Saturday, 11 March 2017
Sunday, 5 March 2017
TV EYE - 1977-1978 (*ARTICLE/REVIEW*)
A couple of weeks back I got a surprise
package through my letter box. It contained a CDR and some
photocopied info on a band called TV Eye. My instant
reaction....WOW! and.... YES! Why you may ask well let me tell
ya.....Birmingham legends TV Eye first came to my ears back in 1984
on the rather brilliant first What A Nice Way To Turn Seventeen
compilation album with the track Stevies Radio Station which is a
piece of swooning pop'n'roll since then I've wanted to hear more from
'em. Now thanks to those good people at Seventeen records and Stephen
Duffy for preserving the recordings I can, and so can you. 1977-1978
is a collection of lost studio and rehearsal recordings by TV Eye.
“2017 is going to see many bands
celebrating the 40th anniversary of their 1977 debut
records. There won't be nearly so many from 1977 making their debut
40 years later in 2017. Here is one which is, TV Eye” - Seventeen
Records Press Release.
So after waiting 33 years to hear more
TV Eye, what do I think? Well....once again let me tell ya....
Opening track Repartee is a
short sharp and sweet blast of Power pop Punk. It's followed by the
beautiful and brilliant uplifting pure pop of Stevies Radio
Station which in turn is swiftly followed by the strutting and
swaggering Citizen Then we
have the angsty and angular, taunt, tense and narcissistic
proto post-punk Let Me Win, more Voidoids than Heartbreakers.
The last of the studio recordings is the intense and grandiose
Dreaming of Your Cars. The
fact that none of these songs saw the light of day at the time is a
rock'n'roll crime. The rehearsal tracks (Roses, When You're
Gone, Cry, Cry To You and Kites are more unearthed gems, Rock'n'Roll
relics that still sparkle and shine through their rough'n'ready no-fi
state, they sound in places like something the Cuddly Toys would come out with
a couple of years later.
TV Eye sound like The Stooges meet the
Stones with a slice of Sparks added to the whole Rock'n'Roll Molotov
cocktail mix. Switch-blades swish and slash as the alley cats
screech, even at their most sensitive these songs scream with a spikey fuck
you attitude and abandon. Dave Kusworths razor sharp guitar
riffs'n'licks duel with the rhythmic chops of Paul Adams guitar,
while the simple and solid rhythm section of Dave Twist's Drum's and
Eamon Duffy's Bass hold it all together and Vocalist Andy Wickets
wired and wild whelps, whoops wails and woo woos, add some theatrics
to the whole show, which unfortunately was a rather short one.
The demise of TV Eye came shortly after
Duffy and Twist joined up to help out The Prefects, Duffy opted to
stay, but Dave Twist returned to TV Eye, who stumbled on but
eventually fell apart by the middle of 1979 and the rest is, as they
say.... history; The Subterranean Hawks, The Rag Dolls, The
Jacobites, and Duran Duran....Friends'n'fans of the band Nick Rhodes
and John Taylor, soon to be a future member of Duran Duran used to
visit the band at their Cheapside rehearsal space and had been
taking notes; Stevies Radio Station later evolved into Rio, and there
is speculation that many other TV Eye ideas were taken by Duran
Duran, once again the rest is history and what could have beens, but
never weres but without these there might never have been The Bounty
Hunters, The Tenderhooks or The Black Bombers.
TV Eye were new romantic glam punksters; ahead of
their time. 1977-1978 is a timeless collection of Rock'n'Roll and
it's time is now! Available from 24th March as a very
limited red vinyl pressing of 300 copies on Seventeen Records, you
also get a four page photo insert and essay by Dave Twist. A CD
release with a couple of extra tracks will follow. What ever the
format this album must be heard at all costs, it's a newly discovered
masterpiece to shake the wall not to hang on the wall. Lovingly
presented and packaged by people that care. This album is indeed a
thing of beauty a work of art, and a must have for anyone with a luv
of Rock'n'Roll at it's most primal and feral.
For more details hit the TV Eye 1977-1978 Facebook Page.
Acknowledgement to Nikki Suddens book The Last Bandit for background info to this piece.
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