Sunday, July 24, 2005

NME C86: A Profile

Casey Dorrell

C-86, the latest controversial Canadian legislation bill? No, that's C-38.

c86
C86 is a genre of music. That and a famous NME (New Musical Express) cassette. The genre is indie. More precisely, it refers to mid to late 80s and early 90s British indie pop that was generally"twee" (think Scottish group Belle & Sebastian for definitive twee). Although most tweepop groups grow from c86, the c86 genre is arguably identified as jangle pop. This was a British movement, but there were many American and Canadian bands that were also c86 in all but location in the following years, like Velocity Girl (Which takes its name from an original C86 track) or Jale. The original movement is now almost as old as a lot of the people reading this, yet it still holds a place of importance in contemporary music beyond being mere reference fodder for indie elitists. Its pop-culture relevance has only become more apparent in the last year. Look for the influences of all those bands you or your little brother is rocking out to on the OC, and you'll invariably find yourself back at C86.

But wait, didn't I say something about a tape? You got me. C86 is literal abbreviation for Cassette 86, which refers to a tape given away with then 34 year old NME magazine in, unsurprisingly, 1986. NME was perhaps beginning to feel old and listless but, rather than focusing only on the biggest possible bands and celebrity gossip as with its (then 24 year old) cousin, Rolling Stone, NME decided to try something new.

"We [tried] to invent an alternative scene - our own version of punk you could say - by forcing a coterie of new bands onto a cassette called C86. It's not entirely convincing and you should get out more if you remember The Shop Assistants - but it nails our colours to the mast. We, it said, for better or worse, are indie."

The Forgotten Shop Assistant
A Former Shop Assistant, Forgotten and Discarded Returns To His Shop

The Cassette featured exclusively independent artists, most of whom were not hugely popular at the time. While C86 came to be a genre rather than a literal tape, some of the bands on the original compilation were neither janglepop nor twee (ie. not all the bands on C86 were C86). Examples being Primal Scream's Velocity Girl or Stump's "Buffalo". Regardless, C86 was the cassette that launched a genre (rather than just recognizing one).

Says the freakishly well-informed uau of Freeway Jam, "C-86 was an extraordinary release; most of the bands had been unknown prior to its issuance, but taken together they resembled a scene. Almost every one of the groups that appeared on C-86 were short-lived, but in their wake, newer indie bands on both sides of the Atlantic began experimenting with this airy, tuneful style."

Tom of Indie-mp3 whose tag-line is "Keeping the c86 alive" points out another distinction between the current twee pop and indie music scene and the c86 scene: politics. Unlike many of the C86 groups, indie music right now is rarely political. Personally, I prefer my music sans politik. Politics and music make for sloganeering, good protest chants, and propaganda, but not intelligent debate. That said, music remains the perfect visceral outlet for frustration, anger, or apathy born of perceived political disenfranchisement. "At this time, the NME was a socialist music paper in all but name," Tom explains in his C86 overview. He goes on to further link the politicization to Thatcherism, but I'd argue that there are as many, if not more, reasons for a band to be political today. Though that's likely every generation's claim.

In writing this, I've relied on more than a few quoted references. Hopefully this makes me look credible and journalistic, and not confused and lazy. I've also avoided actually describing the music. This was not unintentional (i.e. this was intentional). I'm no good at it. This sometimes makes having a blog with a primary purpose of music description a bit tricky. I've never claimed it was a useful blog. Essentially, c86 is poppy but underproduced. Doesn't that describe all indie pop? Well, yes, but.. um . . . this stuff is, uh, jangly too. And old.

The Famous C-86
Why Don't People Lament the Loss of Cassette Art, the Way They Do With Vinyl?

This is the complete Track listing as it appeared on the original C86 release:

Side A
1. Primal Scream - Velocity Girl
2. The Mighty Lemon Drops - Happy Head
3. The Soup Dragons - Pleasantly Surprised
4. The Wolfhounds - Feeling So Strange Again
5. The Bodines - Therese
6. Mighty Mighty - Law
7. Stump - Buffalo
8. Bogshed - Run to the Temple
9. A Witness - Sharps And Sticks
10. The Pastels - Breaking Lines
11. The Age of Chance - From Now On This Will Be Your God

Side B
1. Shop Assistants - It's Up To You
2. Close Lobsters - Firestation Towers
3. Miaow - Sport Most Royal
4. Half Man Half Buiscuit - I Hate Nerys Hughes
5. The Servants - Transparent
6. The MacKenzies - Big Jim (There's No Pubs In Heaven)
7. Big Flame - New Way (Quick Wash And Brush Upon Liberation Theology)
8. We've Got a Fuzzbox and We're Gonna Use it - Console Me
9. McCarthy - Celestial City
10. The Shrubs - Bullfighter Blues
11. The Wedding Present - This Boy Can Wait

I'm glad I've helped fuel the nostalgia for so many of you - Since most of you are linking to the post, feel free to wander the rest of the site. Click here to visit the site itself, and here to navigate past features or perhaps discover The Like Young. Cheers. (Also, TB below is trackback)

Comments on "NME C86: A Profile"

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (24/7/05 9:51 AM) : 

to whomever's responsible for this--- THANK YOU!!!! <333

 

Blogger dickvandyke said ... (24/7/05 9:54 AM) : 

Interesting stuff. As the hair greys and the memories fade.

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (24/7/05 10:57 AM) : 

I'd say about half of the songs on C-86 are jangly pop, but Bogshed, Age of Chance, Stump etc certainly aren't jangly.

C-81, the tape that preceeded it seems to have more bearing on the music most indie folk reference today...
Track Listing:

Side One:

The "Sweetest Girl" - Scritti Politti
Twist and Crawl Dub - The Beat
Misery Goats - Pere Ubu
7,000 Names of Wah! - Wah! Heat
Blue Boy - Orange Juice
Raising the Count - Cabaret Voltaire
Kebab Traume Live - D.A.F
Bare Pork - Furious Pig
Raquel - Specials
I Look Alone - Buzzcocks
Fanfare In The Garden - Essential Logic
Born Again Cretin - Robert Wyatt

Side Two

Shouting Out Loud - Raincoats
Endless Soul - Josef K
Low Profile - Blue Orchids
Red Nettle - Virgin Prunes
We Could Send Letters - Aztec Camera
Milkmaid - Red Crayola
Don't Get In My Way - Linx
The Day My Pad Went Mad - The Massed Carnaby St John Cooper Clarkes
Jazz Is The Teacher, Funk Is The Preacher - James Blood Ulmer
Close To Home - Ian Drury
Greener Grass - Gist
Parallel Lines - Subway Sect

pip

 

Blogger kek-w said ... (24/7/05 3:21 PM) : 

Bloody hell! The Close Lobsters....

Whatever happened to The Wigs, I wonder.

 

Anonymous Franswa said ... (24/7/05 4:03 PM) : 

Thank you very much ! Fantastic post !!
It hepled me to improve my knowledge about english music/politics in the 80's.

 

Blogger Casey Dorrell said ... (24/7/05 4:27 PM) : 

Hey, Pip

I'm not as familiar with C81, but have planned on doing a follow up post on it. To date, I've only gotten my hand on 5 mp3s from the cassette so it may be a bit yet.

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (24/7/05 7:08 PM) : 

C-86 defined my love of music more than any other movement ever has including punk!
I broke my tape years ago so this brought back a few memories although I have everything that primal Scream, The Close Lobsters and The Soup Dragons have ever released!
Oh, and I obviously SHOULD get out more because I absolutely adore The Shop Assistants!
Thanks for this.

 

Blogger Tom said ... (24/7/05 7:33 PM) : 

Good post. I had planned to do something along the same lines but was beaten to the punch.

I have the C81 Tape and Jive Wire as well.

 

Anonymous whoops said ... (24/7/05 9:16 PM) : 

Hell !! What happened between the C81 tape and the C86 one ?
What caused such a disaster in less than five years ?
Oh yes...I remember now....The Jesus and Mary Chain !

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (25/7/05 11:56 AM) : 

Cheers!! Thanks for the post, I've been wanting to here the full tape for years.

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (25/7/05 5:38 PM) : 

best foookin' post ever...best fookin' genre ever...I'm 'avin' it in a major way.

~Sjimon

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (25/7/05 5:39 PM) : 

best foookin' post ever...best fookin' genre ever...I'm 'avin' it in a major way.

~Sjimon

 

Blogger Old Scrotum, the Wrinkled Retainer said ... (25/7/05 6:00 PM) : 

Good work fella - now you just need to get cracking on a few of John Peel's Festive Fifties...

 

Blogger Sarra Manning said ... (25/7/05 7:15 PM) : 

Oh God, all of a sudden I'm 14 again and sitting in my best friend's room listening to Shop Assistants! Thank you so, so, so, so much for uploading this. To hear Therese again and remember every single nuance and inflection. Happy days...!

 

Blogger Andy said ... (25/7/05 8:32 PM) : 

Thanks so much for this - brought back some memories of a time when music changed me...

 

Anonymous mike said ... (25/7/05 9:14 PM) : 

Are you sure about Velocity Girl and Jale being C86?

They were both indie rock bands IMO that fell squarely within the confines of the indie rock scene's early to mid 90's heyday.


Wasn't C86 just a purely British indie-pop scene?

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (25/7/05 10:38 PM) : 

thank you! now pls pull down the curtain...old wounds will be reopened and forgotten smiles shall be remembered

 

Blogger Casey Dorrell said ... (25/7/05 11:38 PM) : 

Hey Mike, right and right. I've adapted the wording a bit while keeping it generally intact, being stubborn as I tend to be. :D
Thanks.

 

Blogger pophenrik said ... (26/7/05 3:10 PM) : 

Thanks a lot. Great to listen to it after hearing about it for almost 20 years.

 

Anonymous HANS GRUBER said ... (26/7/05 6:51 PM) : 

Fucking great and thousand thanks!
Now: release it as a record. HA_HA_HA.

 

Anonymous kenny said ... (27/7/05 1:42 PM) : 

oh, happy days! it's all about staying up late watching tv and drinking endless cups of tea because we didnt have the money for beer. I hadn't thought of Stump in fifteen years, and you got me searching for Charlton Heston put his vest on as soon as I had heard their track

 

Anonymous DuffPaddy said ... (27/7/05 2:57 PM) : 

Thank you! I have the tape, but this saves me the trouble of encoding it.

I have some nice encodes of the C81 tape, if anyone's interested. I also still have the owner's manual after all these years, so can scan that in, too.

 

Blogger Casey Dorrell said ... (27/7/05 3:42 PM) : 

Interested if you've got an email or something (mockingmusic@gmail.com)

 

Blogger Tom said ... (27/7/05 6:09 PM) : 

I've dug out my C81 tape but duffpaddy has beaten me too it :)

The A Witness track is called Sharpened Sticks by the way......

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (27/7/05 6:21 PM) : 

Brilliant, thanks so much.

Anyone going to upload C-81?

 

Blogger The Empty Signifier said ... (28/7/05 12:59 AM) : 

Just two days, and the links are already down...

 

Blogger Casey Dorrell said ... (28/7/05 1:47 AM) : 

ouch - well, I know nothing about the site I uploaded it to so not a big surprise. It will be relocated if possible shortly.

And, Sharps and Sticks... guess I was a bit tired there.. at least I named the mp3 properly. ;)

 

Anonymous uao said ... (28/7/05 2:39 AM) : 

Excellent work, Mocking Music! Nice job of capturing what was special about C-86.

I appreciate the mention; I'm going to link this to the Twee Pop playlist at my pad.

 

Blogger Jun Eric Pilar said ... (28/7/05 3:10 AM) : 

Cool!!!
Great to see that this one is posted & any chance that the NME or the indie crowd celebrate it's 20th anniv next year?

cheers!

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (28/7/05 3:28 AM) : 

http://66.40.206.13/buzzard.htm

The Wolfhounds started already! They played at the Buzzard in Camden last month as part of their own 20th year celebrations. Easily the best band on the whole sorry affair.

Tony - London

 

Anonymous Franswa said ... (28/7/05 8:58 AM) : 

Hi Casey ! I saw your pessimistic comments on MOKB about uploadyoumom.
Your wondeful C86 post made me discover (and bookmarked!) your blog. So you can be sure that I'll visit it a lot of time in the future, and I think a lot of other people will do the same !!
:-)

 

Anonymous bon said ... (28/7/05 10:06 PM) : 

a lot of thanks! (hands clapping)...now this boy wont wait no more

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (28/7/05 10:08 PM) : 

lot of thanks!(hands clapping)now this boy wont wait no more

 

Anonymous jeremy said ... (29/7/05 11:56 PM) : 

looks great! anybody have a mirror of these yet? I'd love to hear this.

 

Blogger Tom said ... (30/7/05 12:32 PM) : 

I hope Mocking Music does not mind but in the downtime interim I have posted these tracks via Rapidshare. They are my own encodes direct from the tape (vbr 220).

http://www.indie-mp3.co.uk/blog/2005/07/nme-c86-repost.html

 

Blogger Steve said ... (4/8/05 11:08 PM) : 

Why don't you create a torrent for these files? I'd love to be able to download them but I can understand the difficulty of hosting them directly. I'd be happy to create a torrent for you if that would help.

 

Blogger Casey Dorrell said ... (5/8/05 2:44 PM) : 

A torrent set-up would be great, we've just been in the process of moving so we're in computer down-time. I think a torrent is the easiest way to go, though, as it's a blog and using that amount of hosting space for one post is a bit much (even if one in three of our total visitors ever were coming to the c86 post . . . :)

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (17/8/05 11:31 PM) : 

C81 - I have that too. My copy is a little tattered, just like my copies of 'Mattress of Wire' and my Orange Juice Postcard singles - they were all sitting in a pile when my flatmate spilt his drink on them some 20 years back. The vinyl still plays fine, a little crackly, but they look ragged. The cassette is getting tired though.
So - please, please post the C81 tape! Or someone send me a copy - my email is [alanjgelder@hotmail.com]

 

Blogger Mikey said ... (9/9/05 11:51 AM) : 

which was the one with Carmel singing 'Storm' and David Gamson's 'No turn on red' ?

I'd love to hear that one again!

 

Blogger Mikey said ... (9/9/05 12:44 PM) : 

ah, it was called Jive Wire It rocked. Anyone seen it posted anywhere? (I can't see that there's a serious copyright issue with things like this because they're not available commercially)

 

Anonymous Anonymous said ... (24/10/05 9:33 AM) : 

This was also released on vinyl - I still have a copy, which I haven't heard since I buried my vinyl in the shed about ten years ago. Yay, Stump. Thank you!

And btw, on the subject of classic compilations, I've also got the Some Bizarre album in the shed, but it's way too buggered to rip. If anyone's got that to post, I'd be well chuffed.

- some old girl

 

Anonymous shihlun said ... (24/2/06 2:08 PM) : 

Hi:

I live in Taiwan. I used to have a NME C86 cassett back to the 80s. It is so great to listen to these tracks again. Unfortunately I'm having problem downloading them from rapidshare. Can anybody help? Tom ? My email addres is shihlun.chang at gmail.com

thanks for your kind help

 

Blogger ephraimgadsby said ... (28/2/06 5:18 PM) : 

last year i saw Half Man Half Biscuit (for the ninth time) and Wedding Present.I also paid 76 quid for Happy Head CD.Some things never leave you! Almost everyone mentions Stump off of that tape,or how Primal Scream sound like Stone Roses(um other way round sir).Heady days.

 

Anonymous Bazooka81 said ... (8/2/08 6:12 AM) : 

No MP3s, but lots of info on all the NME cassettes at www.bazooka81.livejournal.com

 

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