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Post Info TOPIC: House On Fire WWF Club Cologne May 1982 German TV - Youtube


Loudmouth

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House On Fire WWF Club Cologne May 1982 German TV - Youtube
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Just discovered this which I had not seen before.It's the Rats performing House On Fire from a German tv show called WWF  Club.

To avoid any confusion this is not Musicladen -it is a different tv show and performance.

Again its nice to know that this footage exists and in such high quality. The credits running at the end slightly spoils it and the short interuption for a spot of Germanic humour but overall its great to see so many tv spots emerging.

PS Does anyone have a name for Bobs "dance" that he seemed to use a lot around that time in his onstage performances?



-- Edited by noelindublin on Sunday 3rd of April 2011 02:57:42 PM

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Loudmouth

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No, but he did it rather a lot around these times

Here's a top thirty rundown from April 1982. Nice to see the band's name in full this time (TOTP had a habit of dropping 'The' from their name) and with an up to date photo and set to the new Lynott Yellow Pearl theme which came in '81 I think.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLkAdqKYNyw

What was going on? How can House on Fire be at just 29 and Bardot, Bucks Fizz and Dollar be in the 10? Weren't they all one group in the end?



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Loudmouth

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Mark L wrote:

No, but he did it rather a lot around these times

Here's a top thirty rundown from April 1982. Nice to see the band's name in full this time (TOTP had a habit of dropping 'The' from their name) and with an up to date photo and set to the new Lynott Yellow Pearl theme which came in '81 I think.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLkAdqKYNyw

What was going on? How can House on Fire be at just 29 and Bardot, Bucks Fizz and Dollar be in the 10? Weren't they all one group in the end?


Was there such thing as a 'typical' singles buyer? So many hits just seem to be novelty tracks, and so easily forgotten. Undoubtedly when The Jam or The Boomtown Rats had top 20 hits there must have been a cohort of fans of these bands buying the records. But all too often the songs that were big hits were completely ephemeral.

There is a strange thrill in looking back at old charts and remembering a song you had completely forgotten. When I try to remember my schooldays it is often by looking up when a particular song was in the Top 40, to pinpoint the date, and other things that were happening. 



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Loudmouth

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I remember a lot of my school days but mostly where there was a Rats connection!

I remember the day after they had been on TOTP with House on Fire, for example, and there was the usual pre-assembly discussion about what had been on the night before. No-one had mentioned the Rats so I said I thought House on Fire was pretty good. Cue a virtually total chorus of disapproval of the song and this trend would continue right through to Dave, Drag me Down etc and if anything, increase in intensity.

Whereas as once I was in good company with Rat Trap etc and the popularity stakes were high, now I was a lone voice in liking them still.

I don't care now who else likes them, which I suppose comes with getting older. Back then, I was very dispirited people had mostly gone off them and could not work it out.



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House on Fire

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Mark, I could have typed the exact same thing. Although a lot of people thought House on Fire was good.
 
 
Mark L wrote:

I remember a lot of my school days but mostly where there was a Rats connection!

I remember the day after they had been on TOTP with House on Fire, for example, and there was the usual pre-assembly discussion about what had been on the night before. No-one had mentioned the Rats so I said I thought House on Fire was pretty good. Cue a virtually total chorus of disapproval of the song and this trend would continue right through to Dave, Drag me Down etc and if anything, increase in intensity.

Whereas as once I was in good company with Rat Trap etc and the popularity stakes were high, now I was a lone voice in liking them still.

I don't care now who else likes them, which I suppose comes with getting older. Back then, I was very dispirited people had mostly gone off them and could not work it out.


 



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In the Long Grass

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Like yourself Mark, I stood by everything the rats put out, In my opinion the weak single has to be Charmed Lives (Which was hard to take in) Back in 83 i remember reading that the rats had a new single coming out called Hard times This turned out to be the b side to Dave. which i through was why up there and sure to get them a hit. But then along came band aid and put paid to that. would have loved to see Europe looked ugly on cd think this is a really good song along with Man at the top, Anyone agree



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Loudmouth

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I agree 100% - so many b sides like Europe Looked Ugly, Man at the Top, Real Different, It's all the Rage could easily have been A sides - we were rarely short-changed in that department, perhaps except when an existing album track was placed as a b side, such as Hard Times, When the Night comes etc.

I come from the West Midlands and the ILR station there was Beacon Radio and the Rats were in favour with quite a few DJs there. I recall Charmed Lives being played a few times on the evening show (I think it was called 1922 imaginatively, because it went out between 7pm and 10pm) in mid-82 and there was almost an inquest into how such a poor track could have firstly been written and then secondly put out as a single. It was all done from the perspective of 'how could the mighty have fallen' so dramatically. I tried to ring in to defend it (I had 01902 754123 on speed dial!) but looking back, I knew it would have been a disingenuous defence, much like a mother rushing to school to defend her wayward son - no impartiality whatsoever!

I felt they had regained some ground with House on Fire and was hoping they would go with He Watches it All or Skin or Skin (although I knew the risks of going with that, despite the sense of loosening morals as the 80s gathered pace) as single 3. When it was announced Charmed Lives was single 3, I knew it would not trouble the charts in the slightest.

And here's an example of when TOTP dropped 'The' from their name (about 47 seconds in, at 7 with Someone's Looking at You from Feb '80)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q--8aph56-M



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In the Long Grass

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I couldn't agree with you more. For some reason back in the days a lot of the well known DJs Did push any rats singles that came out. I know Peter Powell really loved house on fire, and at the time he said he was unaware that it was a rats song as he had to asked the guy playing it who it was. Just goes to show you



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Loudmouth

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Peter Powell liked them from day one and I have a pop quiz book where he enthuses about their great new wave sound from about 1979/80. He would have been delighted to hear House on Fire was by them. I'm sure he presented TOTP when House on Fire was shown and can recall him saying how the band had flown back from Athens to perform it and how brilliant it was.

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In the Long Grass

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Couldn't agree with you more. Same as Mick Reid, he was well into them, and could not get enough of Elephant's Graveyard Which he through was a really good song and always said it was robbed at just getting to number 26



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Loudmouth

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Yes, he was a big fan.  He was with Bob when Eamon Andrews collared him with his big red book. Appeared several times on Mike Read's Pop Quiz show and with the group on Saturday Superstore. He did seem genuinely bemused by the Rats' difficulties in getting into the top 20 in 1981, once playing Million Years and House on Fire back to back in '82, which was incredible for the breakfast show and expressing surprise at how the former had sunk virtually without trace. He loved Drag me Down and A Hold of Me. The former was at no. 56 in May '84, after a huge jump from no. 81 and many thought that in the next run it would crack the 40. As if to 'assist', it was played each day at prominent times on his breakfast show and most times the full brassline ending was allowed to play out in full. It only limped on to no. 50. I prefer the US version slightly and think the track sounds better with that version's emphasis on a drummed ending.

I would regularly shuttle between Radio 1 and Beacon Radio and it's not as if they weren't playing it too, although their Breakfast DJ Chris Ashley remarked that there was more than hint of Born to Run in it and that Bob must have moved on from 'copying' Elvis Costello.

Pity TOTP didn't have a week when they were showing 'breakers' hovering just outside the 40. I saw plenty of songs shown as low as 50 to 55 on the charts and later go on to be big hits. However, singles from below the top 40 (but within the top 75) were only shown if the group or artist were up and coming or had a big selling album. Sadly, these criteria no longer applied to the Rats.



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In the Long Grass

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Talking of Drag me down. I through the us version was much better Same with Lucky i liked the us version of that I have the tapes picked them up when i was in london in 89. Didn't like rain through that was poor rewriting of the song. Also prefer the us version of Up all night. Going to the belfast gig, Have you booked any urself



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Loudmouth

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Yes, I prefer US version of Drag Me Down to UK version. Prefer UK version of Lucky though.

Booked for Manchester and Birmingham.



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In the Long Grass

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Enjoy your two dates, Have been a rats fan from the day I saw Geldof going off on one on the late, late shown why back in 77 and being of 14 at the time myself I was thinking who is this guy. As coming from Ireland myself you just did not hear anyone talk like that on tv. But I was like get in there And my Da was telling me to turn it over. (Guess who won) LOL



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In the Long Grass

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hi all,

 

talking of house on fire. Has anyone got the V.Deep CD when it 1st came out on cd. I got this cd well b4 i even got a cd player. I paid £16,99 for this cd way back in 1983.Well b4 i could buy a cd player, It was printed (at the time) in west Germary by mercury records 800 042-2



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In the Long Grass

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I've got that version, but only from years later (i.e. sometime in last few years only via eBay). Derek's prob got abou 7 copies biggrin.

Funnily enough if I do choose to give that album an airing in the car or wherever that's the version I normally play, rather than reissue, for no particular reason other than it's more 'original'. Same with all the others that had a CD issue. Reissues are great for the b-sides etc though.

Thinking about it, was there ever (anywhere) a CD version of first album other than reissue?



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In the Long Grass

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No I am unaware of the 1st album coming out on cd I Know that all the albums had been reissued in the USA But the 2st album over that side of the water would have been tonic Which had two songs from the 1st LP on it. Just like yourself I tend to play that cd along with the cd,s I got from the usa I feel a much better sound coming from them But I have to agree with you regarding the UK reissues Good for the B sides. I myself would like to see an anthology released So not only would to get the single version you would get all the B side really feel the likes of Mat at the top and Europe looked ugly  should be got on cd



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Loudmouth

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Same here, paid (too) much money for it on e bay around 10 years ago I'd say. Manufactured in Hanover with red vertical lines on the cd, it's a nice looking cd and does sound richer than the reissue.



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In the Long Grass

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Thanks for that info, Yeah i have the same cd then. Got it new at a record shop in belfast called caoline music at the back of boots which is still in the same are( No longer with us) long time ago. IT took me weeks to get it as £16.99 was alot of money then. God knows' ()Funny really as it was some years b4 i got to play/here it on cd) how many times i went into the record shop and looked at it i'm sure the guy must have through i was mad.



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Loudmouth

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Mark L wrote:

Same here, paid (too) much money for it on e bay around 10 years ago I'd say. Manufactured in Hanover with red vertical lines on the cd, it's a nice looking cd and does sound richer than the reissue.


 Quote from Discogs about reissued V Deep cd sound:

Notes

Remastered edition with 4 bonus tracks and modified running order. House Burned Down has not been included on this CD issue. Comes in a slipcase. The sound quality on this CD release is terrible. It has been extremely "brick walled", meaning the sound has been turned so loud during remastering that all of the dynamic range has been completely squashed out. All of the Rats reissues in this series suffered the same fate. The original CD from decades earlier sounds infinitely better.
 
48c1e2c6e45171eb71360e5c1dfbe12c?s=52&r=pg&d=mm

raydium 

Mar 08, 2012
edited about 1 year ago 
 
Well, that's what happens to a CD RM when you let the evil Jon Astley get his crude paws on it! The hallmarks of his technique are not only brickwalling but injudicious use of NR to sap the life out of every recording along with tape hiss! Thank goodness I have some of the original Rats CDs still! I was just A/B comparing the UK "Fine Art Of Surfacing" [which has a better selection of B-sides to boot!] with the 2005 on headphones and it was not pretty.


-- Edited by noelindublin on Monday 19th of August 2013 02:48:22 PM

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Loudmouth

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manatthetop wrote:

hi all,

 

talking of house on fire. Has anyone got the V.Deep CD when it 1st came out on cd. I got this cd well b4 i even got a cd player. I paid £16,99 for this cd way back in 1983.Well b4 i could buy a cd player, It was printed (at the time) in west Germary by mercury records 800 042-2


 Not sure but I think the first cd edition of any Rats album was V Deep, 1982 issued/printed  in Japan. I certainly remember reading of a Japanese version but maybe that was printed in Germany??

 



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In the Long Grass

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100 per cent right mate V Deep was the 1st of the rats LPs on CDI can not say anything wrong about then even when i new some of the work was not that great. Call it being a die hard. I have evrything they have ever put out. Even all of geldofs stuff . 



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Loudmouth

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https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=IyV93kCVHWk

For those who want to hear John Peel with the chart rundown from April '82 when the Rats were new at 30 (previous week 44 with a TOTP boost)

Noel's link seems to have gone, so reposted;

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=BTEMycbj3es

This is the longer of the 2 versions floating about on You Tube of the WWF Club performance so stay to the end to see some Geldof japes in the style of baseball cheerleaders. He often seemed more relaxed on German tv around this time, the jesting that had differentiated them up until Graveyard (and particularly in that video) seemed to be replaced on UK tv shows by a more serious side when promoting songs, although he was popping up on Kenny Everett etc on his own with the usual sense of humour in tact.

 

 



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V Deep

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I also had the same reaction iwas the uncool kid on the estate who liked the rats every body else was into Duran & krapagoogoo but I stood my ground and defended my choice fiercely my wife who I met at menzies also liked the rats win win I still defend them now as some in my circle of friends still think of them as one hit wonders and not the11 or so top 40 hits they had and iam proud to be a fan of the best band in the world


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Loudmouth

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Krapagoogoo! Like it!

Lots of us are kindred spirits in this respect,  fiercely defending the Rats as the 80s swung into action. The 12/13 year olds that were into Rat Trap were the 18 year old A level Business Studies students who shot me down over Drag Me Down. 



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Back To Boomtown

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Mark L wrote:

Lots of us are kindred spirits in this respect,  fiercely defending the Rats as the 80s swung into action. 

Among others.  I was pretty stuck in the 1970s for much of the 1980s, so whilst peers were listening to Smiths, New Order etc. I was still into Slade, Sweet, T.Rex, Rats, Teardrop Explodes, Stranglers, Damned etc.  It was only at the end of the 1980s that I listened to "new" music.   Looking back all I hazily remember from the 1980s was football, school, university and exams.  It wasn't until I finished all that I started my true adolesence.  Which may explain why I was still acting like a teenager when I was thirty



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