B-Movie: A Letter From Afar
Best known for their single "Nowhere Girl", B-Movie was an '80s new romantic could-have-been, never quite reaching mainstream success. Formed in 1978 in Mansfield, they named themselves after an Andy Warhol painting and trudged their way through the music industry in vain until 1985. The unbelievably detailed and exclamation point-filled biography on their website blames their record labels, management,, former band members, and anyone else they associated with for their failures (and frankly makes the band sound like egotistical jerks).
Too bad anyway, since they wrote some great pop songs that hardly anyone remembers now. "A Letter From Afar" was meant to be their comeback single, produced by pop hitmaker , but it never made a blip on the charts. I'm sure it was all Marc Almond's fault...
Posted: August 9th, 2010
at 5:11pm by qbot
Tagged with 1984, andy warhol, british, graham boffey, jellybean benitez, letter from afar, marc almond, new romantic, nowhere girl, paul statham, rick holliday, soft cell, steve hovington
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Vicious Pink: Cccan’t You See…
Although only a band for five short years, the dynamic duo of singer Josephine Warden and keyboardist Brian Moss formed Vicious Pink (originally Vicious Pink Phenomenon) in 1981 and got their start as backing vocalists for Marc Almond and Dave Ball's Soft Cell. With two new wave godfathers to guide them, the influence of Soft Cell's provocative, sexualized lyrics and dance beats were apparent in Vicious Pink's music. Through the course of their career, they earned three club hits rather than making any commercial impact.
The band made their biggest splash with the release of their third single "Cccan't You See..." Yes, stutter when you say it - it's necessary. Legend has it that Vicious Pink were actually the first band to coin the word "techno" in 1982 when describing their music to the press. Maybe not techno by today's standards, but certainly modern electro. Listen to anyone from Ladytron and Goldfrapp and tell me you can't hear the influence these pretty in pink things had on them.
There are several versions of the song. The original 12" version of the song is the most common (and certainly most addicting), though there is at 7" version that varies slightly. A year after the original was released, the song was remixed to have a French vocal, which was recently re-released in a limited pressing on vinyl. Vicious Pink have yet to release an official CD though their states a retrospective is currently in the works.

Oh. Don't be fooled by the opening sample to the song either. Your shuffle didn't accidently turn on "This Corrosion" by the Sisters of Mercy. Now go bust out those poppers and shake a tailfeather!
Posted: September 15th, 2009
at 9:40pm by Peroxide
Tagged with 1984, british, club, new wave, soft cell, synthpop, techno, vicious pink
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