This is the second half of the blog post from Nick Halliwell of the Granite Shore that, five years ago, brought us new Distractions songs. The stand-out track, Black Velvet, went on to be The Distractions' first EP since 1981's "And Then There's...". The links to the MP3 downloads are still live, so if you haven't already, fill your Boots.
Sunday, 6 September 2009
I Thought You Were Dead...
What you really want to know, though, is this: are they any good?
Well, as Mike has given me permission to upload the tracks here, you can judge
for yourselves. For my money the first of them, Black Velvet, is among the very finest things in the
Distractions canon. It's unusual in that it's roughly twice the length of
anything else they ever did but it is absolutely stunning. It has that apparent
simplicity which is the hallmark of all the band's work, even though it
actually takes a great deal of subtlety to get anything sounding that simple.
Mike remains one of the all-time great pop voices, there's something about his
singing that sends shivers up and down my spine. The lyric is very much in the
classic Distractions tradition too. As Mike says, this is perhaps the logical
extension of a track like Looking
For A Ghost; and it reminds you just how special this band were, how
different from their contemporaries. As a result their records have barely
dated at all, and even though these demos were recorded 15 years later they fit
seamlessly into the canon.
Although Black
Velvet is the clear
standout, the other four are also pretty terrific; they're much more similar to
earlier Distractions in that they're short and oh so sweet. None of these
would've sounded at all out of place on Nobody's
Perfect. I'm also extremely fond of Good
Girls Don't Get To Paris, but
all five songs here are terrific.
It really is positively criminal that the Distractions' oeuvre has
yet to be reissued, with the exception of their classic Factory single, Time
Goes By So Slow, which has
appeared on a number of compilation albums. Major record companies... Grrr…
Anyway, here are the five tracks which I've converted to MP3 for
maximum compatibility. I'll try and write more pieces on this blog over the
next few weeks and months.
The
Distractions: 1995 demos (MP3)
Thanks to Mike Finney and Steve Perrin for letting us hear these.
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