Setlist
Johnny Yen / Are You Ready / Ya Ho / Gregory's Town / Burned / So Many Ways / Medieval / Charlie Dance / Sit Down / Riders / Black Hole / What's The World / What For / Summer SongSupport
Happy MondaysMore Information & Reviews
None.
Strip-mine was the second album from James, released 37 years ago in September 1988.
What For / Charlie Dance / Fairground / Are You Ready / Medieval / Not There / Ya Ho / Riders / Vulture / Stripmining / Refrain
Release Name: | Strip-mine |
Artist Name: | James |
Release Date: | 26th September 1988 |
Format: | Studio Album |
Catalogue: | LP – JIMLP2, CAS – JIMC2, CD – JIMCD2 |
Following the chart failure of Stutter, James went into the studios in early 1987 to record the follow-up album. Using many of the tracks left over from the Stutter sessions and earlier live performances, the result of the sessions at Rockfield Studios was an album, but one that neither the band or the record company were happy with. Sire were reluctant to do much with the album and initially refused the band’s request for funds to remix it. James stagnated for a year, until they enlisted the help of Simply Red’s manager Eliot Rashman, who persuaded Sire that James could still be an internationally successful band given the right promotion.
A release of Ya Ho was scheduled for September 1987 but was postponed at the last moment. Steve Power was enlisted to remix the album, albeit with limited funds. At this stage, the band were left to rehearse and write new material, only able to afford to play the odd gig as they had little to promote and even less cash to pay for it.
What For was released in March 1988 and failed to chart, partly due to insufficient promotion by Sire who viewed the single as “too indie.” They finally relented to release Strip-Mine in September 1988 but gave it no push at all at a time where James resurrection was beginning in the live arena, selling out 1,500-2,000 capacity venues in Manchester and London despite never having had a whiff of chart success.
The version of Strip-Mine that finally saw the light of day was not too radically different from the original, Stutter having been replaced by Are You Ready and a revised track listing being the major differences. By the time it hit the shops some of the songs were five years old and the band had stacks of new material ready to unleash including a little number called Sit Down. The album reached number 90, a credible performance in the circumstances but then sank without trace.
An anti-Clause 28 gig with The Stone Roses in support.
James are all about food. At the close of their set, singer Tim Booth remarks, with considerable disdain, “This is the last song and it’s dedicated to all those journalists who think we’re Buddhist vegetarians.”
Not me pal. First, I’ve never written about James before and second, because it should have been obvious to anyone over the past three years that, live at least, this band are rampant carnivores.
Some things don’t change, thank heavens and Tim Booth still shakes. For those unaware of what I mean, at appropriate moments in certain songs he comes on like a rag doll with a gyroscope for a backbone and judders violently at immense speed.
Not only is it fascinating and exciting to watch, but it can serve as an escape route for awkward moments, like in the first song tonight “So Many Ways”, when the sound quality was
atrocious and things looked extremely dodgy.
Tim went bananas and everyone felt a whole lot better, the band most of all.
“We have to sort this out now, because we’re going to be ruthless tonight,” said Tim referring to the sound problems. But, although they earned top marks for effort, the sound remained variable and this was a less than ruthless performance.
Having previously thrilled to some high-octane Jamesian burnouts in small-scale venues, I know they can do better. They are a very intimate live band and the expanses of the T&C appeared to cramp their style. On the long term musical front, however, there seems no cause for concern as the liberal sprinkling of numbers from the forthcoming Stripmine album proved that James are still amongst the land’s finest pop bands, nonconformist and just slightly mysterious.
“So if you came for a Buddhist vegetarian party, f**k off!”
Right Tim, mine’s a kebab with extra meat.
See attached press clipping.
Mastertape of BBC Radio Manchester Meltdown session from September 1987. Features 4 tracks and an interview.
Medieval / (interview) / Charlie Dance / Doubts
Release Name: | BBC Radio Manchester Session - 28th September 1987 |
Artist Name: | |
Release Date: | 28th September 1987 |
Format: | Promo Album |
Catalogue: | N/A |
This mastertape is from a BBC Radio Manchester session for the show Meltdown from September 1987. It features Medieval, Doubts, and Charlie Dance. There is also an interview with Gavan Whelan and Tim Booth.
The song Charlie Dance was a pre remix version from Strip-mine, which was released the year after. The tape also features the song Please Say Yes by Manchester rapper Prince Kool.
The mastertape was a loft find and listed for sale on eBay in August 2016.