C86 Show - Indie Pop thec86show
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Paul Haig - Josef K
Paul Haig in conversation with David Eastaugh
https://linktr.ee/paulhaig
Together with Orange Juice, Aztec Camera and The Go-Betweens, Josef K were one of the Postcard label's million dollar quartets, recording five smart singles and an album, The Only Fun In Town. Touring the album during July and August of 1981, however, the band split after a final show in Glasgow. The exact reasons behind the split - principally the decision of frontman Paul Haig - remain obscure, although it would seem that a combination of too-great expectations, too-small financial returns, Haig's dislike of touring, and unspecified disagreements over future direction were to blame. Fancifully, Postcard boss Alan Horne pointed the finger of blame at the NME... Whatever the truth, one of the Great White Hopes of the post-punk had self-destructed after just one long player, thus fulfilling their own brash prophecy. -
Gerry Colvin - Terry and Gerry & The Man Upstaris
Gerry Colvin in conversation with David Eastaugh
https://www.gerrycolvin.co.uk/index.html
In the 1970's Gerry joined pop band 'The Man Upstairs'. They released three singles and toured with 'The Smiths'.
In the early 1980's he co-founded and fronted the legendary John Peel favourite skiffle-cowpunk indie outfit 'Terry & Gerry'. This seminal band toured Europe and the USA and appeared on countless Radio and TV shows including "The Tube" and "The Old Grey Whistle Test". Their five singles and album all reached No.1 in the indie charts. In 2010 Cherry Red released 'Let's Get the Hell Back to Lubbock', the definitive 'Terry and Gerry' compilation. -
Gaye Black - The Adverts
Gaye Black in conversation with David Eastaugh
https://www.gayeblack.co.uk/
English punk rock musician, who played bass guitar in the band The Adverts in the late 1970s. She was one of the first female rock stars of the punk rock movement, whom The Virgin Encyclopedia of 70s Music called the "first female punk star". She was "one of punk’s first female icons". Dave Thompson wrote that her "photogenic" looks, "panda-eye make-up and omnipresent leather jacket defined the face of female punkdom until well into the next decade". -
Gered Mankowitz
Gered Mankowitz in conversation with David Eastaugh
https://mankowitz.com/
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Rolling-Stones-Rare-Unseen-afterword/dp/1802797335
"Mankowitz (Goin' Home with the Rolling Stones '66), who at 18 became the official photographer for the then newly formed Rolling Stones, gathers a rich and revealing trove of images from the band's early years. Capturing the group as they were "finding their style and... becoming themselves," Mankowitz's photos depict the rockers in motion onstage; in their homes and luxury cars; and in heated exchanges with concert security, incidents that underlined their reputation as a more boisterous and rowdy alternative to the Beatles -
Red Money - Richard & Julian
Richard & Julian in conversation with David Eastaugh
https://redmoney.co.uk/
http://www.firestation-records.de/catalogue.html
Red Money emerged as an acoustic band in January 1990. Originally performing as a larger line up, fate stepped in to change both the format and sound of the band. Booked to play their first gig of the year at the Fulham Greyhound in London, various members then dropped out due to other commitments. Rather than cancelling, founder founders Richard and Jules hastily arranged a stripped down set and took to the stage with saxophone player Roz Bateman (who played on the single). -
Monogroove - Rin Lennon, Michael George,Jay Smith-drums & Alias Wilde
Rin Lennon, Michael George,Jay Smith-drums & Alias Wilde in conversation with David Eastaugh
https://monogroove.bandcamp.com/album/the-flip-side
http://www.rinsrescues.com
https://www.youtube.com/user/rinlennon4/featured