ZTT Royalty Frankie Goes To Hollywood + Propaganda Get 40th Anniversary BSOG/Blu-Ray Treatments

The ZTT legacy is borne aloft by the sales and critical sway of FGTH and Propaganda

Sometimes you are on the road when big news drops. I’ve been in the middle of a whirlwind for the last month or two [as if one couldn’t tell from the lack of posting here at PPM], and when news got out about the ZTT big guns of Frankie Goes To Hollywood and Propaganda getting the BSOG [and more] treatment, I was caught with my attention elsewhere. But here’s the short form. On October 31st, FGTH are having “Welcome To The Pleasuredome” released in a 7xCD + Blu-Ray edition.

And, yes: Steven Wilson is remixing the album for Blu-Ray. As we’ve discovered, if we want to hear a classic album in a different character to the original iconic production, Steven Wilson is the man to do it. You may prefer the original production and mix but I have never found much fault with his mix. And in some cases I definitely prefer his! The box is filled to bursting so let’s examine what’s in it.

Frankie Goes To Hollywood: Welcome To The Pleasure Dome Super Deluxe Box – UK – 7 x CD + Blu-Ray [2025]

CD1 | DEMOS + SESSIONS

  1. Get It On – BBC Radio 1 John Peel Session – 3rd December 1983

CD2 | RELAX + B-SIDES

  1. The Party Trick (Acting Dumb) – Cassette Edition
  2. The Special Act (Adapted From The Sex Mix) – Cassette Edition
  3. The U.S. Mix (Come Dancing) – Cassette Edition
  4. The Single (The Act) – Cassette Edition
  5. Ferry Across The Mersey (…And Here I’ll Stay) – Cassette Edition
  6. Relax – Sex Mix Edition 3 – AKA Luis Jardim Mix
  7. Relax – Video Version

CD3 | TWO TRIBES + B-SIDES

  1. Two Tribes – Cowboys & Indians Original 7 Inch
  2. Two Tribes – Video Destructo
  3. Two Tribes – Keep The Peace, Intro
  4. Two Tribes – At Madison Square Garden, The Carnage, The Annihilation
  5. War – Somewhere Between Hiding And Hidden
  6. Two Tribes – Keep The Peace, Outro
  7. Two Tribes – We Don’t Want To Die
  8. War – Hidden
  9. Two Tribes – Hibakusha
  10. Two Tribes – The Last Voice

CD4 | FROM THE VAULTS OF BLUE HELL

CD5 | THE POWER OF LOVE + B-SIDES

  1. The Power Of Love – 7 Inch Version
  2. The World Is My Oyster – 7 Inch Version
  3. The Power Of Love – Extended Singlette Version
  4. The World is My Oyster – Scrapped
  5. The World is My Oyster – Trapped
  6. The Power Of Love – Instrumental Singlette Version
  7. Welcome To The Pleasuredome – Pleasurefix
  8. The Only Star In Heaven – Starfix
  9. The World Is My Oyster – 12 Inch Version

CD6 | WELCOME TO THE PLEASUREDOME + B-SIDES

  1. Welcome To The Pleasuredome – Altered Reel aka Alternative To Reality – Original 7 Inch Version
  2. Happy Hi! – 12-inch Version
  3. Relax – International – Live On The Tube Europe A Go Go
  4. Welcome To The Pleasuredome – The Alternative aka Fruitness
  5. Happy Hi! – All In The Body
  6. Welcome To The Pleasuredome – The Soundtrack From Bernard Rose’s Video
  7. Get It On (Edit)
  8. Welcome To The Pleasuredome – How To Remake The World
  9. Disneyland
  10. Born To Run – Live
  11. Welcome To The Pleasuredome – Urban Mix

CD7 | WELCOME TO THE PLEASUREDOME – THE ALBUM

  1. Well…
  2. The World Is My Oyster
  3. Snatch Of Fury (Ferry Across the Mersey)
  4. Welcome To the Pleasuredome
  5. Relax
  6. War
  7. Two Tribes
  8. Ferry (Go)
  9. Tag
  10. Born To Run
  11. San Jose
  12. Wish The Lads Were Here
  13. The Ballad Of 32
  14. Krisco Kisses
  15. Black Night White Light
  16. The Only Star in Heaven
  17. The Power of Love
  18. Bang

BLU-RAY | STEVEN WILSON VERSION

  1. Welcome To The Pleasuredome Album

BLU-RAY | BONUS TRACKS

That seems as thorough as one could imagine! There are 34 mixes in addition to the classic single format mixes which are duly accounted for in the Record Cell! And of course, such attention to detail comes with a price. The UMG store has this in pre-order for $135.99. The buy in will probably only increase over time in the aftermarket, but 40 years later, I think I’ll stick with what I have already. It’s paid for and not going anywhere [yet]. But if you’ve been jonesing for the ultimate “Pleasuredome” package… on the silver discs, [the last such attempt was vinyl only!] then this has your name in the credit booklet. DJ hit that button!

Post-Punk Monk buy button

Then on November 14th, Propaganda’s “A Secret Wish” will get a 6xCD BSOG treatment of their own. Sadly, I looked into this as soon as I got the info on it and seemingly within hours, that sucker seems to be SOLD OUT everywhere on the web! If you can find it for pre-sale, good luck! I will have to console myself with the knowledge that throughout the 21st century, I’ve gotten most of the ZTT raids of the Propaganda tape cabinet that compiler Ian Peel has already curated! Here’s the contents for the sake of argument. Your guess is as good as mine as to what hasn’t been issued prior.

a secret wish super deluxe box

Propaganda: A Secret Wish Super Deluxe Box – UK – 6xCD [2025]

CD1 | SECRET

  1. Dream Within a Dream
  2. The Murder of Love
  3. Jewel
  4. Duel
  5. p:Machinery
  6. Sorry For Laughing
  7. Dr. Mabuse (First life)
  8. The Chase
  9. The Last Word (Strength to Dream)

CD2 | STAHLNETZ

  1. Disturbdance One
  2. Abuse – Here
  3. Machined
  4. p:Machinery – The βeta Wraparound…
  5. Laughed
  6. Sorry For Laughing – Alvin Clarke 12″ Mix
  7. Loving
  8. Jewelled
  9. Loved
  10. Abuse – There
  11. Im Stahlnetz Des Mabuse
  12. Thought
  13. Frozen faces – The Echo of…
  14. Machined – Nowhere

CD3 | SINGLETTE

  1. (The Nine Lives of) Dr. Mabuse
  2. Dr. Mabuse – A Paranoid Fantasy
  3. Dr. Mabuse Der Spieler – An International Incident
  4. Das Testaments Des Mabuse
  5. Femme Fatale – The Woman with The Orchid
  6. Dr. Mabuse – The Ninth Life of…
  7. Do Well
  8. The First Cut
  9. Duel
  10. Jewel – Cut Rough
  11. Wonder
  12. Bejewelled
  13. Complete Machinery
  14. Introduction
  15. p:Machinery – Connected
  16. Separation
  17. Frozen Faces – βeta

CD4 | SERIES

  1. Die Tausend Augen Des Mabuse
  2. Testament One
  3. Duel – Bitter-sweet
  4. Testament Two
  5. p:Machinery – Polish
  6. Testament Three
  7. Frozen Faces – αlpha
  8. Testament Four
  9. Sorry For Laughing – Unapologetic
  10. Testament Five
  11. The Murder of Love – Murderous Instrumental
  12. Testament Six
  13. p:Machinery – βeta
  14. Testament Seven
  15. Dr Mabuse – Special Instrumental Mix
  16. Testament Eight

CD5 | STUDIO

  1. Dream Within a Dream (Within A Dream)
  2. P:Machinery – αlpha
  3. Dr Mabuse (An International Conclusion) – Outtake 24.04.85
  4. (The First Life of…) Strength to Dream – Outtake 04.02.84
  5. Dream Within a Dream – Noise and Girls Come Out to Play
  6. Frozen Faces – A Secret Sense of Rhythm
  7. Frozen Faces – A Secret Sense of Sin
  8. p:Machinery – Goodnight 32
  9. The Chase – The Goodnight, Mix
  10. Femme Fatale – The Orchid
  11. Jewel – Rough Cut
  12. Lied
  13. The Lesson
  14. p:Machinery – Passive
  15. p:Machinery – The Voiceless βeta Wraparound Edit

CD6 | STAGE

  1. Disturbdance Six
  2. Dr Mabuse – Some Kind of Wonderful
  3. Disturbdance Five
  4. Duel – Top of the Pops Mix
  5. Disturbdance Thirty-three – Parts one and two
  6. Dr Mabuse – Anton Corbijn Video Mix
  7. Disturbdance Seven
  8. p:Machinery – Zbigniew Rybczyński Video Mix
  9. Disturbdance Fourteen

Then our pals at SuperDeluxe Edition are issuing one of their typically thorough Blu-Rays for each album. The Blu-Ray in the FGTH 8-disc box only has the first three of the seven streams here. As usual, SDE have salted the pot with many variants for our many moods.

Super Deluxe Edition | UK | Blu-Ray | SDE 050 | 2025

Frankie Goes To Hollywood: Welcome To The Pleasuredome – UK – Blu-Ray [2025]

  • 2025 Steven Wilson Dolby Atmos® Mix
  • 2025 Steven Wilson 5.1 Mix
  • 2025 Steven Wilson Stereo Mix
  • 2025 Steven Wilson Dolby Atmos Instrumental Mix
  • 2025 Steven Wilson 5.1 Instrumental Mix
  • 2025 Steven Wilson Stereo Instrumental Mix
  • 1984 Stereo Mix
  • 6 Bonus tracks in all Atmos, 5.1 and Stereo
  • 6 Bonus tracks as Instrumentals (Atmos, 5.1, Stereo)
  • Welcome to the Pleasure Dome (Supernova) – 30 min Steven Wilson remix

For rabid ZTT collectors, SDE also offers an exclusive foil stamped O-card artwork edition for £4.99 more…

Super Deluxe Edition | UK | Blu-Ray | SDE 050 | 2025

With the Propaganda I was shocked to find that Steven Wilson did not remix it. A new pair of hands and ears to me, David Kostan is responsible for the new mixes. He also held court on the Claudia Brücken “Night Mirror” Blu-Ray which was #40 in the SDE series, but I passed on that one. This one is already pre-ordered! We’ve been wanting a surround mix of “A Secret Wish” ever since we got 5.1 in 2011! The German 20th anniversary CD + DVD on Repertoire was hard to source, and the SACD was, well…an SACD. I never bothered with getting one of those players. With this Blu-Ray a mind expanding ten different streams are provided on the handy disc!

Super Deluxe Edition | UK | Blu-Ray | SDE 051 | 2025

Propaganda: A Secret Wish – UK – Blu-Ray [2025]

  • A Secret Wish 2025 Atmos Mix (48/24)
  • A Secret Wish 2025 5.1 Mix (96/24)
  • A Secret Wish 2025 Stereo Mix (96/24)
  • A Secret Wish 2025 Binaural Mix [headphones-only]
  • A Secret Wish 2025 Atmos Instrumental Mix (48/24)
  • A Secret Wish 2025 5.1 Instrumental Mix (96/24)
  • A Secret Wish 2025 Stereo Mix Instrumental Mix (96/24)
  • A Secret Wish 2025 Binaural Instrumental Mix [headphones-only]
  • A Secret Wish 1985 Stereo Mix – Vinyl Version (96/24)
  • A Secret Wish 1985 Stereo Mix – CD Version (48/24)

Very thorough in that the original 2.0 CD/LP mixes are also included. Each of these SDE Blu-Rays are still in pre-order until Sept 29th, so if you want them act now! They are £25 each, with a bundle option available. Now that The Fathead has started a trade war with the Entire Free World, shipping for these bad boys is likely to be more costly. Because …America is the winner? So I’m only in on the Propaganda disc. Because. After the added Stupidity Tax from The Fathead, I was about $50 out of pocket for the Blu-Ray. If these are calling to you, then DJ hit those buttons!

Post-Punk Monk buy button
Post-Punk Monk buy button
Post-Punk Monk buy button

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Posted in 5.1, BSOG, Core Collection, Want List, Wilson Never Sleeps, Your Prog Roots Are Showing | 30 Comments

The Monk Was In A Metal Mood: Or, How I Stopped Worrying And Learned To Love Judas Priest – Live @PNC Music Pavilion – Sept. 20th, 2025

judas priest
Last Saturday’s gig was not the usual sort of Monastic show we attend…

I never have been too much of a Metal fan in my time. But perhaps a weird outlier in my musical development was the fact that the first “favorite band” I ever had were the hard + heavy for their time Steppenwolf as a small child. ProtoMetal Biker Rock? If you asked me between the ages of 6-9 what my favorite song was I’d have probably said “Born To Be Wild” or “Magic Carpet Ride. I generally had the “golden hits” 45 of those two songs as soon as I could have records of my own to play. But I was a Top 40 listening kid, basically. I liked the organ in that band more than the guitars.

A big shift happened for me in 1978 as I discovered that there was more than Top 40 on the FM dial, and there began three years of my “FM Rock” period. At one point I actually owned the first three Van Halen album as I was still forming my persona. I soon realized that i did not have what I’ll call a “Metal disposition” in high school as the quirkier sounds of New Wave were actually speaking in my ears in ways that Heavy Metal did not. So I sold my VH LPs to a kid in school and got on ,with my life prior to learning about used record stores!

But at the end of my dalliance with “FM Rock,” the 1980 period had UK act Judas Priest finally breaking through with their “British Steel” album and I heard a few cuts from that or live material on the King Biscuit Flower Hour. By 1981 I was appalled that Ramones had obviously ripped off the chord sequence from “Priest’s “Breaking The Law” for their 1981 song “We Want The Airwaves,” but actually played it slower that Judas Priest! I was offended by Ramones and went off them for a full eight years! Meanwhile by the end of 1980 I had a new favorite band, Ultravox. The opening track [in America, at least] to their album “Vienna” was the intense “Sleepwalk,” which features a breakneck tempo coupled with a grinding synth riff. A song that their drummer typified as having “all the guts and gore of Judas Priest, but done on synthesizers.”

It was sometime last year when I began to get the itch to have Judas Priest in the Record Cell. I thought to myself that I should give “British Steel” and “Point Of Entry” a try and to go from there. At 60 years of age, I had nothing to prove. My criteria for listening to music is no longer, “how does this music help to define me” but “does this music have integrity?” And I was feeling the integrity, many years down the line, from the Judas Priest camp. It seemed clear from my perspective that the band were the band that shepherded the NWOBHM into being and cleared the underbrush that allowed Modern Metal to send off new shoots of growth.

I swear I hadn’t heard a note from the band since maybe the videos from 1986’s “Turbo” getting an airing on MTV. But I went to local stores to buy used CDs of those two albums, only to get a rude awakening. Used Judas Priest CDs were absolutely not ample underfoot! Even new CDs were scanty on the shelves. So I began looking further afield. To no avail! When at the biggest Record Show in the world in Den Bosch in the Netherlands last year, I saw plenty of Judas Priest CDs in evidence for €10.00 but I was determined not to spend hard fought vacation Euros on something that I felt I should be able to get in America.

Then later last summer, after attending a show in Raleigh, I was shopping with my friend Todd in Schoolkids Records and he told me that there was a simple reason why I couldn’t get any used Judas Priest CDs. He claimed that it was because no one ever gets rid of their Judas Priest CDs! And then we had an eye-opening discussion of Judas Priest on CD format with the store’s owner, who had plenty of colorful commentary on the label and industry politics behind the scarcity. Nevertheless, I managed to find a used “British Steel” CD late last year at a local store I don’t frequent heavily. Price was $9.00 – a premium for a used disc not Out Of Print, but I had been grousing so long about wanting this that I didn’t find the time to be a cheapskate. So I bought it.

And I loved it! It helped that the three songs I liked from hearing on the radio in 1980 [“Breaking The Law,” “Living After Midnight,” “Grinder”] were nowhere near the best the album had to offer! It opened with “Rapid Fire,” which I swear had to have been the initial spark of thrash metal with its relentless tempo and steadfast resistance to Pop structure. You held on to that one for dear life and sped along with it. So I had crossed the Judas Priest Threshold® and was more than happy with it. So I’ve been searching for those other used CDs ever since. But a few months ago I happened to be reading The Guardian and saw a glowing review of Judas Priest live in the UK that had me visiting the Judas Priest website to see if perchance they might be coming close to striking distance. Just for the hell of it.

And I saw that they were due to be in Charlotte on September 20th! I wanted to go. I only know one album but this seemed like a chance too right to pass up. The Metal Gods were whispering in my ear and I was paying attention. Then it got better. When I investigated, the tour was in conjunction with Alice Cooper. Of course, I’d seen Cooper before, in 2001 on his “Dragontown” tour in Cleveland, but his presence on the bill gave me a great idea. My metal loving, guitar playing neighbor had lost his wife last year and was a raving Cooper fan. He never missed a local show but this was as close as Cooper was coming this year. I should go to the show with him and we’d have a hard rocking adventure that day. So I bought two tickets to the show and saw my August and September schedule get really crazy with the sort of events that have impacted the regularity of this blog. I was content to get cheap seats at the edge of the seated area in the huge shed. We wouldn’t be under the roof but at least we had seating. Behind us was the lawn and that was a little too cheap even for me.

On Saturday I picked up my neighbor at noon and we headed towards Charlotte. We ate a Greek lunch and stopped by Repo Record as it was walking distance from the restaurant, but nothing awaited us there this time. I’m trying to cut back any way. Since I’ve been trying to unload a thousand CDs I don’t have room for all year now. We got to the venue’s free parking lot early and were among the very first cars there. We hoofed it across the street to the long queue’s that were beginning to form outside the PNC Music Pavilion. It was not brutally hot, but we picked the line that was adjacent to shade trees in any case. Around this time, thoughts of “Heavy Metal Parking Lotcouldn’t help popping in my mind, though the crowds here were far more civilized than the burnouts in that famed opus. True, there was a sea of black t-shirts, of course. That was always going to happen, but I was determined to wear something colorful to stand out. In this case, my bright yellow “Top Of The Pops” Rezillos t-shirt from 2002! This would be a help later on as I found out!

PNC music pavilion
Not quite a Heavy Metal Parking Lot®… but close enough

At 5:45 sharp the lines began moving. We scanned our tickets and got into the venue which was a first time visit. Since I was coming here to see Lene Lovich, DEVO, and the B-52’s in about a month, I wanted to see the layout of the place. I always look at the merch table and I was agog at more pricey goods than I’m used to. I guess there’s a Metal premium on merch that I was unaware of? I think of $45 t-shirts as being pricey, but the prices started at $50 here! There looked to be a Judas Priest tour book that I swear was $100!!! Which had to have been a mistake on my part [I hope]. The most interesting piece of merch was a life-sized plush boa constrictor in a top hat of the Alice Cooper merch. That seemed to be a steal at only $40. My neighbor and I both demurred as we found our seats. Way in the back, but still dead center. As the pre-show music on the PA was loud, I opted for my earplugs early.

judas priest + alice cooper merch
Pricey t-shirts in the merch stall made it easy to “just say no…”

There was an opening act for this tour, and as chance would have it, I even had a slight familiarity with them, Raleigh’s own Corrosion of Conformity. Their 1992 single “Vote With A Bullet” garnered a little safe harbor play on college radio back in the day. What had been an extreme pronouncement 33 years ago was now much less so. They started their set sharply at 6:45 and they even had plenty of bodies in the 18,000 seats even as the setting sun was going to blast the stage with its ebbing rays during their set.

The PA sound was good. I wear Earasers concert rated plugs to protect what’s left of my hearing. They are attenuating plugs with the same filters that my hearing aid uses rated at 31 dB. I was hearting the music turned down to a tolerable level. Better still, the mix engineer was not engaging in any bass fracking here today! The bass drum hits didn’t shift my organs with each hit. It was surely loud but not mixed to feel loud! A grateful Monk breathed a sigh of relief.

Corrosion Of Conformity onstage
Corrosion Of Conformity netted a decent audience for the opening act

Fortunately, the opener had an audience! The guys behind us were enthusiastically shouting “C.O.C.!!” and the huge venue was over half full. So Corrosion Of Conformity had their moment of triumph. They alone of the three bands on the bill actually referenced the others on the bill and indicated their disbelief on being part of this tour with greats like Cooper and Priest as they were readying their eleventh album for release for next year. Yes, I heard “Vote With A Bullet” but other songs in their set swung a little more and almost dabbled with Funk. They wrapped up their set in a tight 30 minute slot as the swarm of roadies broke down and prepared for the next act.

Which I thought was going to be Judas Priest in all honesty, but after a 25 minute set transition, we were delivered Alice Cooper in all his visual glory. But this being the 21st century, the video staging was a huge part of the presentation, though Cooper would still have plenty of room for his traditional theatrics. There were no jumbotrons when I saw him in 2001! Cooper opened with a cut, new to me, from “Special Forces;” “Who Do You Think We Are.” He had a trio of lead guitarists onstage with him and my neighbor had good things to say about Nita Strauss, whom he had seen in earlier shows prior. More modern Alice followed with “Spark In The Dark” but the old dudes like myself got heir first tossed bone of the evening with the classic “No More, Mister Nice Guy.” Always a fave Cooper cut in the Record Cell, though my favorite “Billion Dollar Babies” single was “Hello Hooray.” Which I only recently found out was a Judy Collins [!] cover version!

Alice Cooper @ PNC  Music Pavilion 9-20-25
Alice Cooper is a professional…he’s been doing this since before you were a gleam in your parent’s eye

The video feed on the jumbotron featured lots of live inserts from the action onstage, which was helpful since we were pretty far back. The actual band seemed about as big as dolls on the stage, as the pics from my seat reveal. I’m usually cold to the idea of watching a concert off of a huge video screen, but I’m usually in pricier seating as well. So the evening would be a weird blend of watching the stage, watching the jumbotron behind the stage, and watching the large monitors flanking the stage or even the one closest to our seats; hanging off of the roof structure. Going to a show this large out of doors was really stepping outside of my comfort zones even more so than the genre stretching to include Metal in my musical diet. It’s not like I hadn’t seen Janes Addiction or Killing Joke before. Still, at least it wasn’t a stadium. The crowd here were waaaay better than my sole 1983 stadium experience…seeing a Rock Superbowl® with The Police.

I certainly appreciated stone cold classic “I’m Eighteen” though Cooper was now singing it at the age of…77! Next came a pair I also knew. “Muscle Of Love” and “Feed My Frankenstein;” a Zodiac Mindwarp cover from his 80s Hair Metal resurgence. The next wave of the set drifted to that period for a run of Cooper singles that I might have caught snippets of on MTV before I had to stop watching anything but 120 minutes in the late 80s. Stuff like the Desmond Child song “Poison.” I get it. It was a Pop hit and sold lots of discs but this was the era of Alice Cooper that I’d have preferred to have missed entirely.

When the set moved to the third and final phase we were in better hands. Ms. Strauss got a guitar solo at center stage as the intro to “Brutal Planet.” My neighbor took a bathroom break near this point in the set and on his way back to the seat, a little complication arose. I was the one who had tickets on my personal device. Had I not been wearing a bright yellow shirt he might not have found our seat in the nighttime darkness! And then came the psychodramatic material that Cooper made his name on. “The Ballad Of Dwight Fry” and it’s straitjacket tale followed by the tasteless necrophilia anthem “Cold Ethyl.”  The next thing we knew Cooper transitioned to the empathetic hit “Only Women Bleed.” Those two were a thematic whiplash that was a bit hard to take and then the guillotine came out and it was time for “off with his head.” Leading to the second coming of Alice Cooper [now in white tux and top hat] for the climactic “Schools Out.”

alice cooper school’s out
“School’s Out” is built to close the show

It was the undisputed Alice Cooper radio classic. If you were in elementary school back in 1972 like I was, you will never forget [or get tired of] this song. The one new wrinkle was Cooper interpolating the chorus of “Another Brick In The Wall” into the song’s climax! I sure didn’t see that one coming! Truth be told, I thought it cheapened the appeal. As the second 77 year old guy I’ve seen singing lead in a Rock concert in two weeks, Cooper was certainly holding his weight onstage. His vocals were certainly up to snuff. Pun intended. And his trio of guitarists kept the energy circulating throughout his tight 75 minute set. A bit Hard Rock. A bit Metal. And a bit Hair Metal. Well, two out of three ain’t bad!

Alice cooper curtain call
Alice Cooper curtain call

Cooper had played from 7:40 to 8:55 and I’m very used to outdoor shed shows having a 10:00 p.m. curfew. I wondered how the evening was going to play out with seemingly insufficient time for a Judas Priest set. After the video overkill of Cooper, the roadies had their work cut out for them to break down the set. Forty minutes later, we got the video screens showing ads for the vendors go black and the “Invincible Shield” cover art appeared on the main screen onstage. Then the first minute of Black Sabbath’s “War Pigs,” blasted out of the speakers. My Sabbath fan neighbor was prepped for a cover version but this was the traditional opening salvo for Judas Priest as the song faded quickly and “All Guns Blazing” opened the set.

judas preist freewheel burning
“Freewheel Burning” completely rocked my world!

As a near complete Judas Priest neophyte, this was an interesting experiment. I half attended this just to see where next in their catalog I might want to explore. My only hope  for the evening was that I might get the awesome breakneck pacing of “Rapid Fire” in a live setting. The third song in the set was the MTV über-classic “You’ve Got Another Thing Comin'” which I probably saw 800 times [no fooling] on MTV in the ’82-’83 era where our neighborhood got equipped with cable and we literally had MTV on [with a ßeta tape cued in the VCR] for a year or two. But the next song was one I only recognized by title. “Freewheel Burning” was of a piece with the slipstream tempo of “Rapid Fire” and was number two with a bullet on my new personal Judas Priest list of faves. What a smoking hot song this one was!

It was almost overkill when they followed this up with “Breaking The Law.” A song whose distinctive staccato chorus I have always tried to work into any conversation I’ve had in the last fifteen or so years. Then came a run of material that I was unfamiliar with, but it was all really good! The band just had the sort of lean, relentless sound that guarantees no boredom in your future. I remember maybe seeing the title “Electric Eye” maybe in a review at the time. It too, was a speed machine barreling headfirst at top velocity.

The pace eased up for the band’s tribute to those rockers now in Valhalla. “Giants In The Sky” was a memorial song from their latest, “Invincible Shield” with images of the rock stars of both the distant and recent past. Ronnie James Dio, Janis Joplin, Lemmy, Freddie Mercury… even Christine McVie was noted in the collage of departed artists. But of course with Judas Priest being a Brummie Metal band, Ozzy Osbourne was onscreen for the song’s final minute.

I was thoroughly enjoying this show by this point. Then, they played “Painkiller.”

“Painkiller” was a whole new level to my understanding of Judas Priest

Great Googly Moogley! Now THAT’S what I call Metal. It was a erupting speedball of shrieking sound powered by double kick drums, 120 mph twin guitar riffs and Rob Halford’s fearless range. And it took it its damn sweet time to reach its climax six to seven minutes into the track. Leaving the audience in a state of shellshock. I actually saw people around me head banging…and totally accepted it. Actually, I didn’t want it to end. But that was the end of the set. But the band were soon back onstage for an encore.

judas priest painkiller
Judas Priest give their all for “Painkiller”

I had wondered if Halford still took a motorbike onstage anymore but the early classic “Hellbent For Leather” put an end to that internal speculation as he rode the hog into the lights. The audience had no problem taking the chorus from Halford when he handed it off. The tight, tight riffing revealed not an once of fat on the bones of the music. This is what I think I was responding to in the music of Judas Priest at this late stage of the game. The intensity was on par with Punk Rock, and the band claimed to have been reactive to the Punk coming up several years into their journey by seeing what they could take from it. Like smart guys.

And then the US breakthrough single from “British Steel” closed it down with “Living After Midnight.” It was a fun track, not anywhere near the breakneck intensity of what they could deliver if they wanted to, but there’s nothing wrong with a little fun. And this show had been a lot of fun for me. I had entered into it just to see if my instincts were right to make room for Judas Priest in my Record Cell, and I didn’t know how right they were! As with Cooper, Judas Priest had delivered a tight 75 minute co-headlining set to close the venue down at 10:50, shockingly! A first for This Monk. I’ve never seen an outdoor venue [that wasn’t a festival] move past the 10:00 p.m. line in the sand.

Rating: 5 out of 5.

This had been an interesting experiment. Judas Priest songs from albums I was completely clueless about were even better than what I’d heard and was intrigued by. This tour was not so much the “Invincible Shield” tour as the “Shield Of Pain” tour celebrating the 35th anniversary of “Painkiller” with many songs in the set coming from that opus. And was I ever thankful for that! The frenetic title track was the tightest Speed Metal I’d ever heard. It’s not typically my thing, but this sure was! That the band can deliver at this level 45 years into their history paints an impressive picture. My trip into the world of Judas Priest was a first for me but I am hoping that it will not be my last. In the meantime, a copy of “Painkiller’ is on my hotlist to acquire. We now return you to your regularly scheduled Post-Punk Monk Programming.

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Sparks Really Show How To Rock It As A “70s-80s Band” At Atlanta’s Tabernacle: Sept. 5, 2025 [part 2]

Sparks Russel and Ron Mael in Atlanta 9-5-25
Don’t get use to these great close-up Monk pix for a concert review… I’m almost never front row.

[…continued from last post]

At the set’s midpoint came one of my all time Sparks Favorites: the ironic flipside to Pulp’s “Common People,” quite probably. That hilarious mockery of privileged class slumming, “Suburban Homeboy.” More amazingly, as Russell exited the stage they performed the “Ron Speaks” B-side version from the single of the same name. Wherein Ron Mael came to the front of the stage and drily recited the song’s lyrics. With brother Russell only popping back onstage at the song’s midpoint to add his enthusiastically chipper backing vocals to the wondrous song. I’ve now seen it performed in two different ways at both of my Sparks concerts. The lord can take me now.

Sparks 80s canon got a bit of short shrift in the set, but “All You Ever Think About Is Sex” from “Sparks In Outer Space” was a good choice to include. The melodrama of the “MAD!” albums’s single “Drowned In A Sea Of Tears” made for a smart change of pace in the set. I have to admit that at first “Jansport Backpack” from the new album felt like a slight slog on first listen but that was before I became obsessed with it. Give it half a chance, and the song will worm its way into your skull to make its presence felt for hours is not days at a time.

I try not to have any expectations when I see a concert, because I need to keep myself open to the possibilities for wonder and abandon. Still, there are certain songs by certain bands that I would always roll over like a puppy for. “I Travel” by Simple Minds would be one. “Music That You Can Dance To” by Sparks would be another. It was the lead single to the mid 80s album of the same name; not necessarily regarded as the band’s finest hour, though I’d be first in line to defend its merits as one of my favorite songs by the group. The metalyrical approach was peerless and in concert with the song’s Hi-NRG vibe, made for dance music bliss that engaged the hips as well as the cranium.

Sparks Russel Mael in Atlanta 9-5-25
Russell Mael; stage right.

So when I heard those sequencer loops begin, it was a galvanizing moment for this fan! As the vibe was pretty much sequencer based and this band had no sax players in it to play the sax lines on the record, this allowed guitarist Eli Pearl the freedom to sashay throughout the entire song while adding his BVs to the mix. Giving the Brothers Mael some visual competition that they usually don’t have.

It can be argued that the entire last 31 year arc of Sparks career renaissance can be put down to the progress and success they found in Germany with the “Gratuitous Sax And Senseless Violins” album. That album revisited the Mororder era via the then emergent sounds of Techno. The repetition began to seep into their consciousness further with the “Balls” album; finally reaching a fever pitch on the dramatic re-imagining of the band on “L’il Beethoven®.” One can certainly hear the stirrings of that album’s explorations on the German hit single “When Do I Get To Sing My Way?” With the full band available the players injected more guitars and real drums into the piece, grounding it in ways that the album rendition couldn’t achieve.

Sparks Russell Mael makes his point in Atlanta 9-5-25
Russell makes his point in “No. 1 Song In Heaven”

This carried through with the next number; the crucial “Number One In Heaven.” Their guitars added waves of even further tight rhythm to the arrangement and the fills of live drummer Max Whipple managed to keep in time with the heights of tempo that the song eventually climbed to the Techno middle eight. Then Russell took his leave of the stage and Ron rose from his sequenced keyboard and counted down carefully with his fingers until it was the correct bar for him to begin the infamous Ron Dance! Grinning wildly as he capitulated to self-animation for the rapt crowd. And then he once more sat down at his keys. Allowing Russell to return to the mic for the climax of the song, whose lyrics never fail to make me weep as the climactic la-la-las wash over me.

After that point, where could they go but up, so then the captivating “This Town Ain’t Big Enough For The Both Of Us” erupted from the stage. An atomic bomb of a song sporting a wickedly complex arrangement closer to Gilbert + Sullivan than Rock. Whether live or Memorex, it embeds itself into my skull with a vengeance. The twin guitars of Evan Weiss and Eli Pearl were adding lots of meat to the bones of the melody here. That Russell can still ride this song like a jockey [and his stage wear was no less colorful than riding silks…] was a thing of wonder.

A super deep cut from album number two [ca. 1972!] followed with “Whippings And Apologies.” It was a song that was one of the three new to my ears this evening as I don’t think I’ve ever heard the first note from “A Woofer In Tweeter’s Clothing.” I counted myself lucky to have heard the title elsewhere! And the set reached it’s close with the plaintive “Lord Have Mercy” from “MAD!” The band exited the stage for about a minute as the thunder of shoes on the Tabernacle floor began to ring out in the night. The band quickly returned to perform “The Girl Is Crying In Her Latte” and “All That” from their previous two albums. It’s impressive that an encore for once isn’t their oldest, most beloved material. And with that a vivacious and eclectic Sparks concert; only my second, ended as the entire band took their curtain call bows.

Sparks curtain call in Atlanta 9-5-25
Sparks final curtain call [L-R]: Evan Weiss [g], Steve Nistor [d], Max Whipple [b], Russel Mael [v], Ron Mael [k], Eli Pearl [g]

Rating: 5 out of 5.

This set list rightly featured nearly half of the new album with selections from a further eleven discs. I wouldn’t have minded hearing “In Daylight,” “I-405 Rules,” or “A Long Red Light” on offer from “MAD!” but c’est la vie. The Sparks itch has been well and duly scratched…for now!That I got to see the show with friends like Pam and Sandra was icing on the cake. It had been decades since I’d seen a show with Sandra and Pam just went clubbing back in the day. I don’t think I ever saw a concert with her! Perhaps that will change going forward?

This show was a long time coming. My wife had gotten us tickets for Atlanta in 2022 but the Omicron wave of Covid dissuaded us from attending. Having seen the “Revenge Of Two Hands, One Mouth” tour in 2013, the urge was certainly there to see Sparks in full fury with their band for the very different vibe. But I was not certain that it would happen. Honestly, when the dates were announced earlier this year, I made the decision to demur. Little did I know at the time that I’d be traveling almost constantly from July through September for everything from family vacations and concerts to business travel. It took the high value target of a Pulp show in Atlanta [at the same venue!] the day prior to move my hand. Pulp were not only a band I had never seen, but never imagined I’d ever see. When presented with this fact, all steely resolve on seeing Sparks a decadent second time on the same trip time evaporated instantly.

This is all the more relevant when taking the ages of Sparks into account. When I call them a 70s-80s band it’s not only a reference to significant decades where they were musically active, but also their ages. Russell will be 77 in a few weeks. Ron is already 80. Though they have undoubtedly taken care of their health in ways probably alien to much of the corpus of Rock, titans won’t always be walking the earth. I’m no spring chicken either.

Another salient fact in their favor is the notion of how many other bands have a wealth of 28 albums to draw from for their set list? That they played that amazing residency of 21 shows over 21 nights in the UK showcasing their complete canon of every album played in full – with a second set drawn from of all other 20 albums [which also had to change every night] shows the dedication to their art that The Brothers bring to their game. Can we agree that they have no peers? Certainly not after a further seven albums as well as two musicals they wrote sandwiched in there – all during their “golden years” as well? The musical treasure of a Sparks concert is something we must take care to partake of until we can do so no longer.

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Sparks Really Show How To Rock It As A “70s-80s Band” At Atlanta’s Tabernacle: Sept. 5, 2025 [part 1]

Sparks band in Atlanta 9-5-25
Sparks rocked Atlanta on the opening night of their “Mad!” North American Tour on September 5th

The previous night in Atlanta [September 4th] had me sharing a seat with my friend Sandra for Pulp in the front and center upper balcony while my friend Pam had secured general admission on the floor behind the front seating in the venue. At Pulp, our seats had a good unimpeded view of the concert stage in the not terribly large venue, which had been a church as the name implied.

This evening, the scenario was reversed. Sandra had gotten a front floor seat while once more I was in the front and center balcony, albeit the lower balcony this time, along with my friend Pam. That was what the expectation was. But during our tasty dinner together before the show at Alma Cocina, a distracted Pam kept looking at her phone. She had bought her Pulp ticket at an online reseller and she was eyeing better seating for Sparks this evening.

At a certain point with less than an hour before the show, she pulled the trigger on a pair of tickets. Of which she was sharing one with me. The tickets were front row center! This is so not how The Monk with his vows of poverty usually rolls! I typically buy at my comfort level. I’d secured fourth row seats at the Lost 80s show a few weeks earlier, but that was to see Peter Godwin up close in a rare event for certain.

I’d seen Sparks once before in 2013, and we were able to move in front of the stage from our seats for that one so with this being a double dip for Sparks, the urgency for a seat this amazing had not been there. The only time I’d had seats this good before that I could recall was the 1994 Duran Duran Orlando Arena show and the 1995 Bryan Ferry show at the Bob Carr Auditorium with second row, I believe, for each of those shows.

Sparks merch manager and wares
The merchandising manager was friendly and talkative with the fans

We entered the venue and made our way to the merch tables. We appreciated how the band’s merchandising manager had had several tours of merchandising experience with Sparks and eagerly chatted with Sandra about the band. There were only two t-shirt designs. A girl’s cut design with the Brothers Mael in black on white looked great but was not for me. The unisex design eschewed the distinctive images of the band over the [intentionally] crude graphics from the new album. I was not inspired… Until I saw something much more exciting!

I did not know that Sparks were releasing the “Madder!” EP in October, but weeks earlier, it was here in the merchandise on both 12” and CD formats! It sported four tracks that presumably didn’t fit the flow of the “Mad!” album from the sessions for the first Sparks EP in their storied career. So that was coming home with me! The only thing better than t-shirts is actual music. Particularly a scoop like that one. We went to our seats and I marveled at how Pam and I would be sitting as little as six feet from Russell Mael.

As we awaited the show to begin, Pam and I talked among ourselves, enjoying the catching up after decades apart. At a certain point the gentleman sitting to my right asked me a question. “Had you ever made a videotape for a guy named Kevin?”

This was a loaded question. In the 80s and 90s there were no shortages of videotapes of music videos I made for friends as well as people I barely knew. I have actually formed friendships by scanning the video want ads in Goldmine magazine and offering the goods being sought out… at no charge, of course.

But this gent recognized my voice, and told me about a Human League videotape I had made for him in the 90s. He worked at Rock + Roll Heaven, the Orlando store I spent a lot of Saturday afternoons in, and DJ’d on the side and had complained one day that he didn’t have any Human League videos to show in clubs. And I had the Japanese League Greatest Hits laserdisc and was happy to provide a tape for him since the VHS was released only in the UK and Japan. You could have knocked me over with a feather, but there was an unexpected person I was also catching up with this evening.

The pre-show music finally faded and the crowd lit up in anticipation. The band moved onstage and Ron and Russell each entered in very distinct garb. Ron was dressed in black Chinese Tai Chi frog jacket and pants while Russell was resplendent in a riotous red suit with a Japanese floral/stork pattern. He looked like a human bento box! On their “Live In London” DVD the concert opened with a unique song, relevant to the situation with “It’s A Sparks Show Tonight” but tonight they were able to repurpose an existing song that really set the pace; “So May We Start” from the “Annette” soundtrack!

Then we began our dive into the new “MAD!” album with the lead off single “Do Things My Own Way” making a proper impression. As with the last time I had seen Sparks, Russell put out a very physical performance. On the “Revenge Of Two Hands, One Mouth” tour, I marveled at how he seemed to be keeping time to the drum-free music with his body movements. Internalizing the rhythms in a way that was arresting for a gent who had just turned 65.

Russell will turn 77 in a few weeks and though he was not moving with that same height of intensity from a dozen years past, his demeanor was the furthest thing from what we expect from a late septuagenarian! Next in the set was one of the few wildcards for me this evening. I have 18 of the band’s 28 albums, so there are gaps in my Sparks knowledge. Particularly in their earliest period where I only have “Kimono My House.” I may be cheap, but I’m not stupid! So I had not heard “Reinforcements” before.

Fortunately, I’m well acquainted with the “Number One In Heaven” album so I appreciated the deep cut of “Academy Award Performance,” which, amazingly, was also on the Atlanta 2013 setlist when I saw them at Variety Playhouse. Then another new one to me came in the set with “Goofing Off” from “Introducing.” That album is a scarce one on the ground. I’ve never seen a copy in any format. A classic from “Number One In Heaven” ensued with the zippy, witty “Beat The Clock” giving Russell plenty of chances to show off his still adroit falsetto.

Sparks Russel Mael strikes a dramatic pose in Atlanta 9-5-25
The first time I saw Russell Mael, in 2013, he was a young stripling of 65

By that time Russell’s jacket was off, but he kept his vest on for the remainder of the show. The whole band next got a chance to shine vocally when they filled in for the choir of children on the tender “Please Don’t F*** Up My World” from “The Girl Is Crying In Her Latte.” I still need that one in the Record Cell as I’ve only seen LPs of it out in the wilds. Then came a fave rave cut from the “MAD!” album with “Running Up A Tab At The Hotel For The Fab.” It was a very different experience having a full band with the group this show. That their live band were also the band on their last three albums meant that as a unit, this lineup of Sparks were humming on all eight cylinders.

Next: …Answered Prayers

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Pulp @ The Tabernacle, Atlanta Bring Classics Both Old And New To Eager Ears [part 2]

Pulp think we’ve got to have love

[…continued from last post]

The incisive “Mis-Shapes” came next in the set and I loved how the song began tentatively, only to flow into a headlong rush of energy as the increasingly agitated Mr. Cocker outlined the tenets of this ultimate anthem of outsiders taking their due. Then Jarvis told us that the next song was one that he had written many years ago but could not endorse its central thesis at the time. The song in question? “You’ve Got To Have Love.” A vibrant and heartfelt song he first needed to outgrow his cynicism to sing. But like Dylan said, he was so much older then, and he’s much younger [and grayer] now.

And with that it was time for the heavy twin emotional payloads of the band’s end of set climax. Of course that meant that “Babies” was going to grace our ears. This was probably the first song that first alerted the world to the fact that Cocker was a master storyteller as he detailed the teenage tale of an unformed lothario and two sisters who were there to intersect with the narrator on his journey to cad status. The verses detailed his borderline perv status while the soaring chorus presented the character’s far more heroic, yet immature, internal viewpoint. All of which was accompanied by music unashamed to mirror an orgasmic glow as the scenario played out.

The set had flown by. This was a case where I had known every song performed like the back of my hand and that’s not always the case with shows I attend. But I knew that the set would be moving toward the elephant in the room that was now in front of us. The finest #2 song ever to grace the UK Pop chart. Sorry, Ultravox, but this prize was Pulp’s alone for the always powerful class warfare anthem of “Common People.” It’s my favorite song of the 20th century.

Pulp deliver The Bomb that is “Common People”

The passion of its righteous anger never fails to connect powerfully with me. Some time about 21 years ago a switch flipped in my brain and I can no longer listen to the song without sobbing as the powerful lyrics connect to the core of my being. It happens every time. And I always surrender to it. Only the single edit or the Motiv8 remixes fail to connect with me in this way, so this evening I was once more prepared for hot tears staining my face. And of course it happened.

I always marvel at the synergy between the exuberant music and the lyrics, which charted a course from bemused indignation all the way to righteous fury as the tempo shifts in the music ascended the heights of intensity as the song climaxed. Never more so than when Pulp were performing it live; a gift I never expected. At the end of the set, Jarvis took the time to introduce full full band while they vamped a groove coda at the end of “Common People” for a couple of minutes; prolonging the experience for this grateful fan. Then it was off the stage for a brief minute or two before the encore began.

The first song back was a surprising “This Is Hardcore” deep cut, “The Fear.” I was happy to hear more from that album but I noticed that following album “I Love Life” still hadn’t figured in the set list yet. I wondered by this point if it ever would. Another single from “His ‘N Hers” followed with the swoops and swirls of “Lipgloss.”

“Help The Aged” is now self-help to the band members

The only single we’d hear from “This Is Hardcore” figured next with the no longer ironic plea of “Help The Aged.” Then Mr. Cocker announced that they would play a song recorded for a film soundtrack next, leading me to perhaps expect the raucous “We Are The Boys” from the “Velvet Goldmine” soundtrack, but I’d forgotten all about “Like A Friend” from the “Great Expectations” OST that they actually played. Having encountered that song only as a bonus track on the US copy of “Different Class.” The jaunty number had the vitality of a single had it been lucky enough to have had the sort of push that John Hughes films used to get a decade earlier.

Finally, the entire band came upstage as the core members had during “Something’s Changed” earlier in the set. Now it was time for the new album [and show closer] “A Sunset” from the “More.” album. Jarvis related how the song had been inspired by a conceptual artist who had issued tickets to an actual sunrise and how it gave the attendees a new perspective on the common experience. Making for the deftest of landings following what had been a rousing concert experience of the vivid and emotional music of Pulp.

pulp atlanta sunset
“A Sunset” gave the entire band an upstage acoustic session to close out the show

Rating: 5 out of 5.

As we exited the venue, the music playing was an instrumental version of my favorite song from the 21st century; Cocker’s own “…Running The World,” which I had unrealistic expectations of hearing this evening that had almost been fulfilled in this manner! As we made the way to the streets outside of The Tabernacle, my friends were eager to try to meet Jarvis after the show and I was only too happy to tell them that the last time at The Tabernacle, we had successfully gotten to meet Jim Kerr of Simple Minds by waiting politely at pack-in.

So I led our group to the sidewalk and attempted to find the pack-in area as it had been seven years earlier since I had been here. Eventually, we made our way to the proper zone where barricades separated the trucks which were already being re-loaded. We talked among ourselves before an animated Nick Banks emerged from the venue about 20 minutes later. Happy to sign anything and to meet with fans. I took the opportunity to tell Mr. Banks how happy I was to have Britain’s best band active once more.

Then, about ten minutes later, Jarvis in an orange baseball cap emerged from the exits and ambled over to meet with the 30 or so fans awaiting the artist. He looked pretty spent from the great show we’d just seen and as he’d mentioned the jet lag from the flight over onstage, I demurred from any attempt to sap the gentleman’s energy by communicating with him. Only taking a photo of one of my friends who had asked him for a photo together.

And with that we were off on a Pulptastic high from a concert I felt truly grateful for having the chance to experience. Those incredible songs were already coursing through my skull in insistent replay and I wondered if I would be able to fell asleep after such a potent event. But I got back to my nearby hotel and showered to wash off the Atlanta humidity before bed and eventually made it asleep. I would need to fortify myself, because the next evening would bring an encounter at the same venue with America’s best band, the inimitable Sparks!

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Pulp @ The Tabernacle, Atlanta Bring Classics Both Old And New To Eager Ears [part 1]

Pulp @ Tabernacle, Atlanta Sept 4th 2025
Pulp with an 8 piece band could cover a lot of territory…magnificently

Having a double-header concert out of town is always something quite electric. It’s only happened once before for me but the 2002 trip to Washington D.C. to see The Rezillos one night and Simple Minds the next was legendary! That time my good friend chasinvictoria was my accompaniment. This time, in seeing Pulp one night in Atlanta and Sparks the next [each in the same venue; The Tabernacle] was enhanced by my good friend Sandra and another friend that I’d lost contact with 30 years ago.

When my loved one bowed out of attending the shows due to her busy schedule, that left me with tickets to flip for Pulp and Sparks. I knew Sandra would be attending Sparks, and she didn’t need much convincing to take the extra Pulp ticket off of my hands. The extra Sparks ticket was trickier. I couldn’t re-sell the ticket on TicketMonster due to the band preventing resale. I get it. They want to avoid profiteering and exploiting the fans.

So Sandra mentioned on her FaceBoot that there was an extra Sparks ticket. Savvy PPM readers may be aware that we avoid social media. This circumvented that issue and best of all, the person desiring this Sparks ticket was my old friend Pam, who I had not seen in 30 years! She’d moved away from Orlando in 1995 [pre-email] and I did the same in 2001. In the noughts I asked the mutual friend who had introduced us if he had any contact info but he didn’t. This was going to be a fun time catching up with Pam!

I was thrilled that I was finally seeing Pulp not just regrouped and playing the hits, but with a vibrant new album under their collective belts. It’s just how it’s meant to be for this band. Though I still would have seen a reformation tour without a new album, this movement forward helped to mitigate the seductive drug of nostalgia. As vocalist Jarvis Cocker shared with the audience, the new phase is more about getting in touch with feelings and leaving thoughts and ideas by the wayside. At least for him!

guitarist Mark Webber also tripled on keys when the sound required it

The eight piece band were still all about giving life to the cinematic and often anthemic soundscapes that sought to unite the band’s New Wave roots with an often Ennio Morricone vibe. That had been the Pulp brief since their fortunes had turned with their 1992 singles for Gift Records through to their latest album; “More.” The core band of Mark Webber [guitars, keys], Candida Doyle [keys], Nick Banks [drums] along with new bassist Andrew McKinney, were abetted with a second drummer plus a percussionist, as well as a pair of utility players who carried either secondary synths or guitar and each with violins to do the magnificent songs justice. Take that, King Crimson!

The band started the set with two singles from their “Different Class” album with “Sorted For E’s + Wizz” followed by the unique anticipatory pre-nostalgia of “Disco 2000.” Both songs were mired deeply in the outsider-looking-in persona that informed Jarvis Cocker’s engaging songs. Next we had a pivot to the strong modern material that the new album, “More.” offered with the excellent pre-release single, “Spike Island.” I was pleased to hear that the crucial Syndrum® hooks survived translation to the live arena.

Jarvis often took flight from the risers at the front of the stage

A rush of anthemic Pulp energy followed with the fortissimo stylings of “F.E.E.L.I.N.G.C.A.L.L.E.D.L.O.V.E” as the concert had its first peak experience of the kind that their strongest material readily delivered where the synergy between the lyric and the vitality of the band’s music was in a class all its own. The eight member band onstage with Mr. Cocker certainly earned their stripes on material like this.

The vibe transitioned to something less brash with the sardonic deep cut “My Sex” from the new album. When I first heard that Cocker was reusing the title of the Ultravox! classic from their debut album, I felt that he had to know what energies he was trafficking in. This was more than borne out after finally hearing the song and discovering that it had a very similar vibe to another song by John Foxx, albeit one released twenty years later. Fans who have Foxx and Louis Gordon’s “Shifting City” album could attest to the simpatico between Pulp’s “My Sex” and Foxx’s similarly languid yet astringent, “Everyone” from the 1997 Foxx album.

One of the most impactful tracks on “More” got an airing with the intimate and heartfelt ”Farmer’s Market.” Cocker admitted that this one cut close to home as it was inspired by his relationship with his wife. The insouciant interplay between the piano, violins, and the gently shuffling drums were far from the vibe of Rock and that suited the song wonderfully. The coda the saw Cocker repeat the lyric “ain’t time we started living” until he switched out “living” for “feeling” to deliver the thesis at the heart of the new album. It was a lovely epiphany on the stage this evening.

The staging of “This Is Hardcore” was appropriately dramatic

Next the set to a much grimmer turn with the intense title cut to “This Is Hardcore.” I was very gratified to see that the “difficult” album wasn’t going to be glossed over this evening. Particularly this darkly cinematic track where a chair was put at the back line of center stage where Jarvis sang the song from his throne of self-abasement. The curdled and dramatic quality of the song reached epic proportions in the hands of the large band and as the song neared its fevered climax Cocker sprung up from the chair and came to life as a participant, not spectator.

Pulp could tone things down as well as pulp them up

As if to dispel the demons that the song conjured up, the band shuffled positions on the stage for “Something’s Changed” with the four core members coming together at the front of the stage to replicate the rehearsals that led to this new phase of the band. With Jarvis and Mark on acoustic guitars, Candida on a small organ, and Nick Banks just sitting on a box and drumming with\ his hands. Fortunately, they liked the feel and this new phase has quickly come to pass.

Another vibe shift came with the startling 1992 single “O.U. Gone Gone” from their transitional “Pulp: Intro” compilation that arrived just ahead of their “His ‘N Hers” breakthrough. This “banger” was built with a motorik beat complete with Farfisa drone with violin soloing over it attained a nervy, headrush feeling that was exhilarating to hear. I never would have expected any of the Pre-Island material to be included in the set but in my opinion, the Pulp saga really began there on those 1992 singles for Gift Records. This was a much deeper deep cut than I had been expecting!

I appreciated how Cocker told the Atlanta audience how he was last in the city half a lifetime ago; playing at Masquerade while opening up for Blur. Asking if Masquerade were still there and though it had been years since I’d visited the iconic [and large] club, I’d certainly have driven up to Atlanta had I known about it at the time. Alas, I only found out about that gig in the internet era; annoyed that I missed what I thought was my one chance to see Pulp, right at the point where they first looked large in my universe.

The vibrant anguish of “Acrylic Afternoons” followed for a deep cut one-two punch. It was hard to believe that this feverish song hadn’t been a single back then, though it certainly had that feel. As the set aimed the prow of the good craft Pulp for the shores of Lake Climax, it was now time to start offering up the band’s crown jewels. I next thrilled to the orgasmic shimmer of that first song to alert me to the abundant merits of the band; “Do You Remember The First Time?” The song simply excelled at raising goosebumps this evening as it had for the last 31 years. Mark Weber’s soloing in the ebullient climax being a thing of particular beauty.

Next: …The One Thing That We Have More Of

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Avfall Explore “Weltschmerz” From Over A Dozen, Distinct Perspectives

Avfall are [L-R – Daniel Söderberg, Joel Segerstedt] observing and commenting ©2025 Anna Drvnik

I recently got some outreach from Sweden’s Novoton label regarding a new release, out today, from the group Avfall and carrying the title “Weltschmerz.” I was delighted to find that this band were strongly following a boldly multifaceted approach in putting their songs across. The loaded title potentially set me up for some punishing, angst-ridden, navel gazing. However, once I sampled the music, I was instead served songs which were brimming with energy, fire, and dynamism. This was much more than gray music to slit wrists by and they had quickly won me over with their fighting spirit and wild sense of eclecticism.

If anything, “Weltschmerz” almost sounded like a compilation album of European bands who filtered their concerns about the terrible state of the world through a well-developed sense of Post-Punk ethos which bypassed more common touchstones such as John McGeoch’s guitar tone, and pivoted instead towards the less likely, but equally welcome approach of Wire or Killing Joke.

Rating: 5 out of 5.
Avfall Weltschmerz
Novaton | SE | CD | 2025 | NOVO144

Avfall: Weltschmerz – SE – CD [2025]

  1. Biologismus Fatale 03:21
  2. Vielleicht, wie ein Speer 03:55
  3. The Hate 03:11
  4. Just Show Me the Way 04:47
  5. [Knarkögon] 00:46
  6. La Marchesa 03:03
  7. The Mills 05:23
  8. With the Glowing Wind 03:09
  9. Natten 04:31
  10. Discharged 02:52
  11. I Think it’s Name is Life 03:42
  12. Mental Anhalt: 1921 03:12
  13. Se Taire 06:22

From the very beginning of “Biologismus Fatale,” the breakneck double time tempo of the drums and bass with shards of guitar buttressing the dour, massed vocal attack. The choral chant of “let yourselves go…GO!” Offered the fire of resistance in an appealing way. And at 3:20, the band were not about to waste a second of our time. This was music that went for the throat and didn’t mince words.

Admirably, the band sounded like a completely different entity on the second track. The Germanic “Veilleicht, wie en Speer.” The autumnal vibe of the song was awash in an appealing, guitar soaked, melancholy where at the halfway point the sequencers joined in with their six-stringed brethren to transform the vibe of the song to something quite different. By the time of the song’s climax, the guitars had dropped out completely and left us with pure motorik synth energy to deposit us at a radically different place from our starting point! Avfall we’re obviously not content to play the game safe and predictably.

It was only at the point of track three’s, “The Hate,” that they were content to relax into some good old fashioned, angst rock. The hypnotic drum pattern of guest drummer Sakarias Olsson coiled its energy inward as the group once more sung in English as the repetitive meter of the drums and lyrics set the pace for the pensive nature of the tune. I’d have been happy to have heard another two minutes of this one for some real Krautrock energy, but the band deferred, as ever, towards brevity here.

“Just Show Me The Way” proffered pulsating synth loops up front to hook our ears before building an edifice of phased guitars and dance rhythms that adroitly balanced synthetic and traditional instrumentation. The break where the synth loops ruled the song for a bar or two painted this song as one aimed at a club space. Yet the phased guitars fearlessly added Rock texture while the furious drum machine tattoos in the climax laughed at Rock’s conventions.

“La Marchesa” was a warm, anthemic song built on a sturdy drum machine beat overlaid with a chord sequence of densely arranged synths that imparted hope to the listener. While the foreboding opening chords and sound bites to “The Mills” did the opposite. What transpired was completely unexpected as the track delved into a drum + bass style that I surely didn’t see coming. And I found the vocals to be strongly redolent of the phrasing of Wire’s Bruce Gilbert. The results were certainly electric! And the distorted bass overloads and squelches of ragged synth sound contrasted mightily with the frantic, brassy hi-hats.

The gentle melancholy of the pensive “Natten” relinquished the energy levels here for the closest the album came to attaining a chanson vibe. The stately melody coaxed a world weary, European vibe to the fore while the coda suggested an entropic finality to it all.

The material drumbeat of “Discharged” brought yet another radical mood shift to our ears before diving deep into a bludgeoning cacophony of distorted bass [and everything else] riffs and vocals at thrash tempo! It all ended by 2:35 with a coda of sound bites to bring us back down to earth. Was there no end to the inventiveness that Avfall were willing to explore?

The elegiac “Mental Anhalt: 1921” answered that rhetorical question with piano and swelling string patches. And the gorgeous melancholy of “Se Taire” brought this album’s journey to a cinematic closure as the chorus of drones nearly obliterated the song before receding into the shadows at the end of this suitably expansive 6:21 closure to the typically economical album.

Rating: 5 out of 5.

As befitted its title, this was an album packed with emotional  content; some bruising, some despairing, others uplifting. But all of them addressing the theme embedded in the album’s honest name. I’ve been known to champion an eclectic approach as it’s a trait I admire, but I can’t recall an album that trafficked more recklessly and fearlessly with whatever disparate vibes that the group at hand were interested in exploring in each moment than this one.  And it was all down to Segerstedt and Söderberg who played everything here except for the live drums by Olsson on four tracks and a guest vocal/lyric by Emma Lundenmark on “The Hate.”

This is far from a fun or carefree album but it’s one you’ll more than respect in the long run. Now I need to investigate their debut recording, “Mental Preparation” from 2017, to see from whence they came as we await their next opus. Meanwhile CDs for 100 SEK/$10.70/£7.89 await inquisitive ears at their Bandcamp store with 24/48 downloads available for 50 SEK/$5.35/£3.94. I can vouch that the results are worth much more than such modest prices, so as ever, don’t forget to top up your purchase! DJs hit that button!

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