Second Hand News / August 2013
It’s that time of the month! SDE has been shopping for used records, largely in charity or thrift stores. Here’s what we’ve found…
Janet Jackson / Control The Remixes CD (1986)
There seems to be a few different versions Janet Jackson‘s Control The Remixes – different cover art, different track listings. This is the eight-track CD that doesn’t have any versions of The Pleasure Principle on it. It also has the “Cool Summer Mix (Part 1)” of Nasty, not Part 2. A nice find to go with the Japanese issue of the standard Control album that we found in May.
John Lennon / Borrowed Time UK 7″ Single (1984)
Borrowed Time was the second single from the posthumous John Lennon album Milk and Honey (released in early 1984). Despite the poignancy of the subject matter, the charming, but slight track, didn’t stand a chance against the big hitters in 1984 (Frankie, Wham!, Duran Duran) and it limped to number 32 in the UK charts. The B-side is a Yoko Ono song called Your Hands.
ELO / Out Of The Blue 2LP Blue Vinyl (1977)
This was a nice find. An original 1977 UK pressing of ELO’s Out Of The Blue on blue vinyl. This is a Jet Records release (JETDP 400) packaged in a gatefold sleeve and it also comes with a poster.
Various Artists / Blitz One CD (1989)
We have to admit that we’ve got a bit of a ‘thing’ for weird budget CD compilations from the 1980s. This 16-track offering called Blitz One was issued on Pickwick International in 1989 on behalf of the National Autistic Society. It’s apparent claim to fame is that it has two tracks from eight different artists. So track 1 is Shout by Tears For Fears, while track 9 is Mad World, by Tears For Fears. Track 7 is I Will Be Your Friend by Sade and track 15 is Hang On To Your Love by… well, you get the idea. The people who compiled this do use a bit of poetic license by including I’m Your Man by Wham! and then A Different Corner by George Michael. Fine, he wrote both songs, but hey, Wings and The Beatles aren’t the same artist are they? Not sure why it was called Blitz One, surely something like ‘It Takes Two‘ or hell, ‘Blitz Two’ would have made more sense.
Various Artists / The Brit Box 4CD box set (2007)
This really was found in a charity shop (honest, guv) and it has to be the daddy of all CD boxes. The Brit Box from Rhino is a four-CD box set from 2007 that has working lights!! Yes, if you click on the image above, you’ll see the lights. There is a switch at the back of the box and the idea is that you turn it on and put the telephone box lid back on. The light flickers on and off shining through the top of the ‘telephone box’ illuminating the sign which reads ‘The Brit Box’. Gimmicks aside, this is actually a really good compilation, clearly targeting the American market with mainly UK Indie/Britpop type content. Artists include Suede, New Order, The Boo Radleys, Pulp, Menswear, Supergrass, The Jesus and Mary Chain, The Primitives, and Primal Scream. 78 tracks in total. Hopefully all the imagery is ironic, because it’s all rather unpalatable if you are a Londoner – Beefeaters, red telephone boxes, baked beans, tea bags and ash trays(?). Comes with a really good 80-page booklet.
Duran Duran / Do You Believe In Shame UK 10″ (1989)
The last single from Duran Duran‘s underrated Big Thing album. Do You Believe In Shame was released in loads of formats in the UK including a triple-pack seven-inch single and a little three-inch CD single, but not, curiously enough, as a twelve inch vinyl record. This features The Krush Brothers LSD Edit – which combines an edited version of The Edge Of America with Lake Shore Driving – and Notorious live from the Strange Behaviour tour of 1987. It doesn’t include God (London) or How A Road Gets Made which were on some formats.
Kirsty MacColl / England 2 Colombia 0 Promo CD (2000)
This was never actually released as a single from Kirsty MacColl‘s last album Tropical Brainstorm (issued in 2000). The promo includes the album version and a radio version, of which the latter is presumably unique to this CD.
Culture Club / Victims UK Poster Bag 7″ (1984)
It looks like a T-shirt, but this is actually a seven-inch poster-bag of Culture Club‘s eighth UK single Victims. One side of the massive poster is a not very appealing picture of Boy George and Jon Moss (in American football gear), but the other side is that great moody black and white shot that was the cover of Victims. Even so, the poster bag seven-inch single was always a bit of a flawed concept, because if you actually used the poster, you’re left with a naked sleeveless vinyl single, in a see-through plastic bag.
Jellybean / Rocks The House! UK CD 1988
A collection of twelve-inch remixes from Madonna’s ex-boyfriend Jellybean, including Who Found Who (US Club Mix) and The Real Thing (West 26th Street Mix).
Hue and Cry / Labour Of Love UK 12″ (1987)
“I don’t need your pseudo satisfaction, baby!” Labour Of Love was the second Circa Records single for Scottish duo Hue and Cry after debut, I Refuse, flopped. It reached number 6 in the UK and would be their biggest hit of their career. The sticker on this twelve-inch boasts ‘12″ Single at 7″ Price’ but what ‘they’ don’t tell you is that you’re not getting the twelve inch version of the song, it just plays the seven-inch version. And YES there was a remix – the excellent ‘Version Superbad’ (runs for 6.25) was on the cassette single and a ten-inch vinyl version. This twelve-inch also comes with a poster, which was a pleasant surprise. Having said that, do you know anyone who wants to put a Hue and Cry poster on their wall in 2013?
Hue and Cry trivia > With Labour of Love in the UK top ten, Hue and Cry were ‘big’ enough to be asked to support Madonna when she played Roundhay Park in Leeds on her Who’s That Girl? tour.
See you next month, with more Second Hand News!
19 Comments
19 thoughts on “Second Hand News / August 2013”
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Really love this feature Paul! Reminds me of my vinyl buying days rummaging through the bargain vinyl bins in the early 80s. My biggest regret was only buying the one copy, of about 10 in the racks, of the original 12″ of The Pet Shop Boys ‘West End Girls” for 25p each. Pretty much unknowns so I bought it as I liked the sleeve! Happy days!
You can never have enough remix albums of Janet Jackson’s Control.
What a great haul! I’m always on the lookout for a good bargain, particularly used vinyl, which I have a blog about. Today I got Depeche Mode’s Speak & Spell in perfect nick for £1 in a charity shop – made my day!
Jj looks like the us version i think. The dd10″ was one of those where i saw more copies of the numbered version than the un numbered! Good stuff though.
What’s the difference between shopping with you in a bad way and shopping with you in a good way? Intrigued… :)
Always a joy to see what your local secondhand/charity shops have to offer.
The local shops round my way usually have little of interest, but was in a secondhand shop the other day that had obviously recently acquired the collection of someone who was busy buying singles in 1988-1990 when multiformatting was at its height. The racks were full of various limited editions (poster sleeves, boxsets, tins) of singles by the likes of Fine Young Cannibals, Climie Fisher, Fuzzbox, the Primitives, Breathe, Debbie Gibson and Bananarama for next to nothing. Made me quite nostalgic, although I do wonder how often producing all those limited editions proved to be cost-effective for the record companies.
There was a Blitz 2 CD compliation released by Pickwick (the year on the CD copy I have says 1988) featuring 12 tracks in total(two each by Rick Astley,Paul Hardcastle,Elkie Brooks,Kim Wilde and one track each by Simply Red,Hollywood Beyond,Howard Jones and Red Box.
The ELO on blue has always been on my wants list. Haven’t found one in good condition. If you want to move it, let me know. The Bit box is a great find also.
My fave is the Janet Jackson disc. I love the old discs printed in West Germany with aluminum hubs.
I still have my Brit Box I bought at Barnes and Noble (I’m in U.S.) way back when it came out. Was listening to it and playing it in the car for friends all this past Christmas vacation, and, yes, the lights still work, and I’ve never changed the battery. The ELO ‘Out of the Blue’ LP I bought in 1977 still has the poster. (Not on blue vinyl, though).
Are you sure the Hue And Cry 12″ A-side is the 7″ version? I thought the 12″ was about a minute longer than the 7″…
(I was always disappointed with those 4 and a bit min “extended” versions back when I was buying vinyl regularly!)
Don’t forget that the Jellybean album has a Madonna penned track called ‘Sidewalk Talk’ and she also sings the chorus and backing! For Madonna fans its a real gem!
To be fair to the compiler of ‘Blitz One’, George Michael’s ‘A Different Corner’ had previously been included on the official Wham! compilation ‘The Final’ in 1986.
Yes, fair comment I suppose. A Different Corner always felt more out of place than Careless Whisper did…
I have the Brit Box and it is a great compilation–it exposed this American to some deeper British tracks. I’ll have to see if the light still works. Pink Floyd’s ‘Pulse’ had a pulsing light that you could replace the battery to keep it going. Second Hand News is one of my favorite features of this fantastic site. Thanks, Paul.
I want to go shopping with you in a bad way. Would it be rude to ask how much each of your finds cost when you go shopping? It may make me more envious. :)
Haha… Nothing cost that much. The Brit Box was the most expensive, but still only £8. ELO was £6. Everything else was under £3 I think.
The Kirsty promo is indeed a great find — the radio edit has different lyrics, replacing ‘bastard’ with ‘scumbag’ in the bridge IIRC.
Angus from Gusworld!!? Hello! Loved your coverage of Wham from all those years ago…. thanks for the info on Kirsty – I hadn’t got around to comparing the two tracks. The ‘radio version’ is actually a bit longer so it was clear it wasn’t a short edit. Do stay in touch, by the way. cheers, Paul