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A subject that was discussed a couple of years ago, I wonder if anyone got to see and ask the band recently about a song played at Bradford University on the 23rd June 1983. I don't know the title but listening to it i guess it's something like 'Don't Feel Like Doing It'. Not sure if it would have been a song left off V Deep or one considered for Long Grass or maybe it could be a cover version song? One of the great Rats mysteries! Would love to hear more about it from the band.
I saw that tour at the Top Rank Suite in Brighton. I remembers Bob saying that they were going to try out lots of new tunes, for their new album (which became ITLG). The band would decide which songs went on the album based on how wild the fans went.
So, I would guess that the song that people are referencing would have been a song for ITLG, but which was never used. Could quite easily have been the tune for Do They know its Xmas - but with different words. Then again it could have been a song never recorded.
Like Clockwork
Nothing Happened Today
Drag Me Down
Wind Chill Factor Minus Zero
Lucky
Hard Times
Talk In Code
Up or Down
Charmed Lives
I Don't Feel Like Doing It?
House On Fire
Tonight
Having My Picture Taken
Rat Trap
Keep It Up
Banana Republic
Under Their Thumb
Up or Down is a brilliant version with Simon on lead vocals. Wonder why he didn't sing it on ITLG?
I Don't Feel Like Doing It, is quite heavy on the trombones and keyboards. It sounds quite a complete song, not something they just came up with a couple of weeks ago. Sounds miles away from Do They Know It's Xmas!
I'm going to have to try and get the cassette transferred on to a cd. I'd like others to hear it.
I saw that tour at the Top Rank Suite in Brighton. I remembers Bob saying that they were going to try out lots of new tunes, for their new album (which became ITLG). The band would decide which songs went on the album based on how wild the fans went.
So, I would guess that the song that people are referencing would have been a song for ITLG, but which was never used. Could quite easily have been the tune for Do They know its Xmas - but with different words. Then again it could have been a song never recorded.
I have a tape of Geldof telling how he used a reject song from the Rats for DTKIC. It was called It's My World. Johnnie Fingers was sitting in with Bob and when asked did he remember the song said he had no recollection of it . He ironically said 'oh it must have been a goodie' .
I'd love to hear that Bradford song- maybe someone can find out how to upload an old cassette recording onto YouTube?
-- Edited by noelindublin on Friday 6th of February 2015 02:14:40 PM
I don't hate DTKNIC, but it's a far cry from The Rats. I can't imagine it being a strong song. Maybe it was It's my World or Another Piece of Red and APOR won .
Like Clockwork Nothing Happened Today Drag Me Down Wind Chill Factor Minus Zero Lucky Hard Times Talk In Code Up or Down Charmed Lives I Don't Feel Like Doing It? House On Fire Tonight Having My Picture Taken Rat Trap Keep It Up Banana Republic Under Their Thumb
Up or Down is a brilliant version with Simon on lead vocals. Wonder why he didn't sing it on ITLG?
I Don't Feel Like Doing It, is quite heavy on the trombones and keyboards. It sounds quite a complete song, not something they just came up with a couple of weeks ago. Sounds miles away from Do They Know It's Xmas!
I'm going to have to try and get the cassette transferred on to a cd. I'd like others to hear it.
Yes Ian we'd all love to hear it. Glad also that you cleared up that it sounds miles away from Do They know. I was just thinking that you would be able to spot any similarities between the two songs.
Maybe it was one of the songs that got away as it were, a good track that could have been recorded. Geldof sometime sticks good tracks on b sides and who knows why this one was 'dropped'.
I have just found a company that will convert old cassettes to cd, so I have posted it off to them. Although I'm not totally confident with computers I am pretty sure I won't have any trouble burning a few cds off for those who want one, and it should be the whole gig as well!
-- Edited by Ian D on Friday 6th of February 2015 03:43:44 PM
I have the Bradford gig on cd,not sure whether it is the full set list but it has the mystery song on it.I wrote to Pete Briquette but he never replied about the mystery song.It is a great concert and it is interesting listening to the early versions of the songs from ITLG.
I have the Bradford gig on cd,not sure whether it is the full set list but it has the mystery song on it.I wrote to Pete Briquette but he never replied about the mystery song.It is a great concert and it is interesting listening to the early versions of the songs from ITLG.
Ah yes, I remember doing a copy for you a couple of years ago when I had a tape to tape hi-fi. You said you had a mate who could put it on cd didn't you?
-- Edited by Ian D on Friday 6th of February 2015 04:54:58 PM
I have the Bradford gig on cd,not sure whether it is the full set list but it has the mystery song on it.I wrote to Pete Briquette but he never replied about the mystery song.It is a great concert and it is interesting listening to the early versions of the songs from ITLG.
Ah yes, I remember doing a copy for you a couple of years ago when I had a tape to tape hi-fi. You said you had a mate who could put it on cd didn't you?
If anyone would like a CD-R of this gig then please PM me. What I will probably ask, to keep postage costs down for me, is for those interested to send me a SAE small packet. The CD-R's are no problem as I have lots of those. I will get back to those interested when I get my copy back from the company transferring it, probably in a couple of weeks.
.I wrote to Pete Briquette but he never replied about the mystery song.
There are other mystery songs. When I saw them at The Rainbow in 1979 they finished with an unknown song I'd never heard before or since. It had a reggae vibe and whilst they played it, they and the crew climbed on the noughts and crosses scaffold. No idea what it was.
I would say that it is definitely ITLG. Yes, it has horns, but so does most of that album. To be honest it doesn't sound too good and can see why it was quickly dropped. A mix of charmed lives and Tonight.
The mystery song is definitely of its time, ie between Charmed Lives and Tonight but therefore I can't rate it any higher than about 5 out of 10. Perhaps unjustifiably, Spandau Ballet's Chant No.1 (I don't need this pressure on) and Haircut One Hundred's Boy meets Girl are now swirling around my head.
Unfortunately, it's not all been blackened out yet.
Thanks for that ArrGee. I have only listened to the 'lost' song once, and it seems fairly ok to me. Certainly better than the 4 new songs the did recently. I will listen on my proper hi fi later and make a better judgement. All that brass and horns does make it sound a bit like Spandau Ballet or even Teardrop Explodes to some degree. Sort of makes the Rats themselves a bit redundant, thought the playing is energetic and frenetic.
Also glad to hear a live Hard Times and Up or Down. Need to listen a few times to get a better picture,as it were.
PS I think the reason the Rats did a Uni/Poly type tour in 1983 is that the were in trouble with the taxman(or taxwoman)
Second opinion on I Don't Wan't To Do It, is that it is rather forgettable, and one for the cutting room floor.
I noticed also on listening to the Bradford gig last night that a lot of the lyrics underwent major rewrites prior to the recording of ITLG. Hard Times in particular seems full of lines not used, and the recording quality, though fairly good does not help to make out the words.
Same with Drag Me Down.Also noticed total silence from audience just before they started this songs. The really interesting thing about this tape is that it was well over a a year before ITLG was recorded, so lots of the songs are not fully worked out yet. Lucky also has lots of lyric changes, thought the tunes are more or less as the appear in the recorded version of ITLG. The arrangement of Hard Times too seems a bit all over the place, though as I saw it's fascinating to think that a lot of the songs were new,and in the process of being fully completed. Also the band did not seem to hold back from the new songs, and the audience seems to clap along and accept the new material.
Amusingly Bob throws a strop when asked to perform particular songs. Seems to reply (paraphrasing) something like ' Well play whatever song we like, and if you don't like it we'll just go home...'
Really liked live version of Wind Chill Factor. The lp version is overproduced, and the live version here seems to let the instruments 'breathe' a little, great percussion on the 'do you agree with anything' bridge.
Wasn't too keen on live Up or Down, seemed a bit cluttered and frenetic, though lp version works out well.I've never disliked Charmed Lives, though I know it's far from their best, live it can sound pretty ok and the irony laden lyrics aimed at the new romantic pop singers are pretty accurate.
The Bradford gig was 23 June 1983. It would be nearly a year and a third before In The Long Grass was released so seeing these early tryouts of songs in a live context in very interesting.
-- Edited by noelindublin on Tuesday 10th of February 2015 02:50:55 PM
Second opinion on I Don't Wan't To Do It, is that it is rather forgettable, and one for the cutting room floor.
I noticed also on listening to the Bradford gig last night that a lot of the lyrics underwent major rewrites prior to the recording of ITLG. Hard Times in particular seems full of lines not used, and the recording quality, though fairly good does not help to make out the words.
Same with Drag Me Down.Also noticed total silence from audience just before they started this songs. The really interesting thing about this tape is that it was well over a a year before ITLG was recorded, so lots of the songs are not fully worked out yet. Lucky also has lots of lyric changes, thought the tunes are more or less as the appear in the recorded version of ITLG. The arrangement of Hard Times too seems a bit all over the place, though as I saw it's fascinating to think that a lot of the songs were new,and in the process of being fully completed. Also the band did not seem to hold back from the new songs, and the audience seems to clap along and accept the new material.
Amusingly Bob throws a strop when asked to perform particular songs. Seems to reply (paraphrasing) something like ' Well play whatever song we like, and if you don't like it we'll just go home...'
Really liked live version of Wind Chill Factor. The lp version is overproduced, and the live version here seems to let the instruments 'breathe' a little, great percussion on the 'do you agree with anything' bridge.
Wasn't too keen on live Up or Down, seemed a bit cluttered and frenetic, though lp version works out well.I've never disliked Charmed Lives, though I know it's far from their best, live it can sound pretty ok and the irony laden lyrics aimed at the new romantic pop singers are pretty accurate.
The Bradford gig was 23 June 1983. It would be nearly a year and a third before In The Long Grass was released so seeing these early tryouts of songs in a live context in very interesting.
-- Edited by noelindublin on Tuesday 10th of February 2015 02:50:55 PM
I don't know where I picked the tape of the Bradford gig up from, probably from a record fair at The Brighton Centre many many years ago, but i'm glad I kept hold of it.
I also have a bootleg of the gig they did in Sunderland just 6 months later (10th Dec 1983). Up or Down is the 2nd song on it and again Simon is singing lead vocals on it (rather good in my humble opinion). No sign of Don't Feel Like Doing It though so may have been dropped! Bob also mentions that some of the songs will be appearing on their new album In The Long Grass.
-- Edited by Ian D on Tuesday 10th of February 2015 04:27:05 PM
I prefer Up or Down live. I noticed the lyric changes but as Noel says, quite hard to make out although 'the fog of the night' seems to feature in Drag me Down with 'but is it always like this with you' changed to 'I've got to insist it's you' etc.
Assume the sad event giving rise to Dave had yet to happen?
Wonder if Another Sad Story was aired at all in '83 - really like this track from ITLG. Again, maybe Fingers was yet to experience what prompted this song.
Assume the sad event giving rise to Dave had yet to happen?
Not sure. It was sometime in 1983 when Geldof wrote the song after Dave McHale's girlfriend died from a heroin overdose. In The Long Grass was written and recorded in 1983 as Tonight was released as the lead single in early February 1984.
I prefer Up or Down live. I noticed the lyric changes but as Noel says, quite hard to make out although 'the fog of the night' seems to feature in Drag me Down with 'but is it always like this with you' changed to 'I've got to insist it's you' etc.
Assume the sad event giving rise to Dave had yet to happen?
Wonder if Another Sad Story was aired at all in '83 - really like this track from ITLG. Again, maybe Fingers was yet to experience what prompted this song.
I prefer Up or Down live. I noticed the lyric changes but as Noel says, quite hard to make out although 'the fog of the night' seems to feature in Drag me Down with 'but is it always like this with you' changed to 'I've got to insist it's you' etc.
Assume the sad event giving rise to Dave had yet to happen?
Wonder if Another Sad Story was aired at all in '83 - really like this track from ITLG. Again, maybe Fingers was yet to experience what prompted this song.
I only listened to the Bradford gig in full, once, a few nights ago, so my opinion are subject to change again. I might not be being fair on Up Or Down, the live version. The recorded version has a sense of instrumental clarity, like all recorded music, whilst live music can seem a bit all over the place. Sometimes live versions and recorded versions can really compliment each other, while conversely sometimes, and usually I prefer the recorded version of a song, and find the live version to be hard to deal with.
As an example if I was to judge the live 1983 version of Hard Times it would seem a bit of a dog's (or rats!) dinner, kind of all over the place, lacking the structure and clarity of the version put down on tape for ITLG. Add to this the lyrics, which seem totally different, and due to the limitations of the source tape,are not too clear. The producer/mixers etc in the studio often help to bring some much needed organisation' to a song. Look at how Mondays turned out, compared to the early 'reggae' type version, which in my opinion was very unimpressive.
Again what I find so fascinating about this Bradford concert is how the Rats launched into so many new songs. It seemed they were willing to go with the idea of a new album after the disappointment of V Deep and had no qualms about just going out and airing these new songs. Brave in many ways, as they could have just gone through the motions of their earlier 'greatest hits' package and the students may not have been too bothered.
Look at how Mondays turned out, compared to the early 'reggae' type version, which in my opinion was very unimpressive.
The first rendition of Mondays in San Diego was a basic piano vocal. The Dudgeon session version was done afterwards, they just went back to the original.
I prefer Up or Down live. I noticed the lyric changes but as Noel says, quite hard to make out although 'the fog of the night' seems to feature in Drag me Down with 'but is it always like this with you' changed to 'I've got to insist it's you' etc.
Assume the sad event giving rise to Dave had yet to happen?
Wonder if Another Sad Story was aired at all in '83 - really like this track from ITLG. Again, maybe Fingers was yet to experience what prompted this song.
Dave was played at the Sunderland gig, 10/12/83
Thanks Ian. It seems she died during the tour as Bob speaks elsewhere of dropping Dave off after a gig, a row between Dave and his partner and then his gruesome discovery later after she had made herself scarce.
I prefer Up or Down live. I noticed the lyric changes but as Noel says, quite hard to make out although 'the fog of the night' seems to feature in Drag me Down with 'but is it always like this with you' changed to 'I've got to insist it's you' etc.
Assume the sad event giving rise to Dave had yet to happen?
Wonder if Another Sad Story was aired at all in '83 - really like this track from ITLG. Again, maybe Fingers was yet to experience what prompted this song.
I only listened to the Bradford gig in full, once, a few nights ago, so my opinion are subject to change again. I might not be being fair on Up Or Down, the live version. The recorded version has a sense of instrumental clarity, like all recorded music, whilst live music can seem a bit all over the place. Sometimes live versions and recorded versions can really compliment each other, while conversely sometimes, and usually I prefer the recorded version of a song, and find the live version to be hard to deal with.
As an example if I was to judge the live 1983 version of Hard Times it would seem a bit of a dog's (or rats!) dinner, kind of all over the place, lacking the structure and clarity of the version put down on tape for ITLG. Add to this the lyrics, which seem totally different, and due to the limitations of the source tape,are not too clear. The producer/mixers etc in the studio often help to bring some much needed organisation' to a song. Look at how Mondays turned out, compared to the early 'reggae' type version, which in my opinion was very unimpressive.
Again what I find so fascinating about this Bradford concert is how the Rats launched into so many new songs. It seemed they were willing to go with the idea of a new album after the disappointment of V Deep and had no qualms about just going out and airing these new songs. Brave in many ways, as they could have just gone through the motions of their earlier 'greatest hits' package and the students may not have been too bothered.
I had another listen to this over the weekend. It was very brave. There was no Mondays, SLAY or anything from the first album. Drag me Down improved in the studio version with the 'in pink and, in pink and, in pink and gold' refrain and the eight 'Oh oh's' after the steal from Born to Run. Hard Times live was really good live and was not made better in the studio, maybe the lyrics were developed and the 'I don't care's' were thinned out a bit. Lots of banter between Geldof and the boisterous audience and Simon sang well on Up or Down.
Wonder if anyone felt shortchanged attending a Rats gig less than 4 years after Mondays hit the top and not hearing it?
Maybe Bob just thought 'I don't feel like doin' it doin' it'
I prefer Up or Down live. I noticed the lyric changes but as Noel says, quite hard to make out although 'the fog of the night' seems to feature in Drag me Down with 'but is it always like this with you' changed to 'I've got to insist it's you' etc.
Assume the sad event giving rise to Dave had yet to happen?
Wonder if Another Sad Story was aired at all in '83 - really like this track from ITLG. Again, maybe Fingers was yet to experience what prompted this song.
I only listened to the Bradford gig in full, once, a few nights ago, so my opinion are subject to change again. I might not be being fair on Up Or Down, the live version. The recorded version has a sense of instrumental clarity, like all recorded music, whilst live music can seem a bit all over the place. Sometimes live versions and recorded versions can really compliment each other, while conversely sometimes, and usually I prefer the recorded version of a song, and find the live version to be hard to deal with.
As an example if I was to judge the live 1983 version of Hard Times it would seem a bit of a dog's (or rats!) dinner, kind of all over the place, lacking the structure and clarity of the version put down on tape for ITLG. Add to this the lyrics, which seem totally different, and due to the limitations of the source tape,are not too clear. The producer/mixers etc in the studio often help to bring some much needed organisation' to a song. Look at how Mondays turned out, compared to the early 'reggae' type version, which in my opinion was very unimpressive.
Again what I find so fascinating about this Bradford concert is how the Rats launched into so many new songs. It seemed they were willing to go with the idea of a new album after the disappointment of V Deep and had no qualms about just going out and airing these new songs. Brave in many ways, as they could have just gone through the motions of their earlier 'greatest hits' package and the students may not have been too bothered.
I had another listen to this over the weekend. It was very brave. There was no Mondays, SLAY or anything from the first album. Drag me Down improved in the studio version with the 'in pink and, in pink and, in pink and gold' refrain and the eight 'Oh oh's' after the steal from Born to Run. Hard Times live was really good live and was not made better in the studio, maybe the lyrics were developed and the 'I don't care's' were thinned out a bit. Lots of banter between Geldof and the boisterous audience and Simon sang well on Up or Down.
Wonder if anyone felt shortchanged attending a Rats gig less than 4 years after Mondays hit the top and not hearing it?
Maybe Bob just thought 'I don't feel like doin' it doin' it'
I have told this story before. A friend of mine saw the Rats on the Uni circuit. Everyone was shouting for Mondays and Rat Trap. They refused to do it. He felt shortchanged for years and only rectified it a couple of years ago when he came to see them in Oxford.