Words: Chris Arnsby
It's
time to play: Who's On Strike At The BBC This Week? Tommy Vance has been CSO'd
in front of a photograph of two lights, one red and one blue. Given the virtual
nature of the set I'm going to guess the scenery crews were out.
Tommy
Vance: " Hi everybody. Good evening and welcome once again to Top of the
Pops. Now Top of the Pops this week is a very, very special edition. I'll tell
you why, well it's all wrapped up in one phrase because it's full of absolutely
amazing music. I know you're going to love it and I think we ought to start
with a real cracker. How about this one by The Teardrop Explodes. It's called
Reward."
The
Teardrop Explodes: Reward [13]. Normally when the same band appears two
weeks in a row it's because BBC4 has skipped a repeat due to the presenter.
This is not the case, this time. Unusually The Teardrop Explodes appear twice
in two weeks. Last week they were on film racing around the Albert/Birkenhead
docks (delete as applicable), this week their studio performance has been
edited in from the 19/02/1981 Top of the Pops. Ironically this is the
first BBC4 showing of this performance because D*v** L** Tr*v*s presented the
earlier edition.
Kim
Wilde: Kids In America [6]. Kim Wilde stalks down a corridor and looks
startled as blinds snap open to reveal her band shining torches at her. It
probably made more sense at the time, or maybe it was just a good excuse for
the director to shove a hand-held camera in Kim Wilde's face; and why not? This
video makes good use of the universal symbols of America; oil drums, graffiti,
fences and blue flashing lights. It's like pages have been torn straight from
Jung's book Man and his Symbols.
Lynx:
Intuition [41]. Tommy Vance has been reduced to a voice-over linking songs.
Say that gives me an idea for a radio show. This video cuts between Lynx
performing on a vile pink and blue set, and sepia toned footage which suggests
that the band somehow grew up in the 1930s.
Kelly
Marie: Hot Love [22] Tommy is back in vision. CSO'd in front of the Top
of the Pops logo. He launches into a long, desperate, rambling link.
"Okay, that was a good bit of film shot outside on a... well I suppose you
could call it somebody's... um... well, football field maybe. A sort of
backyard football field. Well let's come back into the Top of the Pops studio
and see Kelly Marie." Presumably the Floor Manager is just out of shot
making frantic come-on-spin-it-out-the-show-is-underrunning gestures. "She
is over there [points] with some Hot Love." This is a blatant lie. Kelly
Marie is not "over there" she is on 2-inch videotape edited in from
the 26/02/1981 Top of the Pops. Kim Wilde appeared in studio on the same
edition, I wonder why they didn't use that performance instead of the video?
Freeez:
Southern Freeez [8]. This single has had a good run. This repeat is edited
in from the 12/02/1981 programme.
Status
Quo: Something 'Bout You Baby I Like [9] All Status Quo videos are the
same; the band rocking out in a warehouse, pretending that they are on stage.
Well, just to prove you wrong Status Quo have rung some changes. This video
features a bewigged blonde lout wandering around while posters come to life and
show footage of the band rocking out in a warehouse, pretending that they are
on stage. The posters come to life via the magic of crude CSO. Massive yellow
fringes are the order of the day; on the special effect posters and hair (boom!
boom!). Record shop N & J Discs (251 Preston Road, fact fans) seems to have
been absorbed into a redeveloped Preston Road Underground station which will
disappoint fans of visiting the locations of old Status Quo videos.
Beggar
& Co :(Somebody) Help Me Out [15]. Another repeat from the 12/02/1981
edition.
Landscape:
Einstein A Go-Go [38]. The video starts off well with the band mucking
around in a Frankenstein style lab. The second half with the band playing
instruments is sub-Devo nonsense without the interesting hats.
Talking
Heads: Once In A Lifetime [14]. Talking Heads become the second non-number
one band to have their song played two weeks in a row on Top of the Pops.
Michael Hurll must have been desperate for usable clips to recycle this bizarre
Legs & Co routine from 19/02/1981. Tommy Vance lies again and describes
this as "excellent." It's just bizarre. Lulu is voguing frantically
while the others strike random poses. No more space dust for Flick Colby.
Kiki
Dee: Star [17]. Repeated from 26/02/1981.
Coast
To Coast: (Do) The Hucklebuck [5]. A third song from 12/02/1981.
Top
Ten Countdown: This week there's a spinning number to indicate the chart
position. Will the presentation be the same next week? That depends on the
fickle whim of Michael Hurll.
Number One: Roxy Music, Jealous Guy. The closing credits play out over
the video of Brain Ferry making the sexy faces to camera.
Performance
of the week: The Teardrop Explodes: Reward
No comments:
Post a Comment