Reviewed
by Chris Arnsby
19/02/87: Gary Davies: “Hi how ya doin'? Welcome to another mega Top of the Pops. Tonight we have an excellent show for you. In the studio we have Eric Clapton, Curiosity Killed The Cat, also Man 2 Man Meets Man Parish, but first we start with a band who've just released their first single. It's the highest new entry in the chart this week. Here's Westworld and Sonic Boom Boy.”
[14] Carly Simon: Coming Around Again. On video. Carly Simon's Coming Around Again, I didn't know she was unconscious.
[3]
Curiosity Killed The Cat: Down To Earth. Sigh. Back again for the third time in five
weeks. Unfortunately for my blood pressure this song has the perfect chart
trajectory to gain maximum Top of the Pops exposure. It's risen slowly
each week from [15] to [8] to [5] to [3] which
means the band can be invited back on a bi-weekly basis. Deep breath. The song
now peaks at [3] which means I don't have to look at Ben
Volpeliere-Pierrot's stupid hat, and stupid face, and stupid socks, and stupid
eyebrows for a while. (John – or as Smash Hits used to call him Ben
Vol-au-vent Parrot)
Top
40 Charts.
The Top of the Pops audience are rowdy tonight. They can be heard in the
background whooping and shouting during Gary's chart countdown; which I think
would have been taped earlier at the start of the studio session and then
played back into the studio during recording.
[6]
Man 2 Man Meets Man Parrish: Male Stripper. Call that stripping? It's rubbish. By the end
of three minutes he hasn't even taken his bow tie off. Gary Davies seems
flustered and back announces the song as “Man 2 Man Meets Male Parrish, and
Male Stripper,” but he might just be thrown by having to try and
remember the cumbersome band name.
Top 40 Breakers: [25] Duran Duran, Skin Trade; [23] Simply Red,
The Right Thing; [19] Mental As Anything, Live It Up (From 'Crocodile
Dundee'); [18] Jets, Crush On You.
[15]
Eric Clapton: Behind The Mask. Gary Davies is terribly impressed that Eric Clapton is on Top
of the Pops. “He is just so brilliant.” He'll always be Derek Claptout to
me, as the computer game Rock Star Ate My Hampster renamed him.
Top
10 Charts
[1] Ben E King: Stand By Me. On video.
[17]
Europe: Rock The Night. “Will he be number one next week, or could it be Percy Sledge with
When A Man Loves A Woman, or could it be another record from a jeans
commercial?” wonders Davies, unexpected channelling the spirit of John Peel.
Mike
Smith and Steve Wright host next week.
Meanwhile,
Top of the Pops returns to using the classic freeze frame from the
opening titles. Making the pattern; 09/10/1986 to 04/12/1986 classic freeze
frame, 11/12/1986 DIFFERENT! 18/12/1986 to 05/02/1987, a return to classic
freeze frame, 12/02/1987 DIFFERENT! And now, a return to the classic. Do they
keep losing it?
Performance
of the week:
Westworld: Sonic Boom Boy
26/02/1987
[9] Jets: Crush on You. The Jets, are bouncy and perky with lots of energy, and other words ending in y. The song is a polished piece of pop but it's also bland. Ultimately it's hard to shake the feeling the Jets are the band for people who find Five Star too edgy and threatening. (John- I prefer it to Five Star, its more fluid and in the video they all dance in sync while playing their instruments. Its so Eighties though with that percussion sound and lots of keyboard stings! They are all from the same family and took their name from the Elton John song `Bennie and the Jets`)
[15] Simply Red: The Right Thing. On video.
[18] The Cult: Love Removal Machine. “This next song is very, very loud,
be warned!!” says Steve Wright. I can't speak for the loudness of The Cult.
They don't look loud. They look like four clots in black leather. What I can
speak to is my impression that half The Cult had got confused and were playing
Start Me Up, and the lead singer decided to press on regardless and hope no one
noticed.
Ian
Astbury, the lead singer, of The Cult seems to be wearing a big golden
Totenkopf on the front of his hat, which is a bit infra dig these days to be
frank. “You're a bit of a cult? Aren't you?” Mike Smith asks of Steve Wright
afterwards. Steve Wight actually looks a little hurt. Which made me laugh
loads. I am a bad person.
Top
40 Charts.
[7]
Level 42: Running in the Family. Watching Level 42 I'm always struck by how pleased Mike Lindup
looks. The other's are all trying really hard to look cool, but Mike's just
happy to be there.
Top 40 Breakers: [21] The Communards, You Are My World; [17] A-Ha,
Manhattan Skyline. (John- Surprisingly this song will only reach number 13
yet it is surely one of the Eighties’ finest singles. Maybe if they’d done this
TOTP it would have gone higher?)
[8] Mental As Anything: Live It Up. Has there been a greater
disconnect between a band's name and their appearance? Mental As Anything don't
look unpredictable and zany. They look like they've stepped out briefly from
performing at the Enchantment Under the Sea dance in Hill Valley, 1955.
Top
10 Charts
[1] Ben E King: Stand By Me. On video.
[24] Duran Duran: Skin Trade. Gary Davies and Janice Long host next week. Mike Smith and Steve Wright say goodnight and we close with Duran Duran's video for... no we don't finish with a video. We finish with a studio performance. It feels disrespectful to exile Duran Duran to the arse end of the programme when they've made the effort to come into the studio. It also feels disrespectful to shrink them into a small cube to allow the credits to roll uninterrupted, as if the credits are more important. For reasons which never become clear Duran Duran are accompanied on stage by a man resembling Witch-Finder general Matthew Hopkins, who plays the trumpet.
Performance
of the week:
Really? By a process of elimination it's not Duran Duran, or Mental As Anything
or Level 42 or The Cult which means it has to be... the Jets? I'll try again,
by a process of elimination it can't be the Jets or The Cult or Level 42 or
Mental As Anything which means it has to be... Duran Duran? Heads
it's Jets. Tails it's Duran Duran.
It's
Jets, Crush on You.
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