Words by
Chris Arnsby.
02/03/1989
Gary Davies:
“Hello. A very good evening to you. It's Thursday night, welcome to another Top
of the Pops.
Anthea Turner:
“And tonight in the studio we've got Sam Brown, Tyree, Texas, and Gloria
Estefan and the Miami Sound Machine!”
Gary Davies:
“But first we're going to blow the house down will you welcome Living In a
Box.”
Anthea Turner:
“Yeeeeess!”
Did someone hear “don't be afraid,” and press the button too early? This speculation is confirmed when the second time the “let it explode,” line is used a nice shower of sparks busts up behind the band. And the third time. At least whoever's finger was on the button got the timing right for the final round of explosions at the climax of the song. (John- If, as previously confirmed, they live in "a cardboard box" blowing said dwelling down would not be that difficult)
[4] SAM
BROWN: stop. “Over
there,” says Gary Davies and points. Sam Brown isn't over there, she's on
videotape in a performance repeated from the 16/02/1989 edition. Gary Davies we
are wise to your lies and knavish tricks.
CHARTS FROM
40 TO 31.
[9] JASON DONOVAN: too many broken hearts. Unless you are Anthea Turner, in which case the song is called Too Many Lonely Hearts. Jason Donovan is on video. Afterwards, Anthea Turner announces that Jason Donovan is “looking really hunky!” “I'm glad you think so,” says Gary Davies, then lest anyone might question his place on the Kinsey Scale he quickly adds, “... I don't.”
BREAKERS:
[23] DEPECHE
MODE: everything counts
[26] DEACON
BLUE: wages day
[30] DONNA
SUMMER: this time i know it's for real
[28] W. A.
S. P. : mean man
[16] TYREE
FEATURING KOOL ROCK STEADY: turn up the base. Top of the Pops has previously made use of an effect
where the programme's logo is rotated, as if pasted on all four sides of a box.
Now, Vision Mixer Hilary Briegel feeds the output of four cameras into the
effect, one for each side of the box obviously, and it looks great.
Two things
really help. The first being that all four camera angles are sufficiently
different to sell the visual; there's a close up of Tyree working the record
decks; then one of Kool Rock Steady; then a wide shot of the stage with Tyree
to the right of the picture and Kool Rock Steady to the left; and then finally
a reverse angle. Also, the spin of the box has been set so it appears to rotate
on each repeat of “turn up the base/turn it up,” it could be a happy
coincidence but the timing seems too precise to be anything except deliberate.
Veteran effects
technician Dave Chapman is credited with video effects this week. He's clearly
had a go at the Quantel box with his soldering iron.
CHARTS FROM
30 TO 11.
GLORIA
ESTEFAN: can't stay away from you. “Singing
live!” says Anthea Turner. Well yes, she is singing live on this recording
which is played in from the 16/02/1989 show.
[8] TEXAS: i
don't want a lover. The
16/02/1989 tape has been getting a lot of use tonight. So when Gary Davies
announced that Texas are “singing live tonight,” my response is to raise a
sceptical eyebrow and go “yeah, suuuuure they are,” and then possibly to
speculate about whether Texas will be joined on stage by Jimmy Hill. But I'm
wrong. Texas really are behind Gary Davies.
Anthea Turner
is now so excited that she steps on Gary Davies' link. “That is just such an
excellent, excellent song,” he says and then attempts to continue, getting as
far as “let's.. ta...” before Turner butts in and bubbles, “and now our last
look at the charts! Our final countdown!” Gary Davies stares into the camera
and works on his poker face.
TOP 10:
[1] SIMPLE
MINDS: belfast child. On
video.
[14] POISON:
every rose. Who's on
next week? Anthea has the answer, “Nicky Campbell and a few guests from Comic
Relief.” How intriguing. It's certainly something to think about while Every
Rose plays out over the closing credits.
09/03/1989
Nicky Campbell:
“Oh yes. Good evening and a very warm welcome to a special Top of the Pops,
Comic Relief edition. Let me introduce you to my very special co-host Lenny
Henry!”
Lenny Henry:
[Shrieks] “Yeeah. We're red nose rockin' for the next thirty minutes. I'm gonna
go absolutely crazy, here's my pants [does Rik Mayall-esuqe hip wobbling] and
here's my pals.”
Norman Pace [as
Ron]: “Listen. Give your cash to comic relief.”
Gareth
Hale [as Ron]: “Because it's hard to
talk when you ain't got no teeth.”
Nicky Campbell:
“AndherearetheReynoldsGirls.”
Lenny Henry:
“Yee hah!”
To modern eyes,
the Reynolds Girls arrive with a lot of baggage. Much time has been spent
debating whether the song is legitimate protest, a foretelling of Matthew
Bannister's defenestration of the Radio One old guard, self-aggrandising
rubbish, a joke, an act of Swiftian self-loathing on the part of Pete Waterman,
or [insert other opinion]. I have little to add. Except that I was 17 in 1989.
I didn't care about the age of the DJs on the radio. They were all old. I
didn't much like the Rolling Stones, Dire Straits, or Fleetwood Mac. And I
thought I'd Rather Jack was rubbish. Pink Floyd got a pass because I had
nostalgic memories of being frightened by the marching hammers in the video for
Another Brick In The Wall.
The direction
for the Reynolds Girls is surprisingly poor. Go back and watch Mel and Kim
perform Respectable, 05/03/1987. The pair are mainly shot in mid shot or close
up, and they dominate the screen. Generally the only time both are shown head
to toe on camera is when they are not singing and then they don't dance so much
as stride around, fashion show style. By contrast, the camera angles for the
Reynolds Girls don't take their dance routine into account. The pair are often
left facing away from camera. When they are looking the right way, Paul Ciani's
direction favours long wide shots that leaves the pair marooned and alone on a
vast stage. The wide shots wouldn't be a problem if there were 10 Reynolds
Girls or the choreography was amazing, but there aren't and it isn't. The
performance looks like two of your mates mucking around in the disco while the
42 year old Pete Waterman complains that the 28 year old Nicky Campbell is too
old to play his songs.
It does seem a
bit on the nose for this song to be on Top of the Pops the same week
Jason Donovan's terrible song reaches Number One. What's that Pete? I can't
hear what your complaining about over the sound of all the money you're making.
(John- And
all this time later millions of people still listen to Fleetwood Mac whereas
the Reynolds Girls……….)
[16] DUSTY
SPRINGFIELD: nothing has been proved. This
being Comic Relief Eve the studio is festooned in red noses. Lenny Henry
wears a gold-lamé coat with red noses stuck to it.
Another chaotic
link, Lenny Henry attempting to link the Reynolds Girls to Dusty Springfield
comes out with the non sequitur “I'd rather jack supremo... no...” “Profumo,”
Nicky Campbell corrects him. Was his original line was supposed to be “I'd
rather jack Profumo”? I'm not sure that's much better.
Dusty
Springfield shakes her head and puts her hand to her forehead before she starts
singing. It looks like she's corpsing. Is Lenny Henry pulling silly faces at
her?
CHARTS FROM
40 TO 31. Vas Blackwood
joins Lenny and Nicky in the crow's nest to introduce the charts. The
background to the wipe into the charts is a tile of the comic relief logo for
1989. And, the countdown has two overlaid red noses either side of the chart
position.
[24] WOMACK AND WOMACK: celebrate the world. Did any of these links get rehearsed? Hale and Pace are in the studio as The Management (which caused me no small amount of confusion at first because I couldn't remember which year they were responsible for the single, it was 1991) and they introduce Womack and Womack as part of a messy link which rambles into the introduction to Celebrate The World. Womack and Womack are clearly recorded earlier but I can't really work out when.
[18] DEACON
BLUE: wages day. There's
a small podium at the end of each wing of the main stage, it's occasionally
used by the hosts. This time a couple of lads and a girl are standing on the
one at the end of the stage right wing, clapping along. Have they been placed
there by the floor manager or did they climb up under their own initiative to
get a better view? It doesn't really matter because suddenly they are in the
way. As one of the camera cranes tracks backwards, just after the first split
screen shot, it catches a member of the studio crew getting the trio off the
podium so it can be used by one of the handheld camera operators.
Keep an eye on
the back wall of the stage at the same time. See it wobble. There's a handheld
camera operator back there, alternating between getting shots of the drummer
and the keyboard player, he must have backed into the wall hard.
CHARTS FROM
30 TO 11.
[15] PAULA
ABDUL: straight up. Paul
Abdul is travelling with a full posse. Herself, and two pairs of dancers and
three chairs. Abdul, and the two women dancers, stride over and sit facing the
camera in a position popularised by Christine Keeler, appropriate for a show
which also features Dusty Springfield singing Nothing Has Been Proved.
During the
first chorus, watch out for Lenny Henry blundering into shot as he heads to the
mark for his next link. Let's hope Top of the Pops wasn't planning to
use this performance again because its just been very effectively time stamped.
This is a
catchy pop song but not necessarily a brilliant one. The performance is
brilliant, elevated by the choreography and camera direction. Everything that's
wrong with the Reynolds Girls performance is right here.
I got thinking
about the difference between the two routines. I think it comes down to the
difference between being professional and being amateur. Paula Abdul is clearly
an experienced professional. The Reynolds Girls aren't. Being an amateur
performer on Top of the Pops can be charming and endearing and could
have been made to work in the Reynolds Girls favour, but their image is all
wrong. They're not professional dancers so why give them a routine to remember?
Instead encourage them to act looser and have fun. In the end, I think the
person who prepared the Reynolds Girls for television did a very poor job and
doomed them from the start.
[3]
BANANARAMA/LANANEENEENOONOO: help.
On video.
[11] DONNA
SUMMER: this time i know it's for real. Another pre-recorded performance but this time it can be
dated to the studio session for last week's show. Check out the vertical
configuration of neon tubes which can be seen on the other side of the studio.
They first appeared last week on the stage used by Tyree and Kool Rock Steady.
TOP 10:
[1] JASON
DONOVAN: too many broken hearts. On
video.
[21] : mean
man. Sybil Ruscoe and
Simon Mayo next week, hopefully joined by Rod McKenzie. W. A. S. P. plays out
over the closing titles with this week's hosting duties credited to NICKY
CAMPBELL & LENNY HENRY and friends of COMIC RELIEF.
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