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

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I find Dreadlock Holiday and The Things We Do For Love really bad but like I'm Not In Love (except for the 'big boys don't cry' bit?).

Is there any future for me as a 10 CC fan?

N. (nickdastoor), Monday, 6 October 2003 15:36 (twenty years ago) link

There could be, N.
Just work your way backwards from that bloody 'Bloody Tourists' alb (that "Dreadlock Holiday" is from).

t\'\'t (t\'\'t), Monday, 6 October 2003 15:44 (twenty years ago) link

"i'm mandy, fly me" is one of the greatest airline company ads ever (although while Dinah Shore had "Oxygen Part IV" for her US syndicated talk show, there was still a special French deal for UTA, one of the first bits of music i'd ever heard sold to both the US and the EU).

i'm fond of Peter Cook too, sneezing at Malcolm McClaren's presumed sub-goon Biggsey role for him in " .. Swindle" and instead going with i suppose his musical Peter Sellers attempt (which wasn't as good as Sellers admittedly, but at least it had nothing to do with Dudley)
(ok, and especially since he saved us from Goldenballs)

george gosset (gegoss), Monday, 6 October 2003 16:52 (twenty years ago) link

I'm a bigger fan of seeing them as two good songwriting partnerships, whether in 10cc or later.

"I'm So Laid Back I'm Laid Out" only recently got thrown in as a bonus track on the album Gouldman etc. made after the split. I guess that album is more slapstick. Well thanks, after all that. The following duo/10cc Bloody Tourtist is just as much "humour" i suppose (f'in English music hall tradition ?).

Ok, How Dare You has it's moments (mostly on side one, and mostly Gouldman songs), but i do like the group effort of "The Second Holding of the Last Supper" off .. Bends

The first two single lps off Godley/Creme are been nicely collected on a recent one way/cd re-issue, and they'd be my favourites, with all that extreme pre-digital studio experimentation, without the excesses of the Cook folly.

george gosset (gegoss), Monday, 6 October 2003 17:05 (twenty years ago) link

Though I don't know Bloody Tourists, I actually quite like "Dreadlock Holiday" -- never understood the argument that it was somehow "racist" or anything (an argument someone made on this board a ways back). Seems more a clever parody of the Ugly American than anything else...

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Monday, 6 October 2003 18:07 (twenty years ago) link

(...but i do like the group effort of "The Second Holding of the Last Supper" off .. Bends

So do I. But its actual title sounds/looks a tad batter, even - "The Second Sitting for the Last Supper" :) \nit-pick-fact-check mode off\ :)

t\'\'t (t\'\'t), Monday, 6 October 2003 20:30 (twenty years ago) link

The trilogy "Sheet Music"/"Original Soundtrack"/"How Dare You" are all brilliant and must buys. The rest are a lot more patchy, while some of the 80s ones are downright awful.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Monday, 6 October 2003 21:07 (twenty years ago) link

Didn't 10cc own Strawberry Studios as well, which was where the mighty Joy Division recorded some of their best stuff?

Damian (Damian), Monday, 6 October 2003 21:53 (twenty years ago) link

the first one is kind of a pastiche record: they do a teen death song, a prison riot song etc. its great, but its a bit like a comedy record.
by sheet music, although still smartarse and referential, they've ditched this approach. this is my favourite of their records, although i listened again recently and found its smugness left me a bit queasy.

i also quite like neanderthal man from when they were called hotlegs.

gaz (gaz), Monday, 6 October 2003 22:37 (twenty years ago) link

So do I. But its actual title sounds/looks a tad batter, even - "The Second Sitting for the Last Supper" :) \nit-pick-fact-check mode off\ :)
If you want to be really nitpcky, the track's actually off "The Original Soundtrack"!!!!!!

Old Fart!!! (oldfart_sd), Tuesday, 7 October 2003 11:41 (twenty years ago) link

Much obliged, Old Fart!!!
*bows* *out*

t\'\'t (t\'\'t), Tuesday, 7 October 2003 11:48 (twenty years ago) link

i second Sheet Music as a good place to start, but Geir is OTM upthread (cor, never thought I'd say that)

btw, Castle Music (part of Sanctuary group now) recently released a compilation of the Gouldman-Stewart-Godley-Creme "hit factory" period called "Strawberry Bubblegum: A Collection of pre-10cc Strawberry Studios Recordings 1969-1972". It looks ace!

zebedee (zebedee), Tuesday, 7 October 2003 15:56 (twenty years ago) link

Well of course Geir is right! Yes, Sheet Music/OST/How Dare You are their essential records, personal fave being OST. You should also get "100cc" their UK-era hits-&-b-sides compilation, if only for the magical "Gizmo My Way".

Strawberry Bubblegum is a great idea in theory (it's something I've been going on about for years), but the final product is somehow unsatisfying. What we really need is a compilation of Graham Gouldman's beat-era recordings/compositions.

harveyw (harveyw), Wednesday, 8 October 2003 07:00 (twenty years ago) link

four months pass...
I'm interested to see, actually, what people's thoughts were concerning Godley & Creme's "Consequences"... how does it stand up? I'm intrigued by its mention in the new Uncut [within IIRC the Blegvad/Partridge album review], c.f. Peter Cook's involvement, and a curious one-star slating on the AMG...

Must say I'm a big fan of humorous 10cc stuff like "Donna", "The Wall Street Shuffle" and "The Dean and I", as well as the *staggeringly sublime* "I'm Not In love", of course. "Lazy Ways" is certainly another real favourite.

Tom May (Tom May), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 01:28 (twenty years ago) link

I am a huge fan of almost whatever Godley & Creme have come up with. I have to say, though, that "Consequences" is one of those albums where the ambitions may have been great, the idea may have been good, but the way it ended up, well... Just didn't work out.

Settle for "Freeze-Frame" instead (although Soulseek may be the only possible place to find Godley & Creme albums these days)

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 01:42 (twenty years ago) link

I'm interested to see, actually, what people's thoughts were concerning Godley & Creme's "Consequences"... how does it stand up?

Not very well, but I gotta credit them for getting a major label to release what is basically a technical demonstration album for the Gizmo.

Consequences is a spectacular example of the old tradition where the songwriter(s) of a band leaves and then hoodwinks their record label into funding a completely bizarre and self-indulgent album that's PR-ed as being genius, but is really just bulldada. Treat it as a Zappa album only with Peter Cook/Goon fixations instead of Zappa's barnyard humor. If you're going to start with Godley/Creme, I'd go with L first. I believe it got reissued with Freeze Frame together on one CD, but I'd go to slsk first just so you know what you're getting into.

Elvis Telecom (Chris Barrus), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 03:47 (twenty years ago) link

I listened to Consequences in its entirety for the first time..possibly..ever.. a couple of weeks back as part of my A-Z project, and really didn't know what to make of it at all. I was quite a big fan of 10cc when the set came out, but even then it seemed like a massive conceit. And I hadn't even heard it! Now..it seems...well, the first side is fascinating from a technical standpoint, the rest simply doesn't hold together at all. The great thing about 10cc was that they had such a great pop sensibility (the Gouldman/Stewart beat-group background) but with intellectual pretensions (Godley & Creme's art school background). One without the other was always bound to fail.

harveyw (harveyw), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 13:01 (twenty years ago) link

Who knew Harvey had a livejournal? It looks excellent!

(BTW: I was thinking about you the other day when I noticed that one of the few good things about 'The Dreamers' was the snatch of Polnareff that drifts onto the soundtrack halfway through. They were playing it in the lobby before the film too.)

(This is Stevie T speaking, btw)

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 13:05 (twenty years ago) link

Oh! Hi Stevie! Where are you these days? Feel free to leave comments on my lj; that's what it's for...
Polnareff on the Dreamers soundtrack? Which tune? Maybe I'll go see it after all.

harveyw (harveyw), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 13:12 (twenty years ago) link

It's 'Love Me, Please Love Me'. I don't know whether to recommend the film or not - it's quite a lot of fun for 45 minutes or so, but gets really obnoxious as it goes on. Actually you could do worse than leave straight after the Polnareff in the Cafe scene.

I will be reading the LJ with keen interest.

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 13:15 (twenty years ago) link

I loved nearly all the singles ("I'm Mandy, Fly Me" especially) but always thought that on the albums their clever-dickness tended to overflow a little.

LondonLee (LondonLee), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 13:24 (twenty years ago) link

Oh, and since no one else has I want to tip my hat to "Life Is a Minestrone"

LondonLee (LondonLee), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 13:25 (twenty years ago) link

Wait, did the G&C records go back out of print again? Weren't they just reissued, like, a year or two ago?

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 20:25 (twenty years ago) link

They may have been. Never seen them here though.

Still waiting for the three 80s albums by 10cc to be re-released too, particularly "Ten Out Of Ten", which is IMO their best post-Godley/Creme album.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 21:41 (twenty years ago) link

although Soulseek may be the only possible place to find Godley & Creme albums these days

mmm, i do suspect there's at least one more place - a very BIG "place", just east of the estonian border - where godley/creme albums, among other things, mightn't be particularly hard to find :)

t\'\'t (t\'\'t), Thursday, 12 February 2004 00:35 (twenty years ago) link

one year passes...
what?

Ajamateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Tuesday, 17 May 2005 03:34 (eighteen years ago) link

the first two are it, I think. I found an old copy of "How Dare" and I couldn't really stomach it. "Mandy" is nice but I mean what is that song about? Nothing that I can discern. "Not in Love" is a great single, "Life is a Minestrone" is all right. "Things We Do for Love" is a nice single, as is "Dreadlock Holiday." And I prefer the first one to "Sheet Music." Like "Worst Band in the World" a lot. And, search their bubblegum single under, what name is it?, "Let's Go to Sausalito" or whatever, that is nice.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Tuesday, 17 May 2005 12:49 (eighteen years ago) link

10cc were the reason Steely Dan never really had much in the way of hits in Britain; they were our equivalent, but the Britishness doesn't really translate overseas I suppose.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Tuesday, 17 May 2005 12:51 (eighteen years ago) link

"Mandy" is nice but I mean what is that song about? Nothing that I can discern.

"Mandy" was a continuation of the story started in "Clockwork Creep" on "Sheet Music".

I like their albums from "Sheet Music" to "How Dare You" the best. The debut contained a lot of great stuff, but there are a bit too many obvious novelties on the album for me to be able to take it fully seriously.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Tuesday, 17 May 2005 16:58 (eighteen years ago) link

one year passes...
Just listening to Original Soundtrack for the first time. As a fan of the High Llamas, there's plenty for me to enjoy. There are some seriously cringeworthy moments, though.

And as for I'm not in love, how beautiful is that after years of not hearing it?

Daniel Giraffe (Daniel Giraffe), Thursday, 6 July 2006 11:54 (seventeen years ago) link

three weeks pass...
Amazed that nobody has mentioned "Rubber Bullets," probably my favorite song by them. Also amazed that nobody has mentioned Hotlegs, of "Neanderthal Man" fame, the band that evolved into 10cc; does anybody know whether Hotlegs ever made an album? I don't remember ever seeing one (and I know I could google, but I'm lazy.) (Also, what is the 10cc song that Rush seemed to have ripped off the opening of "Tom Sawyer" from? "The Worst Band in the World," maybe?)

xhuxk (xheddy), Monday, 31 July 2006 15:12 (seventeen years ago) link

Also amazed that nobody has mentioned Hotlegs, of "Neanderthal Man" fame

Great song, that, if only for the pretty amazing drum sound.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Monday, 31 July 2006 15:26 (seventeen years ago) link

Also great: Frank Kogan's parody of "Neanderthal Man," which I believe goes "I'm a lesbian man/You're a lesbian girl/Let's make lesbian love/In our lesbian world." Or something along those lines.

xhuxk (xheddy), Monday, 31 July 2006 15:30 (seventeen years ago) link

does anybody know whether Hotlegs ever made an album?

It was called Thinks: School Stinks. Alice Cooper may or may not have pinched an artwork idea from it.
http://www.planetmellotron.com/images/hotlegs-thinks.jpg

LC (Damian), Monday, 31 July 2006 15:55 (seventeen years ago) link

While it contained some of the brilliant musicianship that made them so great later on, I still feel that "Rubber Bullets" was still a bit too much of a novelty to rank among their best work. For me, anyway.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Monday, 31 July 2006 22:59 (seventeen years ago) link

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

chaki (chaki), Saturday, 10 February 2007 12:25 (seventeen years ago) link

I dunno. I find them a lot less endearing than the Dan.

I Tried to Use My Cock as a Bong (noodle vague), Saturday, 10 February 2007 12:27 (seventeen years ago) link

four years on, stil haven't followed up on the original question.

pisces (piscesx), Saturday, 10 February 2007 13:44 (seventeen years ago) link

"Dreadlock Holiday" is uncomfortable, to say the least. But that might be partially cos of the time I was playing the triv machine in a working man's club where imminent violence was in the air (and it was only lunchtime) and some heavily drunk dude kept playing it on the jukebox over and over again.

I Tried to Use My Cock as a Bong (noodle vague), Saturday, 10 February 2007 13:48 (seventeen years ago) link

I find them better than Steely Dan (and I love Steely Dan too). Absolutely genius, although they dried out somewhat once Godley & Creme left.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Saturday, 10 February 2007 15:16 (seventeen years ago) link

two weeks pass...
Reviving this thread to ask a question about "I'm Not In Love".

I read somewhere that the voices in the background on that single were all tape loops that were carefully put together to fit into the production.

Does anyone know more about this? Was this the case, or did they just use a mellotron.
And if they didn't use a mellotron, why wouldn't a mellotron have been sufficient to create the same kind of mood?

Geir Hongro, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 02:38 (seventeen years ago) link

yes they were all tape loops. perhaps they did it this way because they preferred the sound of voices to strings? you'd probably need to ask them. there's a sound on sound article about this track somewhere..

electricsound, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 02:44 (seventeen years ago) link

But mellotrons contained voices too.

Geir Hongro, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 02:45 (seventeen years ago) link

here

http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/jun05/articles/classictracks.htm

electricsound, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 02:45 (seventeen years ago) link

props to lol creme for his incredible name

electricsound, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 02:47 (seventeen years ago) link

Now, there's a lot of interesting facts. Thanks. :)

Geir Hongro, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 02:58 (seventeen years ago) link

W/o looking at that SoS article, basically they did "I'm Not In Love" this way:

They recorded 13 tracks of them singing every note of the octave (plus one) for the duration of the song, and "played" them by moving the faders on the mixer. Pretty great stuff, and it only left 3 tracks for the Rhodes, the bass drum sound (a synth, if memory serves) and the sumptuous Eric Stewart vocal...

Naive Teen Idol, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 19:06 (seventeen years ago) link

rad

chaki, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 19:46 (seventeen years ago) link

Wow, that's even better than the story of the recording of "Stayin' Alive."

James Redd and the Blecchs, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 19:52 (seventeen years ago) link

that 3rd song on 'the original soundtrack', after 'im not in love', is the hottest song ever recorded.

chaki, Wednesday, 28 February 2007 20:00 (seventeen years ago) link

Also, unlike Queen (but like Sparks, and Steely Dan) there is a real smartass/snide/acidic/satirical quality to a lot of the lyrics that some might find oft-putting, or less accessible.

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 9 October 2021 15:34 (two years ago) link

Maybe, although hasn't that lyrical aspect has been part of the appeal in the Sparks and Dan revival?

Halfway there but for you, Saturday, 9 October 2021 15:45 (two years ago) link

The band might have been dreary to look at but I wouldn't say their artwork was? I think I said it before itt but there's a lot of Let's Laugh At Foreigners And Their Funny Ways stuff going on in their work, which seems very UK in the 70s and probably deserves to stay there.

Starmer: "Let the children boogie, let all the children boogie." (Tom D.), Saturday, 9 October 2021 16:14 (two years ago) link

There's a quote from Gouldman or Stewart: "we had two arts students in the band, so why were our sleeves always such crap?"

Let's Laugh At Foreigners

Surely appropriate in the age of Brexit!

Halfway there but for you, Saturday, 9 October 2021 16:24 (two years ago) link

Blame Hipgnosis.

Starmer: "Let the children boogie, let all the children boogie." (Tom D.), Saturday, 9 October 2021 16:25 (two years ago) link

Maybe, although hasn't that lyrical aspect has been part of the appeal in the Sparks and Dan revival?

Absolutely, I was saying that more in comparing/collecting 10Ccc to/with Queen, who lacks that acid tongue.

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 9 October 2021 17:03 (two years ago) link

Let's Laugh At Foreigners

Is there? I know there's "Dreadlock Holiday," but I always thought the narrator was the butt of the joke there, kind of like in a Randy Newman song, or "Safe European Home."

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 9 October 2021 17:05 (two years ago) link

There's also "One Night in Paris" (making fun of the French and Americans), "Oh Effendi" (Arabs and Americans), "Hotel" (unspecified Third World cannibals and their Western victims), maybe "Baron Samedi"?

Halfway there but for you, Saturday, 9 October 2021 17:51 (two years ago) link

I think Godley and Creme were largely responsible for those.

Starmer: "Let the children boogie, let all the children boogie." (Tom D.), Saturday, 9 October 2021 18:06 (two years ago) link

I think their albums are kind of difficult and dense for your average American dan fan that buys mash up shirts on Etsy. The Original Soundtrack is so sick tho and every time I DJ and play Blackmail, a lot of youngins freak out and ask me what it is.

kurt schwitterz, Saturday, 9 October 2021 18:12 (two years ago) link

Anyone read this?

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/41jOme9WPZL._SX338_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

piscesx, Saturday, 9 October 2021 23:26 (two years ago) link

Gonna suppose the reason sparks and 10cc aren't experiencing a breakout with the youth is that they lack an iconic character of a frontman and had one hit song in the US between the two of them

, Saturday, 9 October 2021 23:45 (two years ago) link

I think I said it before itt but there's a lot of Let's Laugh At Foreigners And Their Funny Ways stuff going on in their work, which seems very UK in the 70s and probably deserves to stay there.

There's also a fair amount of 1970s misogyny in 10cc's lyrics that deserves to stay there, especially the stalker song 'Iceberg' on 'How Dare You'. Kevin Godley apparently wanted to make the lyrics even darker and scatological, but other band members disapproved. Eric Stewart said it was 'one of the songs that almost split the group', although the split wasn't far away by that point.

Portsmouth Bubblejet, Sunday, 10 October 2021 06:35 (two years ago) link

Kinda surprised Bon Iver Nation hasn't made its way into the 10cc back catalogue, via Gayngs' cover of "Cry" several years back.

henry s, Sunday, 10 October 2021 14:35 (two years ago) link

I don’t really like or “get” this band except for “I’m not in love”. “the things we do for love” just sails past me. “Dreadlock holiday” yikes. They seem to have recorded lot of deliberately goofy stuff that’s not my cup of tea. I understand they did incredible things production/studio-wise. “I’m Mandy (fly me)” is pretty okay. I’d listen to an ilmer-compiled comp of fav cuts sans goofy stuff.

brimstead, Sunday, 10 October 2021 17:01 (two years ago) link

I feel with 10CC there are a lot of “just because you can, doesn’t mean you should” aesthetic choices that just seem bewildering when divorced of the context in which they made them. More so than Queen, who, when faced with the same issue, could at least go *bigger*/more anthemic

Buckfast in America (Master of Treacle), Sunday, 10 October 2021 17:40 (two years ago) link

I feel with 10CC there are a lot of “just because you can, doesn’t mean you should” aesthetic choices that just seem bewildering when divorced of the context in which they made them

So well put. Despite finding these guys pretty hard to get into, it helps a tiny bit if I think of them as related to broadly the same cultural moment that’s responsible for Kenny Everett or The Goodies. Which gels well with the presence of Peter Cook on Consequences I guess? Douglas Adams / HHG2G kind of in this space as well maybe? Also feel like Rupert Hine/Quantum Jump are related to this vibe.

lemmy incaution (emsworth), Sunday, 10 October 2021 22:16 (two years ago) link

I don't know that Godley or Creme would have been too pleased to be associated in people's minds with the Goodies tbh. Peter Cook, obviously. Kenny Everett, meanwhile, was still a slightly dangerous maverick at the time. Clever dickery in general though.

Starmer: "Let the children boogie, let all the children boogie." (Tom D.), Sunday, 10 October 2021 22:31 (two years ago) link

Ha yeh probably conflated a few thoughts there - Goodies sprang to mind because I watched a few episodes with my kids recently and was shocked at the degree of casual racism/sexism. Cue slightly flustered explanations about how the past is a foreign country (as it were).

lemmy incaution (emsworth), Monday, 11 October 2021 01:38 (two years ago) link

Casual racism and sexism? That's just 70s UK in general.

Starmer: "Let the children boogie, let all the children boogie." (Tom D.), Monday, 11 October 2021 07:03 (two years ago) link

Last 4 posts illustrate why these dudes never broke with hipster USA. Way too British!

kurt schwitterz, Monday, 11 October 2021 07:27 (two years ago) link

They should do a post-brexit comeback now that we've fully wound the clock back 50 years. Plus they'd now be free to call themselves 0.34 fl oz.

primate marmite (NickB), Monday, 11 October 2021 07:40 (two years ago) link

As a young-un I thought that 10cc referred to some kind of engine or motor, and had assumed that the band trafficked in what was would later come to be known as "classic rock."

henry s, Monday, 11 October 2021 12:33 (two years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Speaking of 10cc, I just heard (or I should say, listened to) "Just the Way You Are" by Billy Joel, and there are some striking similarities with "I'm Not In Love." Not just the electric piano, but also the vaguely Latin rhythm and, most conspicuously, the ghostly vocals droning in the background:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=STugQ0X1NoI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HaA3YZ6QdJU

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 25 October 2021 18:06 (two years ago) link

nine months pass...

You aren't the only one:

Composer and music theory professor Thomas MacFarlane considered the resulting "ethereal voices" with distorted synthesized effects to be a major influence on Billy Joel's hit ballad "Just the Way You Are", released two years later.

a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 24 August 2022 17:09 (one year ago) link

ten months pass...

Can't imagine too how Godley & Creme sat through the band meeting at which Stewart was ejected knowing that they were going to be working as a duo anyway on Consequences.

This is just next-level dickery.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 18 July 2023 02:44 (nine months ago) link

I mean, that's Stewart's account, so it makes sense he'd remember it that way. Another account I've heard was that it was the other way around and that G&C were booted for doing Consequences on their own. Regardless, there aren't a lot of bands that can subsist as long as they did with four songwriters.

As for the comments upthread about their songs about foreigners, the funny accents and the like, I do get the sense that this was something of a mid-70s UK thing -- but it also feels to me as if most if not all of these pieces are poking fun at colonialism above all else. At least one of the transcriptions of the lyrics to Hotel I found online uses Uncle Remus/Br'er Rabbit-like spellings ("Can see, cross water, to de' mainland") for the first verse. That seems rather intentional.

Anyway, no, you could never get away with the *way* they do it today -- and I'm not doubting that there may be some actual racism in there as well. But the white people seem to be the punchline of almost all of these songs.

Naive Teen Idol, Tuesday, 18 July 2023 14:29 (nine months ago) link

I seriously don't think they are.

John Donne In Concert (Tom D.), Tuesday, 18 July 2023 14:33 (nine months ago) link

The westerners in "Oh Effendi", at least, are also specifically Americans (which is why the music is quasi-Southern rock), and they're definitely included in the satire. Also "Hotel" has musical elements that echo the 30s and 40s, so in many ways it's a parody of the xenophobic attitudes of those eras, and the films of the times. Also a song like "Punchbag" on L shows that Godley and Creme were recipients of racist attacks and sensitive towards the issue.

I had always heard the story that Godley and Creme were ostracized from the other two as a consequence of planning their own album. I have trouble imagining Gouldman deciding he had more in common with those two rather than Stewart, or unilaterally deciding, once they were a trio, that they couldn't return to the group.

Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 18 July 2023 14:42 (nine months ago) link

OK so "Oh Effendi" is (I assume) about westerners desperate to make deals with Arabs for oil. But it manages to mention white slave girls, harems, turbans (Arabs don't wear turbans) and also finds time to refer to the French as "frogs".

John Donne In Concert (Tom D.), Tuesday, 18 July 2023 14:44 (nine months ago) link

What sort of enlightened racial and cultural attitudes would one expect from a gang of US mercenary gun runners in the 70s?

Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 18 July 2023 14:57 (nine months ago) link

Having their cake and eating it I'd call it, lampooning uncultured American assholes (it's never British arseholes you'll note) while getting to slip in a few funnies about Arabs etc.

John Donne In Concert (Tom D.), Tuesday, 18 July 2023 15:04 (nine months ago) link

If it was only one song too...

John Donne In Concert (Tom D.), Tuesday, 18 July 2023 15:04 (nine months ago) link

I do get the sense that this was something of a mid-70s UK thing

I agree. The turn the thread has taken reminded me of the episode of Rising Damp that opens with Leonard Rossiter returning from his holiday in Spain, wearing a sombrero and glumly shaking a pair of maracas. His lodger asks him, "How was the food?" "Greasy." "And the people?" "The same."

Vast Halo, Tuesday, 18 July 2023 16:39 (nine months ago) link

Well, I just got back and I wish I'd never leave now

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 18 July 2023 16:41 (nine months ago) link

Each night in this thread...

Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 18 July 2023 17:33 (nine months ago) link

...could be your last

Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 18 July 2023 17:33 (nine months ago) link

Americans are funny foreigners too remember.

John Donne In Concert (Tom D.), Tuesday, 18 July 2023 17:36 (nine months ago) link

I try to pretend I'm Canadian.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 18 July 2023 17:36 (nine months ago) link

A few years ago we had a compilation of the pre-10cc bubblegum material - a period memorably (and pretty accurately) described as "a load of crap" by Kevin Godley - but this looks more interesting...

https://www.cherryred.co.uk/godley-creme-frabjous-days-the-secret-world-of-godley-creme-1967-1969/

John Donne In Concert (Tom D.), Saturday, 22 July 2023 14:29 (eight months ago) link

Well, I just got back and I wish I'd never leave now

OTM

Live and Left Eye (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 22 July 2023 17:27 (eight months ago) link

I mean, that's Stewart's account, so it makes sense he'd remember it that way.

10cc manager Harvey Lisberg confirmed in an interview for the Consequences podcast (about 18 minutes in) that Eric Stewart was summoned to Manchester and told that Godley, Creme and Gouldman didn't want to work with him any more. Godley and Creme were unhappy not only that the group's music was becoming blander, but also with Stewart's dictatorial approach to studio production and engineering.

They resented the fact that their work was being produced in a certain way. They wanted the freedom to do it their way, instead of having to argue every minute. So, obviously, they pinpointed Eric - from their point of view, they wanted to get away from that. Graham was stuck in the middle of the deep blue sea, and I think... Graham was in an impossible position, because Kev and Lol definitely wanted to leave, and the question was "Do they carry on as 10cc with the three of them? How does it work?" But the reality was Kev and Lol wanted to do their thing, they wanted to do Consequences, and they wanted to be free.

Lisberg also suggested that, if Gouldman had stayed on the Consequences project, he "would have also been controlling them (Godley and Creme) to a degree, probably in deciding whether they would have done a single album", as opposed to the triple LP that emerged.

Portsmouth Bubblejet, Sunday, 23 July 2023 10:02 (eight months ago) link

in the bbc doc lol (lol) describes consequences as a heaven's gate* project, and hints that here was a symptomatic ballooning that a better managing of band politics (by everyone) might have mitigated

*= the 5 and a half hour cimino western that destroyed united artists at the start of the 80s: i don't think you cite it as a comparison -- even as a joking drive-by -- to induce a positive response

mark s, Sunday, 23 July 2023 10:31 (eight months ago) link

Yeah, Gouldman and Godley both think now that they should have just put the band on hold for a year to allow Consequences to be recorded and then reconvene afterwards.

As for 10cc trying to continue as a trio after Stewart had been removed: Gouldman said in another interview on the Consequences podcast (about 1hr 17 minutes in) that he had not been 'part of the initial Consequences team,' as had been suggested in Godley and Stewart's books.

I don't think it was going to be a three-man team, I think Kevin and Lol just wanted me to play on the album. I remember doing some stuff right at the beginning. Their sessions would start at sort of 10 at night and go on until 6 in the morning. I didn't like that at all. And I just sort of eventually drifted away from it.

So at some point Gouldman must have gone back to Stewart, who he'd just co-ejected from 10cc, and suggested that they carry on with 10cc after Godley and Creme had formally left. Can't imagine how that conversation went, although Gouldman said that he and Stewart were both 'on a mission' with Deceptive Bends to prove that they could deliver as a duo.

Portsmouth Bubblejet, Sunday, 23 July 2023 11:08 (eight months ago) link

Thanks for that info, it sounds like everyone has their own perspective on the break-up.

I was curious about the Frabjous Days compilation, although the Hotlegs album from 1971 doesn't encourage my hopes: it has a fair amount of decent music, but not a lot of 10cc's specific virtues (the lyrics, in particular, are vague or self-consciously dumb).

Halfway there but for you, Monday, 24 July 2023 01:04 (eight months ago) link

Seems like a lot of the songs on the Hotlegs album date from the Frabjous Days period.

John Donne In Concert (Tom D.), Monday, 24 July 2023 06:48 (eight months ago) link


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