In My Room (Again)


Thought I’d do another repeat post from the archives to make up for the lack of new stuff I don’t have time to write. I chose this one because this album still hasn’t been reissued since I first wrote it back in 2007 and these tracks are too great to remain expensive cult collectibles.

Most Saturday afternoons in 1977 you’d find me in my bedroom listening to the Kenny Everett show on Capital Radio which was the perfect way to fill some of that dead time between getting back from the shops with my Mum and the football results coming on Grandstand. It wasn’t just the adventures of Captain Kremmen (which you can listen to here) that kept me listening, like myself Kenny had a major ELO obsession and was constantly playing their then-new Out Of The Blue album. He must have played the entire double album (parts of it several times over) and this was before I got my own copy so I was glued to the radio. Kenny’s musical tastes leaned heavily toward the polished and elaborate like ELO, he was the sort who thought “Sgt. Pepper” was the pinnacle of western civilization and that snotty punk stuff was just horrible. I thought so too at the time, it just sounded like a moronic racket to my ears and whenever my sister played the first Clash album I’d take the piss by singing “White Riot” in a retarded D.P. Gumby voice.

Another album that got heavy play on his show was Looking Over My Shoulder by Scottish singer/songwriter Chris Rainbow. If anybody has heard of him these days it’s as lead singer of The Alan Parsons Project in the 1980s (I’m so glad to say I never knew he was) but in the 70s he recorded three solo albums which are to The Beach Boys what ELO’s were to The Beatles — full of sunny, intricately-arranged pop symphonies with heavily multi-tracked vocals. While a lot of the album now sounds as dated and cheesy as the shirt he’s wearing on the sleeve, some of it still quite gorgeous.

“Dear Brian” is a fan letter to Brian Wilson who at that time was still a recluse, drugged out of his head in a sandpit somewhere. Over it’s sublime six minutes he laments the destroyed tapes and lost outtakes that ended up on a studio floor and implores Brian to “step in the sandbox” and make music again. The ghostly “In And Out And Round About” washes in like a mist coming off the North Sea and gets a bit Proggy (but in a very pretty way) with some highly pretentious lyrics and a grand church organ arrangement. Kenny played this a lot and would get all wobbly over the whispery ending.

Download: Dear Brian – Chris Rainbow (mp3)
Download: In And Out And Round About – Chris Rainbow (mp3)

All of Rainbow’s albums are out of print now and go for rather large amounts of money as he’s something of a minor cult amongst fans of 70s soft pop.

4 thoughts on “In My Room (Again)”

  1. Reply to Anonymous (February 24, 2013 at 2:11 PM)…The Trib is notorious PC and…I don’t know if you think you are agreeing with me or not, but this is my point. When a left-wing paper prints stuff like “you feel me” and all the other ghetto dialect in the article, and uses the real ghetto names, I am surprised. I don’t know if it’s a trend, or a rogue reporter, or just a newbie whose prose fell through the cracks unfiltered, but I like to hope that it’s a sign. Just because I am a realist doesn’t mean I can’t look for signs about which to be optimistic.And in that vein, I guess I should assume that you were simply underscoring my remarks, saying it’s not just a typical MSM rag that did this, it’s a leftist, libtarded rag. Potayto, Potahto.

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  2. I definitely remember his name and feel sure he must have had a hit single of some sort but I’m buggered if I can remember what it might have been.

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  3. Thanks – I will head off towards Youtube and see what I can find.

    This sounds like the sort of stuff my Facebook friends the Sonic Executive Sessions would enjoy. If you’re not aware of them, you should give them a listen:

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