Hope you don't mind, but tonight I'm just going to re-type an old Bill Hicks sketch from '92. He was a huge influence on me and I wanted to pay homage to that fact by, well, y'know... just ripping him off. What? You do mind? See, I told them you would. Damn, I hate it when I'm right.
It's the last week of October, so allow me to officially welcome you to The Suck. Yeah, I know that's what they call the first Iraq War in Jarhead, but I bet you didn't know that 'The Suck' is also the proper way to refer to every single album released between the last week of October and the third week of December. It's true, just agree with me. In this period - just over two months - record labels will fob on you every little thing they can in the hope that you, the zombie shopper, will consider them adequate enough to present to a loved one at Christmas. Case in point: Radio One's double whammy of mediocrity. First off, Live Lounge Volume 2.
The first Live Lounge compilation was a surprise hit last Christmas. By surprise I mean they released it in fairly small numbers, it was successful, and they pumped out a few hundred thousand to keep up with demand. And it was a genuine success; even my mum asked for a copy. And so, with all the crusihing inevitability of an X-Factor /christmas number one, we get an utterly needless, irrelevant, cash in Volume Two. Worse, though, is Radio One's idea that we want all things Radio One for Christmas 2007.
Y'see, they've punted something else out this year an extra little indicator of just how cheap our national broadcaster thinks you are. Ostensibly a 30th anniversary treat, Radio 1: Est 1967 is meant to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the shining light of British radio. But if it was really meant to commemorate anything it would've been released a month ago (unfortunately shit doesn't shift in September), and the fact it nestles snuggly on HMV's shelves next to Live Lounge 2 simply highlights how The Suck gets worse each and every year.
Here's where we come back to my Hicks reference at the start. Because if I followed the ethos of Est 1967 then all I'd do is re-type an old Bill Hicks routine. Est. 1967 has today's artists covering classic songs of yesteryear. And yes, that is every bit as bad as it sounds.
I should point out that I don't object to cover versions per se; a decent, well placed cover can lift a live set (Damien Rice's cello player once single-handedly saved his life covering Seven Nation Army), and back in the day when you used to actualy buy music, an interesting cover version would elevate a single to 'essential purchase' status in a heartbeat. Sadly, all they've done with Est. 1967 is leave a monument to just how truly fucking awful music was in 2007. I mean, just look at this tracklist:
Disc One
- 1. Flowers In The Rain-Kaiser Chiefs
- 2. All Along The Watchtower-The Fratellis
- 3. Cupid-Amy Winehouse
- 4. Lola-Robbie Williams
- 5. Your Song-The Streets
- 6. Betcha By Golly Wow-Sugababes
- 7. You're So Vain-The Feeling
- 8. Band On The Run-Foo Fighters
- 9. Love Is The Drug-Kylie
- 10. Let's Stick Together-KT Tunstall
- 11. Sound And Vision-Franz Ferdinand
- 12. Teenage Kicks-The Raconteurs
- 13. Can't Stand Losing You-Mika Vs Armand Van Helden
- 14. Too Much Too Young-Kasabian
- 15. Under Pressure-Keane
- 16. Town Called Malice-McFly
- 17. Come Back And Stay-James Morrison
- 18. Careless Whisper-Gossip
- 19. The Power Of Love-The Pigeon Detectives
- 20. Don't Get Me Wrong-Lily Allen
Disc Two
- 1. You Sexy Thing-Stereophonics
- 2. Fast Car-Mutya Buena
- 3. Lullaby-Editors
- 4. Englishman In New York-Razorlight
- 5. Crazy For You-Groove Armada
- 6. It Must Be Love-Paolo Nutini
- 7. All That She Wants-The Kooks
- 8. You're All I Need To Get By-Mark Ronson
- 9. Stillness In Time-Calvin Harris
- 10. No Diggity-Klaxons
- 11. Lovefool-Just Jack
- 12. Ray Of Light-Natasha Bedingfield
- 13. Drinking In LA-The Twang
- 14. The Great Beyond-The Fray
- 15. Teenage Dirtbag-Girls Aloud
- 16. Like I Love You-Maximo Park
- 17. Don't Look Back Into The Sun-The View
- 18. Toxic-Hard-Fi
- 19. Father And Son-The Enemy
- 20. Steady As She Goes-Corinne Bailey Rae
You don't get more than two songs in before you spot something is seriously fucking amiss; there's not really anything wrong with The Fratellis... but does anyone want to hear them cover All Along the Watchtower? Fuck, they have exactly ONE album under their belts - you can't cover Hendrix until you've shaken the cultural landscape a bit. It gets worse: Robbie Williams covering The Kinks, Keane covering Queen (read that out loud, go on), fucking McFly covering The Jam... FOR CHRISTSSAKES! We haven't even moved onto disc two and already it's become an insult.
This isn't any sort of memorial to 30 years of great music, this is a cheap, nasty cash in from a whole bunch of people who should really know better. As if you would ever, ever, remember one of Madonna's finest moments by sticking on a fucking Groove Armada cover version. What is the fucking point of having The View cover The Libertines? There is none at all - it's utterly redundant. Teenage Dirtbag is a hideous song, who in their right mind would want to hear Girls Aloud make it worse?
Make no mistake, this is a colection of oddities and afterthoughts that have been packaged together to get £15 out of your pocket. There's no sentiment behind it, there's no wish to memorialise anything great, it's a simple, cynical cash-in. And it'l be followed by a whole load more simple, cynical cash-ins over the next few months.
Welcome to The Suck.