Great divorce albums, Powerpop snobs and dark tales of 1999

Great divorce albums, Powerpop snobs and dark tales of 1999

By Mark Ellen, David Hepworth and Alex Gold

Various items set off the alarm in the rock and roll bag-check this week and were hauled back for closer inspection, among them …

 

… when did records first try to sound like the past?

 

… why Karl Wallinger and Robbie Williams fell out over She’s the One.

 

... how Marillion and Chuck D changed the digital landscape.

 

… the only word for the sound of Free is “lascivious”.

 

… Blood on the Tracks, Here My Dear, Shoot Out The Lights, Tapestry, Tunnel of Love and other accounts of marital fracture.  

 

… proof the mainstream no longer exists: Glastonbury headliner SZA has had 1.7b streams yet people claim they’ve never heard of her.

 

… the poignancy commercial failure lends to pop music.

 

… the Wire’s ‘100 Records That Set the World On Fire (While No-One was Listening)’.

 

… how Marvin Gaye married a woman 17 years older than him and left her for a 17 year-old.

 

… Eamonn Forde - in bed! - talking about his new book ‘1999: The Year the Record Industry Lost Control’, the people who knew the digital revolution was coming and the ones who didn’t believe it.

 

… Big Star, Dwight Twilley, the Raspberries, World Party and why Powerpop appeals to music snobs like us.

 

… “a Golden Age is when things behaved in such a way that you believed they’d behave that way forever”.

 

… plus Frank Sinatra, Ava Gardner, Andy Fraser, Steve Winwood and the days when “music down a phoneline” felt like science fiction.

 

Order Eamonn Forde’s 1999: The Year the Record Industry Lost Control here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/1999-Year-Record-Industry-Control/dp/1913172775


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