Craig Stephen digs deep to come up with another should-have-been but never-quite-got-there classic album from the vast vaults of the early 1990s shoegaze scene …
In the days when British
television made music shows that mattered, there was a one-off series that
stood out because it unveiled some emerging and exciting acts.
I had long forgotten the
programme’s title, but Mr Google informs me it was called the Yamaha Band
Explosion, and that it was filmed at the Marquee Club in London.
The nauseating yet
enthusiastic DJ Gary Crowley introduced a variety of shoegazing bands who
looked aloof and immersed themselves in wah-wah effects. This contrasted with a
very young and electrifying Manic Street Preachers and an act that, sadly, has
disappeared off the historical radar, 5:30 (also written as Five Thirty).
Timing was cruel to 5:30
who were in the right place, at the wrong time. In 1991, the world had a choice
between the Madchester / indie-dance bands, shoegazers, techno geeks and the
grunge noiseniks from America. It was impossible to market a band decked in
shirts from Carnaby Street, and possessed a sound that didn’t really fit into
any of the above scenes.
It includes ‘Supernova’,
the burning pop single with heavy tremolo-effected guitars that should have
gone higher in the charts, while ‘13th Disciple’ was tuneful, assertive and
owed a small debt to the Stone Roses. ‘Junk Male’ used some clever guitar
techniques with a stunning opening stanza: “If God were to ever come my way,
I’d spit into his face. Then calmly walk away.”
‘Songs and Paintings’ was
about how creativity couldn’t change the world: “Songs and paintings never
brought a regime down. It cannot be fair.”
Bed was surprisingly
diverse, ranging from funk-infused numbers to slow burners to guitar-driven belters,
sometimes beefed up with the use of wah-wah pedals.
While their recording
output was tragically brief, the band was in existence for seven years, forming
in 1985 in Oxford while Tara Milton and Paul Bassett were still at school.
Despite their youth, they released a cracking EP (as 5:30!) that same year. It
was headed by ‘Catcher in The Rye’, which was brimming with youthful cockiness
and possessed the headstrong maturity of a more seasoned group.
What happened thereafter
is somewhat mysterious as they disappeared for four years. They then reappeared
in 1989 in London - having dropped the exclamation mark - and had been joined
by Phil Hopper on drums. Soon after they signed to East West, in the days when
real talent could get you noticed by big to middling labels.
The following year came
the long-awaited second single, ‘Abstain’, which sounded like late-period Jam
and The Clash rolled into one. Later, in the year of ‘Fool’s Gold’, ‘Step On’
and ‘Sit Down’, came the edgy guitar-driven ‘Air-Conditioned Nightmare’. Not
quite as good perhaps as ‘Abstain’ but still way ahead of many other, more
successful but more limited, British bands. Neither single was deemed suitable
for Bed.
These singles set them up
for a big 1991 and they were on fire during the year. ‘13th Disciple’ was released
as a single in May, ‘Supernova’ in July, Bed in September, and the You EP in
November. Every single was a stunner, and the album was packed full of them.
However, the singles reached No.67, 75, and 72 respectively in the UK. Not
surprisingly with such low sales numbers, Bed never stood a chance. The radio
DJs, the music journalists and the TV producers were nowhere to be seen when
they were needed most.
The almost vilified
Northside had more success FFS.
Alas, 5:30 split up in
1992, a second album not progressing beyond the demo stage. Hindsight might
proffer that, had they been more aware of how the tide surges and subsides,
they could’ve been contenders. But you can understand why they packed it in.
Pop music is a fickle industry indeed.
Tara Milton subsequently
formed The Nubiles which had one decent album, the slightly left-field
Mindbender, and later had a solo career. Paul Bassett was part of Orange Deluxe
which released a string of albums, while Phil Hopper left the music industry
altogether.
My vinyl copy of Bed is
much played, and the triple disc version of Bed is getting its turn when the
time allows. I only wish many more people and their pets could say the same
thing.
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