10CC : they really *were* that good weren't they ?

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every so often i find myself with an overwhelming desire to listen to 10cc. and every time i find myself thinking, jesus, they *really fucking were* that good. walking up the street earlier, blasting "rubber bullets" into my ear, was a moment of utter joy.

as with so, so many bands, i need to get more of their albums.

grimly fiendish, Friday, 29 June 2007 14:30 (eighteen years ago)

also: WTF with whoever it was above who doesn't understand/get/whatever "i'm mandy"? that song ROCKS my SOUL.

grimly fiendish, Friday, 29 June 2007 14:42 (eighteen years ago)

("dreadlock holiday" is kinda blowsome, though.)

grimly fiendish, Friday, 29 June 2007 14:52 (eighteen years ago)

three months pass...

Things We Do for Love. Fuck me.

pisces, Monday, 8 October 2007 03:17 (eighteen years ago)

I bought the Best Of for 4 quid in HMV on Saturday, to replace a dusty cassette of Changing Faces. It's ninja.

Can I say "it's ninja"?

Matthew H, Monday, 8 October 2007 11:25 (eighteen years ago)

yes.

pisces, Monday, 8 October 2007 17:46 (eighteen years ago)

i was a kid when this was a hit and my mother and i used to sing it together when it would come on the radio. that song is still totally classic!

BATTAGS, Monday, 8 October 2007 18:00 (eighteen years ago)

two months pass...

The National Guard, The National Guard
The exercise yard, the exercise yard

Dom Passantino, Sunday, 30 December 2007 14:04 (eighteen years ago)

Jonathan King may be a child molester, but I am still thankful for the fact that he discovered two of my all-time favourite bands.

Geir Hongro, Sunday, 30 December 2007 15:10 (eighteen years ago)

five months pass...

Just listened to "I'm Not in Love" on repeat. What a brilliant track. This song must have been a balearic hit, fits perfectly within that sound.

oscar, Friday, 13 June 2008 21:08 (seventeen years ago)

have you heard their other song like this, Godley & Creme's "Cry"?
http://youtube.com/watch?v=B1Z8pSXCNFI freaky video

jaxon, Friday, 13 June 2008 21:30 (seventeen years ago)

wow that track is nice. i have a couple of their lps from the 70's which are really good, but beyond that i never investigated their later stuff. i am going to now.

oscar, Friday, 13 June 2008 21:55 (seventeen years ago)

10cc were the British Steely Dan. I say it is so, so it is so.

Not sure about this. I'm sure I'll be crucified for this (bring it, bitches), but Steely Dan never wrote anything as sublime as "I'm Not In Love".

Alex in NYC, Saturday, 14 June 2008 12:01 (seventeen years ago)

eight months pass...

Erol Alkan has been halting intense electro sets at 2 a.m. in vast warehouses before thousands of people by playing I'M NOT IN LOVE. IN FULL!

piscesx, Sunday, 8 March 2009 04:22 (seventeen years ago)

10cc were the British Steely Dan. I say it is so, so it is so.

If you regard the fact that 10cc were indeed very typically English whereas Steely Dan were very typically American (at least in an East Coast way), then this may well be a very good way to see it.

Geir Hongro, Sunday, 8 March 2009 13:05 (seventeen years ago)

That makes me LOL so hard.

Dances With Psychedelic Owls (Masonic Boom), Sunday, 8 March 2009 13:36 (seventeen years ago)

If the name had been deliberately chosen for the reasons cited, it would have been a misnomer: The average male ejaculation actually contains only about 3cc of semen.

derelict, Sunday, 8 March 2009 21:10 (seventeen years ago)

Wasn't 9CC supposed to be the max male ejaculation rather than the average?

Geir Hongro, Monday, 9 March 2009 00:28 (seventeen years ago)

props to lol creme for his incredible name

all-seeing eye of horus (psychgawsple), Monday, 9 March 2009 03:27 (seventeen years ago)

one month passes...

how have i never heard about this group

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 22 April 2009 16:31 (seventeen years ago)

i get the feeling theyre more of a singles band, right?

Michael B, Wednesday, 22 April 2009 16:36 (seventeen years ago)

and maybe not so much of a "any american has heard them" band

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 22 April 2009 17:11 (seventeen years ago)

besides xhuxk of course

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 22 April 2009 17:12 (seventeen years ago)

'im not in love' was surely a big hit stateside

Michael B, Wednesday, 22 April 2009 17:17 (seventeen years ago)

ive only heard the album 'bloody tourists' (dreadlock holiday was on it) and it was dissapointing. i might pick up their greatest hits sometime if i see it for cheap.

Michael B, Wednesday, 22 April 2009 17:18 (seventeen years ago)

god, i heard i'm not in love all the time when i was a kid. i certainly knew who they were in the 70's in the u.s. that and the things we do for love were huge on the radio.

scott seward, Wednesday, 22 April 2009 17:19 (seventeen years ago)

i wonder what kind of station would have played 10cc. they don't seem like they really fit. i was born in 1974 and the earliest thing i ever remember hearing on the radio was eddie rabbit.

"i wanna rule the world" is like.. ambient techno ambient highway 61 style queen or something.

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 22 April 2009 17:28 (seventeen years ago)

two weeks pass...

Amazing BBC doc online here
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00kn4q5/The_Record_Producers_10cc_6_Music_Producers_Cut/

Lol Creme, Kevin Godley, Graham Gouldman and Eric Stewart provided the entire package. Not only were they great musicians but they also wrote all their hits in various group combinations, produced their own recordings and, in Eric Stewart, had a built-in engineer. They also owned their own recording studio which made them a highly productive self-contained unit.

Featuring new interviews with all four band members and exclusive access to the original multi-track recordings of Donna, Wall Street Shuffle and I'm Not In Love.

This extended 6 Music Producer's Cut includes additional 10cc tracks and related music. Broadcast on:BBC 6 Music, 9:00pm Saturday 9th May 2009
Duration: 120 minutes

piscesx, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 21:00 (seventeen years ago)

No, they were much better.

Geir Hongro, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 21:04 (seventeen years ago)

"Please install Real Player".

Fuck that noise.

Vast Halo, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 21:08 (seventeen years ago)

maybe not so much of a "any american has heard them" band

Most Americans above a certain age have probably heard their two huge sellout hits "I'm Not In Love" and "The Things We Do For Love." Beyond that pair (and among younger Americans), maybe not, though.

(Ha ha, just looked up their chart positions and found out their third biggest U.S. hit -- only went to #40 -- was something called "People In Love." I can't even think of how that goes. And like their two top fives, it has the word "love" in its title.)

xhuxk, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 21:10 (seventeen years ago)

Actually, "Cry" would be their third biggest U.S. hit if it counts, and "Neanderthal Man" their fourth biggest.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 21:16 (seventeen years ago)

Amazing BBC doc online here

AH DUDE thank you for sharing this link: I knew nothing about this. That's one to luxuriate in tomorrow.

"Please install Real Player".

Fuck that noise

WTF, you keeping it real with your Babbage Engine there or something?

a tiny, faltering megaphone (grimly fiendish), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 22:23 (seventeen years ago)

"People In Love." I can't even think of how that goes

"People in love do funny things
walk under buses, um tum ti tum tum..."

Mark G, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 22:56 (seventeen years ago)

Fascinating article about the recording of "I'm Not In Love" here: http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/jun05/articles/classictracks.htm

About recording the a cappella backing:

"Each note of a chromatic scale was sung 16 times, so we got 16 tracks of three people singing for each note. That was Kevin, Lol and GiGi standing around a valve Neumann U67 in the studio, singing 'Aahhh' for around three weeks. I'm telling you; three bloody weeks. We eventually had 48 voices for each note of the chromatic scale, and since there are 13 notes in the chromatic scale, this made a total of 624 voices. My next problem was how to get all that into the track.

"I mixed down 48 voices of each note of the chromatic scale from the 16-track to the Studer stereo machine to make a loop of each separate note, and then I bounced back these loops one at a time to a new piece of 16-track tape, and just kept them running for about seven minutes. Because we had people singing 'Aahhh' for a long time, there were slight tuning discrepancies that added a lovely flavour, like you get with a whole string section, with a lot of people playing. Some are not quite in time, some have slightly different tuning, but musically a lovely thing happens to that. It's a gorgeous sound. A very human sound, very warm and moving all the time."

Space Is The Place, Wednesday, 13 May 2009 12:44 (seventeen years ago)

as nice as this thread is, it is still SERIOUSLY lacking in worship and praise for the guitar sound(s) on silly love. and it sounds just as glorious live:

scott seward, Wednesday, 13 May 2009 13:06 (seventeen years ago)

OK, the BBC doc is absolutely tremendous: thanks again for sharing, piscesx. I didn't realise it'd cover so much of Godley & Creme's later material, too (must go and revive that G&C thread) ... what, with that and the Sound on Sound article I can become the world's most tedious I'm Not In Love bore.

a tiny, faltering megaphone (grimly fiendish), Wednesday, 13 May 2009 17:00 (seventeen years ago)

ten months pass...

So basically, "Hotel" on Sheet Music (1974) sounds like Vampire Weekend, three and a half decades before the fact. (Lots of the album sounds too indie/twee to me, in retrospect. Convinced nothing much matches th side openers, "Wall Street Shuffle" and "Silly Love" -- well, maybe "The Worst Band In The World" I guess -- though feel free to try to convince me otherwise. Also guessing they liked Zappa a lot.)

xhuxk, Saturday, 13 March 2010 22:42 (sixteen years ago)

hey who's drummer number 2 on that live clip?!

piscesx, Saturday, 13 March 2010 23:56 (sixteen years ago)

If only Vampire Weekend had had the same wonderfully slick and absolutely perfect production...

Tied Up In Geir (Geir Hongro), Sunday, 14 March 2010 01:35 (sixteen years ago)

i don't think there is a rock band working today that has that production. and i wouldn't call it slick. it's hand-crafted and...words fail me. it's wonderful. i'm talking about the early stuff that chuck was listening to though. they did get much slicker. and great too, but in a different way.

scott seward, Sunday, 14 March 2010 03:37 (sixteen years ago)

massive desire to hear "Rubber Bullets" now need to find my LP...

Stormy Davis, Sunday, 14 March 2010 04:47 (sixteen years ago)

three weeks pass...

So, maybe this is common knowledge, but it never occured to me before today that pretty much the entire (great) first side of 10cc's first self-titled album from 1973 is done as ironic but loving nostalgia for high school life in the '50s and early '60s, with music to match. "The Dean And I" is probably my favorite track on that side, but I swear I could imagine the Dictators doing "Sand In My Face" (only they'd do it a lot louder, of course.) Second side isn't as good but does include the album's (and probably the band's) best song in "Rubber Bullets," definitely the funniest fusion of rockabilly and proto-Eurodisco ever.

Also just noticed that they didn't chart in the States until Sheet Music in 1974 (which got to #81; debut didn't even hit #200.)

xhuxk, Wednesday, 7 April 2010 21:51 (sixteen years ago)

I did pull out and listen to "Rubber Bullets" like 4 times in a row after my post immediately above xhuxk's.

except I don't have the first album, I have it on this:

http://farm1.static.flickr.com/102/271548150_cdd96c3906_m.jpg

Stormy Davis, Wednesday, 7 April 2010 22:36 (sixteen years ago)

The first album is great, but a bit too tongue-in-cheek for its own good maybe. Their golden age for me remains 1974-76 - all those three albums were absolutely awesome.
Then, they parted into two, and even though still making great music, the split was a disadvantage for both parts. Goldman and Stewart lost the creative x-factor and that the two others provided, whereas Godley & Creme were often just too weird, and didn't quite match Stewart and Goldman when it came to writing great pop songs.

Tied Up In Geir (Geir Hongro), Thursday, 8 April 2010 03:28 (sixteen years ago)

two months pass...

My 100cc LP looks different than the one Stormy posted -- actually says 100cc Greatest Hits Of 10cc, released in 1975 on UK Records, but apparently only draws "hits" from their first two albums (making it one of the fastest best-ofs in history probably), since I guess they'd switched labels to Mercury, at least in the States. (My copy's a Brit import, which might explain the different cover.) Anyway, B-side is six useless outtakes -- what sounds like a back-to-the-land Neil Young tribute or parody ("Waterfall"), a quasi Clapton blues rock hack thing ("4% of Something"), some forgettable elevator music instros and a couple maybe goofier songs that aren't particularly catchy. Any reason I should keep hanging on to this?

xhuxk, Tuesday, 8 June 2010 03:15 (sixteen years ago)

seven months pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_qXm4nzyev8

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 January 2011 23:40 (fifteen years ago)

ok I never actually knew the dude's name was lol creme
I just thought that people thought he was funny
so when they typed his name they would just ad the word lol in front of it

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 January 2011 23:42 (fifteen years ago)

LOL :D

You're Twistin' My Melody Man! (Geir Hongro), Tuesday, 11 January 2011 02:11 (fifteen years ago)


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