Details
The video was filmed at a racecourse, in a bar and on a beach on the Dingle Peninsula, in County Kerry, Ireland. It was shot in black and white to more fit in with the mood of the song.
Runaground was a new track released to promote The Best Of compilation release.
CD JIMDD 20 – Runaground / Say Something (live at GLR) / Laid (live at GLR) / Lose Control (live at GLR)
CD JIMCD20 – Runaground / Hang On / Crescendo / Be My Prayer
CD JIMED20 – Runaground / Runaground (James Remix) / Egoiste / Lost A Friend (Aloof Mix)
Release Name: | Runaground |
Artist Name: | |
Release Date: | 25th May 1998 |
Format: | Studio Single |
Catalogue: | JIMCD 20; JIMDD 20; JIMED 20 |
Following on from the Number 1 success of the Best Of, Runaground was originally scheduled for release at the beginning of May 1998. It was then delayed for three weeks inexplicably, particularly as when it finally came out Tim was in the middle of his acting stint in Saved at the Bolton Octagon. A day off allowed a TFI Friday performance and there were interviews for the Big Breakfast, but very little promotion in total.
The 3CD format of previous singles continued. The live disc contained three tracks recorded acoustically for GLR back in April which Tim describes as one of the band’s best sessions ever. The second disc again featured James “rarities” which included both Hang On and Crescendo, deleted from Gold Mother in May 1991 to make way for Sit Down and Lose Control. A third CD featured a band remix of the title track, an Aloof remix of Lost A Friend (originally commissioned for that song’s planned release in the summer of 1997) and Egoiste, a mostly instrumental track previously only available on the Long Live Tibet compilation album. Artwork was designed by Peacock.
The video was filmed at a racecourse, in a bar and on a beach in rural Ireland. It was shot in black and white to more fit in with the mood of the song.
The lack of significant promotion and, crucially, the fact that the song was already available on the platinum selling Best Of, the single entered the Top 40 at number 29 but bombed the week after despite another £1.99 campaign. This chart position made a mockery of Saul’s claims that it would be the band’s biggest single since Sit Down.
Earnest rock breast-beating on behalf of some poor lost woman, from a band who make Eamonn Holmes look like a paragon of sincerity. Never trust a man who sings about some nebulous, suffering ‘she’ in any song that’s not a love song – they’re generally the kind of men who believe, like Eternal, in ‘the power of a woman’, who are creepily devoted to the ‘mystical feminine principle’ and who think a lot of eye contact and caring hand-stroking mean they’re in touch with their feminine side. Most unpleasant. Still, James will understand that – after all, with the “come back when we’re getting old” line from ‘Destiny Calling’ and now a single called ‘Run Aground’, it seems they’re in the throes of a severe honesty attack. Expect the next single to be ‘Hello? Hello? Is Anyone Listening?’ followed by ‘I Used To Be Tim Booth, You Know’.
OK, it’s a marketing trick, alright? James have a Greatest Hits album out and apparently need filler. So this is one of those irritatingly “exclusive” singles which bands now record especially to give obsessives a reason for buying their compilation albums. But, despite all the incentive to hate it for that reason, this is one of the few times when the phrase “bonus track” actually makes sense.
Because “Runaground”‘s more than satisfying in its own right.
Here’s one of James’ occasional warmly blue-tinted songs, coming from one of the reflective lulls between their big anthems (“Laid”, “Sit Down”, “She’s A Star”) and their bursts of dervish doolally (“Avalanche”, “Bring A Gun”, “Sometimes”): with a soft bush of guitars rather than a wall of them, a lilting breathy melody, and Saul Davies’ thin sweet glow of violin coming through like light under a mother’s door. “For every woman you will leave an open door / You find yourself thinking “why can’t I have more?” “. There’s a directness to Tim Booth at such moments, an unguarded wistful sadness to his herald’s voice as he ditches the metaphysics and the egghead bluster. “Runaground” is one for the frightened fool, grasping for every tiny illusory chance in order not to get stuck, only to find they’ve dropped everything that’s worthwhile anyway just to grasp at shadows, and that they’ve gotten stuck anyway. “Oh no, she’s gone, back wherever she came from. / You watch her go, your reactions much too slow. / Let her go. / Runaground.”
Is it one of Booth’s flagellating stabs at his own unreliability, as with “Come Home” and “Don’t Wait That Long”? Maybe. One thing’s for sure as the waves of another great James chorale surge up: with this, the Manchester stadium-pop weirdos have touched down gently on the human feelings they neglected too much on the patchy techno moves of the “Whiplash” album. Experimentation’s nothing without soul and empathy. “You take for granted all the riches of the world / You may have oysters, but you’ll never find your pearls…”
Almost a desert island disc.
One of two new tracks recorded to promote The Best Of album, Destiny Calling was released as the first. It reached 17 in the UK Singles Chart.
CD JIMDD 19 – Destiny Calling / Jam J (live at Reading 97) / Honest Joe (live at Reading 97) / Sound (live at Reading 97)
CD JIMCD 19- Destiny Calling / Goalies Ball / Assassin / The Lake
CD JIMED 19 – Destiny Calling / She’s A Star / enhanced multimedia section
Release Name: | Destiny Calling |
Artist Name: | |
Release Date: | 9th March 1998 |
Format: | Studio Single |
Catalogue: | CD JIMDD 19; CD JIMCD 19; CD JIMED 19 |
In order to promote the forthcoming Best Of album, James recorded two new tracks for release as singles. Destiny Calling was viewed as the more chart-friendly of the two by the record company so was chosen as the first single. Another Radio 1 A-listing and a TFI Friday performance ensued as part of the session and interview blitz that was beginning for the Best Of.
The single appeared on 3CD singles. The first featured three live tracks recorded by the BBC at the band’s Reading Festival performance in August 1997, Jam J and Honest Joe brought stunningly to life compared to their studio version. The second CD promised James rarities although the three songs chosen – Goalies Ball, Assassin and The Lake – were all still readily available cheaply on the second hand market. Rather than unpopular remixes, the third CD had a multimedia section featuring the full video of She’s A Star, snippets of some of the other single videos, a biography and band photographs. Artwork for the single resurrected the band’s famous daisy logo and was designed by Peacock.
The video, as the lyrics of the single, mocked the commercialism of the music business. James images were placed on plates and perfumes amongst other things in a Shopping Channel mock-up. Graham, the voiceover man from ITV’s Blind Date, guest-starred in the video.
A poster campaign asking “Is This Your Destiny Calling?” preceded the single’s release. To push the single’s sales in view of the impending Best Of, all CD formats were priced at £1.99. The first week chart placing of 17 and the subsequent success of the Best Of suggested that some people had waited for the album or were put off by the lack of new material. A Top of the Pops appearance followed, but this failed to give the single any second week push.
James: Live at Whitfield St, a 1998 Live Album by James.
Full recording of the Whitfield St Studios concert for the Unhinged live second CD available with the special edition of The Best Of.
Sit Down / Say Something / Runaground / Ring the Bells / Out To Get You / Destiny Calling / Johnny Yen / Lose Control / She’s A Star / Laid / Sound
Release Name: | James: Live at Whitfield St |
Artist Name: | James |
Release Date: | 21st January 1998 |
Format: | Live Album |
Catalogue: | Inhouse |
A Mercury in-house cassette featuring the whole of the Whitfield St Studios set on January 21st 1998 that was recorded for inclusion on the 2 CD version of The Best Of. Includes four unreleased tracks – Sit Down, Say Something, Destiny Calling and She’s A Star.
A Mercury in-house cassette featuring the whole of the Whitfield St Studios set on January 21st 1998 that was recorded for inclusion on the 2 CD version of The Best Of. Includes four unreleased tracks – Sit Down, Say Something, Destiny Calling and She’s A Star.
Waltzing Along was the third single released from the Whiplash album. It reached 23 in the UK Singles Charts.
CD JIMDD 18 – Waltzing Along / Homeboy (live) / How Was It For You? (live) / Greenpeace (live)
CD JIMCD 18 – Waltzing Along / Your Story / Where You Gonna Run? / Long To Be Right
CD JIMED 18 – Waltzing Along / Waltzing Along (Disco Socks Mix) / Waltzing Along (Flytronix Mix)
Release Name: | Waltzing Along |
Artist Name: | |
Release Date: | 23rd June 1997 |
Format: | Studio Single |
Catalogue: | CD JIMDD 18; CD JIMCD 18; CD JIMED 18 |
The release of Waltzing Along was originally timed to coincide with the end of the band’s US tour and their Glastonbury appearance. Tim’s injury which meant the curtailment of the US tour and the band joining the Lollapolooza travelling festival meant that the band would be out of the country for the single’s release.
The single was rerecorded to give the song a much harder and more commercial edge than the album version. As with the previous two singles there were 3 CDs released. The first featured live tracks recorded by the BBC at the band’s Shepherds Bush Empire in March including a rousing version of Homeboy with its extended opening section. The second CD featured three new tracks, the strident rude-lyriced Your Story, an instrumental Where You Gonna Run? and a falsetto-driven Long To Be Right. The third single once again featured remixes, this time a little more successful, by Flytronix and Midfield General. Artwork was once again designed by Blue Source with photography by Davies and Davies.
The video featured James in the Spanish desert, one by one hitchhiking and being picked up by a woman in an open top car. Mark plays an escaped convict chained to another prisoner who is the long lost brother of the policeman trying to recapture them.
With absolutely no promotion at all, the single, again given a £1.99 release, exceeded most expectations by entering the charts at number 23 and the song became a live favourite in James sets with crowds chanting along to the intro.
Time was when these merry Mancunian misfits could lay claim to being one of the most forward-looking groups in this country, with their weird take on rock music and an ascetic outlook that stuck out a while in times of much frippery. These days, James are more like Simple Minds than the Scottish stadium rockers themselves, if the hackneyed and plodding backing track here is to be taken seriously. Which is a pity as Tim Booth still sings like he’s got something of importance to impart – in the case a prayer for the dying. Oh well, there’s always the solo career.
Following their chart-topping single ‘Tomorrow’ and a sell-out UK tour, James release a new single on 23rd June – ‘Waltzing Along’. It is a completely re-recorded version of the song from the band’s gold album ‘Whiplash’.
‘Waltzing Along’ is released on 3 CDs – CD1 contains 3 brand-new songs, ‘Your Story’, ‘Where You Gonna Run’ and ‘Long To Be Right’ as b-sides, whilst CD2 has live versions of ‘Homeboy’, ‘How Was It For You?’ and ‘Greenpeace’ recorded at the band’s sell-out show at the Shepherds Bush Empire in March this year. CD3 is the remix CD with Skint’s Midfield General chopping out the big beats and Flytronix smoothing the edges with mellow drum n bass.
‘Waltzing Along’ is produced by Stephen Hague with additional production and interference from Brian Eno and drummer, David Baynton-Power.
The full details of ‘Waltzing Along’ are:
‘Waltzing Along’ is released on 23rd June through Fontana. The top ten album ‘Whiplash’ is out now.
James tour America as part of the notorious Lollapolooza and return to the UK to play Reading Festival.
The second single from the Whiplash album reached 12 in the UK Singles Charts.
CD JIMDD 17 – Tomorrow / Lost A Friend (live) / Come Home (live) / Greenpeace (live)
CD JIMCD 17 – Tomorrow / Gone Too Far / Honest Pleasure / All One To Me
CD JIMED 17 – Tomorrow / Tomorrow (Full On Vibe Mix) / Tomorrow (Archive Mix) / Tomorrow (Droppin’ Cake Mix)
Release Name: | Tomorrow |
Artist Name: | |
Release Date: | 21st April 1997 |
Format: | Studio Single |
Catalogue: | CD JIMDD 17; CD JIMCD 17; CD JIMED 17 |
Following the Top 10 success of She’s A Star and the Whiplash album and a sold-out UK tour, James released Tomorrow as the second single from the album, having resurrected the track from the Wah Wah album and rerecorded it with a more conventional sound. The obligatory TFI Friday performance and a Radio 1 session for Mary Ann Hobbs preceded the single release.
As with She’s A Star, the single was released on three CDs. The first featured three tracks recorded live for Radio 1’s Mark Radcliffe show in January. Three new tracks – All One To Me, Gone Too Far and Honest Pleasure, the pick of the b-sides from the Whiplash singles, were featured on the second CD. Rather unsuccessful remixes of the title track by Fila Brazilia, Midfield General and Archive made up the third CD. Artwork for the singles was again designed by Blue Source and photography by Davies and Davies.
The video featured the band playing the song stood in large circle with a camera spinning round at high speed above them causing them to duck and dive to avoid being hit. Whilst a relatively simple concept, the video complemented the energy of the song perfectly.
A poster campaign with the fetching slogan “Tomorrow : Coming Soon” preceded the release. The singles were once again priced at £1.99 each in attempt to boost sales. Tomorrow entered the charts at number 12, another commendable performance, although it was to fall sharply in the following weeks.
Don’t write off the old ponces off just yet – this is classic latter-day James, a huge anthemic stadium sparkler, co-written by Eno and the perfect vehicle for Tim Booth’s Broadway show-stopping tendencies. The extra tracks flirt with jungle, glam and even rap, but James don’t really make convincing postmodern dilettantes. Tomorrow is what they’re still great at; soaring sincerity, heroic emotion, wide-eyed new-aged optimism. Recently Booth has been instructing his live audience to ignore what the music press says, so here’s our advice : THIS IS A FINE RECORD, GO OUT AND BUY IT. There you go – ignore that at your leisure.