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Indietracks Festival / all things C86 and indiepop!



Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,142
Faversham




Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,142
Faversham
Have to say, that leaves me pretty meh: sounds like an A-ha album track or something. This on the other hand, from the essential Labrador 100 compilation, is rather fantastic. Pick out your fave influences ;o)



Sorry, I linked to te wrong track. May have been drunk at the time. I'll see if I can dig out the joyous one some time. All the best.
 


Flex Your Head

Well-known member
Sorry, I linked to te wrong track. May have been drunk at the time.

No need to apologise. I reckon a good 50% of my posts take place after alcohol has been happily glugged. Left downstairs with a bottle of red I can lose hours trawling round the web listening to lost gems. Like tonight.

 




Stato

Well-known member
Dec 21, 2011
7,371
Its not quite C86, but I've just got around to playing a CD that a mate gave me a while ago. It's by a Brazilian bloke who goes by the name Le Almeida. The album he's given me is from 2010 and called Mono Maca, but it looks like he's got a new album out which is all on YouTube. Any fans of stuff like Pavement might be interested.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1pTdmUSHWCk&list=PLTaRWr5sdDvk2Jf-idLAngcwG-EJlK6pC

It's all in Portugese and the older album is more garage-sounding and can be heard at https://lealmeida.bandcamp.com/album/mono-ma
 






Flex Your Head

Well-known member






hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
62,759
Chandlers Ford
It's OK, doesn't really tell you anything new, but not a bad way to spend three hours.

I did record the 80's one and watched it last night. It was, as Tiny says - no earth shattering insight for the converted - but enjoyably nostalgic. For a program supposedly about NON-mainstream music, it kind of wasn't - at least not to the likes of us indie-kids. (Understandably I guess) concentrated on the likes of the Smiths, New Order, Happy Mondays, etc rather than PROPER indie-pop. Sarah Records didn't get a mention at all, (although Amelia Fletcher was one of the talking heads).

Going to have a look and see if the 90's one is still on iPlayer, later in the week.
 




Stato

Well-known member
Dec 21, 2011
7,371
I did record the 80's one and watched it last night. It was, as Tiny says - no earth shattering insight for the converted - but enjoyably nostalgic. For a program supposedly about NON-mainstream music, it kind of wasn't - at least not to the likes of us indie-kids. (Understandably I guess) concentrated on the likes of the Smiths, New Order, Happy Mondays, etc rather than PROPER indie-pop. Sarah Records didn't get a mention at all, (although Amelia Fletcher was one of the talking heads).

Going to have a look and see if the 90's one is still on iPlayer, later in the week.

***Spoiler alert for anyone who hasn't seen it.***

I found it quite Manc-centric. It started with the Buzzcocks EP which was a punk single on an indie label, just like 'New Rose' on Stiff some months earlier, but Stiff didn't seem to fit the narrative and didn't get a mention. This would be fine if the programmes concentrated on 'indie' as musical genre rather than a business model, but we got quite a lot from Waterman about PWL, so this was obviously not their intent. I wouldn't have expected Stiff to be covered in detail as BBC4 have done a previous documentary focusing on them, but it needed mentioning as one of the originators, one that preceded anything in Manchester. I suspect that its base in London would have contradicted the programmes view that everything came from the provinces.

As it continued into the Factory, Britpop and Creation stories it covered old ground. There is a far more esoteric and interesting story to be told, but this was glossed over as 'C86' happened, but it wasn't very good, lets not to talk about it. By skipping to Britpop as the supposed antidote to grunge it ignored the impact that bands like the Vaselines and the Shop Assistants had on Cobain's music and that the scene had on his worldview. I would say that a lot of the early grunge bands shared the anti-corporate, anti-commercialism, do-it-yourself attitude that British post-punk indies and C86 type labels had. Most Britpop bands seemed to just want to be the next big thing.
 




Flex Your Head

Well-known member








hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
62,759
Chandlers Ford
Hmmm. I want to buy it, but (a) I'd be surprised if I watched it more than once, and (b) surely it will be broadcast on BBC4 on a Friday night in the not-too-distant future? ???

All of that.

I don't think our house even possesses a DVD player any more, tbh.
 




Jul 20, 2003
20,684
You need to factor in the additional cost of needing to buy a duffle coat ASAP after watching it.
 








Staly

Well-known member
Mar 30, 2004
1,076
Manchester
No, posters have to be in frames these days. And even then only in the rarely frequented wings of the house where only I go.
 


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