Reviewed by Chris Arnsby. Mike Read: "Surprise surprise
it's Top of the Pops. Me and Tom wondered where you'd got to, to be
honest." Tommy Vance: "Well, we made it and we're glad that you made
it too. Our first band are in our studio tonight. They're from Münster in
Germany. Alphaville who are Big In Japan."
[43] Alphaville: Big In Japan. I'm not sure Big In
Japan is the best song to open the show. Coming up later are two more obviously
crowd pleasing singles, Miami Sound Machine and the dance antics of Break
Machine (there are a lot of Machines -well two- on tonight's edition, is this
the first sign of that technological singularity I keep reading about?). I like
Big In Japan but, rather like Mothers Talk which opened the last edition of Top
of the Pops, it feels as if Michael Hurll is deliberately resisting the
obvious by putting this song in pole position.
[15] Elton John: Passengers. On video (now) but I
think it's been transferred from film to allow for the addition of various
video effects and a faux widescreen look. Whoever was in charge of the
widescreen effect clearly couldn't decide what width looked best. The picture
varies from 4:3 to different ratios on a shot by shot basis.
[40] Break Machine: Are You Ready? Tommy Vance and
Mike Read banter about the Cyrillic lettering on the front of Read's shirt.
"I hope it's not rude," he quips after Vance calls him
"comrade."
Break Machine appear on the same stage as Alphaville,
slightly redressed with the removal of the fifties wallpaper style backdrop. Except
that's not quite right... the lighting grid is different and the scaffolding
behind Alphaville is recessed but straight for Break Machine. I would be
prepared to dismiss this as the hard work of various behind the scenes bods at
the BBC except some of the changes seem too substantial to do in a recoding
break. Notably the addition of a step down to a lower tier rostrum along the
front of the stage. The short explanation is that I wasted far too much time
establishing Break Machine's performance was actually recorded two weeks
previously during the studio session for the 09/08/1984 edition. On the same
stage as used by Windjammer for their memorable performance of Tossing And
Turning. This explains why Michael Hurll didn't want to use Break Machine as
the opening act. He does like to pan directly from the hosts to the first group
in a single camera move.
[16] Miami Sound Machine: Dr. Beat. It's the Miami
Sound Machine (with lead vocalist Gloria Estefan), later to become Gloria
Estefan and Miami Sound Machine, and then just Gloria Estefan. (John – Nowadays she’s just called Gl) The
band are singing about Dr. Beat so obviously they should all be dressed in
surgical greens while Gloria Estefan perches on a medical trolley and a couple
of the audience cheerleaders are dressed as sexy nurses. It's good to see Top
of the Pops hasn't lost the creative edge that saw Legs & Co dressed as
sexy hookers for Bad Girls, sexy sad clowns for Tragedy, walking through doors
sexily for Let 'Em In, and dressed as a sexy tree for Donna Summer's version of
MacArthur Park.
Dr. Beat is, so far as I can remember, only the second
charting song about a medical professional. It follows in the footsteps of the
1976 song Dr. Kiss Kiss by 5000 Volts. The medical profession comes off badly
in both songs. Dr. Kiss Kiss behaved in a way that surely saw him struck off,
while Dr. Beat is denying treatment to judge by Gloria Estefan's repeated
begging for help.
Towards the end of the song the picture cuts to a wide shot
of the stage. One of the cheerleaders, stage right and dressed in white, is
bent double and apparently looking at the floor. He's clearly waiting for his
moment and when he thinks the camera's off him he dives forwards and grabs
something. Unfortunately he's wrong, he's not off screen he's in profile but
frustratingly the object he grabs is just off screen. Whatever it is, he's
pleased to have got it because he does a double arm pump and then leans
forwards again as if picking up something else. Was Gloria Estefan shedding
small change?
[18] Tracey Ullman: Sunglasses. On video, on location
at Sandbanks beach in Dorset with Adrian Edmondson.
[23] Spandau Ballet: I'll Fly For You. Spandau Ballet
have come into the studio to perform I'll Fly For You. Good for them.
[19] Rod Stewart: Some Guys Have All The Luck. On
video.
[1] George Michael: Careless Whisper. George Michael
has also come into the studio to solo-promote a song released on the Wham!
album Make It Big! This is going to be dull. It's not the world's greatest song
and George has been set to serious and soulful mode so there's very little
chance he'll be dancing around like he did for Wham Rap!
Worst fears are confirmed early. This is going to be
televisual porridge. A chance for the camera operators to practice staying in
focus while slow zooming in and out from George Michael's face. What am I
supposed to do for the next four minutes? Spend my time gazing into George
Michael's dreamy eyes?
Actually, the staging is more interesting than expected. The
audience is stood on the scaffold walkways in the background and packed round
George Michael's stage. Two pairs of audience cheerleaders have been placed on
rostrums so that they poke up above the level of the crowd (there's also a
nameless saxophonist) and they're picked out in soft orange light to stand out
against the dark of the studio (Lighting is credited to Dickie Higham this
week). The slower pace of the song allows for longer more sweeping shots (in
between slow zooms in and out of George Michael's face) and the effect is
atmospheric and intimate.
[6] Laura Branigan: Self Control. Tommy Vance teases us with details of
next week's Top of the Pops. "British Rail are going to unveil
their new InterCity high speed train and they're going to call it Top of the
Pops." Mike Read adds, "Not only that, it's going for the speed
record between London and Bristol so join us. Be part of the speed record on
Top of the Pops next week."
This episode won't be repeated on BBC4. J*mmy S*v*l* is on
the train, and Mike Smith was one of the hosts of the 30/08/1984 edition; his
episodes of Top of the Pops are not repeated to respect the wishes of
his estate. It's a shame because the footage that exists on Youtube is
gloriously chaotic.
Bucks Fizz's performance of Talking In Your Sleep is
interrupted after two minutes so that Simon Bates can babble away over a shot
of the train pulling into Bristol. For reasons that never become clear Simon
Bates and the camera operator have been separated. Simon Bates is waiting at the
door to S*v*l*'s carriage while the camera operator is stationed further down
the platform to get a shot of the station master stopping the train. Simon
babbles away in sound only while the camera operator walks down the platform
and pushes through the crowd. A couple of minutes of chat follow, during which
Norris McWhirter disembarks and confirms the record, and then Simon Bates hands
back to Mike Smith in London.
Also on Youtube is Howard Jones' performance of Like To Get
To Know You Well which starts in walkabout style, like Holly Johnson's tour of
the studio for the final performance of Two Tribes. Howard, a guitar player, a
hand held camera operator, and what appears to be most of a steel drum band,
all climb onto the world's smallest podium and are surrounded by the crowd who
press forwards to shake Howard Jones' hand (the theme of the song, you see).
Performance of the week: George
Michael: Careless Whisper.
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