Get The Real Tuesday Weld's 2014 Audio Christmas Card HERE
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It's almost that time of year again isn't it?. It seems to come with increasing rapidity. Good job I'm immortal..
In the sixties, The Beatles, who were pioneers in SO many ways, used to make special flexi discs containing songs and bits of spoken word for their fan club at Christmas. Inspired, The Real Tuesday Weld have made an Audio Christmas Card for the last eight years. Originally it was just for friends and to say thanks to all the amazing people who have helped or supported us but a few years back after many requests (well, two or three), we started to make them available to all. They contain new music and pieces from the past year that wouldn't normally see the light of day. Often some of our best work I think.
They take the form of a specially designed greetings card with a mini cd inside - a format I have always loved although it is now almost totally anachronistic. You can actually play them in a standard cd player tray - although not of course in a laptop. Every year, we think 'shall we bother?" and I always say 'yes' because although we now also include a digital download token, it just doesn't seem the same to not have 'the actual thing' in some physical form or other. You can use the cd as a small coaster if you like.
You can get this year's card HERE - signed and dedicated if you like.
The super cool image is one from the Alice in Wonderband collection by Antique Beat - beautiful cool greetings cards and T shirts featuring Alice and her friends in a psych-rock band (really). With all the other things Antique Beat have on offer, that should really cover your Christmas list right?
I am particularly pleased with the music this time: "Hey Miss Policeman" (a song about a cross-dressing law officer); "Forsaken" with my dear friend Marcella Puppini (from this year's score for the US film 'Meet Me in Montenegro'); "Cheshire Love Cat Blooze" (does what it says on the tin) and 'It Came Through the Window" inspired by 'The Man Who Married Kittens', the Walter Potter biopic I scored for maverick director Ronni Thomas.
And as an extra Christmas stocking filler, the EP contains a copy of our much requested cover version of Abba's masterpiece "The Day Before You Came". This was only previously available on a US compilation. The original is one of my favourite ever songs:
All text copyright Stephen Coates 2006 - 2015
Showing posts with label the beatles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the beatles. Show all posts
LOST IN THE TEMPLE OF LOVE
"Welcome to Heaven".
'John Lennon' is my Daddy'.
It was clear he didn't mean this literally although tellingly from a psychological perspective, his own father seemed to have been a difficult, absent figure in his life. I was rather at a loss as to what to say. Eventually I ventured:
"You must have been very upset when he died"
He looked at me with surprise:
This time, all I could manage was
"Er, oh."
He closed the album:
"He has been living secretly in Northern Italy since 1980"
He waved toward a wobbling shelf of CDrs behind him.
At this point, Sergey Chernov asked if he could use the bathroom and was directed through the kitchen. He returned a little while later looking slightly stunned (he told us afterwards that there was absolutely no sign of any cooking implements or food but didn't want to talk about the loo).
We didn't get to hear any of the secret Lennon albums. I got the impression they weren't available for anyone but a committed devotee and we never got to the bottom of why Lennon had been in hiding. Pressing him on the subject seemed upsetting in some way, so we returned to the music itself. Nikolay said (and I believe him) that when he is in the Temple listening to the Beatles he feels completely happy and filled with love but that when he hears it elsewhere, even at a friend or fellow fan's place, it doesn't have the same effect.
As the first bit of "All You Need is Love" played out on my laptop, he smiled beatifically and nodded with encouragement. But when a beat and a sample from another song kicked in, a pained expression fell across his face.
He looked up at me and indicated I should stop the music (we were at about bar 16).
"You ruined it' he said sadly.
He was probably right.
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***Leslie Woodhead's recent "How the Beatles Rocked the Kremlin: The Untold Story of a Noisy Revolution" has much more on the importance of the band in the ex-USSR if you want to know more about the subject.
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Speaking of The Temple of Love, I'd almost forgotten this old song about Cupid and Psyche, or was it Laura and Petrarch? Or me and that person I met in the launderette?
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