Melody Maker, June 12, 1982: Difference between revisions

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<center><h3> Everybody's somebody's Bluebell </h3></center>
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<center> Paolo Hewitt </center>
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'''Paolo Hewitt gets hooked on classic pop, Eighties style, from Scotland's Bluebells.
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[[image:1982-06-12 Melody Maker cover.jpg|140px|border|right]]
Matters finally came to a head after the show that night. In the cramped dressing room, Ken McCluskey, the Bluebells' harmonica player, picked up a plank of wood, walked over to Alan Horne and threatened him with extreme violence if he didn't vacate the room, like NOW! Quaking with anger, it was only the restraining arms of his friends that kept McCluskey from inflicting the awful damage he had in mind for the Postcard supremo.
Relationships hadn't always been so strained between band and manager. After only their second concert as the Bluebells, Horne had burst into their dressing room and told them how great they were. How they should go away and rehearse Lovin' Spoonful songs. Polish their exquisite pop tunes into an efficient, organised form.
Horne knew that Orange Juice, his ace card at the time, would soon be leaving Postcard for a major, and he saw the Bluebells as his last chance. They would record the last ever Postcard single, an EP of three cover songs, plus an original and Postcard could go out in a blaze of glory. The record was never made. Horne had a masterplan and the Bluebells just wanted to take things as they came. Easy come, easy go. Maybe do it tomorrow, maybe not. The result: friction.
Eventually, Horne turned...
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|prev = Melody Maker, January 16, 1982
|prev = Melody Maker, May 15, 1982
|next = Melody Maker, June 26, 1982
|next = Melody Maker, June 26, 1982
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'''Melody Maker, June 12, 1982
'''Melody Maker, June 12, 1982
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Guest singles reviewers Michael Dudley, Adrian Borland and Graham Green of The Sound review the single for "[[You Little Fool]]."  
Guest singles reviewers Michael Dudley and Adrian Borland (The Sound) review "[[You{{nb}}Little{{nb}}Fool]]."  
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Also includes an interview with [[The Bluebells]].
EC is mentioned in [[Paolo Hewitt]]'s interview with [[The Bluebells]].


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[[image:1982-06-12 Melody Maker page 19 clipping 01.jpg|188px]]
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<small>Cover and page scan.</small><br>
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[[image:1982-06-12 Melody Maker page 19.jpg|x120px|border]]




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<center><h3> The Bluebells Interview </h3></center>
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<center> ... </center>
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<small>Page scans.</small><br>
[[image:1982-06-12 Melody Maker page 10.jpg|x240px]][[image:1982-06-12 Melody Maker page 11.jpg|x240px]]


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==External links==
==External links==
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melody_Maker Wikipedia: Melody Maker]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melody_Maker Wikipedia: Melody Maker]
*[https://twitter.com/nothingelseon/status/1129312250483728384 Twitter.com: nothingelseon]
*[https://twitter.com/nothingelseon/status/1129312250483728384 Twitter.com: nothingelseon][https://twitter.com/nothingelseon/status/1129310572015521792 {{t}}][https://twitter.com/nothingelseon/status/1129311145725009920 {{t}}]
*[https://www.rocksbackpages.com/Library/Article/the-bluebells-everybodys-somebodys-bluebell rocksbackpages.com]


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[[Category:Magazine articles]]
[[Category:Magazine articles]]
[[Category:Single reviews]]
[[Category:Single reviews]]
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Latest revision as of 23:29, 10 August 2023

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Melody Maker

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You Little Fool

Elvis Costello

Michael Dudley, Adrian Borland

Dudley: I preferred him when he was plundering Stax. I thought Get Happy was an excellent album, but he's lost his teeth now and he's trying to find them amidst a fog of old psychedelic effects that got chucked in the bin ages ago.

Adrian: When you talk about a Costello record, you're not talking about whether it's good or bad, it's a question of whether you like it or not. And, as he slagged "Silent Air," I think it's.... only joking. It's good radio music, will get a lot of airplay and probably become a hit. Why are we bothering to talk about it in special terms? He's not worth it. It's not bad. That's all.




Everybody's somebody's Bluebell


Paolo Hewitt

Paolo Hewitt gets hooked on classic pop, Eighties style, from Scotland's Bluebells.

1982-06-12 Melody Maker cover.jpg

Matters finally came to a head after the show that night. In the cramped dressing room, Ken McCluskey, the Bluebells' harmonica player, picked up a plank of wood, walked over to Alan Horne and threatened him with extreme violence if he didn't vacate the room, like NOW! Quaking with anger, it was only the restraining arms of his friends that kept McCluskey from inflicting the awful damage he had in mind for the Postcard supremo.

Relationships hadn't always been so strained between band and manager. After only their second concert as the Bluebells, Horne had burst into their dressing room and told them how great they were. How they should go away and rehearse Lovin' Spoonful songs. Polish their exquisite pop tunes into an efficient, organised form.

Horne knew that Orange Juice, his ace card at the time, would soon be leaving Postcard for a major, and he saw the Bluebells as his last chance. They would record the last ever Postcard single, an EP of three cover songs, plus an original and Postcard could go out in a blaze of glory. The record was never made. Horne had a masterplan and the Bluebells just wanted to take things as they came. Easy come, easy go. Maybe do it tomorrow, maybe not. The result: friction.

Eventually, Horne turned...




Remaining text and scanner-error corrections to come...



Transcribe.jpg


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<< >>

Melody Maker, June 12, 1982


Guest singles reviewers Michael Dudley and Adrian Borland (The Sound) review "You Little Fool."


EC is mentioned in Paolo Hewitt's interview with The Bluebells.

Images

1982-06-12 Melody Maker page 19 clipping 01.jpg1982-06-12 Melody Maker page 19.jpg
Clipping and page scan.



Page scans.
1982-06-12 Melody Maker page 10.jpg1982-06-12 Melody Maker page 11.jpg


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