Tag Archives: Seven
Born Again James – NME News
JAMES are set to chase their Top 20 hit ‘Sound’with a new 45 this month.
‘Born Of Frustration’ is backed with another previously unreleased track,’Be My Prayer’. CD and 12″ formats will carry a Mark ‘Diceman’ Hunter remix of ‘Sound’.
Tim Booth and co are also gearing up for the release of a new LP,’ Seven’, which follows the reissue of their ‘Gold Mother’ album last year, and is accompanied by tours of America and Europe, likely to climax with their own major outdoor UK date this summer.
Gang Get Gott – NME News
James guitarist Larry Gott was victim of an armed mugging in Los Angeles last week, just three hours after arriving in the States from Manchester.
Gott was held up at gunpoint outside the band’s hotel on Sunset Boulevard by two men who made off with his money and jacket. After giving a statement to police, Gott, distressed by the incident, took the first plane back to England – missing the group’s three-day US video shoot.
Gott told NME: “The robbery coupled with my subsequent experience at the hands of the Los Angeles police left me with an overwhelming sense of fear, paranoia and suspicion of everyone I came into contact with.”
The band went ahead with taping the video for the new single ‘Born of Frustration’ with their tour manager standing in for Gott.
Material World – NME
MATERIALS
Jim : Crimpolene
Tim : Honey, massage oil, skin
WHAT ARE THE VIBES LIKE WITH YOU?
OK, thank you
WHAT DID YOU DO LAST NIGHT?
Jim : Got up, brushed teeth, fed cat
Tim : I can’t remember, I was unconscious
WHAT BOOKS ARE YOU READING?
Jim : Wide Ranger
Tim : Quantum Psychology, Kundalini Yoga, Time’s Arrow
WHAT’S IT LIKE BEING A POP STAR?
Jim : Very good
Tim : I’ve no idea. Ask one.
FAVOURITE SNACK
Jim : Dinner time
Tim : Love bites
FAVOURITE JOURNEY
Jim : To the centre of the earth
Tim : Coming home
WHAT DO YOU ALWAYS CARRY?
Jim : Shopping
Tim : Gravity
WHAT ARE YOU LIKE WHEN DRUNK?
Jim : Axe murderer
Tim : Benignly tearful
WHAT WOULD YOUR SPECIALIST SUBJECT BE ON MASTERMIND?
Jim : Green Green White Red Brown
Tim : The 39 Steps
FAVOURITE GAMES
Jim : Mastermind
Tim : Hunt The Mars Bar, Pick Up The Orange. Potential game show.
FAVOURITE HEAVY METAL ACT
Jim : Metallica, Stutter
Tim : Uranium
WHAT MAKES YOU LAUGH?
Jim : Funny things
WHAT RECORDS MAKE YOU CRY?
Jim : Really bad ones
Tim : Julee Cruise, Mary Margaret O’Hara, “Green Onions”
WHAT RECORDS CAN MAKE YOU DANCE?
Jim : Ones that travel down your legs and make your legs jerk.
KEY FILMS IN YOUR LIFE
Jim : Jacob’s Ladder, Blood Simple, Bambi
Tim : Sky West And Crooked
WHO DO YOU HATE?
Jim : Baddies
Tim : Goodies
PUNCHLINE TO FAVOURITE JOKE
Jim : “Never mind the porridge, who’s nicked the f**king video?”
Tim : “The horror, the horror”
IRRITATIONS
Jim : Questions
Tim : Negative patterns
FAVE MANCUNIANS
Jim : Brown paper packages tied up with string
Tim : Bobby Charlton, Anthony Burgess, Morrissey, Ben
FAVE GUITAR SOLO
Jim : So low you can’t hear it
Tim : Breakin’ In My Heart – Tom Verlaine
NAME THREE GREAT SINGERS
Jim : Pavarotti, Domingo and the other one
Tim : Mary Margaret O’Hara, Patti Smith, Black Francis
NAME THREE OVER-RATED PERFORMERS
Jim : Jim, Tim and Larry
Tim : Van Morrisson, Elvis Costello, Paul Daniels, Kate Bush and Prince (Ha Ha)
WHAT WOULD YOU LIKE FOR CHRISTMAS?
Jim : Lots of very expensive presents
Tim : Real love. Self-sacrifice
FAVE GADGETS
Jim : Remote control model of Cutty Sark
Tim : DAT-Organiser-Video-Walkman-thingy
HOW DO YOU RELAX?
Jim : Sleep
Tim : A large hammer
FAVE SPORTS
Jim : Mountaineering, hand-gliding, scuba-diving, parachuting, potholing
Tim : Hunt the Mars bar
WHAT NEWSPAPERS DO YOU READ?
None
FAVOURITE LAKE
Greg
MOST ROCK N ROLL THING YOU’VE DONE THIS WEEK
Jim : Threw my mother’s colour portable out of the window
Tim : Rowed with the guitarist
FAVOURITE JAMESES
Jim : James songs, and gigs, and t-shirts
Tim : Joyce, Swaggart, Kirk
FAVE SMITHS SONGS
Jim : “We want to be Smi-i-iths crisps, we want to be Smi-i-iths crisps”
Tim : “Hammer and the Anvil”
WORST SONG YOU’VE EVER RECORDED
Jim : All of them
Tim : None of them
FAVE THING FROM THE BODY SHOP
Jim : Dodgy, recyclable plastic bags
Tim : Sexy massage oil
WHEN DID YOU LAST BREAK THE LAW?
Jim : It was him, honest
Tim : Yesterday
FAVOURITE TIPPLES
Jim : Drinking
Tim : Favourite what?
FAVOURITE DESSERTS
Jim : Sahara and Gobi probably
Tim : Chocolate ice cream, cheese cake
EARLIEST MEMORY
Jim : 3.15am
Tim: The beginning of life on Earth, pre Greenwich Mean Time
FAVE PUNK GROUPS
Jim : Pistols, Clash, Old James
Tim : The Stooges
WHAT ARE YOU BAD AT?
Most things
FAVE KARAOKE TUNES
Jim : Never heard of them
Tim : Kara Oke. Some strange Japanese singer who never turns up for his own gigs
BEST ADVICE YOU’VE RECEIVED
Jim : What you need to do is try a cover version, have a hit then try one of your own
Tim : You’re on your own. There are no rules
FAVE SMELLS
Jim : Number One, Number Six and 11
Tim : Necks, hips, geranium, hair, bodies
FAVE SEASIDE RESORTS
Jim : Anywhere sunny
Tim : Beirut
WHEN WAS YOUR LAST OUT-OF-BODY EXPERIENCE?
Jim : Being born
Tim : Now. Are thoughts out of the body?
WHAT SCARES YOU?
Jim : Bogeymen and people shouting “Boo” loudly
Tim : Paranoia, no love life, help doctor
FIRST RECORD BOUGHT
Jim : Sit Down
Tim : Paddy McGinty’s Goat
FAVE SOUNDTRACKS
Jim : My Mum’s Sound of Music
Tim : Theme from Cuckoo Waltz
WHO WOULD YOU MOST LIKE TO SIT DOWN NEXT TO AND WHY?
Jim : The pilot
Tim : Robert Anton Wilson, Gordon Strachan, Jodie Foster, Ben, Martine, Kylie, Liz McColgan
FAVE MONTH
Jim : October
Tim : August
WHAT WOULD YOU FAX KENNY THOMAS?
Jim : Who?
Tim : A condom
HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO BE REMEMBERED?
Jim : Who?
Tim : As the one that got away
FAVE CLASSICAL MUSIC
Jim : Ask Saul this one
Tim : Nick Cave’s “The Ship Song”
MOTTO
Jim : “Life’s what you do when you can’t sleep”
Tim : “Can you turn your guitar down Larry?”
Standing Room Only – Vox
It’s taken eight years for Manchester pop princes James to become a BIG DEAL. But before the stadia of the world are rocked, there’s that tricky Sheffield gig – Stephen Dalton reports, Ian Dickson photographs
It’s not very rock’n’roll in Sheffield these days. Gone are your Def
Leppards and Saxons, prophets of a dying sub-culture consigned to towns more grubby and provincial than this oddly faceless steel city. And no longer is Sheffield Techno Central; its central grid of science-fiction walkways and flyovers no longer ring with the distant metallic thud of Fon studios and Warp Records. Not tonight, at least, because James are playing — and James are androgynous ambassadors from the planet Pop.
It makes perfect sense, of course, in this most inoffensive and neutral of Britain’s major cities. The classless crowd at the City Hall is as sexually and socially balanced as you will find under one roof these days, united by their simple uniform of primary colours and artfully basic band T-shirts. Students from the local Poly and youths from Sheffield’s grim Blade Runner housing projects are outnumbered by the band’s core constituency — high-street teenagers addicted to the clean and clever pop thrills these Mancunian minstrels provide in stronger doses than anyone else around.
Because there is something about James that cuts to the bone, an emotional depth and left-field intensity that few of their peers and none of their descendants can equal. Eight years of crippling bad luck and false starts does that to a band, especially when their final reward is the sudden sun-drenched glory of massive mainstream popularity. It’s been a long and bumpy ride.
After their sparse but immaculate early Factory singles and attractively angular debut album Stutter, released under the searing searchlight of Morrissey’s double-edged patronage in 1986, critical hysteria cooled. The band fell out with Seymour Stein’s Sire label over the shambolic and half-hearted release given their excellent second long-player Strip Mine in 1987, jumped through a legal loophole to record a self-financed live collection One Man Clapping for Rough Trade in 1988, before finding themselves in the absurd position of being able to pack huge venues without even having a record deal.
But 2000 Sheffield teenagers don’t care about the intervening years of poverty, illness and misfortune when the band found themselves back on the dole and deeply in debt. It doesn’t affect these youngsters whether James are on Phonogram — which they now are, with an expansive album, Gold Mother, and several awesome hit singles behind them — or Plastic Dog Records of Skelmersdale. What matters to any pop fan is the gorgeous sensurround sound this new-look seven-piece belts out.
James send a huge surging power through two chunky bungalows of speakers: violins, acoustic guitars, synthesizers, babies, personality disorders, sexual politics and whopping great singalong anthems the size of Norway.
It’s not very rock’n’roll, but it’s brilliant.
Of particular note: the rousing anti-religion battle-cry ‘God Only Knows’; a scathing attack on Sire and their industry ilk in the lurching lament ‘Burned’; former single and thundering pop juggernaut ‘How Was It For You?’• a sweet stroll through the Velvet Underground’s ‘Sunday Morning’ and a deliberately truncated ‘Sit Down’ purpose-designed to defuse the call-
and-response crowd hysteria invariably generated by their biggest hit to date.
Just occasionally, when impish choirboy Tim Booth trains the search-light of his maverick intelligence onto obvious targets like the Gulf War rather than his trademark psychological territory, James descend into verbose pomposity.
More often, as on throbbing current single ‘Sound’, they change into the acceptable face of stadium rock — wired and weird, lean but huge.
“The U2 you’re allowed to like” is the approving post-gig verdict of one friend and critic of the band.
Which obeys a perverse sort of logic: both groups lash fierce idealism to the clatter and strum of rootless neo-primitive polyrhythms, both emerged from a musical wilderness and both have advocated monkish self-denial in varying degrees. Tim was a teetotal celibate vegan long before his mentor Morrissey made sobriety sexy, which might explain why the band’s backstage gathering at Sheffield is so low on alcohol but piled high with tasty vegetarian cuisine. As befits their sensitive New Man reputation,
James sit around discussing poetry and art while their dressing room buzzes with wives, girlfriends and children. It’s a family affair, and 2000 light years from rock’n’roll as we know it.
As is longtime band manager Martine McDonagh, politely answering questions as the two-and-a-half year old son Ben she shares with Tim Booth — the couple have separated but enjoy a healthy working relationship — excitedly bellows the titles of James songs at her. Does she think the band are in danger of becoming genuine stadium rockers?
“In danger?!” laughs Martine, pound signs clearly visible behind shrewd eyes.
‘They are a big band, so the sound they make will always have to adapt to the venues they play. But every song they write is different from the last, so I think they’ll always retain some idiosyncratic character. ”
Part of that idiosyncrasy is the oddly feminine aspect of James, the gentle and androgynous side of seven male performers which Martine wholeheartedly encourages. It is she — along with Booth and fellow founder members Jim Glennie and Larry Gott — who has final say over band policy. “They’re not afraid of their femininity, they’re not out here to be big macho men or prove something. They’re not worried about their sexuality and they’re prepared to go out and display all sides of their personalities. I feel that’s something to be praised. ”
One side of their personalities James no longer display is the self-destructive dithering and crippling idealism of their early days: refusing interviews and photo sessions, turning down a prestigious support slot with The Smiths in America, waiting two years between releases. “There’s been bad luck and bad decision-making,” confesses Martine, “but I’m glad we made all the mistakes we made in the past, because if we hadn’t made them then we’d be making them now.”
What finally sent the band careering towards careerism was the “Madchester” explosion of recent years — in spirit at least — when fellow Mancunians and former James support acts like Happy Mondays and The Stone Roses benefited greatly from saturation media coverage.
“We very consciously avoided it but obviously realised we could use it to our advantage,” Martine admits. “We were very aware of musical waves at that point, having had our own one crash rather suddenly. We were aware the Madchester thing was a wave that would crash at some point, so we decided to develop alongside it but apart from it.”
Encouraged to think big by recent successes at Europeån festivals, Martine confesses she has been sizing up the potential international profile of James for the last two years. “I think in the UK we’ve hit a point where it could go very stale if we’re not careful, we’re going to have to be very creative.”
When she speaks of creating a buzz in selected territories and taking alternative hits to mainstream radio, Martine begs the question whether James are becoming just another packaged pop product. But she refuses to accept they have lost anything since their electrifying early incarnation besides “a bit of naivety. I don’t think they’ve lost their soul by any stretch of the imagination. You lose things, you gain things.”
James— The Movie: the touching story of a band who lost everything, but found themselves along the way. It’s possible, but who would play Tim — still a waifish waistrel at 30 with his little-boy lisp and wide-eyed innocence — Booth?
Even their sex-starved female press officer calls them “the kind of band you want to be your friends, and Tim’s the boy next doör.” Women, sighs the singer, only really want him for his mind.
“In the early days I was celibate, then I was with Martine for three years, and now I’m a free man — so I’m kind of frustrated! Some nights we do really sexual concerts, but unfortunately I don’t think people quite relate to us in that way, and sometimes I would like them to! I think we get a lot more… it’s going to sound really corny, but respect and love. And lust can be a healthy thing now and again. ‘
Preconceptions fall away minutes after meeting Booth. Educated at the same public school as John Peel before moving to drama college, the precious and po-faced crank we might expect overflows with gentle charm and dry wit. Tim is that rare and immensely treasurable commodity, a genuinely intelligent, eternally questioning pop star, even if he doesn’t take kindly to Simple Minds comparisons. “We can communicate with large audiences but stadium rock is a dirty word in hip English journalism, which is indie and white and sarcastic.
They aren’t going to like us if they know we can communicate in those kind of venues. When we did ‘Come Home’ everyone said we’d turned into a rave band; when we did ‘Government Walls’ and ‘Promised Land’ everyone said we were a political band; when we had a couple of songs on an acoustic guitar we were a folk band. They’re not listening — we’ve got fifty songs and maybe two or three you could say are in a stadium rock style. Two songs out of fifty — I mean, fuck off!”
Reviewers slammed James’s patchy performance at Reading this year as flabby and bombastic, but Tim dismisses this as the inevitable backlash against bands who become too big for the music press. His mind is on bigger horizons: Australia, Japan, America.
“There’s a kind of hollow stadium rock, where it promises a lot and nothing happens, and there are people who can play in large venues and still communicate in a very kind of personal way. To me it’s all part of this
whole English thing about success: I don’t think people in this country know how to handle success beyond a certain level.”
Tim protests that the set list he chose for Reading was deliberately difficult, overflowing with new material and not leaning too heavily on crowd-pleasers. He loves the celebratory atmosphere of recent James concerts — which reached a hysterical peak at Blackpool’s Winter Gardens last year when 3000 people sat down to ‘Sit Down’ — but is wary of becoming a Greatest Hits act. “We thought we could actually control ‘Sit Down’ but we can’t, it’s out of our hands now, we’ve come to that realisation since Reading. ‘Sit Down’ to me is like the end of a big book, the last chapter, and it has to be seen in context. I don’t like it overshadowing songs I love as much or more. ”
Perhaps Tim Booth overestimates his audience? At one stage during the Sheffield gig he thanked everyone for concentrating so hard. “Tonight the audience got loads of new songs and they really concentrated, and we were fired by it. Tonight I got the sense we could have played any song we chose, and they were willing to really listen, and that’s beautiful. The Sun underestimates people’s intelligence: I don’t want us to be a fucking daily newspaper, I want us to be challenging and still be big.”
Like The Doors, Talking Heads and The Smiths… the success rate at this game is pretty low — one band per decade — but James are ideal candidates to continue this lineage. All four bands are able to yoke the intensely cerebral wordsmithery of messianic, manic frontmen to savagely visceral energy and conjure up rock theatre on a visionary scale. When James tap into this soaring momentum, their anthemic majesty transcends everything on today’s pop landscape. Even when they wear waistcoats, a telltale symptom of stadium-itis, their passion and intelligence sparkles through.
“It’s not very rock’n’roll, is it?” coughs Tim apologetically. No, and thank God for that. She must be smiling on James at last.
Sound
Summary
Sound is the follow-up single to Sit Down that reached 9 in the UK Singles Chart.
Track List
7″ JIM9 – Sound (7″ version) / All My Sons
CAS JIMC9 – Sound (7″ version) / All My Sons
12″ JIM912 – Sound (7″ version) / All My Sons / Come Home (Youth Pressure Dub) / Sound (full length)
CD JIM9 CD – Sound (7″ version) / All My Sons / Come Home (Youth Pressure Dub) / Sound (full length)
Details
Release Name: | Sound |
Artist Name: | |
Release Date: | 18th November 1991 |
Format: | Studio Single |
Catalogue: | 7" JIM9; 12" JIM912; CD JIM9 CD; CAS JIMC9 |
Following the massive success of Sit Down was never going to be an easy task. In typical James fashion, they chose not to release one of the more obvious singles off Seven but went for a six-minute understated epic called Sound. Fans converted by the singalong Sit Down were to be surprised by the new single.
The single was backed by the radio version of the single, All My Sons and a remix of the James standard Come Home by Seven producer Youth. All My Sons clocked in at under two minutes and was a rant at the Gulf War written in late 1990 and first aired live in December 1990.
Press reaction to the single was generally negative. Accused of stadium rock by critics after the recently finished tour, the layered sound of the single provided ammunition to those accusations in their eyes. The inevitable U2 comparisons ensued.
The single was promoted by a series of Radio 1 interviews and the now obligatory appearance on The Word and children’s television including a rather amusing performance on Going Live, where the band en-masse took the piss out of presenter Phillip Schofield.
Artwork was again kept simple with a band photograph with James name superimposed over the top.
Sound entered the charts at number 9. Another Top of the Pops appearance resulted from this success, but the single dropped out of the Top Ten the following week failing to match Sit Down’s second week climb and longevity.
Reviews
NME
Doubtless this will infuriate James pop fan contingent expecting another ‘Come Home’. Instead James do the decent thing and spread their wings with a grace and elegance which – despite what people say – saves them from stadiumitis. There are stadium-guitar traits here, but thankfully, they don’t come wrapped up in the bombastic shroud widely reported of their recent live shows. Sound (even the title works on various levels) is a layered number with a nice urgent bassline and flickering guitars. Tim Booth, meantime, sounds less fraught than his ‘Gold Mother’ era, though still uncomfortable with the world in general. I like him.
Press Release
James: Sound Press Release November 1991
James end a triumphant year with a brand new single ‘Sound’. Released by Fontana on November 18th this is a taster for their new album, which is set for release in the Spring of 92.
‘Sound’, a new Booth/Gott/Glennie song. was produced by Youth and mixed by Tim Palmer. The 7″ is backed by another new song, ‘All My Sons’. while the four track 12″ and CD contain extended versions of ‘Sound’ plus Youth’s Pressure Dub Mix of ‘Come Home”.
James chequered eight year history finally came to fruition in 1991. They enjoyed a number two hit with ‘Sit Down’ in April, their live ‘Come Home’ video topped the video charts, their ‘Gold Mother’ LP has sold quarter of a million in the UK, while the band played their biggest show to date when they topped the Saturday night at the Reading Festival, going on to play a 36 date sell-out UK tour.
In Europe a series of summer festival appearances saw the band enjoying a long deserved continental success, while American alternative radio has embraced ‘Sit Down’.
- 7″ JIM9 SOUND / ALL MY SONS
- 12″ JIM912 SOUND (FULL VERSION) / (EDIT) / COME HOME (YOUTH’S DUB) / ALL MY SONS
- CASSETTE JIM9 SOUND / ALL MY SONS
- CD JIMCD9 SOUND (FULL VERSION) / (EDIT) / COME HOME (YOUTH’S DUB) / ALL MY SONS
- All My Sons :1991
- Come Home :1989
- Sound :1991
Going Live Interview – BBC1
Phillip Schofield : Come and have a seat at the front. Always a pleasure to have you on the programme. That’s a great housecoat by the way – that’s a heck of a thing. Fabulous. I bet you can go straight back to bed afterwards. Welcome to you. I’ve got a couple of things for you here. First of all this has come from Christine Free who is in Swindon. My daughter Poppy is an avid James fan as you can see from the enclosed photo. There we are. There’s a nice picture there. Had her hair done. Extraordinary. So I thought if we gave that to you, maybe you could send her a picture or something.
Tim : Yeah sure. Find out her hairdresser
PS : If you’ve got time. The other one I’ve got here, we’ll get through the fan mail first of all if that’s alright, this is from Susan. Susan is in Greater Manchester and she’s done a whole load of pictures for you here. Masses of them. All sorts of stuff.
Tim : Who’s that psychopath?
PS : Let me show you the originals. Those are the originals there.
Tim : Thank you.
Jim : Who is it?
Tim : It’s Andy
PS : A bit skinny in that one actually.
Tim : Oh, I’m like that under this coat.
PS : Well you do apparently, I was reading all this stuff on you last night, and apparently is it true that you lose a stone when you’re touring? When you’re performing.
Tim : Yeah. From the beginning of the tour to the end, kind of. Not in one concert
PS : Does that mean you can pig out? You can have those as well. You can pig out in a major way before you go on tour because you know you’re going to lose it before the end?
Tim : Yeah, but not straight before a concert because you end up belching in the middle of a song which isn’t very healthy. As you’ll find out I think.
PS : Oh no, I shan’t be eating, I’ll be far too nervous to do any of that stuff
Tim : No fizzy drinks
PS : Is that right? Thanks for the advice. It’s going quite well actually, I’m quite pleased with it at the moment.
Tim : You’ve got a good teacher
PS : Yes I have. Got a very good teacher. Thank you. Let’s get on with that now. Going back to reading through all the newspaper stuff, live is very important, your live stuff is very important to you. I mean you were singing live vocals this morning on the programme. Is it important for you to get out and do it live.
Tim : Yeah, yeah
Jim : We’ve just finished a really big tour and that was great fun. It’s what we do best at the end of the day.
PS : My brother says it’s one of the best concerts he’s ever seen actually, really enjoyed it and that’s high praise from him by the way. A lot of people would say, apart from your fanatical fans that you’ve got, that it was almost sort of an overnight success. You’ve actually been plugging away at it for quite a while, haven’t you? Eight years or so
Tim : Yeah, me and him have been together about ten years and James have been going about nine.
PS : Did you feel comfortable about slipping out of that cult status and into commercial popdom? Do you want that to happen?
Tim : We needed the money so we didn’t turn it down. Because we’ve been going so long, we write all our songs through improvisation so we can’t change it so it doesn’t affect the way we make our music. We did, I think we’d had enough of being in that cult ghetto which gets tedious after a while and it’s nice to reach as many people as possible. We’re not prejudiced. We like to have young and old and families and their really young kids, it’s great.
PS : It’s alright being cult but it doesn’t pay the mortgage.
Jim : Biggest cult band in the world.
Sound – Press Release
James end a triumphant year with a brand new single ‘Sound’. Released by Fontana on November 18th this is a taster for their new album, which is set for release in the Spring of 92.
‘Sound’, a new Booth/Gott/Glennie song. was produced by Youth and mixed by Tim Palmer. The 7″ is backed by another new song, ‘All My Sons’. while the four track 12″ and CD contain extended versions of ‘Sound’ plus Youth’s Pressure Dub Mix of ‘Come Home”.
James chequered eight year history finally came to fruition in 1991. They enjoyed a number two hit with ‘Sit Down’ in April, their live ‘Come Home’ video topped the video charts, their ‘Gold Mother’ LP has sold quarter of a million in the UK, while the band played their biggest show to date when they topped the Saturday night at the Reading Festival, going on to play a 36 date sellout UK tour.
In Europe a series of summer festival appearances saw the band enjoying a long deserved continental success, while American alternative radio has embraced ‘Sit Down’.
7″ JIM 9 SOUND / ALL MY SONS
12″ JIM 912 SOUND (FULL VERSION) / (EDIT) / COME HOME (YOUTH’S DUB) / ALL MY SONS
CASSETTE JIM 9 SOUND / ALL MY SONS
CD JIMCD 9 SOUND (FULL VERSION) / (EDIT) / COME HOME (YOUTH’S DUB) / ALL MY SONS
Norwich Gig Cancellation News – NME
James were forced to pull out of a date at Norwich UEA last Wednesday after Tim Booth experienced voice problems.
However, Thousand Yard Stare, currently supporting on the tour, volunteered to headline in place of James, and the show went ahead.
Sound Release News – NME
James round off a triumphant 1991 in which they scored a number two hit with Sit Down and topped the bill at the Reading Festival with a new single.
The track Sound will be the first taster of their new album, due out in Spring 92. The track was produced by Youth and mixed by Tim Palmer, and is backed by another new song All My Sons. 12-inch and CD formats also carry Youth’s dub mix of Come Home plus an extended mix of Sound.
Sound is released on Fontana on November 18.
Dave Haslam, prominent Manchester journalist / DJ has been commissioned to write James’s authorised biography, which will be published by Omnibus next year.
Putting The Booth In – Melody Maker
James Single – Melody Maker News
JAMES are set to return with a new single at the beginning of next month and an LP in the new year.
The single is called “Sound”and is set for a November 11 release by Phonogram. It’s backed by “Come Home”and a new song “All My Sons”.