Top
of the Pops 1981 showing on BBC4. Being watched by Chris Arnsby.
Steve
Wright, "Hello. Good evening. Welcome to another Top of the Pops. I think
it's gonna be a mad one tonight. We're gonna start off with Modern
Romance. Ay Ay Ay Ay Moosey!"
Modern
Romance: Ay Ay Ay Ay Moosey [17]. Once again the Top of the Pops
studio looks amazing. Ron Bristow is on Lighting and maybe he's illuminating
the studio differently because the colours look more vibrant and vivid
(although lurid would be a better description for the vile luminous purple shirt
the lead singer of Modern Romance is wearing). It's not just the lighting. It's
as if someone has tweaked and boosted the colour signal; presumably Vision
Mixer Hilary West. The effect reminds me of how I used to play around with the
television's colour and brightness because I liked the way it made the picture
look. Oh, and someone in the studio (a luckless member of Zoo probably) is
dressed in a Moose costume.
Julio
Iglesias: Begin The Beguine [3]. Up to number three for this turgid song.
Julio Iglesias is a vain, vain man. Look at the way he keeps smirking and
glancing at the camera all the way through this video. All that's missing is a
superimposed twinkle and a "ting" sound effect. Then suddenly Julio
Iglesias is in the Top of the Pops studio. If he's in Television Centre
and he's got time to take part in an awkward interview with Steve Wright then
why couldn't he perform live on Top of the Pops? (John- The Beguine is a dance apparently)
Fred and Ginger moments before they literally begin the Beguine. "You're looking the wrong way Ginge." |
Pretenders:
I Go To Sleep [12]. It's time for more praise for Ron Bristow. The lighting
is very well handled during this performance. It's soft and subdued when the
song is quiet, and then brightens for the louder section, and then softens
again. A simple trick but effective.
ABC:
Tears Are Not Enough [26]. "This is the one they're all talking about
in the discos," according to Steve Wright. Last time ABC's performance was
inexplicably intercut with footage of Grant Satino ("Britain's first ever dance champ!" P. Powell,
Shepherds Bush) this time we get to see two members of Zoo jitterbugging away.
Diana
Ross: Why Do Fools Fall In Love? [19]. Ms. Ross runs up the middle of
Fremont Street in Las Vegas and performs Why Do Fools Fall In Love in front of
a wind machine and a medium sized crowd. (John;
Anyone in the crowd and in love might think she was calling them fools)The
relevance of this to the song? Zero. Presumably Diana Ross was in Las Vegas at
the time and had a gap in her schedule.
Fun
Boy Three: The Lunatics (Have Taken Over The Asylum) [30]. "They used
to be The Specials and now they're the Fun Boy Three". Yes, fresh from the
breakup of The Specials (in a dressing room at Top of the Pops)
it's Terry,Neville and Lynval (or Tel,
Nev and Lyn -as I'm sure all the hip mags called them at the time). Marvel at
some very desultory bongo playing at the start, and (I think) the first time
out for a false colour/colour reduction effect which will go on to become an
eighties staple.
Trevor
Walters: Love Me Tonight [29]. Poor Trevor -dressed sensibly in a jumper
and slacks- looks very out of place next to the trendy dancers from Zoo;
especially the one on the far left who is having a go at this newfangled robot
dancing. A low angle camera shot gives us a chance to admire the BBC's glitter
dispenser. It's a sinister looking black tube fixed to the lighting grid which
rocks backwards and forwards shaking glitter over everyone.
Soft
Cell: Bedsitter [13]. Mark Almond sings a song about how awful it is to
have to live in a bedsit while his fellow residents bang on the bathroom door
and ask how long he's going to be applying his mascara. This promo film
includes some excellent footage of eighties London; St John's Wood underground
station, a Wimpy, Piccadilly, a telephone box, etc.
Number
One: Queen & David Bowie, Under Pressure. Neither Queen or David
Bowie are available to appear in studio (John- Is anyone this week?) so here's some post-apocalyptic ballet
with the boys and girls from Zoo. It's a more conventional (for want of a
better word) performance than their début to ELO's Twilight from a couple of
weeks ago, but still very different to anything you would have seen done by
Legs & Co.
Closing
Titles: The Jets, Yes Tonight Josephine [31]. The audience and Zoo -fresh
from their interpretation of Under Pressure- dance away. Steve Wright seems to
have disappeared from the studio but he's been replaced by someone dressed as a
ladybird. I wonder if it's the same person who was dressed as a moose at the
start of the show? A bloke at the back of one crowd shot leaps up and down.
He's trying to draw attention to his t-shirt which appears to carry the legend
"Murphy China And Olaf." Or something like that. Sadly the picture
quality is not good enough to make out the message.
Performance
of the week: Fun Boy Three: The Lunatics (Have Taken Over The Asylum)
No comments:
Post a Comment