Reviewed by
Chris Arnsby.
27/08/87
Gary Davies:
“Hi, good evening. I
hope you're well. We have a superb show for you tonight. In the studio we've
got Wet Wet Wet, we've got Black, we've got T'Pau, we've got Rick Astley but
first we start with a mega-band at number twenty three, Then Jerico, The
Motive.
“Their first
appearance on Top of the Pops,” says Gary Davies, “but be sure it's not going
to be their last.” He's right. Then Jeric(h)o will pop back eighteen months in
the future to perform Big Arena on an edition hosted by Gary Davies and...
Anthea Turner? Oh no. Stop the world I want to get off.
[2] PET SHOP
BOYS WITH DUSTY SPRINGFIELD: what have i done to deserve this. On video. This is one I taped from the
radio. (John- Not to overstate but this is one of the best singles ever!)
[6] WET WET
WET: sweet little mystery. I
feel well acquainted with this, having sat through three performances of this
song on alternate weeks. Is there anything new to say? Not really. Ooh look.
There's a small stuffed toy on stage in front of the drums. That's new. What is
it? It might be some sort of toy otter, although from certain angles it looks
like a Plush ET. It's unlikely to be everyone's favourite alien as it's grey,
which is the wrong colour -unless someone made a cute, plush, dead ET variant?
Top 40 Charts. As well as What
Have I Done To Deserve This, this week's chart serves up a couple more songs I
taped from the radio; T'Pau, Heart and Soul [28] and Fat Boys with Beach Boys,
Wipe Out.
[18] BLACK:
wonderful life. A quick
turnaround for Black. The group were in the studio with Sweetest Smile six
weeks ago and here they are again. Wonderful Life is a sneaky re-release off
the back of the success of Sweetest Smile, which only got to [72] when first
released in 1986.
[28] T'PAU:
heart and soul. Here's
another sneaky re-release. Gary Davies has the scoop, “now here's a song that
was originally released in January in the country. Didn't become a hit but did
go to number four in the states.” (John- I like the fact that Carol D is
almost-rapping here but not quite)
Top 10
Charts.
[1] RICK
ASTLEY: never gonna give you up.
Rick is on the same stage used by Black. Geoff Beech (on Lighting) pulls a very
quick turnaround and changes the setup from the cool blue and purple he used to
illuminate Wonderful Life to a much warmer orange and red. It's such a radical
change I could believe this was a repeat or a previously recorded performance.
It's only a sighting of the previously mentioned blue-shirted camera operator
that confirms this is the same studio session.
[13] PRINCE
& SHEENA EASTON: u got the look. On
video. A live show next week, hosted by Mike Smith who hasn't been seen since
25/05/1987. The closing titles reveal more job title shenanigans. Brian
Whitehouse is back as Producer & Director while Michael Hurll is back
listed as Executive Producer.
The Roxy
Playlist (25/08/1987): Studio
performances; Johnny Hates Jazz, I Don't Want To Be A Hero; Black, Wonderful
Life; Sinitta, Toy Boy; Then Jericho, The Motive; Squeeze, Hour Glass; Rick
Astley, Never Going To Give You Up. Plus on video; Fat Boys & Beach Boys,
Wipe Out; Five Star, Whenever you’re Ready
Performance
of the week: Black,
Wonderful Life.
Mike Smith: “...thank you, your too kind. We have
about twenty seconds to go...
Iain: “... there's a real danger of going...”
Mike Smith: [drowning out Iain] “... so please
adjust your clothing now, we're going live on air, please put away everything
that could offend the audience... including me, I'm going. [comedy Noel
Edmonds-style squeaky voice] How long to go now Ian? I'm getting nervous.”
Iain: “Nine...” [sound fades]
[Top of the Pops titles]
Mike Smith: “Woo and other excitable noises. We are
live from Television Centre this evening, in the next half hour on Britain's!
Top! Music! Show! We'll have Cliff Richard, Johnny Hates Jazz, The
Housemartins, and Squer-weez!
What's
going on with the theme tune? It sounds different. It's not easy to describe
but it's clearly been remixed. It might have been pitched down to sound less
squeaky and synthesised, and there's a drum beat/orchestral stab flourish to
provide a more definite end.
Squeeze
are back, having broken up in 1982, and then reformed in 1985 for a charity
gig. Jools Holland is also back on keyboard, apparently he also rejoined in
1985.
Meanwhile,
Mike Smith doesn't do the usual cross studio dash. He introduces Top of the
Pops from in front of the neon logo and he's still there at the end; you
can catch occasional glimpses of him in the background bopping away to Squeeze.
[20]
LEVERT: casanova. Are Levert live in studio? There's a cut from Mike Smith to the
band which is accompanied by a Quantel transition effect; the presence of which
makes me suspect it's there to cover the change from live programme to
videotape. The programme does have previous for smuggling pre-recorded
performances into the song two slot. There's also a difference in the studio
atmosphere. It's one of those intangible things which (like the difference in
the theme tune remix) are difficult to describe but the atmosphere is smokier
and the lights are more colourful. Not to spoil the end of the show but the
quality of the lighting is more like that on the Rick Astley repeat which is,
obviously, also played in from tape.
Come
on Iain, spill the beans. There's a crumpled fiver in it for you.
[27] THE HOUSEMARTINS: me and the farmer. Now Mike Smith dashes across
the studio, he's up on one of the studio bridges to introduce The Housemartins.
If my geography of the studio is correct (if) then he's right down the far end
opposite the main stage with the neon logo.
Again,
to harp on about studio lighting (this week presented by Derek Slee), the
lighting for The Housemartins is much less colourful than it was for Levert.
Derek Slee is using a lot more white light, which combined with hand held
camera work gives the performance a more immediate feel. It works, it matches
the energy of the song.
Top
40 Charts: Smitty
runs back up to the main stage to muck around with Jools Holland's keyboard. He
does a reasonable impression of the man, “hello everybody, Jools Holland here
on Top of the Tube, and er time now for the charts of the week, here we go,
yes.” The chart countdown is still using the old version of the theme.
M|A|R|R|S
are a new entry at [35] and they've forgotten to supply a band photo; the silly
sausages. Top of the Pops has to use a close up of the single cover
instead. The caption generator can't do straight lines so it calls the
band M·A·R·R·S· instead; adding in an unnecessary dot after the final S.
[15]
CLIFF RICHARD: some people. Mike Smith is still on the main stage, bent over so the camera
operator can get a shot of him looking upside down. “This is Top of the Pops
live, you never know what's going to happen here,” he says and then, as if to
prove himself right, just after the camera cuts to Cliff, Smitty can clearly be
heard to say “go away,” to someone. Who? What? Why? Come on Iain McLean. I
might be prepared to add another £1.80 on top of that crumpled fiver offer.
Cliff's
already performed Some People on The Roxy, but at least on Top of the
Pops he doesn't slip on the dry ice: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6eCyr3JcLo
[30]
THE CULT: wild flower. On video. A chance for everyone in the studio to catch their
breath and reset. I know videos are an important part of the punctuation of
live shows, but did they really have to choose this pile of dreary old bosh?
The
charts are odd this week, once you eliminate everything going down or featured
last week, or on this week, you are left with these songs; WASP, Scream Until
You Like It [40]; Jonathan Butler, Lies [38]; M|A|R|R|S, Pump Up The Volume
[35]; Depeche Mode, Never Let Me Down Again [22] and these songs which are all
non-movers Whitney Houston, Didn't We Almost Have It All [14]; Wax, Bridge To
Your Heart [12]; and Sinitta, Toy Boy [4]. Personally, I'd have gone for
Jonathan Butler, M|A|R|R|S, Wax or Sinitta. Presumably The Cult was chosen because
their pile of dreary old chaff at least sounds different to anything else
played tonight and also because it hasn't been on The Roxy.
[34]
JOHNNY HATES JAZZ: i don't want to be a hero.
Clark
Datchler may not want to be a hero but he's wearing a big shiny medal.
Top
10 Charts:
Also still using the old theme.
[1]
RICK ASTLEY: never gonna give you up. A repeat from the 27/08/1987 edition.
[3]
FAT BOYS WITH THE BEACH BOYS: wipeout. Simon Bates and Peter Powell next week. The Fat
Boys (and the Beach Boys) are on video, and the Beach Boys segment is recorded
on a day in New York when the weather gets progressively worse. Look at the
puddles and people walking around in the background holding umbrellas, and
enjoy the shots of people wearing skimpy beachwear and pretending to have the
time of their lives.
Let alone camera operators coming close to snagging each other with their cables, the best near-miss of the Then Jerico performance I can recall is towards the end when Mark Shaw very nearly twats the bassist with his microphone stand whilst he's throwing it around. It's a brief moment, but probably gives us a good indication as to why they split up and Shaw went solo less than three years after this.
ReplyDeleteAlso I believe the slight changes to the theme tune are because the original, prerelease mix that they used of 'The Wizard' from April 1986 was in mono - with the imminent USA TOTPs made and broadcast in stereo and UK TOTP permanently beginning its stereo Radio 1 simulcasts exactly one year on from this point in 1987, it must have been seen as a good excuse. The chart rundowns do soon switch as well.
T'Pau have a particular problem miming to 'Heart & Soul', because the chorus is the singing part and the spoken section multi-tracked together. Carol Decker switches between lip-synching the sung and the spoken sections, which - once you've noticed it - is distractingly awkward.
ReplyDelete