Cover Versions, Hard-to-find

Round Round Get Around He Gets Around

Everyone’s favourite spectacle-sporting singer from The Best Band In The World…Ever (that’ll be the Teenage Fanclub) Norman Blake is no stranger to the odd side project or two. As well as playing in parallel with TFC and BMX Bandits until 1991 when, let’s face it, Teenage Fanclub became really really good and so much better than the Bandits, he’s also added his golden chords and vocals to records by The Pastels, Kevin Ayers, the Trashcan Sinatras and Bill Wells. And he plays tonight in Glasgow alongside Gorky’s Euros Childs. A walking side project for hire, the Bellshill Beach Boy knows them all. This, then, is as good a time as any to point you in the direction of a few Norman Blake curios. Tracks that may have slipped underneath your Teenage Fanclub radar but would undoubtedly have become firm favourites by now, were they to have been presented as Teenage Fanclub records.

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In the mid/late 90s Norman teamed up with future Fannie Francis MacDonald as Frank Blake and in ’96 recorded a one-off limited single for Shoeshine Records. Being a collector of all things Fanclub-related I naturally have a copy. ‘Don’t Let Love Pass You By’ is a slice of classic Blakery – a mid-paced love song with typically tricky jangling chords here and there. It even has the grace to start with the chorus so you know how it goes after the first 20 seconds. ‘Plastic Bag’ is a bit different. It sounds, for want of a better word, ‘light’, as in the total opposite of AC/DC. It passes by pleasantly enough, but those wonky keyboards and acoustic guitars have always been a bit too twee for these ears. Sorry Norman.

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Frank Blake also recorded a version of Frank Zappa’s ‘Anyway The Wind Blows‘. I must confess that until recently I had no idea this was a cover version, so I was all over the internet until I could find a version of Zappa’s original. As it turns out, the cover is a fairly faithful reworking of the original. I have a version somewhere of Alex Chilton backed by the TFC live in Glasgow. They do a  grrrrreat version of it. I’ll have to dig that one out for your appraisal sometime  I took this quote from the Shoeshine Records website…

“I hadn’t heard any Frank Zappa and I was wondering what he sounded like. I thought his most musical thing would be his first thing so I got the first Mothers Of Invention LP. I started playing through it and ‘Anyway The Wind Blows’ was the really obvious pop song. I thought it was really good and would be fun to do. Again, it was all done pretty quickly and just sort of worked out on the spot because that’s the way Frank Blake like to work.”

Lastly, tucked away at the very end of a 2001 Shoeshine Records sampler I have ‘You Don’t Have To Cry’ by Frank ‘Jackson’ Blake. There are no sleevenotes with the sampler and I can find no information about this song/band line-up at all. I can only assume this is Blake, MacDonald and Belle & Sebastian’s Stevie Jackson, but I may be wrong. In any case, this track is a belter. It sounds like something the Everly Brothers would have done some time in 1961. In fact, ‘You Don’t Have To Cry‘ sounds so good it has to be a cover. Right? I think it’s a Gene Clark song. Yeah? It sure sounds like it. Someone help me out here.

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I’ve had this picture for ages and was looking for any excuse to put it up here. Cracker, eh?

6 thoughts on “Round Round Get Around He Gets Around”

  1. As usual you’re spot on – the song is Gene Clark, or Clark/ McGuinn. It’s on the Byrds’ Mr Tambourine Man (twice, if you have the cd reissue) but it’s ‘You Won’t Have To Cry’ rather than ‘Don’t’ so that’s maybe why you couldn’t quite place it. Your blog is tops by the way – keep it up.

  2. Norman and Euros were excellent last night and their album should appear soon. I have footage of one of their tracks together and I’ll try and put it up on the Jocknroll blog.

    I feel that the BMX Bandits are cruelly underrated are more Beach Boys-y than the Fannies. Maybe Duglas can come across as a bit too twee but his heart’s in the right place and he’s written some great tunes.

  3. Here’s the line-up on the Gene Clark song:

    Norman Blake: bass, vocals
    Steve Jackson: guitars, vocals
    Francis MacDonald: drums, vocals

    On the other tracks you have:

    Norman Blake: bass, vocals, guitar, keyboards, percussion
    Francis MacDonald: drums, vocals, keyboards, guitar, percussion

    Plus Duncan Cameron playing bass on ” Don’t Let Love Pass You By”

  4. Hey Phil, As you know the Fannies are a band close to my heart too. Magic memories are seeing them in Virgin megastore doing an acoutisc set of 4 songs from the unreleased Grand Prix at Virgin Megastore on Untion Street. There were 50 people there max.

    Norman turned up late as he went to the wrong virgin!! They also asked myself and a friend to hold the lyrics for verisamiatude and say no.

    Also seeing him and duglas T doing a set in ashton lane last time I was up, I met Norman afterwards, throughly charming and self depricating. I got my picture taken with him. But more impressive was the guy that took it….the zidane movie director. Classic.

    I am enjoying bootlegs of september girls and maharishi dug the scene.

    I am also glad the fannies never got more famous. like TCS, they are our band which makes it all the better!

    Take care sir

    Mcmark

  5. Thanks for these. Another recent beautiful Norman song aired is Baby Lee; I heard him do it as part of his support slot for (prior to playing with) Daniel Johnston. On investigation, I found that he’d played it at a 6Music session, which you can download here: http://thedailygrowl.blogspot.com/2008/06/im-in-norman-blake-fanclub.html

    Thanks for all the stuff you’ve written about/uploaded, I’ve been on here for ages today grabbing various bits.

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