portrait of this blog's author - by Stephen Blackman 2008

Monday, April 17, 2023

Television Personalities . . . . And Don´t The Kids Just Love It (1981) :: Zero G Sounds

 And of course Zero G also posted this one, thus illustrating the extraordinary eclectic range of the tastes therein!

So this from Low-Fi masters 'Television Personalties’ (largely Dan Treacy - born 19 June 1960) this their first album from equally legendary Rough Trade now long out of print and always worth checking out anything from them 

Again as ZeroG Sounds says:

"The first full album by Television Personalities, recorded after a four-year series of often brilliant D.I.Y. singles recorded under a variety of names, including the O-Level and the Teenage Filmstars, is probably the purest expression of Daniel Treacy's sweet-and-sour worldview.


The songs, performed by Treacy, Ed Ball, and Mark Sheppard, predict both the C-86 aesthetic of simple songs played with a minimum of elaboration but a maximum of enthusiasm and earnestness and the later lo-fi aesthetic. The echoey, hissy production makes the songs sound as if the band were playing at the bottom of an empty swimming pool, recorded by a single microphone located two houses away, yet somehow that adds to the homemade charm of the record. 

Treacy's vocals are tremulous and shy, and his lyrics run from the playful "Jackanory Stories" to several rather dark songs that foreshadow the depressive cast of many of his later albums. "Diary of a Young Man," which consists of several spoken diary entries over a haunting, moody twang-guitar melody, is downright scary in its aura of helplessness and inertia. The mood is lightened a bit by some of the peppier songs, like the smashing "World of Pauline Lewis" and the "David Watts" rewrite "Geoffrey Ingram," and the re-recorded version of the earlier single "I Know Where Syd Barrett Lives," complete with deliberately intrusive prerecorded bird sounds, is one of the most charming things Television Personalities ever did. 

This album must have sounded hopelessly amateurish and cheaply ramshackle at the time of its 1981 release, but in retrospect, it's clearly a remarkably influential album that holds up extremely well."





Now we may have posted the classic ‘I Know Where Syd Barrett Lives’ before which is their masterpiece IMHO and closest to a Smash Hit they are or were ever likely to get but the rest of the debut album is in that league so well worth checking out if you share taste and a sense of humour with yours truly and/or John Peel


Where’s Bill Grundy Now?

More TVP from the Toppermost of the Poppermost!


Strangely Beautiful - Television Personalities

2 comments:

Rocket said...

The Album Cover...
Wow! Takes Me Back...
The Avengers from the 60s...
Steed & Peel - What a Duo!

Andy Swapp said...

Ha ha ha . . . isn’t it great?!
Totally cool!

Thanks again for dropping by Rocket
Always welcome sir!