Single-Minded
A new time machine is discovered on the local high street...
My challenge to you this month. Dive into your collection of vinyl, tape or CD singles and pick out 6 at random. What’s the story behind each one?
A new record store has opened nearby. It’s a sign of the times (and property market) that someone felt confident enough to begin trading solely in vinyl, but then Friendly Records is one of several new niche businesses that have appeared alongside more established retailers at the grungier end of North Street.
Living the urban dream, I called by and immediately saw a rack
of old vinyl singles on sale for a bargain 10p each. I never planned to buy 6 records
that effectively charted my life but, 30 minutes of rifling through dog-eared
record sleeves later, that’s exactly what happened (I could have bought more). Nick Hornby couldn't have been prouder.
Here are my purchases, in chronological order of release;
- Rivers of Babylon – Boney M
. My first musical
memory, walking through a shopping centre aged 4, clutching this single for
Mum. Almost 40 years later I bought it again for myself.
- Jealous Guy – Roxy Music
. Having discovered
Bryan Ferry in the mid-90s, Jealous Guy will forever remind me of an emotional farewell
with my then-girlfriend. I was disappearing abroad for 3 months, and we were
driving along when this came on. The floodgates opened.
- Wishing (If I had a Photograph of You) – Flock of Seagulls . To me, this track captures that early 80s electronic sound. It’s an era I’ve become very nostalgic about, even though I was only at primary school and it was Madness – rather than Flock of Seagulls – that was played at our school discos.
- Hold me Now – Thompson Twins . It’s easy to forget how huge the Thompson Twins were in 1983/4. This purchase can be attributed to my sister who had their album, ‘Into the Gap’, and ensured it was never off the cassette player back then.
- Hymn to Her - The Pretenders . I always remember this being on an early ‘Now’ album (#9 to be exact). ‘Now’ always seemed to reserve the cooler, less ‘poppy’ stuff for sides 3 or 4.
- Don’t you want me – Felix . Something I bought originally through no-one’s influence other than my own. It reflected a time when I’d fully embraced house music and recorded tapes of Pete Tong’s Friday night Radio 1 show.
Besides their significance to me, all of this second-hand vinyl has been a chapter of someone else’s life. Flock of Seagulls once belonged to Allyson because she’s written her name on both sides of the record sleeve. Felix cost someone £2.39 at Woolworths (the price label is still on), back when they were moved enough to go out and buy this single. Every record tells a story.
As the vinyl renaissance continues, I really hope Friendly Records cements its place on North Street. It’s a reminder in the all-pervasive digital age that buying music was once – and can still be – an act loaded with meaning.
Right, ready with your six?










