(2020) Kursaal Flyers – Little Does She Know: Complete Recordings
Review:
In the days before punk rock, Kursaal Flyers straddled the line separating pub rock and power pop. The line was so thin it would seem to disappear in the rearview mirror, but when Kursaal Flyers were active in the mid-’70s, they were subtly pulled in two different directions. They’d tour on the same circuit as their friends Dr. Feelgood, but they also signed to Jonathan King’s company in 1975, then worked with pop impresario Mike Batt after singing to CBS for The Golden Mile in 1976. Batt gave “Little Does She Know” a grandiose arrangement designed to conjure memories of Phil Spector, and it was enough for the single to crack the U.K. Top 20; however, instead of being their breakthrough, it was their only hit. The band made it through 1977, playing harder and faster on-stage, an evolution captured on their incandescent ’77 single “Television Generation” — a pop record with its eyes on punk, not the 1960s — but lead singer Paul Shuttleworth decided to go solo by the end of the year. Kursaal Flyers disbanded after his departure — drummer Will Birch went on to form the Records, who cut the power pop classic “Starry Eyes” — but they reunited in the mid-’80s, a resurrection that resulted in 1988’s A Former Tour de Force Is Forced to Tour. All of this music is boxed up on RPM’s 2020 quadruple-disc set Little Does She Know: Complete Recordings, which not only contains the aforementioned albums but the two albums the group made for King (Chocs Away and The Great Artiste), the ripping 1977 concert album Five Live Kursaals, plus a handful of singles, stray tracks, unreleased songs, and radio sessions. Listening to the collected work of the Kursaals accentuates how they were torn between their country-tinged roots and pop inclinations. Often, the band’s studio productions were a shade too bright and polished for the material, but there’s a charm in how the group gamely attempted to hit the charts, plus underneath the gloss there are a number of remarkable songs, usually written by the combination of Will Birch and Graeme Douglas. A lot of these songs are best heard on Five Live Kursaals, which is leaner and meaner than the studio set, but it’s also true that the clutch of 1977 studio recordings that also spawned the Birch/Richie Bull composition “Television Generation” are immediate in a way that the earliest Kursaal records aren’t. Still, the amiable country-rock and pop of the three studio albums is charming and often effective — and, in the case of “Speedway,” quite brilliant — but it’s also easy to see why Douglas calls A Former Tour de Force the group’s “best recordings” in Birch’s liner notes. On this reunion record, the two sides are integrated and the Kursaals are not only focused but having fun, and that means this box is the rare set where the latter-day recordings help shine a light on what the group did so well.
Tracklist:
CD 1:
Chocs Away!
01.Pocket Money
02.Hit Records
03.Kung Fu
04.Tennessee
05.Chocs Away
06.Speedway
07.Brakeman
08.Now I’m Back
09.Yellow Sax
10.Silver Wings
11.Cross Country
The Great Artiste
12.Ugly Guys
13.The Great Artiste
14.Fall Like the Rain
15.Cruisin’ for Love
16.Back to the Book
17.Palais de Danse
18.Pain and Misery
19.Hypochondriac
20.Television
21.Drinking Alone
CD 2:
Golden Mile
01.Little Does She Know
02.One Arm Bandit
03.Drinking Socially
04.Two Left Feet
05.Modern Lovers
06.Street of the Music
07.Radio Romance
08.When the Band’s on the Stand
09.Detroit Tin
10.Third Finger Left Hand
11.Ready to Go
12.Little Does She Know [A-side edit]
13.Girl Talk [B-side]
14.The Questionnaire [unreleased 1977]
15.The Sky’s Falling in on Our Love [A-side]
16.Revolver [B-side]
CD 3:
Five Live Kursaals
01.Original Model
02.Yellow Sox
03.Pocket Money
04.Cruisin’ for Love
05.The Sky’s Falling in on Our Love
06.Little Does She Know
07.Street of the Music
08.TV Dinners
09.Speedway
10.Revolver
11.On My Mind
12.Anna (Go to Him)
13.Friday on My Mind
14.Television Generation [A-side]
15.Girlfriend Kinda Guy [unreleased 1977]
16.Everything But a Heartbeat [unreleased 1977]
17.Girls That Don’t Exist [unreleased 1977]
CD 4:
A Former Tour de Force Is Forced to Tour
01.IF You Would Only Talk to Me (Like You Talk to the Dog)
02.Pre-Madonna
03.Tonight Before Tonight
04.Man in Mohair
05.A Former Tour de Force Is Forced to Tour
06.Luxury Lane
07.My Sugar Turns to Alcohol
08.Paranoid Weekend
09.Old Men Need Some Lovin’ Too
10.Monster-in-Law
11.Cruisin’ for Love [A-side remake]
12.Slimmin’ [B-side]
13.Walkin’ to School [unreleased 1976]
14.Route 66 [from Southend Rock Compilation]
15.Tennessee [radio session 1975]
16.Foggy Mountain Breakdown [radio session 1975]
17.Yellow Sox [radio session 1975]
18.Route 66 [radio session 1975]
Media Report:
Genre: power-pop, rock
Format: FLAC
Format/Info: Free Lossless Audio Codec, 16-bit PCM
Bit rate mode: Variable
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 44.1 KHz
Bit depth: 16 bits