken from her 5th album “Still On My Mind”. The album is heading for a top 3 position on the UK album chart this week. This will be her best chart position for 11 years. A more comprehensive review of the collection will appear on this site very soon. But, from the dominance on this top 20, expect it to get a good report.

My new favourite, Purple Disco Machine, scores a 2nd number 1 in just 6 months with a freshly promoted track from his 2017 album “Soulmatic”. “Body Funk” was released as a remix EP and has enabled it to enter the chart right on top. It’ll be interesting to see whether its longevity on the chart will be an improvement on the last #1 he featured on- a remix of Jax Jones’ “Play”, which left TT20 just 2 weeks after also entering the chart on top position. The song has had a rebound this week, re-entering for a 3rd week on the list, at this week’s #17.

Benefitting from a neatly packaged EP of remixes on Spotify, Calvin Harris’ “Giant” climbs to its best chart position so far (#3) and, guess what, the New Purple One is one of the remixers. Bringing disco house shimmying into 2019, is this finally the end of listless dance music ruling the airwaves? Everything is crossed…

Bananarama were a pop force in the 80s and have managed to continue for a further 30 years by being a gay scene staple, with a sadly cheap sounding, kitsch pop style. Their only saving grace being a Buzz Junkies remix of a Three Degrees song from the 70s (“The Runner”). Reuniting with Siobhan Fahey in 2016 for a tour seems to have reinvigorated the 2-piece studio line-up. Following a false start with the horrendously reductive “Dance Music”, they’ve released a 2nd song from their forthcoming album. Making an effort to not be a dismissive bitch over the whole affair, “Stuff Like That”, which isn’t quite as offensive, has managed enough streams this week to enter TT20 at #20.

COMING SOON:

My review of Dido’s new album is due later in the week

New entries on TT20 are likely from Daya, Westlife and Rita Ora in the coming weeks. They are unlikely to come from Iggy Azalea.

Rolling Back the Rivers in Time: #001 Britney Spears- Femme Fatale

12 March 2011

What a day to be alive. While I was going through emotional turmoil, what with University work coming out of every orifice, coupled with my OCD manifesting itself in a variety of manners, there was one saving grace: Someone leaked Britney Spears’ new album, the first one since the alleged secret 2nd breakdown in 2010, “Femme Fatale”. I only found out it was the anniversary earlier today, after seeing various posts on my Timehop banging on about how I thought this was her best album since “In The Zone.”

REALLY?!

Has my opinion changed in the 8 years that have passed, to fall in line with that of most Britney stans, that “Femme Fatale” falls short of being in the ‘Holy Trinity’ of Britney albums- 2004’s “In The Zone”, 2016’s “Glory” and, most importantly, the one I ignored this time in 2011, the 2007 hot mess of “Blackout” and all that went on around its creation and such like….?

Well, it’s only more recently, since the highly popularised Bradley Stern and T. Kyle podcast, celebrating 20 Years of Britney (click here to listen), that I’ve really recognised all the shit Britney went through back in 2007 and early 2008. Naturally, I remember it and recall the unfortunate events in everyday conversation with friends who are also Britney stans. But, it’s only been the last few weeks it really hit me how awful all that stuff must have been for her at the time, and I can appreciate why she still isn’t the woman she was (but then who really is the same person they were 12 years ago, eh?)

I hadn’t even considered, prior to listening to the aforementioned podcast, that Britney may have a 2nd breakdown away from the glare of the paps, in the spring of 2010. It would certainly explain how Britney started the year without the desire to dance on point and, ended the year with, not only without the desire to dance on point, but an album of songs autotuned to within its last “woah-oh-oh-oh”, except for “He About To Lose Me”, for which Ina Wroldsen provides the high notes (thanks, Ina). It seems Britney lost her top notes if her Good Morning America promo from March 2011 is anything to go by…

Plus she looked older than my mother!

The album is 16 tracks of perfection. “I Wanna Go” remains my most played song ever, according to my Last FM profile (Last FM link).

Max Martin has been a saviour when it comes to providing the best songs for the best female vocalists, Britney being the most famous of course. He returned to the flock after being completely dismissed by the time “In The Zone” was in production in 2003. He came back at the right time as well. “Circus” contained a bit too much filler and, in hindsight feels like it was thrown together just to keep Britney busy instead of being in the back of an ambulance again. There’d been the moderately successful “The Singles Collection” and “3” released in 2009, to keep the money rolling in in the interim. But, I think without Britney having a tried and tested songwriter/producer at the helm, the album we now know as “Femme Fatale” could have been a marketing disaster.

The most noticeable quality of “Femme Fatale” is its accessability. There’s no grower, it’s all shower. Even, the less ‘bangier’ tracks, like “How I Roll” are so unusual in their structure when placed straight after the mega “I Wanna Go”, you can only listen and think ‘wow, that’s different in a good way’ and want to listen again and again.

“Femme Fatale” served its purpose as an album to keep the money rolling in and to keep the Britney brand selling, while the face of the brand was apparently dealing with her demons for a while yet. In hindsight, and coming to the realisation Britney was clearly the consummate professional when creating “Blackout”, I can understand why the fans want a Part 2. I can therefore understand why many don’t want her to go back to Max, nor Dr. Luke (obviously), when she seemed so disinterested. Personally, I don’t think we should go backwards. Isn’t it our Queen who is “stronger than yesterday” after all?

And whatever happened between the atrocious “Britney Jean”/start of the Vegas residency, and her ability to string a sentence together that consisted of more words than just “cool” and “artsy-fartsy to record the more engaged “Glory” 3 years after, “Femme Fatale” remains her best album ever as far as I’m concerned. Let’s just enjoy the music, celebrate 8 years of “Femme Fatale” and keep on dancing till the world ends.

Listen to “Femme Fatale” here via Spotify

Tim’s Top 20 Number 82

So, 15 weeks after it was last at #1, Little Mix’s first single from “LM5” has returned to the top. “Woman Like Me” is now accompanied by 2 new mixes featuring a Nicki replacement in the form of Ms Banks and has helped with the track’s reversal in fortunes on this chart. Meanwhile, for the 2nd week in a row the group holds the most entries in a single week on this chart with 5.

Click here to read my post on the return of Emma Bunton and my ponderings over why she seems to be the favourite Spice Girl. Her first solo single in 13 years is this week’s highest new entry on TT20, straight in at 3. A new album follows in April.

Benefitting from curiosity plays of a remix package, Xenomania’s new girl group Unperfect’s debut single “Gots To Give The Girl” returns to the chart after a week out of it. Further, dancier remixes are confirmed to be released on 15 March.

I’ll be reviewing Dido’s 5th album “Still On My Mind” later in the week. The title track is the 5th song from it to enter the chart and is this week’s 2nd highest new entry, in at 8.

Last week’s returning chart-topper retreats to its lowest position within the chart so far, as Kelly Clarkson’s “Heat” drops 8.

Coming soon:

My new favourite mixmaster General, Purple Disco Machine has released a new single this week and is likely to enter highly next Friday. Also, Quo’s Francis Rossi and his new collaborater Hannah Rickard prepare the release of the album “I Talk Too Much” with a 3rd single release from it this week. Finally, the full remix collection of “Giant” has been released by Calvin Harris, so will this help the track reverse its downward trek this time next week?

Come back here next Friday to find out!

My Record Store Day Ones To Watch

The history of Record Store Day goes back to 2008, at a time when the vinyl medium for recorded music was reserved for indie snobs and audiophiles who could tell the difference between digital and analogue, preferring the alleged warmth of sound, and flaws that come with the material used to create the discs.

Every April since, Record Store Day has celebrated and, particularly at the time of its inception, provided a lifeline to the vinyl record. 2008 saw sales of mp3s increase exponentially while, the hard copies of records were left to supermarket shoppers and those willing to travel further afield to the last remaining record shops. 11 years later, not only have sales of CDs and downloads collapsed, with Amazon gobbling up every HMV shopper in its midst, the one medium that has skyrocketed in revenues is the vinyl record! So, it’s probably unsurprising that there are more cash-ins from major record labels releasing special editions of massively popular artists’ discography, than at the event’s conception.

I can’t say I’ve been averse to buying the aforementioned cash-in releases, after all I am a pop kid and, as a former radio colleague of mine once said, us pop kids of the 90s/00s golden era of manufactured artists, have been “brainwashed” into what music we like. But, generalising aside (this topic is for a blog posting of its own some day), the records that have piqued my interest/I’ve bought over the last couple of years have included:

Little Mix Glory Days (pink vinyl album)

The Beatles Penny Lane/Strawberry Fields Forever (50th anniversary remix)

Frankie Goes To Hollywood Welcome to the Pleasuredome (singles box set)

ABBA Summer Night City (40th anniversary edition)

Madonna You Can Dance (Japan edition replica)

Madonna Madonna (Japan edition replica)

Although most of the 500 special releases on Saturday 13 April will pass me by here are the ones I’ll be hoping to nab in the 2019 event (subject to price):

Queen Productions Ltd have never been shy to rerelease material featuring the sorely missed Freddie Mercury. Now, a 7″ single of “Bohemian Rhapsody”/”I’m In Love With My Car” is being reissued. The twice-million-seller was recently announced as the most streamed song of the 20th century. The new disc is dual-coloured, featuring the pink and yellow shades used for the promotional fliers and home media covers of the movie. The soundtrack also gets a double picture disc release for Record Store Day as well. I can’t imagine this will be a limited edition though…this is Queen after all.

Steve Bronski and I almost collaborated when he was recording material in the early 2010s. Sadly nothing came of it. If you still want an angelic voice, Steve, drop me a line 😉

The Scottish face of mainstream gay pop in the 80s, along with his once-bandmate Jimmy Somerville, releases a new collection of remixes of Bronski Beat’s pension pot song “Smalltown Boy”.

Sweden has provided most of my favourite artists and/or writers: ABBA, Max Martin, Bloodshy and Avant to name but a few. 2 of my Scandinavian faves have a place on the shelves of the mostly-independently-owned shops eligible to take part in Record Store Day 2019. Robyn releases a 2-LP edition of her 2010 album/3-EP collection “Body Talk”, home of the classic “Dancing On My Own” as well as fan favourites “Call Your Girlfriend”, “Hang With Me” and “Time Machine”(co-written by Martin). Also, Max Martin’s dearly departed colleague from the 90s Denniz Pop’s production “The Sign”, a number 1 in the US for Ace of Base also gets the rerelease treatment.

2019’s replicas of Japanese Madonna EPs are for “True Blue” and “La Isla Bonita”.

Also getting the RSD exposure will be Greatest Hits collections long out of print for the Rolling Stones (Big Hits volumes 1 and 2). Supergrass’ 1999 smash hit “Pumping On Your Stereo” gets a picture disc release and, finally, Status Quo’s 2010 album, once a Tesco exclusive release “Quid Pro Quo”, is out on vinyl as well.

I’d be a hyprocrite if I didn’t say I now bought most of the music I still get hard copies of, from Amazon. However, I still love the bricks and mortar record shop and can spend hours in them, leaving with a nice big bag of goodies. I can’t wait to see what now happens to HMV following its change in fortunes over in Canada, where vinyl is pushed big time. I also love buying from smaller, independent record shops. I will therefore be supporting Record Store Day once more on 13 April 2019. Visit http://www.recordstoreday.com to find out where your nearest participating store is and, to find out what special performances will be going on at each store in celebration.

I give it another 12 months before we get Cassette Day….

No?

Tim’s Top 20 Number 81

This week’s chart is the post-Brits-effect list, with many of the tracks featured being from artists who featured at last month’s Brit Awards; the main beneficiary being Little Mix.

Following on from the essay I posted last week here on what the future may hold for the group after a lukewarm reception to recent album “LM5”, I gave the album another chance. Now that the hype around rereleased music for Christmas is over (I’m looking at the Carpenters and Queen in particular) I have been able to pay attention to this album once again. Although I still completely get why the album has returned the group back to their pre-Get Weird period in terms of sales, the collection actually has a number of gems, given a few chances. 7 of the songs feature in this week’s top 20, one of which (“Woman Like Me”) is also back in the top 2 after being rereleased with a remix featuring a rap by Ms Banks, reminiscent of the Brits performance.

Little Mix still didn’t quite have enough push to get to number 1 again, however, “Think About Us” has, impressively re-entered the chart at a very high number 4. It would seem last week’s disappearance from the top 20 was an anomoly, which can be partly explained by my reduction in listening to current tracks last week.

Also benefitting from the Brits is George Ezra who, prior to this week, had not featured in any of my charts. This week he has 2 entries!

I gave in my fan club membership after 2009 when it comes to P!nk (minus 2012’s “Blow Me” which was the exception)…it all got a bit too dull for me. “Walk Me Home” is very intriguing to listen to though. I’m still trying to work out what the hell the time signature is! Great, singalong song for the Radio 2 listener, which is no bad thing. This song may have a few weeks’ steam left in it yet as it climbs in its 2nd week on the chart, to number 18.

Calvin Harris’s superstar collaborative performance at the awards has helped the fortunes of “Promises”, which re-enters after a 17-week absence, and “Giant”, which benefits from one of my favourite newbies, Purple Disco Machine, remixing the track to hang around for a 7th week.

The week’s biggest loser, down 17 places and hanging on at #20 is Zedd and Katy Perry’s “365”, which hasn’t lit up any chart except US iTunes for about an hour upon release. It’s likely to have had its run on TT20 as well.

COMING SOON TO TIM’S TOP 20:

Emma Bunton whets the Spice Girls fans’ appetites with a new song called “Baby Please Don’t Stop”, which is ever-so slightly like the spawn of her 2001 UK #1 “What Took You So Long” and, her top 10 hit from her ’60s phase’, “I’ll Be There.” Released last week, this track is likely to enter highly on next week’s chart.

The Ariana tracks have hung around longer than I expected and a lot of the songs, admittedly, are earworms…others not so much… There’s still some life in the music from “Thank U, Next” yet.

The Bohemian Rhapsody movie is out on bluray and DVD next week so, there could be one or two entries back soon from the soundtrack.

Record Store Day is on 13 April and the list looks reasonable. Check out my other post “Got Got Need” with more info on this year’s event. (COMING SOON). Maybe there will be one or two tracks from the special releases make an appearance on the chart in the coming weeks.

#LM6? What’s Next For Little Mix?

They were the darlings of the Brit Awards 2019. Following a controversial performance of “Woman Like Me” where Jesy nearly got her tuppence out on national telly, managing not to mis-step during the awkward-as-hell, but equally hilarious, interview with show host Jack Whitehall, and THEN going on to win the “Best Video” category, with the aforementioned song, they had a decent night.

The award could have been for “Best Hair” for all it mattered as this award was, essentially a fan vote, based on who could get the most hash tags on Twitter. It would seem the Mixers (the fans) are a devoted bunch of girls and gays.

So what happened to all those people who got off the bus between their biggest era to date, the “Glory Days” album campaign, and this, the “LM5″/leaving Simon Cowell phase?

In summer 2018, following another successful tour, Little Mix were the featured vocalists on Cheat Codes’ most recent hit “Only You”. Formulaic, plinky-plonky EDM-lite for the Capital Radio listener to lap up. Even that wasn’t enough to reach the top 10 in the UK. The last time the girls were linked to a single, unavailable on any album, was when they teamed up with CNCO for a revocalised version of the Latin American boyband’s record-breaking smash, “(Bailamos) Reggaeton Lento”. This song, released in the UK just 8 months prior, smashed into the top 5 and helped propel (a 4th edition of) the 4th Mix album, over the million sales barrier, something they’d not achieved before.

Go further back and, Little Mix could have been as musically credible as Girls Aloud once were when they were released from the X Factor(y), by unleashing songs which bucked the trend time and time again: “Wings” (UK #1 in 2012), “DNA” (UK top 3 hit), “Move” (UK top 3 smash in 2013). The first 2 albums, “DNA” and “Salute” weren’t particularly big sellers- they sold well, don’t get me wrong, about 1 million globally between the pair of them. The music was well crafted as well as the injection British pop needed in the first half of this decade.

Rather than continue down the precarious route of music snobbery and turning into the NME’s bum chums, someone saved the group from Simon’s free-swinging axe, by giving them “Black Magic”. The song was the soundtrack to the summer of 2015 even though it had more than a whiff of 80s throwback to it. Being so backward-thinking was a pretty radical move. This song helped turn the group from fair-to-middling chart touchers to ring-shitters round every girl group since the Spice Girls 15 years before them.

2016 and 2017 saw Little Mix become Simon Cowell’s biggest act at the time and with it came a deluge of singles featuring tagged-on rent-a-rappers including Machine Gun Kelly, Stormzy and Kid Ink. Was this Syco’s attempt to break the group into the American market after the almost-but-not-quite attempt a few years before? Well, it didn’t work and the Mixers started to get a bit fed up of it. The Twitterati began to question whether the group would ever release a single on their own again?

So when “Only You” was the first new single in a while, there was a lot of anticipation. What a disappointment it turned out to be. Where was the bombast and sass that made Little Mix trail blazers? OK, so no act gets a 100% strike rate. (“Headlines” anyone?) Let’s see what happens when NICKI MINAJ is featured on the first single proper from “LM5”. Nicki can be the icing on most pop singles if she’s affixed somewhere in the proceedings. “Woman Like Me” was the start of Little Mix’s Year of the Woman campaign, aka the LM5 era. After the success of the last few ‘first’ singles from their albums, there was expectation for this song to blow everything before it out the park.

Instead, the song didn’t hit the top spot and 4 months on from its release, its UK Spotify streams aren’t as stratospheric as those LM songs before it. Never mind, the album will rectify this surely? The answer was a resounding “no”. Upon release, the album sold 50,000 copies in week 1, reaching number 3 in the UK, before falling out of the top 10 within a fortnight! “LM5” has now been out for 3 months, with a moderately successful first single proper and 3 promo singles which went OK. “Strip” was the biggest hit of the promo tracks, hitting the top 30 for a week. Not bad, but, in a market full of ladies promoting stripping back to basics, including the massive Christmas hit “Thursday” by Jess Glynne (who, coincidentally or not, co-wrote “Woman Like Me” and shares certain lyrics on this song with “Strip”) it feels like the track didn’t go on to become the runaway hit the record label hoped (the fact a video was made for it as well suggests there was an attempt to push this all the way). Again, something didn’t quite connect with the general public.

2nd single “Think About Us” has yet to even enter the UK top 20, even with a feature from Ty Dolla Sign, who helped make fellow X Factor group Fifth Harmony score their biggest hit with “Work From Home” 3 years earlier. The album has struggled past the 100,000 sales mark in the UK which is pretty awful for their standards and is so far their worst seller by a mile. Now the Christmas market has long died, which they relied on for the last 7 years to hit the massive sales, it’s not looking good. Is this the reason Simon split with the girls? He jumped as soon as he could see the Little Mix ship was sailing.

The group have stated that “LM5” is the album they always wanted to make. Maybe, too much input from the girls is the reason they’ve disconnected somewhat. Manufactured groups who go from having everything mapped out for them to trying to do it their way hardly ever works very well (examples: Spice Girls ditching their manager which undoubtedly helped Geri think she’d be better to leave, STEPS going for a more grown-up sound in 2001, Girls Aloud doing a song without Xenomania?!?!) Perhaps poorer ratings for The X Factor in 2018 and their absence from the series finale, which they were usually the star performers in these shows, meant too few people in their target audience were watching what they were doing.

Here are my predictions for what will happen next for Little Mix:

Once the campaign for this album has dried up (which I fear will happen sooner than anyone had hoped during its creation), they will announce an “hiatus” upon completion of their Autumn tour, for which tickets luckily went on sale before anyone could get used to LM5 (or not as the case seems to be). I would hope that the girls realise from history, that going solo probably won’t work out and they still need each other to be successful. So, they could return in 2021 for a 10th anniversary celebration and bring out an album free of featured rent-a-rappers, with a sound reminiscent of their “Get Weird” collection. Maybe they could do an Olly Murs and tag on a 2nd CD with their greatest hits.

I really hope Little Mix don’t quit altogether because the coins aren’t coming in as vast an amount. I don’t think they’ll be able to pull off enough of a credible facade to reclaim their former glory days without the power of the Syco machine chugging along in the background…especially when the music isn’t quite there either.

Tim’s Top 20 Number 78

So, there’s a change at the top and it’s primarily due, not to primary artist Jax Jones, or even their collaborators Years and Years, but due to the stellar remix released a week ago by, who I hope provides the sound of 2019, Purple Disco Machine. A one-man gay night who, in recent months has already provided some much-missed sparkle to the charts with his 1st number 1 on the former Tim’s Top 10 in September 2018: “Dished”, which used the top line of Man2Man’s UK top 3 gay anthem in itself “Male Stripper”. Keep your ears out for another remix of his, released on Friday 8th Feb, this time refreshing Fatboy Slim’s number 1 hit from 1999 “Praise You”.

The Sound of 2019 is trying to be the Y2K Rebooted. Along with Purple Disco Machine, coming through is another artist providing a coat of sumptuous paint to the sounds of 20 years ago, CamelPhat, who could be mistaken for being Chicane for those who missed the fuss the first time round. “Breathe”, which scores the 2nd highest new entry on the chart this week, is currently a top 10 sales hit and is on a slow but, promising trajectory up the official UK charts.

The Chemical Brothers also had massive success in the late 90s with hits like “Hey Boy, Hey Girl” and “Let Forever Be”. They return after a break from the mainstream with something a little less daring but, maybe this is for the better, with their take on commercial disco: “Got To Keep On”. Unlucky for some, they enter TT20 at #13.

Saara Aalto has rerecorded her cover of the Frozen song “Let It Go” and released it on the back of her half-sung, half-ice-skated performance on ITV’s Dancing on Ice 2 weeks ago. This is Saara’s 5th hit on the chart following her Eurovision smash “Monsters”, Xenomania-produced #1 “My Touch”, “Domino” and “Walking on Nails”. She enters the chart this time at #19.

Coming soon to Tim’s Top 20:

Ariana Grande released her 5th album “Thank U, Next” on Friday 8th Feb. Can she score a hit that’ll topple the success of “Blazed” from last year’s “Sweetener” album?

The Brit Awards are presented on 20th February. Will anyone do an Adele and shit rings round the competition with an unexpectedly perfect performance?

Tim’s Top 40 Songs of 2018

Last year STEPS’ itunes number 1 single “Scared of the Dark” beat off stiff competition from Rita Ora, Shania Twain and Kesha to claim my most played new song of the whole calendar year.

2018 was, more-so than 2017, generally rubbish for new commercial sounds and I’ve found myself struggling to warm to the big radio hits that came to be. Still I’ve managed to compile my top 40 most played “new” tracks of 2018…though you’ll see a lot of the tracks are in fact remixes, soundtracks, covers and songs relying on samples of old tracks. Although I cling to a hope that I haven’t reached the age of “back in my day music was better than this rubbish” I am not particularly optimistic that 2019 won’t produce more reductive, minimalist or just plain shit chart toppers. So I’ll drink my bucks fizz and say goodbye to 2018 with this list of my 40 most played tracks of 2018. Happy “New” Year.

(Position Artist Song//Album)

1 Kylie Minogue Dancing// Golden (88 plays)

Kylie returned to form for her Golden year, leaving the mediocre Voice/Kiss me Once meh-fest well and truly behind her. As well as managing to score another number 1 album in the UK, her album has continued to perform in the top 40 intermittently ever since with numerous special edition releases at a time when streaming is dominating the commercial music industry. Kylie appears another FOUR times in this chart.

2 Clean Bandit Solo//What is Love? (81 plays)

3 Kylie Minogue Stop Me From Falling//Golden (63 plays)

4 Ariana Grande No Tears Left to Cry//Sweetener (57 plays)

5 Jess Glynne I’ll Be There//Always in Between (45 plays)

Following a fabulous run of hits and a smashing debut album campaign between 2014 and 2015, Jess Glynne returned to the top of the UK charts in January with her contribution to Rudimental’s “These Days”. Although her follow-up collection feels reductive when placed next to her earlier output, (she wouldn’t be the first act to try to capitalise on a formula that worked for them in the past) she still appears 3 times in this chart. Her most recent UK number 1 from May “I’ll be There” is the highest entry on my top 40 of 2018 at number 5.

6 Tyler Bates You Can’t Stop This Motherfu__er//Deadpool 2

The shortest track in my top 40 is a closing a cappella featured on the soundtrack to Deadpool 2. Holy sh!tballs…

7 Cher Gimme Gimme Gimme//Dancing Queen

8 Little Mix Woman Like Me//LM5

9 Rudimental These Days

10 Clean Bandit Baby//What is Love?

11 Purple Disco Machine Dished

Heavily sampling one of the gayest tracks I’ve ever heard, 1986’s top 3 hit “Male Stripper” by Man2Man, this funky track was a breath of fresh air upon commercial release in the Autumn but the saturation of plays caused the track to disappear from my playlists briskly after its 6-week stay up the top of my weekly chart.

12 The Beatles Back in the USSR //The Beatles

The 32 plays counted to help this 50-year-old track enter my 2018 chart as high as number 12, come from the new versions and mixes released as part of the 50th anniversary campaign curated by son of the fifth Beatle George Martin’s offspring Giles.

13 Jess Glynne All I Am//Always in Between

14 Kylie Minogue Raining Glitter//Golden

15 Azealia Banks Anna Wintour

If the woman is a homophobic, racist b!tch she’ll be her own undoing. Until then I’m down for absolute BANGERS like this. I’ll never meet the woman.

16 The Coral Eyes Like Pearls//Move Through the Dawn

17 Ariana Grande and Pharrell Blazed//Sweetener

18 Kylie Minogue Golden//Golden

19 Netta Toy

20 Saara Aalto Monsters//Wild Wild Wonderland

She was robbed on X Factor and the Eurovision. Fingers crossed it’s 3rd time lucky on Dancing on Ice.

The rest…

21 Cheryl Fernandez-Versini-Cole-Tweedy-Payne Love Made Me Do It

22 Little Mix Joan of Arc//LM5

23 Calvin Harris One Kiss

24 The Beatles Glass Onion (2018)

25 Cher Fernando

26 LSD Genius

27 Kylie Minogue A Lifetime to Repair//Golden

28 Jake Shears Creep City//Jake Shears

29 SuRie Storm

30 Rita Ora Let You Love Me//Phoenix

31 Panic at the Disco High Hopes//Death of a Batchelor

32 RuPauls Drag Race Cast Cher:The Unauthorized Rusical

33 The Cast of Mamma Mia Super Trouper

34 Kelly Clarkson Heat//Meaning of Life

35 Busta Rhymes Get It

36 Ariana Grande The Light is Coming//Sweetener

37 Janelle Monaé Make Me Feel

38 Rick Parfitt Without You

39 Nadine Gossip

40 Janelle Monaé I Like That