Reviewed by Chris Arnsby. 12/05/83 - Tommy Vance: "Edition 1001 of
Top of the Pops! Good evening and welcome!" Mike Read: "Great party
record to start off with, Modern Romance's Don't Stop That Crazy Rhythm."Tommy
Vance: "Woo!"
(Edition 1000: It's worth tracking down the few snippets of edition 1000 currently on Youtube. There's a lovely introduction with Richard Skinner and Diddy David Jacobs in which Richard Skinner comes across as a far more relaxed and natural broadcaster than he does when he's hosting Top of the Pops. He's sitting down for this introduction so maybe he should always be allowed a chair from now on when he's in studio.)
(Edition 1000: It's worth tracking down the few snippets of edition 1000 currently on Youtube. There's a lovely introduction with Richard Skinner and Diddy David Jacobs in which Richard Skinner comes across as a far more relaxed and natural broadcaster than he does when he's hosting Top of the Pops. He's sitting down for this introduction so maybe he should always be allowed a chair from now on when he's in studio.)
[26] Modern Romance: Don't Stop That Crazy Rhythm.
Everything's different. New sets. New title sequence. Same pool of presenters
of course which is one of the reasons BBC4 has jumped from edition 999 to 1001.
Modern Romance are appearing on the main studio stage -the one with banks of
raised rostra behind the performance area for the audience, or Top of the
Pops cheerleaders- and a couple of wide shots reveal that the makeover is
more superficial than it first appears. The geography of the set is the same.
The black and white Eidophor screen is still on the left, and the neon Top
of the Pops logo is on the right. The main difference is the replacement
of the large metallic arches with ranks
of scaffold-like scenery. Bolted to the set are circular neon elements that
echo the shape of the Top of the Pops logo, but have a diagonal line
coming out of the bottom right that makes them Q-shaped. The most significant
effect of the new scenery is to form a definite wall. The arches used to open
onto a black backcloth which made it look like Top of the Pops was being
broadcast from a formless black vortex. Now it's clearly located in a television
studio. Joining Modern Romance is a middle aged dancer who looks like someone's
uncle has rushed the stage; he's dressed in blue with a backwards red baseball
cap perched on his head. He's named-checked by Tommy Vance as "Will
Gaines," and a quick Google search reveals he's a much more significant
figure in dance than his treatment here would make you think. John Bishop's
direction excludes him and the audience at home don't get a good look until the
instrumental. Maybe John Bishop intended the reveal of the tap dancer to be a
surprise, but it comes across more as an attempt at exclusion. It's as if
Modern Romance turned up with Will Gaines and insisted he perform with them,
but the Director had other plans. If you really want to see Will Gaines strut his
stuff then head over to Youtube and watch the clip of him dancing on The
Arthur Haynes Show.