Setlist
Skullduggery / If Things Were Perfect / Vulture / What's The World / Withdrawn / Chain Mail / Leaking / Folklore / Hymn From A Village / StutterSupport
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Thank God then for James, a Factory band with the sort of talent that most headliners would struggle to find in a month of Blue Mondays. If regulation guitar, drums, bass and vocals are back in style then add to your list of potential hitmakers this magnificent four-piece band.
Beginning a well-constructed, well-received set with the patting of a cow-bell in ‘Hymn From A Village’, James build their sound around flurries of cascading vocals tacked onto the janglies of a post-Postcard guitar. Skipping from a chugging, almost Latin beat in ‘Withdrawn’ to the up-and-down, fast-and-slow motions of ‘What’s The World’, James not only make enjoyable music but actually look as though they enjoy making it. Throwing himself into spasms, lead-singer Tim Booth amazes the audience by singing full pelt “I-I-I-I-I-I” then modestly bouncing backstage and almost throwing away the lines “I wear an armour plated suit / You put your lips to helmet slits / You try to suck me out the tin / I can’t get out, I’m welded in”
Hymn From A Village was the lead track on the James II single in 1985 and the subsequent Village Fire EP compilation of their first two Factory singles.
It also features on the band’s 1998 Best Of, the only song from the pre-Mercury era to feature on the record.
A live version recorded at Manchester Apollo in 1989 appears as a b-side to the How Was It For You? single in 1990. A Glastonbury 1990 BBC recording features on the live disc of The Gathering Sound boxset from 2012 and it also features on the Getting Away With Live CD released in 2002 and recorded at Manchester Arena on their December 2001 farewell tour.
Hymn From A Village was featured along with Stutter on the 1982 demo circulated to record companies and was first aired to a mass audience in a 1983 Peel Session. An even earlier version entitled Say It With Flowers appeared on the studio disc of The Gathering Sound boxset in 2012.
Its lyrics take a swipe at the weak lyrical content of his contemporaries.
It was also the track that convinced Larry that his guitar students did have a special talent and that he should join the band. In the 1991 tour programme, Jim named it as the one James song that he would want to survive if all but one were accidentally erased.
It was remastered for the Factory Palatine collection in 1992 and was released on a four track sampler with Cath Carroll, Marcel King and Joy Division. As copies of it “were selling for a hundred pounds” (quote Saul Davies ermmm), it was included as the final track of the Best Of.
It has featured regularly in live sets since the band reformed in 2007.
| Song: | Hymn From A Village |
| Released: | 1st February 1985 |
| Main Associated Album (or Single): | James II EP |
| First Heard Live: | Unknown Venue – 22nd November 1982 |