Showing posts with label 1989. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1989. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 December 2017

7 Days of SAWmas! #4: When You Come Back To Me - Jason Donovan

In the run up to Christmas, what better way to get into the festive spirit than to take a look at 7 Yuletide tracks Stock Aitken Waterman came up with between 1987 and 2015? Join Kean Canter Mattowski for 7 blogposts during December as we take a look back at some seasonal gems…

On the fourth day of SAWmas, the DJ played for me…

When You Come Back To Me – Jason Donovan

1989 saw Mike, Matt and Pete dominate the charts with 7 number one singles, and a further 15 Top 40 hits. A significant part of this success was due to their collaboration with Jason Donovan, who followed Especially For You with two solo number ones (Too Many Broken Hearts, Sealed With A Kiss) and a number two hit (Every Day), and a number one debut album (Ten Good Reasons).

Jason and SAW would end such a successful year by making another attempt at a Christmas number one with the release of a new single - recorded in October 1989 - from his forthcoming second album.

When You Come Back To Me, written and produced by Stock Aitken Waterman, is an up-tempo number which manages to convey the Christmas spirit without making any explicit reference to the season.


Whilst it features the usual SAW hallmarks of synth brass and electronic percussion, it has a very seasonal feel to it; it's underpinned with timpani, swirling strings and prominent backing vocals, with chimes, tubular bells and timpani sprinkled on top. There's a nod to the time of year in the lyrics, with references to "so many people" with "smiles on their faces" and "armful of presents", and there being a "chill in the air". It's a tale of separated lovers, which of course resonates deeply in the Christmas season.

As with many SAW songs, the real strength lies in Mike Stock and Matt Aitken’s melody. The memorable chorus is euphoric, conflating Donovan’s hope of reunion with the hope that Christmas offers many, and Pete Hammond’s immaculate final 7” mix seals the deal that this is a bona fide hit record.


(The 2010 digital release of the When You Come Back To Me single bundle contains the Original 7” Mix, by Dave Ford; this mix dispenses with the distinctive brass found on the final 7” mix and is perhaps less energetic, but is actually more atmospheric and seasonal. It may lack the impact of the Hammond mix, but is an interesting take all the same).


In addition to the main single release, a second remix 7" was released featuring The Yuletide Sleigh List Mix -- this very much turned the track into a Christmas song; opening up with a spoken intro by Donovan, the track removes most of the frenetic percussion and synths which adorn the main version and replaces them by choral backing vocals, tinkly bells and plucked strings.


There were a number of various mixes of the track; the main Extended Version (mixed by Pete Hammond) is an atmospheric longer take on the 7” mix, with the elongated intro and outro showing off the various layers of the track. Dave Ford’s No Probs Mix takes the track into a dance direction, with Ford deploying an effective house approach, whilst the Guitar Instrumental Mix, also mixed by Ford, is a showcase for Matt Aitken as he plays the melody line on a classical guitar. The 2010 digital release contains a No Strings Mix, which was mixed by Ford and appears to be a slight variation on the Yuletide Sleigh List Mix, plus various instrumental and backing track versions.

When You Come Back To Me was fairly well received at the time, and is still fondly regarded by many even now. Perhaps just as memorable was the bright orange overcoat which Donovan wore in the video and on the single sleeve! The single sleeve, the design of which is actually credited to Donovan, also carries handwritten (and annotated) lyrics to the song, and given these appear to be written in two different sets of handwriting, it appears these were Stock and Aitken’s own original handwritten lyrics.


Given both Donovan and SAW's huge success in 1989, When You Come Back To Me would have likely been a Christmas number one -- had it not been for the rush-release of a particular charity single. However, that particular charity record did actually see both SAW and Donovan – and many others – reach number one on the 1989 Christmas charts…

Based upon and expanded from the entry in 80s UK Christmas Singles (available on Kindle)

Tuesday, 12 December 2017

7 Days of SAWmas! #3: The Christmas Medley – Stock Aitken Waterman

In the run up to Christmas, what better way to get into the festive spirit than to take a look at 7 Yuletide tracks Stock Aitken Waterman came up with between 1987 and 2015? Join Kean Canter Mattowski for 8 blogposts during December as we take a look back at some seasonal gems…

On the third day of SAWmas, the DJ played to me…

The Christmas Medley – Stock Aitken Waterman

Back in 2010, SAW fans were delighted when PWL commenced a digital re-issue of much of its back catalogue, with a huge number of singles bundles containing various mixes, remixes, backing tracks and instrumentals. What added to the excitement was that these releases included previously unreleased material, and whilst a number of these were already known about and long anticipated, there were still some surprise items.

Including The Christmas Medley, credited to Stock Aitken Waterman.


Apparently, this track was specially recorded for the December 1989 Stock Aitken Waterman Go To The Albert Hall charity concert (which featured Jason Donovan, Sonia and Big Fun amongst others). The track was not performed at the event, but was played in the venue before and after the show. It would appear this was the track’s sole purpose and it was not designed or scheduled for general release.

The medley, which interpolates Rudolph The Red Nose Reindeer, White Christmas and Silent Night, was produced and arranged by SAW, with vocals provided by regular SAW backing vocalists Mae McKenna and Miriam Stockley, along with Mike Stock.

Opening with swirling harp, blustery wind and sleigh bells, Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer launches into a jaunty synth-backed retake on the famous song, with an occasional interruption by a weird synth squiggle which one assumes is supposed to be a cry of joy from the titular reindeer.

In a slightly jarring change of tone, White Christmas takes over around a minute into the track, with light percussion and strings backing the vocals, in which Stock can be clearly heard.

At the 2:30 minute mark, the track brings in Silent Night, in a much more complementary segue, with an arrangement akin to that of the previous song. Again, Stock can be clearly heard here too, and the combination of both male and female voices create a real warmth.

In the final 30 seconds, Stock sings a reprise of “Sleep in heavenly”, with McKenna and Stockley singing in counter.


It’s all good fun, and is very well done given its purpose. Whilst the White Christmas and Silent Night elements work really well together, the juxtaposition of those tracks with Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer is possibly less successful. That said, that track gives the track some jolliness, whereas the other two tracks are perhaps more contemplative, and perhaps I am being a bit too Scrooge-like to scrutinise a fun Christmas track designed as background music.

It’s a worthy addition to a Christmas playlist, as it’s very evocative and festive. The digital release also includes an instrumental version.

This was not the only Christmas SAW action back in 1989, however. In fact, they had two singles vying for Christmas 1989, one of which was (and is) Christmassy without actually being about Christmas…

Monday, 11 December 2017

7 Days of SAWmas! #2: Especially For You – Kylie Minogue and Jason Donovan

In the run up to Christmas, what better way to get into the festive spirit than to take a look at 7 Yuletide tracks Stock Aitken Waterman came up with between 1987 and 2015? Join Kean Canter Mattowski for 8 blogposts during December as we take a look back at some seasonal gems…

On the second day of SAWmas, the DJ played to me…

Especially For You – Kylie Minogue and Jason Donovan

If Mike Stock, Pete Waterman and others around the SAW operation at the time are to be believed, then the trio’s second attempt at a Christmas number one was unplanned and mounted at the last minute.

1988 had seen the huge success of Neighbours actress Kylie Minogue’s debut album and its string of hit singles, making her a superstar and turning Stock Aitken Waterman into household names. Her fellow Neighbours actor Jason Donovan had also teamed up with SAW towards the end of the year, and had enjoyed a hit with his debut single Nothing Can Divide Us.

As Kylie and Jason’s Neighbours characters were boyfriend and girlfriend, there was much speculation as to whether the pair were an item in real life. Whilst it later turned out they were in-fact dating, this speculation was denied at the time, but did not dampen the public’s romantic hopes of them being in love.

With both parties having launched pop careers, the speculation switched to whether or not Kylie and Jason would release a duet for Christmas. Waterman, in his autobiography I Wish I Was Me, remembers that he was constantly approached by teenagers asking when the Kylie and Jason song would be coming out.

Stock, in his memoir The Hit Factory: The Stock Aitken Waterman Story, adds that there were growing calls for a Kylie and Jason duet, and that SAW initially resisted these, but changed their minds when Woolworths apparently tried to place an advance order for 400,000 copies of the mythical duet!


PWL’s marketing manager Tilly Rutherford came up with the title, and as the main songwriter of the trio, Stock set to work on the composition. The only problem was that both Kylie and Jason had returned to Australia, so SAW recorded a demo version of the track (a short clip can be found below), with Mae McKenna performing the Kylie parts and Stock singing the Jason parts.


It fell to Aitken and Waterman to fly out to Sydney to record Kylie and Jason’s vocals, with the full track being completed upon their return.

Given how successful the track was, it seems surprising to discover that there were some misgivings about the track once the initial mixes came in. Waterman states that he hated the initial version, suggesting that it lacked passion, and added that Stock also disliked it.

In an interview with Paul Smith, Waterman states that the problem with the initial version was that SAW had “tried to make it Peaches and Herb but it didn’t work”. (Note: Peaches and Herb were a 70s soul duo, who recorded Reunited, a ballad about a couple getting back together, as is the case with Especially for You).

Waterman goes on to say that Stock carried out a further remix, but “it still wasn’t wonderful, so I thought I’d have a go. Somehow it all came together at the last moment…”

This is a great story delivered with typical Waterman bonhomie, but a glance at the record sleeve will tell you that it was in fact Pete Hammond who was responsible for the final mix.

In his memoir Get Down Here Quick And Mix Yourself A Hit!, Hammond states that several mixes had been done by various engineers, but PW rejected them all on the basis that the track “just didn’t feel right” and eventually got Hammond to do it.

Hammond comments that he called up the master to prepare his mix, and was of the opinion that there was a drum timing problem. He fixed this and changed the kick sound, but apparently the main change he made was to the intro. The original mix opened with a two-part drum hit, followed by Kylie’s first line. Hammond took some backing harmonies from the bridge (performed by Mae McKenna, Miriam Stockley and Mike Stock), and put them right at the start of the song, creating that evocative opening.


One of those early mixes has been released (see below); this particular mix fades in with a drawn out synth pad before the two-part drum hit, and straightaway it’s clear that Hammond’s clever cut and paste creates an impact the early mix perhaps lacks. In addition, the drum track lacks the punch of the final mix, whilst the synth pads of the early mix are swapped for some nice guitar work in the final version.


All that said, it is clear that the final version has other instrumentation the earlier version lacked, so it appears that Stock and Aitken did some overdub work prior to Hammond’s final mix, which may be the 4 hour mixing session Waterman refers to.

If I’m totally honest, I wasn’t crazy about the record at the time (I think I felt it a bit slushy when in fact many SAW ballads have a bit of an edge to them) but listening to that final version now, there is much to appreciate about both song and the record. The backing vocals bring real warmth, as do the strings and the Spanish guitar solo, creating a lighter-than-usual backing for the main vocals. Kylie probably sounds the most comfortable here; whilst Jason’s voice would improve considerably with each release, he was still new to recording at this time. That said, his voice is pleasant here and does not detract from proceedings. Lyrically, it’s great to have a SAW song about two former lovers reuniting (rather than splitting up, or worse, not getting together at all!), whilst the fluid melody of the verses sells the tentative nature of these two lovers getting back together. The chorus is joyous and memorable, and both vocalists sound great here.

The B-side carried another Kylie and Jason duet, All I Wanna Do Is Make You Mine, which is a fun, upbeat number with Grease leanings. I probably preferred this at the time, with its clattering drums, rumbling bass, chugging guitars and horn blasts really selling the catchy melody, most notably its wonderful bridge.

As it was, Especially For You was issued in time for Christmas, but, just like the 1987 battle for Christmas number one, SAW were thwarted by EMI Records, as Cliff Richard’s Mistletoe and Wine claimed the Yuletide number one. Whilst widely derided, it is clear that Cliff’s tribute to a traditional British Christmas appealed to a large section of the record buying public. It wasn’t all bad news for Kylie, Jason and SAW, as Especially For You was the first number one single of 1989, selling just short of a million copies.

And as 1989 would prove to be SAW’s most commercially successful year, they would go on to have two records vying for the Christmas number one that year. However, it turns out that there would be a third Christmas track from SAW that would go unreleased for over 20 years…

Monday, 8 May 2017

Ten SAW B-Sides I'd Have Made The A-Side! [Part 1]

As a Stock Aitken Waterman fan in the 1980s and early 1990s, one would become resigned to the fact that the B-side of many single releases would be an instrumental version of the A-side. As my love of all things SAW has deepened over the years, I’m now delighted to have so many instrumental versions that allow me to listen closely and pick out the different elements which make up the song.

As a teenager desperate for original SAW material, I was a bit frustrated by this reliance upon the instrumentals – but I guess this made the appearance of a brand new original SAW track on the B-side a VERY EXCITING EVENT!

Sure, some tracks would impress more than others, but every so often you’d get a SAW B-side which was just as good as the A-side, and in some cases, even better than the A-side.

So here is my – admittedly personal – list of the 10 SAW B-sides which I would have made the A-side!

The criteria for the list is:
  • Written (and/or co-written) by SAW
  • Standalone tracks not belonging to an original artist album
  • A full song with lyrics

The latter point means that tracks such as I Wanna Be Your Everything by Delage, Just Call Me Up by Jason Donovan, and Do You Dare? by Kylie Minogue are excluded. As are the instrumental pieces SAW created for the Pat & Mick B-sides (although a separate article on these will follow).

Likewise, instrumental and dub mixes of the A-side are also excluded.

Hopefully, you will find some of your favourites in this list, but I’m equally as certain that you may be aggrieved that I have missed some obvious choices out. Yes, I’ve left out certain Kylie and Jason tracks which I love, but I don’t want this to be a list full of their tracks.

So here goes, in reverse order!

10) I Wanna Shout About It – Delage
[B-side to Running Back For More]

This infectious slab of dance pop from early 1990s SAW girl band Delage appears to have had an interesting genesis. As lovely as the A-side Running Back For More is, this meaty, utterly contemporary banger is probably the more commercial cut of the two tracks, and it is a mystery why this was consigned to B-side status. That said, the recent re-issue of Running Back For More carries additional mixes of I Wanna Shout About It, including 7” and 12” mixes, which suggests that it was considered as an A-side. So we have two key versions: a full vocal single version, and the version that made the B-side of Running Back For More, which omits the verses. The full vocal version is just glorious, with a strong lead vocal and some great backing harmonies, but the official B-side version heads more in the direction of the limited vocal style of contemporaneous dance tracks. A big dirty synth riff and some frantic house piano kicks off proceedings, whilst the solid beat and shifting synth pads give this track a real edge which takes it away from the standard SAW sound of the time towards the tough dance sounds dominating the charts at the time.  A great marriage of pop sensibilities and house influences, this was a real missed opportunity for both the band and producers. One of the emerging themes from this top 10 list of B-sides is how S(A)W were able to demonstrate they were still more than capable of remaining current and up-to-date in the early 1990s, but maybe there was a lack of confidence somewhere in terms of being more adventurous in choices of single material.





9) Say The Word – I’ll Be There - Kylie Minogue
[B-Side to Word Is Out]

Whilst Word Is Out still appears to be a polarising song for S(A)W and Kylie fans, its B-side Say The Word – I’ll Be There garners a much warmer reception. Composed by Stock, Waterman and Minogue, this smooth, mature mid-tempo ballad is worlds away from the beat-led and brass-boasting affair on the A-side. Underpinned by rich, rolling piano and made all the sweeter by the glorious backing vocals, Say The Word sees Kylie in pining mode as she makes her case to the object of her affections. It’s a further development of the Kylie sound; however, where the listener can hear the S(A)W DNA deep within Word Is Out, one could be forgiven for thinking that Say The Word had been produced by a different production team. It’s lush, with a real organic feel to its arrangement and production, with little in the way of electronic sounding synths and percussion to betray the trademark sound of its producers. Certainly Mike Stock, in his recent interview with Nick Moon, cited this track as one of his favourite B-sides. Whilst it perhaps wouldn’t have been the best choice for the first single of Kylie’s fourth album campaign, it would have made for a good third or fourth single and perhaps indicated a new direction for S&W and Kylie had they continued to work together. I would add though that it is almost a crime that the track didn’t make the Let’s Get To It album.





8) Story of My Life - Jason Donovan
[B-side of Rhythm of the Rain]

B-sides often allowed SAW to try something a little different, and during their imperial pure pop phase of 1988-1990, such experimentation was very welcome. So it was that the B-side of Jason’s Rhythm of the Rain gave us Baggy Jason (baggy, of course, being the early 1990s term to describe what would later be called indie). Story of My Life is a standard Jason tale of bad luck in love (“And by the way, if you’re looking for sunshine, I ain’t the luckiest one / If you come with me, there’d be cloud in the desert / or a total eclipse of the sun”), but the arrangement and production presents a real change to the SAW sonic palette of the time. Kicking off with wailing guitars, Jason’s tale of woe is backed by a solid electric guitar riff, honky-tonk piano and a thumping beat, whilst the inclusion of brass and organ enlivens proceedings further. As Tom Parker points out in his excellent sleeve notes for the Between the Lines Deluxe reissue, this track finally gives Jason the Happy Mondays-style track he’d coveted for some time, and surely he must have been pleased with the outcome. That’s why I think it’s a crying shame this languished on a B-side; it’s a million times more adventurous than the pleasant cover version that made the A-side. This track would have really benefited Donovan’s profile – it’s poppy enough to keep the SAW and Jason fanbase, but also different enough to pull in a wider audience – and would have been a good direction for both parties to head for.





7) Another Lover – Bananarama
[B-side of Last Thing On My Mind]

Please Yourself, Bananarama’s 1993 album with Stock & Waterman, received mixed reactions upon its original release, and actually remains a polarising collection amongst S(A)W and Bananarama fans to this day. I can’t help but wonder if that reception would have been improved at all by the inclusion of this track, which was on the flipside of Last Thing On My Mind but omitted from the album. It’s a decision which beggars belief, as this is a superior slab of 70’s disco-styled pop. The use of real strings (no doubt recorded in the same sessions as those for Give It All Up For Love and Is She Good To You?) creates an authenticity of the sound, whilst the addition of brass, funky rhythm guitar and rattling drums just adds to the joyous feel – even if lyrically it’s a tale of Keren and Sara telling a straying lover to pack their bags and go. Happily, the track eventually made it to the album on subsequent reissues, thus righting the original wrong, but for my money, this should have been an A-side back in 1992/1993.




6) Better Than Ever - Sonia
[B-side to Listen To Your Heart]

This sparky uptempo track had a former life, planned as it was to be a fourth Stock Aitken Waterman-branded single in 1989, featuring sometime PWL singer Lisa Fabien as guest vocalist. That version was never released at that time (although was finally issued as part of the PWL iTunes releases many years later), but you can’t keep a good SAW tune down, so it was eventually recorded by Sonia – but insanely was consigned to B-side status. It only takes one listen to know this is a hit record not given the chance to be one. Driven by a solid beat and a mean bass, the track is a perfect concoction of synth fx, brass riffs and guitar licks, providing a thrilling backdrop to Sonia’s tale of her sickeningly perfect relationship. As much as I love the A-side – a moody, house-influenced affair and much underrated – I do think Better Than Ever was a missed opportunity for another hit for Sonia.


Next time: we count down from 5 to 1…