Showing posts with label Dirk Wears White Sox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dirk Wears White Sox. Show all posts

February 17, 2024

Adam & the Ants articles/mentions

 ~        
Ant Music EP     
Dirk Wears White Sox        
     
     
mentions:       
Perry Como ~ Catch a Falling Star     
Malcolm McLaren ~ Fans     
     
     
     
date & photographer unknown
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
 
 
 
 

 

November 3, 2017

20,000 Vinyl LPs 113: Adam & The Ants ~ Kings of the Wild Frontier

vinyl LP front cover detail
cover photo by Peter Ashworth
detail photo of album cover by Styrous®


Today, November 3, is the birthday of Stuart Leslie Goddard who was born in 1954, in Marylebone, London. He is better known as Adam Ant, an English singer and musician who gained popularity as the lead singer of the new wave group, Adam and the Ants.


I discovered the Kings album late in 1980 and was blown away by some of the songs. From the first one, Kings of the Wild Frontier, with its Burundi beat and off-key sounding guitar, it peaked my interest.

vinyl LP front cover
cover photo by Peter Ashworth
photo of album cover by Styrous®
  

The Human Beings, my favorite song on the album, is a very special work. Hi-hats and a quiet bass guitar, played by Gary Tibbs, slowly fade up then are joined by drums that have an American Indian tom-tom throb. The song goes into a moderately fast but determined march beat then along comes the quirky, off key vocal by Adam Ant. The song quiets down at the end as the bass guitar takes over once more then fades out. It is a terrific dance song! (link below)      

The Ants Invasion opens with a sound I had never heard before. It has a guitar intro, played by Marco Pirroni, an ex-member of Siouxsie and the Banshees, that reminds me of a siren. It goes into a driving, savage, syncopated Burundi beat, performed by Terry Lee Miall and Chris "Merrick" Hughes,  with an echoey, 007-like guitar overriding the whole thing (link below). Really nice!   
 
Dog Eat Dog fades up with a FAST, driving, Burundi drum beat (again). It roars along with the speed of a sonic jet gone awry. The guys do some great, non-verbal back up that is WAY cool and the 007 guitar appears again (link below)!       

Physical (You're So) plods along at a VERY slow almost sleepy tempo; however, the driving rock leaves no room for sleeping. The guitar work by Marco Pirroni is fantastic! I like this song a lot (link below)!   
    
Killer in the Home is a bit faster and reflects that sleepy tempo augmented by the echoey guitar of Pirroni once more. There's some really great work by the group in this tune (link below)!


vinyl LP back cover
cover photo by Peter Ashworth
photo of album cover by Styrous®
 

The album has an edgy, post-punk sound with a smooth new wave sophistication that snagged me immediately. I fell in love with it and searched out other work by the Ants. I found Dirk Wears White Sox (link below) which had been issued the previous year and liked it as well. The group issued another album, Prince Charming, the following year, however, for me it didn't measure up to Kings nor Dirk; I was disappointed with it and lost interest in the group.   



vinyl LP record sleeve
photo by Styrous®
 

There were three hit singles from Kings including Dog Eat Dog (reaching No. 4 on the UK singles charts in October 1980), Antmusic (No. 2 in January 1981 – only kept off top spot by the murder of John Lennon), whereby Antmusic went to No. 1 in Australia, and Kings of the Wild Frontier (No. 2 in March 1981, previously No. 48 in August 1980). In addition, Antmusic made it to No. 1 in Australia for five weeks.

In 1982, Adam & the Ants won a Grammy Award for Best New Artist and Kings of the Wild Frontier won a BRIT Award for Best British Album.

Kings of the Wild Frontier is included in the book, 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. It is also one of twenty CDs in the Great British Albums box set released by Sony Records in 2012.      

  
vinyl LP record sleeve detail
detail photo by Styrous®
 

After a 15 year break, Adam Ant has begun a comeback with his “Anthems” tour which began in the UK at the beginning of this year and continued in the US in March. I'm interested to hear the new sound of the group.          

An interview with Adam Ant by Simon Price, the British music journalist and author reveals much about the Ant personality (link below).      


 
photo: Alamy Ltd.
 
 
Originally, The Ants were signed to Decca Records but unable to satisfactorily market the band, Decca let them go in early 1979. It was during this period that they recorded the albums for Do It. Without major label support, the band carried out a major UK "Ants Invasion" tour, at the end of which, they signed a major label deal with CBS Records and began recording Kings of the Wild Frontier, having first rush-released the title track as a single. That album was a hit in the United Kingdom. It reached No. 1 on the UK album charts on 24 January 1981.
        


vinyl LP record, side 1
photo by Styrous®
 

The first band Goddard joined was Bazooka Joe, in which he played bass guitar. He renamed himself Ant and with Lester Square, Andy Warren and drummer Paul Flanagan, they formed Adam and the Ants (initially named just 'The Ants') in 1977, with the inaugural band meeting held in the audience at a Siouxsie and the Banshees performance at the Roxy Club in London's Covent Garden.     


vinyl LP, side 1 label
photo by Styrous®


Adam Ant acted in the Derek Jarman, 1978 "punk" film, Jubilee which starred Jenny Runacre, Ian Charleson and punk rockers: Suzi Pinns (Amyl Nitrate), Siouxsie and the Banshees, Toyah Willcox, Wayne County and featured Slow Water and Dover Beach by Brian Eno.          

Pamela Rooke (aka Jordan) was the manager of Adam & the Ants in 1977 and sang Lou (about Lou Reed) with them (she later married their former bass player Kevin Mooney, now separated). She also acted in Jarman's Jubilee playing the character, Amyl Nitrate.     


vinyl LP record, side 2
photo by Styrous®


Trouser Press cites Kings of the Wild Frontier as the album where Adam Ant "found his groove". In his retrospective review, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic called it "one of the great defining albums of its time.
"There's simply nothing else like it, nothing else that has the same bravado, the same swagger, the same gleeful self-aggrandizement and sense of camp. This walked a brilliant line between campiness and art-house chutzpah, and it arrived at precisely the right time – at the forefront of new wave".     
 

vinyl LP, side 2 label
photo by Styrous®
 

Tracklist:
Side 1:

A1 - Dog Eat Dog - 3:07
A2 - “Antmusic" - 3:36
A3 - Los Rancheros - 3:28
A4 - Feed Me To The Lions - 2:59
A5 - Press Darlings - 4:12
A6 - Ants Invasion - 3:20
A7 - Killer In The Home - 4:19

Side 1:

B1 - Kings Of The Wild Frontier - 3:53
B2 - The Magnificent Five - 3:05
B3 - Don't Be Square (Be There) - 3:29
B4 - Jolly Roger - 2:09
B5 - Physical (You're So) - 4:26
B6 - The Human Beings - 4:24

Companies, etc.

    Recorded At – Rockfield Studios
    Mastered At – Sterling Sound
    Phonographic Copyright (p) – CBS Records
    Copyright (c) – CBS Records
    Manufactured By – Epic Records
    Published By – EMI Music Publishing Ltd.
    Published By – Ant Music Pub. Ltd.

Credits:

    Artwork [Video Film] – Clive Richardson (2), Stephanie Gluck
    Artwork [Warrior Ant Logo] – Danny Kleinman
    Design [Graphic] – Jules*
    Engineer – Hugh Jones
    Performer [Made By] – Kevin Mooney, Marco*, Merrick, Terry Lee Miall
    Performer [Made By], Artwork [Sleeve Concept] – Adam Ant
    Photography By – Ashworth*
    Producer – Chris Hughes
    Sleeve [Concept] – Jules*
    Written-By – A. Ant* (tracks: A5, B5), Ant / Marco* (tracks: A1 to A4, A6 to B4, B6)

Notes:

Recorded at Rockfield Studios, August 1980

Different tracklisting to UK release on CBS S CBS 84549
Inner sleeve with lyrics but no photos/video stills.

Label print variant: Title/Credit will break onto second line.

Slight different in matrix etching.
Barcode and Other Identifiers

    Barcode (Text): 0 74643 70331
    Matrix / Runout (Run-out Side A): AL-37033-1F ANTMUSIC... e s
    Matrix / Runout (Run-out Side B): BL-37033-1E ...FOR SEX PEOPLE! s
    Other (Cat# on inner sleeve): 37033

Adam & the Ants ~ Kings of the Wild Frontier   
Label: Epic ‎– NJE 37033
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album
Country: US
Released: 1980
Genre: Rock
Style: New Wave, Pop Rock

       
     
     
        
Viewfinder links:            
          
Ant Music EP         
Dirk Wears White Sox                    
           
Net links:            
          
Adam Ant Discography           
Adam Ant website
NY Times ~ Barundi Beat ~ The new Tribalism     
Forbes ~ Watch Out, U.S.: Adam Ant Tour Comeback (interview)   
Simon Price ~ A Wild Nobility (interview)
Esquire Magazine ~ The Origins of Punk (interview)          
           
YouTube links:            
          
Kings of the Wild Frontier         
Antmusic           
Ants Invasion        
The Human Beings
Killer in the Home         
Dog Eat Dog   
Kings of the Wild Frontier        
Jubilee ~ Deutscher Girls      
Ant Invasion (documentary)                 
Tom Snyder Interview                
Dick Clark Interview                 
Swap Shop 1981 Interview                  
BBC Wogan Show Interview                   
Johnny Vaughan ~ Coca-Cola Hit Mix Interview      
ABC News Interview ~ August 2012                
Amyl Nitrate ~ Rule Britannia      
     
                       

"If you make a mistake, you should enjoy it!" 
                                    ~ Adam Ant  
            

           
Styrous® ~ Friday, November 3, 2017


















October 8, 2017

Adam & the Ants articles/mentions

  ~      
Ant Music EP          
Dirk Wears White Sox              
                  

    
mentions:       
Perry Como ~ Catch A Falling Star 
Malcolm McLaren ~ Fans     
         
         
photo by Allan Ballard
      
      















May 30, 2013

20,000 vinyl LPs 21: Adam & the Ants ~ Dirk Wears White Sox

 front cover photo by Clare Johnson
photo of front cover by Styrous©

One of the treasures in my vinyl record collection, Dirk Wears White Sox, has always intrigued me with it's image of a woman on the cover album. She is vague, diaphanous, mysterious and compelling. I have the same fascination with her as I have with the woman on the back cover of the Jorge Pardo album (see link below).

 front cover photo by Clare Johnson
photo by Styrous©

In 1978 I saw Jubilee, the British cult film directed by Derek Jarman, which stars Jenny Runacre, Ian Charleson, Amyl Nitrate (Pamela Rooke aka Suzi Pinz on the soundtrack album who does a hilarious but GREAT version of Rule Britania, see link below) and many punk rockers, including Toyah and Adam Ant. The title of the film refers to the Silver Jubilee of Elizabeth II in 1977. Naturally, I was hot on the trail for the soundtrack album. It was my first awareness of Adam and the Ants. A year or so later, I discovered Dirk Wears White Sox by The Ants.

Dirk Wears White Sox was the only LP by the original Ants lineup; it was released by Do It in 1979. The album features a young Adam Ant exploring the fusion of punk, glam, and minimalist post-punk and songs of alienation, sex, and brutality. The album offers a fascinating look at the Ants' formative years, capturing Ant's raw energy.

Adam wrote the words and music for the album and "Dirk" is a reference to is 50's British film star, Dirk Bogard (1921-99). He was a great Bogarde fan. In 1974, Bogard starred in the film Il Portiere Di Notte (in English The Night Porter). The song, Dirk Wears White Sox was inspired by that film but it was cut from the original 1979 album but released on another album years later.

 photo by Styrous©

The album featured an inner sleeve with lyrics and photos by Philip Grey.  The photos are burned out, stylized images á la 1979 punk.

inner sleeve photos by Philip Grey
photo of inner sleeve by Styrous©


I love the title of this song
photo by Styrous©


 album credits
photo by Styrous©


the record labels were pretty cool

side one record label
photo by Styrous©


side two record label
photo by Styrous©


Original 1979 release    

Side one:
1.  Cartrouble (Parts 1 & 2)
2.  Digital Tenderness
3.  Nine Plan Failed
4.  Day I Met God
5.  Tabletalk

Side two:
1.  Cleopatra
2.  Catholic Day
3.  Never Trust a Man (With Egg on His Face)
4.  Animals and Men
5.  Family of Noise
6.  The Idea

Personnel:
Adam Ant – vocals, electric guitar, acoustic guitar, piano, harmonic
David Barbe – percussion 
Matthew Ashman – guitar, piano
Andrew Warren – bass guitar
Marco Pirroni – guitar on tracks 18 and 19
Jon Moss – drums on tracks 18 and 19

Adam Ant was born Stuart Leslie Goddard on November 3, 1954, in London, England. He studied art at the Hornsey School of Art in London. The list of musicians associated with Hornsey is astonishing. He placed a classified ad in the weekly British music paper Melody Maker in June of 1976 that read: "Beat On A Bass With The B-Sides." A few days later he met with Andy Warren and they formed the group the B-Sides. They recorded a punk version of "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'" but broke up right after that.

Melody Maker Magazine ads resulted in many fine collaborations:


20,000 vinyl LPs 2: Jorge Pardo
Amyl Nitrate (Suzi Pinz) singing Rule Britania on YouTube
Car Trouble can be heard on YouTube
Nine Plan Failed can be heard on YouTube
There's terrific historical info about Adam and the Ants during 1978 on the blog, Kill Your Pet Puppy.


The entire collection is for sale. Interested? Contact Styrous®



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