I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Ringo Starr - The No No Song - The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour

 This popped up in my algorithms and made me howl . . . . . regulars will know I am abstinent of all substances from drugs and nicotine to alcohol and worked in the rehab world for the longest time at the end of my working life so this appealed no end (so is Ringo now BTW!)

Ringo Starr - The No No Song - The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour

The Jam - All Mod Cons | Herberg De Kelder

All Mod Cons


The Jam - All Mod Cons

HERBERG DE KELDER


Picture of the Day : Why a Big Suit?

 




Brassed Off - Concerto d’Orange Juice!

 We may have had this before but this clip from Brassed Off is a favourite and fits well with a Sunday afternoon here in Blighty . . . this is what passed for music in the North of England and why my dad ( and subsequently me) adored Brass Band Music . . . .I recall vividly going for a stroll along the promenade  of Fleetwood (North of Blackpool!) and hearing a brass band ringing across the dunes

Concierto d'Aranjuez ~ From the film 'Brassed Off’

The clip features many a British classic actor from Pete Postlethwaite to Ewan McGregor and why we all fell in love with Tara Fitzgerald

Beatles I'm Down Live at Blackpool Night Out 1965

 Someone posted this admiring (if not doubting!?) John’s natural Vox organ playing skills! I reckon it’s LIVE!


D.I.Y. Tip of The Day

 I Too Am Very Practically minded!

D.I.Y tip of the Day

(Thanks Niall)



Thee Milkshakes - Jack The Ripper

speaking of Jack The Ripper and popular culture!!!

 more from Billy Childish  . . .side projects? Can I say that?

Thee Milkshakes - Jack The Ripper

Dangerous Minds - Alexander McQueen and Jack the Ripper | Will Howard

 The Alexander McQueen collection based on Jack the Ripper

The Alexander McQueen collection based on Jack the Ripper

Whether you were Alexander McQueen, Richey Edwards, Sarah Kane or Damien Hirst, if you were a British person who made art, it wasn’t enough to be good; you had to shock audiences. The Young British Artists were a microcosm of that phenomenon. Art was suddenly the new rock ‘n’ roll, and you were just as likely to see Hirst or Tracey Emin staggering out of the Groucho Club with a globule of chang up their snout as any Gallagher brother. However, that attitude went far beyond the world of visual art and into everything else, from music, theatre, film and especially fashion. No one summed this attitude up better than the 22-year-old wunderkind, Alexander McQueen.

The story of McQueen remains incredible. After leaving school at 15 with only one O-level to his name in Art, obviously, McQueen made it through a route that seems to have died out in the past four decades.

Quite simply, he made a career in the medium he wanted to work in by working in it. He worked as an apprentice for a Savile Row tailor, made costumes for West End shows like Les Miserables and eventually took a Master’s level course on fashion design at Central Saint Marten’s college on the strength of his portfolio alone.

Already, McQueen was a name that the entire fashion world was paying attention to while he was still finishing his degree. While several fashion design students get to present their graduation show at London Fashion Week, his was a collection that was marked out as a possible highlight of the entire week, which rarely happens. The pressure would have been too much for hundreds of other 22-year-olds, but McQueen aced it by chasing his masterful craftsmanship with an eye for spectacle.

After all, why else would he call his debut show Jack the Ripper Stalks His Victims?

The Alexander McQueen collection based on Jack the Ripper
His mix of the macabre and the beautiful caused an immediate stir. One that McQueen justified by saying he had family connections to the Ripper murders. A quote from the time saw McQueen saying, “I had a fascination with Jack the Ripper. My mum’s a genealogist and found out that one of the victims had been staying at one of my relatives’ inns in Whitechapel. I was ready to solve the whole bloody mystery.”

Investigations since have shown that McQueen was stretching the truth to breaking point here, but in terms of adding a viscerality to the show, the best was yet to come.

For each of the show’s pieces, McQueen sewed a lock of his hair into the lining. This was a tribute to the fact that Victorian sex workers, the kind that The Ripper targeted, would often sell locks of their hair as part of their business. This shows that there was real thought being put into the show, rather than merely relying on shock tactics. That’s not to say they weren’t there, though they were targeting someone different.

McQueen infamously had a troubled relationship with one of his professors at CSM, Louise Wilson. She was the professor to whom all the reports each student made regarding their final presentation went, which might be the reason why the cover of McQueen’s report wasn’t just decorated with his hair, but more specifically, with his pubic hair. Never was one to turn down an opportunity to stick it to the man, our Alex was.

All of this would be nothing more than publicity stunts if it weren’t for the fact that nearly 35 years later, all the pieces that make up Jack the Ripper Stalks His Victims are still pretty incredible. A mix of modern tailoring with a Victorian sensibility and a subtly aggressive, punkish styling. One can see the influence of this show in particular on the next 20 years of British fashion. What else is the aesthetics of The Libertines and The Horrors but slightly more obvious takes on McQueen’s breakout show?

Deservedly (probably not in the eyes of Wilson, though), Jack the Ripper Stalks His Victims was a star-making turn for McQueen. Legend has it that the entire collection was bought by magazine editor and high society mainstay Isabella Blow, who became a mentor and patron of his work as McQueen moved from student to fashion superstar.

Not bad for a 22-year-old from Lewisham, right?



Alexander McQueen 1992, Jack the Ripper Stalks His Victims (Graduate Collection)

Now I should says perhaps I too was obsessed as a callow youth
 (and still! - ED)  with The Jack The Ripper story and collected books and articles not least a reprint of the Illustrated Police Gazette of the contemporary reports of the murders but also more recent books including the now largely discredited ( ie barking hatstand bonkers!) book that claimed to prove Walter Sickert was the Ripper written by a local author and watched al the true crime programmes about the identity of the Ripper. but and I reckon its a big but and therefore cannot lie, to use it as a central theme for a ‘FASHION’ show is about as messed up as it gets IMHO
Isn’t it?

The Wainwright Dynasty

 

Loudon Wainwright with  Kate and Anna McGarrigle.

Now a fan of their children Rufus and especially Martha who is one of the most fascinating songwriters we have (well Rufus too come to that) but all the family are quite extraordinary. I blame the parents!


Better Every Day

Free - 1969-1972 - Singles As & B | Heavybootz

Free - 1969-1972 - Singles As & B

Studio quality from the original line up and the conceivably one of the very best soul voice in the UK amongst others, one of its tragic guitar legends lost to heroin painfully early and the nice guy under appreciated in bassist Andy Fraser sorely missed as he was to die from complications around AIDS the first time it hit

Free
Singles As & Bs (out of print 45's - sides A & B)
1969-1972

studio
mp3 @ 320 [105 mb]
sq: EX

01 Broad Daylight (A-69-03)
02 The Worm (B-69-03)
03 I'll Be Creepin' (A-69-06) 
04 Sugar For Mr. Morrison (B-69-06)
05 All Right Now (A-70-05)
06 Mouthful Of Grass (B-70-05)
07 The Stealer (A-70-11)
08 Lying In The Sunshine (B-70-11)
09 My Brother Jake (A-71-04)
10 Only My Soul (B-71-04)
11 Little Bit Of Love (A-72-05) 
12 Sail On (B-72-05) 
13 Wishing Well (A-72-11) *
14 Let Me Show You (B-72-11) *

total time: 45:16


Paul Rodgers - vocals
Paul Kossoff - guitar
Andy Fraser - bass and piano
Simon Kirke - drums

Paul Rodgers - vocals, guitar *
John 'Rabbit' Bundrick - keyboards *
Tetsu Yamauchi - bass *
Simon Kirke - drums *

a Dr THC special . . wonder what he’s a doctor of?
Free - All Right Now (Doing Their Thing, 1970) 

check this for a band in their prime and what for the bass to kick in - PLAY IT LOUD