martes, 5 de mayo de 2026

Tracey Ullman

Before she became a famous TV comedienne, Tracy Ullman recorded two albums in the early '80s that effortlessly recalled the classic girl group sound of the '60s. Ullman covered everything from Doris Day ("Move Over Darling") to Blondie ("[I'm Always Touched by Your] Presence, Dear"), finding the underlying connections between classic pop songs of all eras. 'You Broke My Heart in 17 Places', her debut album, was a hit in the U.K., and she even managed to have a Top Ten hit in America with a version of Kirsty MacColl's "They Don't Know." Although it had some fine numbers, the follow-up, 'You Caught Me Out', wasn't as successful, prompting Ullman to return to television. By the end of the '80s, her comedy show, "The Tracy Ullman Show", was one of the most critically acclaimed television shows in America; she hasn't recorded any music since. [SOURCE: ALLMUSIC]
 

lunes, 4 de mayo de 2026

Via Vagabond

Talking about Via Vagabond as if it were a standalone band is a bit misleading; it’s actually tied to the orbit of Anne Pigalle, and more specifically to a track and creative project that came out of her mid-80s work. What people sometimes refer to as "Via Vagabond" is really the collaboration around that song and the aesthetic world built with Nick Plytas, who played a key role behind the scenes. 
 
So here’s the vibe. In the mid-1980s, Pigalle was moving between Paris and London, soaking up punk, cabaret, fashion, and art scenes, and turning all of that into something theatrical and slightly surreal. She wasn’t just a singer; more like a full-on performer mixing poetry, chanson, and new wave attitude. Around that time she released her debut album 'Everything Could Be So Perfect' (1985), where “Via Vagabond” appears as one of the standout tracks. 
 
Nick Plytas was right there in the engine room of that sound. He handled piano, organ, and synths, and contributed heavily to the songwriting and arrangements, shaping that lush, slightly cinematic backdrop that lets Pigalle’s voice drift between cabaret drama and dreamlike pop. The chemistry between them is what gives “Via Vagabond” its identity: a mix of elegance and oddness, like wandering through a smoky club at 3 a.m. with half the lights off. 
 
Pigalle herself came out of a pretty wild cultural mix: Montmartre roots, early exposure to punk gigs in the ’70s, and later immersion in London’s Soho nightlife. That whole background bleeds into the project; you get traces of French chanson, avant-garde performance art, and a kind of romantic decadence that feels very tied to that era. 
 
Rather than a traditional band with a fixed lineup, Via Vagabond works better as a snapshot of a collaboration and a moment. It captures Pigalle’s artistic universe at a time when pop, art, and underground culture were constantly overlapping, with Plytas helping translate those ideas into sound. The result feels less like a group effort in the usual sense and more like a creative partnership frozen inside one track and one album. 
 

viernes, 1 de mayo de 2026

Pookiesnackenburger

Pookiesnackenburger were one of those wonderfully odd, blink-and-you-miss-it groups that could only really have come out of early-’80s Brighton. Formed around 1981, they pulled together a mix of busking culture, post-punk energy, and theatrical chaos into something that didn’t quite fit any category. The core lineup included John Helmer, Luke Cresswell, Nick Dwyer, Paul Clark, Steve McNicholas and Sue Bradley, each bringing a slightly different background from the local underground scene. 

What made them stand out was how loose and inventive everything felt. They weren’t just playing songs; they were staging them. Guitars, violins, sax and accordion sat alongside clattering rhythms and physical comedy, often performed with a busker’s sense of spontaneity. Their shows leaned heavily into visual humour and timing, the kind of thing that worked just as well on a street corner as it did in a late-night cabaret slot. Audiences at festivals like Edinburgh got something closer to a pop-up theatre piece than a gig. 

By 1985 they’d made enough noise to land a short run on Channel 4, a five-episode series that captured their offbeat style on screen. It had that deliberately scruffy, self-aware feel that a lot of alternative comedy and music TV was experimenting with at the time. Around the same period, they were also releasing records and popping up in unexpected places, including a now-legendary Heineken advert built around rhythmic bin-bashing. 

They didn’t last long, splitting up the same year their TV series aired, but the story doesn’t stop there. A couple of members, especially Cresswell and McNicholas, kept pushing the idea of turning everyday objects into instruments and performance into something physical and percussive. That thread leads straight to Stomp, which took those early ideas and scaled them up into an international stage hit.
 
Looking back, Pookiesnackenburger feel like a prototype for a lot of things that came later: street performance crossing into theatre, comedy blending seamlessly with live music, and rhythm being built out of whatever happens to be lying around. Short-lived, a bit chaotic, and far more influential than their discography might suggest. 

miércoles, 29 de abril de 2026

Tenpole Tudor

Tenpole Tudor were one the strangest and silliest groups on Stiff Records, a label that was known for its oddball clients. Led by Eddie Tudor (born Edward Tudorpole), a former actor who could barely carry a tune, the group played a mixture of punk, roots rock, pop, and British dancehall music, developing a thoroughly entertaining and ridiculous style. Tudor formed the band in 1974 with guitarist Bob Kingston, bassist Dick Crippen, and drummer Gary Long. Before recording the band's first album, Tudor appeared in the Sex Pistols' movie "The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle", singing "Who Killed Bambi." After releasing a single on Korova Records, the group joined the Stiff roster, releasing "Three Bells in a Row." 

Tenpole Tudor released their debut album, 'Eddie, Old Bob, Dick and Gary', in 1981; it sold well, launching two minor singles in addition to "Three Bells in a Row": "Wunderbar" and "Swords of a Thousand Men." That same year, the group released its second album, 'Let the Four Winds Blow', which also performed well. The following year, Eddie Tudor broke up Tenpole Tudor; while he led a Cajun-inspired version of Tenpole Tudor, the rest of the band became The Tudors. After the new incarnation of Tenpole Tudor failed, Tudor left Stiff Records and began performing in jazz and swing bands, as well as returning to acting. New versions of Tenpole Tudor were assembled throughout the subsequent years, although Tudor chiefly focused on acting until 2009, when he released the band's third album. 'Made It This Far' was followed by a national tour, which the frontman deemed "an electronic one-man stadium show." [SOURCE: ALLMUSIC]
 

martes, 28 de abril de 2026

Joe King Carrasco & The Crowns

Texas native Joe "King" Carrasco has devoted his career to re-creating the Tex-Mex, Farfisa organ rock & roll sound of such '60s groups as the Sir Douglas Quintet and Sam the Sham & the Pharoahs. After playing in a succession of bands around Texas in the late '60s and early '70s, Carrasco founded his band El Molino in 1976 and recorded Tex-Mex Rock-Roll in 1978.
 
By 1979, he had formed The Crowns and was calling his music "nuevo wavo," playing especially in New York, where he appeared on-stage in a cape and crown. He was signed to the U.K. Stiff label and Joe Boyd's Hannibal label in the U.S., and released 'Joe "King" Carrasco and the Crowns' in 1980. By 1982, he had moved up to major label MCA for 'Synapse Gap', followed by 'Party Weekend' (1983). He moved to Rounder for 1987's 'Bandido Rock', credited to Joe "King" Carrasco y las Coronas. During the '90s and 2000s, he added reggae and cumbia to his Tex-Mex stew, with releases on Royal Texacali and Anaconda. [SOURCE: ALLMUSIC]
 

lunes, 27 de abril de 2026

Lew Lewis Reformer

When talking about the late ’70s British pub rock scene, Lew Lewis Reformer stands out as one of those bands with a strong underground reputation. Fronted by Lew Lewis, the group delivered a mix of rhythm & blues and early new wave with a rough, energetic sound that felt very much tied to the live pub circuit they came from. 
 
Before forming the band, Lew Lewis had already made a name for himself playing with Dr. Feelgood, one of the key acts in shaping pub rock. With the Reformer, he pushed that style further, giving the harmonica a leading role in a way that was unusual at the time. His playing came across as sharp and punchy, almost replacing the traditional lead guitar, while his vocals added a raw, slightly chaotic edge. 
 
One of their best-known tracks, “Lucky Seven,” captures the band’s identity pretty well. It’s driven by a tight rhythm section, bluesy hooks, and a slightly unpredictable feel that gives the song its character. The band never reached major commercial success, but their music carried a strong sense of authenticity that connected with audiences who preferred something less polished. 
 
Over the years, Lew Lewis Reformer has built a cult following among fans of pub rock and early new wave. Their place in music history sits somewhere between the back-to-basics R&B revival of the early ’70s and the more aggressive energy that would soon define punk. They may not be widely known, but their sound and attitude continue to resonate with listeners who appreciate that stripped-down, live-driven approach. 
 

jueves, 23 de abril de 2026

Mickey Jupp

Like Dave Edmunds, guitarist/pianist/vocalist Mickey Jupp was a champion of traditional rock & roll during the late '70s, a time when it had been all but discarded. Unlike Edmunds, Jupp wrote the majority of his own material, which updated '50s rock & roll with a tongue-in-cheek irony. 

Jupp began his career with the Essex-based British R&B group The Orioles in the early '60s. The band earned a devoted local following in the early '60s, yet they never had the opportunity to record. The Orioles broke up late in 1965 after Jupp was arrested for not making alimony payments to his wife. Three years later, he returned to music, forming Legend, who laid the groundwork for English pub rock of the early '70s. Following the release of their third album in 1971, Legend disbanded and Jupp took another lengthy break from music. When he was coaxed back into performing in 1975 by Lee Brileaux, the lead singer of Dr. Feelgood, pub rock was in its last days yet Jupp was well respected in the scene, since both Ducks Deluxe and Dr. Feelgood had recorded versions of his songs ("Cheque Book" and "Down at the Doctors," respectively). 

Jupp released his first solo single, "Nature's Radio," on Arista Records in 1978. The single led to a contract with Stiff Records, who released the "Old Rock 'N' Roller" single and the 'Juppanese' album in 1978; the bulk of 'Juppanese' was recorded with Rockpile and produced by Nick Lowe. Released the same year as his debut, 'Mickey Jupp's Legend' featured material from his previous band. Following the release of 'Juppanese', Jupp joined Stiff's Rail Tour, although he left the lineup before it hit the U.S. because he was afraid of flying. Shortly afterward, he left Stiff Records and signed with Chrysalis in 1979. The same year he released 'Long Distance Romancer', which was produced by 10cc members Kevin Godley and Lol Creme; like 'Juppanese', it failed to gain a large audience. Jupp moved over to A&M Records in 1982, releasing 'Some People Can't Dance'. After releasing one more record on A&M, 1983's 'Shampoo Haircut and Shave', he was dropped from the label. Jupp spent the rest of the '80s and '90s touring the U.K., releasing the occasional album on independent labels. [SOURCE: ALLMUSIC

miércoles, 22 de abril de 2026

The Rumour

The Rumour are best known as Graham Parker's backing band during his heyday, but the band also took a stab at their own recording career. And even though they were overshadowed by their association with Parker and never received much attention for their efforts, they did manage to make three albums of really enjoyable music in the mold of a new wave-ish pub-rock band.
 
The Rumour consisted of pub-rock veterans Bob Andrews (keyboards) and Brinsley Schwarz (guitar/vocals) from the legendary Brinsley Schwarz, Martin Belmont (guitar/vocals) from Ducks Deluxe, and Stephen Goulding (drums/vocals) and Andrew Bodnar from Bontemps Roulez. The group formed in 1975 as Graham Parker's backing band, recording and touring with him off and on through 1980. In 1977, they signed their own deal with Phonogram and released their debut album, 'Max', the same year. They followed with 'Frogs Sprouts Clogs and Krauts' for Stiff in 1979 and 'Purity of Essence' in 1980, and also worked extensively as one of Stiff's house bands, backing up Elvis Costello on "Watching the Detectives," as well as Carlene Carter, Rachel Sweet, Nick Lowe, and Dave Edmunds. By the end of 1980, lack of real success on their own led to their breakup. [SOURCE: ALLMUSIC]
 

martes, 21 de abril de 2026

Rachel Sweet

At Stiff Records, nothing was sacred; often the label's slogans and unorthodox promotion were as memorable as the truly inspired music they released. With teenage Rachel Sweet, whom they marketed as a "jailbait" country singer (and later as a leather-clad child abductor), it would seem that their perverse humor had finally gone too far. One listen to her albums, however, and all questionable images and in-jokes fall into the background; "the little girl with the big voice" made some terrific music, holding her own on a roster that had no shortage of talent. 
 
Akron-born Rachel Sweet began her singing career at age six, doing everything from singing commercial jingles to touring with Mickey Rooney and opening for Bill Cosby's Las Vegas act. Between 1976 and 1978 she recorded a few failed straight-ahead country singles for the local Derrick label ("Any Port in a Storm," "Paper Airplane," and "The Ballad of Mable Ruth Miller and John Wesley Pritchett") and a handful of demos for songwriter Liam Sternberg, who shopped them to Stiff Records. Stiff signed the young singer and debuted her on 'The Akron Compilation'. She recorded her first album, 'Fool Around', with backing from The Rumour in 1978. She promoted the album on the Stiff package tour (The Be Stiff Tour) using The Records as her band. The album didn't sell particularly well, but it did receive a fair amount of critical praise. 
 
The attention was short-lived, though, and 'Protect the Innocent', released through Stiff/Columbia, went virtually ignored the following year. She switched to Columbia in 1981 for '...And Then He Kissed Me', an uneven album that nevertheless featured the Top 40 hit "Everlasting Love," a duet with Rex Smith. After one more album, 1982's 'Blame It on Love', Sweet retired from the music business to pursue an education, returning sporadically, most notably to sing the title track to John Waters' "Hairspray", as well as "Cry-Baby". Her focus later turned to acting. [SOURCE: ALLMUSIC]
 

lunes, 20 de abril de 2026

Jona Lewie

While he wasn't one of the biggest names on Stiff Records, Jona Lewie was one of those irrepressible characters who gave the pioneering British indie label its utterly unique flavor. Born John Lewis, Lewie got his start in the early-'70s pub rock scene, playing keyboards for the Sussex group Brett Marvin & the Thunderbolts. Bizarrely, the group enjoyed its greatest success under the Lewie-helmed alias Terry Dactyl & the Dinosaurs, scoring a U.K. Top Five hit in 1972 with "Seaside Shuffle." However, subsequent releases under the name failed to duplicate that success, and Lewie departed the band. He resurfaced on Stiff in 1978 as a solo artist, singing pub rock and new wave tunes in a dry, deadpan, Ian Dury-ish voice. Most distinctive was his simultaneous taste for musical nostalgia (British music hall, skiffle, etc.), as evidenced on several cuts from his debut album, 'On the Other Hand There's a Fist'. Lewie also participated in the 1978 "Be Stiff" package tour (the label's second). In 1980, Lewie scored a Top 20 U.K. hit with the self-effacing single "You'll Always Find Me in the Kitchen at Parties," which, according to legend, was backing vocalist Kirsty MacColl's first session for the label. Lewie trumped it several months later with "Stop the Cavalry," a strange blend of anti-war protest, brass band arrangements, and Christmas sentiment. Surprisingly, the single hit the Top Five and became something of a Christmas standard in the U.K., where it was trotted out every holiday season and featured on numerous Christmas compilations. Stiff rushed out another album, 1981's 'Heart Skips Beat', to capitalize, but lightning would only strike twice, and Lewie issued his last single in 1983. [SOURCE: ALLMUSIC]