Watched by Chris
Arnsby. Mike Read: "Due to an industrial dispute we're doing tonight's
Top of the Pops live from the canteen at the BBC." Janice Long: "Oh
thanks, I'll have a cup of tea. We've got some great stuff in the show people
like Carmel, and Nik Kershaw, and this lot over here. It's Hot Chocolate at
number 28."
[28] Hot Chocolate: I Gave You My Heart (Didn't I?).
A strike? At the BBC? Yes, it's true. The BBC was seeking to change pay and
conditions in the Scenic Services department and decreed that changes would be
implemented on 14th February 1984 with or without the agreement of the unions.
The deadline passed, Scenic Services workers walked out and the strike spread.
Even Blue Peter was affected (*clutches pearls in horror*) and you can
see a lovely clip here https://twitter.com/BBCFOUR/status/883025323243253760
This edition of Top of the Pops is coming from a
smaller studio and the scenery has been assembled in a haphazard way. Mike Read
and Janice Long stand in front of a photographic enlargement from the title
sequence. The neon logo is present but it's jammed between scenery units from
another stage. Lights are hung from a lower ceiling, or from scaffolding off to
one side. The audience are packed in more tightly because there is less space
for them, and less space for cameras. The rigid walls of neon lights that made
a definite edge to the performance space have gone and once again Top of the
Pops looks like it's coming from a black void rather than a television
studio. If I'm honest, I like the way it looks. The band stages seem a lot
lower, and the audience intrude on shots more that they do in the usual studio.
There's a brilliant long shot Errol Brown. The audience are
clapping their hands over their heads and because the camera is focused on
Errol the hands (and balloons, and flags) become weird soft-focus shapes in the
foreground. Frustratingly I can't grab a good still image to illustrate the
effect. In motion it looks great. In still form it looks as if Errol is being
attacked by an out of focus octopus.
[7] Rockwell: Someone's Watching Me. Yes, someone is
watching you Mr Rockwell. You're on video on Top of the Pops.
[39] Marilyn: Cry & Be Free. Meanwhile, back in
the strike bound studio, here's Marilyn. He's brought in a choir which is not
helping the overcrowded conditions. Hang on. The choir is only three people.
The other ten people on stage appear to be audience cheerleaders. What are they
doing there? Marilyn's stage has a bank of the patterned neon units to the left
with a dry ice machine balanced on top, I hope that's safe. Behind him is a
giant projector screen showing the picture from one of the cameras. Here's the
mystery. It's not the usual Eidophor projector used by Top of the Pops.
That screen is smaller, and black and white. This screen is much bigger, and in
colour. Once again the emergency strike set looks better than the normal one.
[10] Kool & The Gang: Joanna. Kool (& the
gang) hang around Joanna's diner, on video. The service is terrible because
Kool (& the gang) keep distracting Joanna; who is solely responsible for
all the cooking and serving. It takes Joanna several minutes to serve a basic
cup of coffee because Kool is canoodling with her the moment she comes out from
behind the counter. Joanna then takes ages to walk past the rest of the band,
because she keeps smirking at them and making meaningful eye contact. Mind you,
in long shots of the diner there only appear to be two real customers. One who
finally gets served a plate of cold (presumably, given the serving time),
overcooked eggs. The other never even gets shown a menu. The business model of
this place is unsustainable.
[9] Nik Kershaw: Wouldn't It Be Good. I assume the
title of Nik's song is a cut down version of the longer Wouldn't It Be Good...
To Get Out Of This Ghastly Green Snood And Into Something Less Fashionable But
More Flattering. Nik's on the Marilyn stage and the video plays behind him.
It's the one where Nik's jacket and trousers have been overlaid with high
contrast black and white footage. It makes him look like Automan.
[35] Carmel: More, More, More. The crowded studio
doesn't seem to allow for the normal pedestal cameras (the ones you
automatically think of when you think of a TV studio camera). Instead there are
a pair of cranes responsible for all the long shots and two hand held camera
operators, where there would normally only be one. It's a lot easier to see the
hand held camera operators ducking on and off stage. Recording tonight's show
seems a lot more difficult than it would normally be but Michael Hurll is
making good use of the awkward conditions to grab new and interesting shots.
Watch out for the medium close-up of the audience cheerleader dancing in front
of the back projection screen; it looks really good.
[15] Howard Jones: Hide And Seek. A soporific video.
The tune is a wash of synthesiser noises and for the video someone has found a
button that resolves moving pictures into a blur (and vice versa). It's very
hypnotic. There's a lot of stock landscape footage that looks like off-cuts
from a BBC documentary. I keep expecting Professor Brian Cox to suddenly step
into shot and start going on about how brilliant science is.
Top 10 Videos: Suddenly Mike Read and Janice Long
start going on about "the top 10 videos." Excitement! Has Top of
the Pops unbanned Relax? Surely they wouldn't do a top 10 video countdown
that only featured numbers 10 to 2? Yes. Yes they would. Why? I don't know.
It could be strike related. It may not be possible to fit
another band into the smaller studio; at least not without exceeding the normal
studio recording time. And Top of the Pops normally tries to avoid
playing more than three videos; we've already had three and a half (with Nik
Kershaw). Maybe clips are the only remaining option top pad out the 35 minute
running time?
Obviously I'd like to guess that Michael Hurll is being
rebellious and deliberately pointing out the stupidity of the ban on Relax with
a Top 10 countdown that stops at number two and features previously viewed
footage, but I think it's more likely to be boring logistical reasons.
[10] Kool & The Gang: Joanna. It's like déjà vu
all over again.
[9] Nik Kershaw: Wouldn't It Be Good. Janice Long
says "well as we've already seen..." which puts a nice hat on the
sense of futility.
[8] Cyndi Lauper: Girls Just Want To Have Fun. A new
clip. Well fancy that.
[7] Rockwell: Someone's Watching Me. Rockwell's sense
of paranoia is well justified as the audience settle down to watch him again.
[6] Matthew Wilder: Break My Stride. A clip from the
02/02/1984 edition of Top of the Pops. Apparently Matthew Wilder's
record company didn't think it was worth making a video for this song.
[5] The Style Council: My Ever Changing Moods. Are
Mick Talbot and Paul Weller really riding those bikes or being pulled along on
a trailer?
[4] Queen: Radio Ga Ga. Radio goo goo.
[3] Thompson Twins: Doctor! Doctor! The huge blocks
in this video remind me of the Walled City of Antescher from Ant Attack.
[2] Nena: 99 Red Balloons. "Well our producer
Michael Hurll wisely kept me away from Top of the Pops while Nena was on
live," says Mike Read enigmatically.
"Frankie goes to Hollywood, Relax, still number 1"
says Janice Long as Mike Read's face assumes a rictus grin. It's a shame the
audio doesn't appear to exist from 11th January 1984 when Mike Read supposedly
lifted the needle mid-record and calling the song "obscene". The ban
did lead to a great moment one year later (preserved on Youtube) when Mike Read
interviewed Frankie Goes to Hollywood on Saturday Superstore. The band
set a quiz which led to Holly Johnson asking the audience to name the person
"who banned Relax."
[34] Re-Flex: The Politics Of Dancing. This is baffling. Tonight Top of the
Pops has alternated between two stages; the one used by Hot Chocolate, and
Carmel, and the other by Marilyn, and Nik Kershaw. Suddenly, right at the end
of the show Re-Flex perform on a third stage. So, maybe there would have been
room to bring a sixth band into the studio. In which case what was the point of
the Top 10 video slot? Was it just that no bands were available and playing a
fourth video wasn't an option? Did Michael Hurll want to embarrass Mike Read
after all? My brain hurts.
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