Dig if you will a picture: It’s a Sunday evening in suburban southern 'Scansin. A pimply, bespectacled teenager peels the shrinkwrap from a C-90 and puts it in the tape deck. He spins the FM dial from left to center, from WMSE to WQFM. They’re probably playing REO Dragwagon.
But soon it will be time for “Q-Wave”, hosted by “Downstairs Dan” Hansen. Hit the record button! The week ahead will be spent listening to that tape over and over, noting the song titles and artists. Next, poring over mail order catalogs from Rough Trade, Rather Ripped Records, and Enigma in search of these punk and new wave records. Or maybe a trip to Milwaukee, to comb the racks at Ludwig Van Ear with an alphabetized wantlist in hand, and cash in pocket from my after school job delivering newspapers by bicycle.
Here’s a sequel to my previous post of songs played on “Q-Wave”. This music was hard to find back then in the ‘burbs. I knew one kid whose family had cable TV, so I only saw MTV during sleepovers. Once in awhile SNL would have a musical guest like Devo, Elvis Costello, or (gasp) Fear. A rival late night show called Fridays hosted the Clash and the Jam. But these were rare sightings, and we didn’t have a VCR.
I didn’t have older siblings or uncles to borrow records from, and the kids at school were mystified by my Circle Jerks and Bad Brains t-shirts. I was 16, and all-ages shows were rare. “Q-Wave” and WMSE (the college station at the Milwaukee School of Engineering) were my lifeline to the world that I read about in Creem and Trouser Press.
I wrote letters to Downstairs Dan, and he read one of them on the air! After I started a fanzine, he interviewed me on another WQFM show, “Talking To Q”. Had I stayed in Wisconsin, I might have become a student DJ on WMSE. But dad’s career uprooted our family again, this time to Georgia.
There were great college stations in Georgia (WREK, WRAS, and WUOG). And I kept my “Q-Wave” tapes. When I got into hip hop some years later, I found another weekly radio show (“The Beatbox” on WRAS, with DJ JD) and followed the same process: tape the show, learn the songs, find the records.


Q-Wave Faves vol 2: https://pixeldrain.com/u/S1qdmc2T
ReplyDeleteThis one includes a local MKE band (X-Cleavers) and a song that was played frequently on WMSE (Headbutts). I don't remember hearing "Headbutts" on Q-Wave, but it's part of my 80's radio nostalgia. I don't think anybody would have imagined back then that The Cure, U2, Psychedelic Furs, Billy Idol and Stray Cats would become big mainstream artists, or that The Clash and The (English) Beat would have hit songs! And who would have guessed that some of these bands would last as long as they have -- Killing Joke, U2, The Cure?
It was very different in The Netherlands or UK. Everyone with a grain of a brain listened to John Peel. And in The Netheralnds there was the VPRO radio with programs like RadioNome and Spleen. In fact the whole left to right culture had moments on Hilversum 3 (as Pop-radio was called). Very lucky. The Belgians also had their share of New Wave radio shows. I guess the Germans and French also.
ReplyDeleteI and the friends from school, were early disbelievers of U2. When we heared them on a Dutch after that a Belgian, and in the same week on German radio, they copied themselves to the moment they had their "spontaneous" public participations. And we said NO. They were just young Springsteens, hopeless.
In Europe Stray Cats were mainstream from day 1, The Cure - A Forest, a top 40 hit, and Billy Idol, Adam and the Ants, The Clash they were top 40 acts from 1980 onwards, It took Killing Joke a while before they copied U2 with A Love Like Blood and find a new audience.....
Music scene in Europe was dramatically different to the USA.
Yes, we had no John Peel, no VPRO, no pirate stations. I like this blog quite a bit, and it really is amazing the things that charted in Britain that never stood a chance here in the Land of the Free: https://indienumber1s.blogspot.com/
DeleteI was fooled by U2. The press (at least here) lumped them in with the Teardrops and the Bunnymen. The Cure were not immediately successful in the US. I don't think I saw them on MTV until "Let's Go To Bed" and then "Close To Me". I still love their first record the best.
Three Imaginary Boys was repackaged for the US market with a different tracklist as the album Boys Don't Cry:
https://www.discogs.com/master/20161-The-Cure-Boys-Dont-Cry
And then I bought this two-for-one:
https://www.discogs.com/master/22380-The-Cure-Happily-Ever-After
Cool -t hanx a lot. Vol 1 unfortunately is down.
ReplyDeleteSorry about that, I should have checked! New link to v1: https://pixeldrain.com/u/GCMkbso6
DeleteLooks great, Jon. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteI wasn't above taping from the television. It was a big event when YELLOW SUBMARINE aired on network TV & I actually got a pretty good audio recording by hanging a microphone in front of a 4" speaker on a portable color television! As a result I can almost recite the movie. "It's shrinking time in Pepperland!"
I was glad to see some Stray Cats included. Anyone who doesn't like them can (in the words of Jerry Lee Lewis) "Bark my hole." ;)
I know, you know, I did not meant to be dissing The Stray Cats. In Europe we had the Top 40 Rock'n'Roll/Billy revival right with the punks. Bands like MacTaple (Taple sounds like the Dutch word for Nipple) Crazy Cavan, Shakin Stevens, Matchbox, Rocky Sharpe and many others. So when the Stray Cats had Runaway Boys it went straight in, december 1980, and topped at nunber 3
DeleteMy bad then Richard. In the blogosphere "mainstream" is rarely a compliment. :)
DeleteLet it be known that if folks DO want to disparage The Stray Cats, they can take it down the street.
Response will be swift and terrible, and I WILL bring offenders' mothers into it. ;)
"Rockabilly Rules, Okay?"
My bad, I was first to use "mainstream" in connection with Stray Cats. I only meant that I heard artists on "Q-Wave" that weren't played on commercial radio in Milwaukee until at least a year later -- Stray Cats, Go-Go's, Psychedelic Furs, English Beat, U2, and "Dancing With Myself".
DeleteDownstairs Dan used to play "Rumble in Brighton" and "Ubangi Stomp" as well. He had the self-titled 1981 import LP. American audiences didn't get a Stray Cats record until "Built For Speed" was released in 1982. It was a compilation of tracks from the first two albums: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Built_for_Speed_(Stray_Cats_album).
I was thrilled and captivated whenever the movie "Yellow Submarine" would come on TV. I bought the VHS release to watch with my kids.
No harm done Jon.
DeleteThere's a great track on The Stray Cats' UK debut LP; STORM THE EMBASSY. It's about the IRAN HOSTAGE CRISIS and instrumentally is one of the best tracks the band ever recorded. The lyrics are great too--and political--not something they were known for: "Storm the Iranian embassy. Before they start shootin' down you & me". By the time they had a U.S. record deal it was old news.
The song's got amazing guitar throughout it & a soaring middle eight. I always felt that Brian should have written different lyrics for it when the hits stopped coming. But it turned out that he'd already recorded it ONCE (with different lyrics) with The Bloodless Pharaohs, so maybe he was sick of it..
Check them out:
STORM THE EMBASSY: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZvV9EYfuaHA
BOYS HAVING BABIES: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MMLq4J4oz6M
I still like watching YELLOW SUBMARINE myself. The voiceover artists did great versions of The Beatles--they're not exactly doing impressions--and yet I couldn't tell you who they were.
Excellent collection Jonder, lots of familiar names! As Richard already mentioned Dutch radio offered a lot of more alternative music. Having said that the regular Top 40 was usually pretty mainstream as you can see here: https://media.apoplife.nl/nl/2018/07/top40-19780708.png
ReplyDeleteThe Tros Top So-Much and Veronica's Top 40 were based on how many singles were ordered by recordstores, in a way that went hand in hand with promoting the sales of the mainstream record companies. They also manipulated the list to get some artists in and keep others out.
Delete1978 when you take another week it looks like this
https://www.top40.nl/top40/1978/week-13 where you will find Jona Lewie at number 30, gruppo sportivo, nick lowe, robert gordon, blondie and talking heads with a special mention of one of my favorite crooners ever Only A Fool by The Mighty Sparrow, Byron Lee and The Dragonaires
Across the channel, we had France Inter DJ's Patrick Blanc-Francard (Loup Garou) and Bernard Lenoir (better known for later Black sessions but back then his show was called Feedback including Van Halen's Atomic Punk as theme song !) who showcased a number of those acts you mention and more. On TV, there was also Chorus on Antenne 2 hosted by Antoine de Caunes (better known for Eurotrash) with recorded live gigs (at parisian Empire theatre) of the Ramones, the Clash, the Pretenders or the Ruts for instance. De Caunes relentlessly featured Bruce Springsteen's Rosalita video and mentioned he had casually encountered Garland Jeffreys ... He went on to host Les Enfants du Rock in the same vein.
ReplyDeleteBut more importantly we got the "radio libres" from 1981/82 on. Before that we only had half a dozen "périphérique" state-controlled radios allowed and all of a sudden thanks to the new socialist government we gained a lot of private local radios many of those hosting new wave rock shows. Now sadly many have been bought by commercial networks only caring for top 40 music.
The proximity with Britain meant we got to know punk and new wave bands pretty well not to mention listening to John Peel and record buying trips to London. Back then no tunnel so we had to take the ferry and didn't have to carry a passport or pay a fee as Brexit hadn't happened yet !
In the early 80's, my favourite foreign bands included Devo, Mission of Burma, the Ramones, the Lyres, the Ruts, the Buzzcocks, TV Personalities and the Undertones. In my secondary school, we met American exchange students from Oklahoma and their favourite bands were the B52's and REM.
J from Europe.
I was fortunate to listen to a local college station WMUH in Allentown, PA. Thats where I heard alot of bands like, Devo, Sex Pistols, B52s, R.E.M, The Clash and all of those great bands on the I.R.S. Record label like Oingo Boingo, Fleshtones, The Police, The Damned, Stranglers, Skafish. Stayed up late many nights recording everything I heard and then trying to find the records. I also prefered Fridays over SNL because the music acts played 3 songs per show. I remember seeing the Clash, Pretenders, Tom Petty to name a few. Great blog and I always enjoy reading the comments.
ReplyDeleteBest regards
Zippy
Thanks for the comment, Zippy! The only thing I didn't like about the musical segments on Fridays was the use of cheesy camera effects. But they had some really good musical guests! These links don't include all 3 songs, but they will get you started.
DeleteThe Jam: https://youtu.be/I-WMh-dBJxg?si=Raj3J041IBtsXkth
The Clash: https://youtu.be/Lhwk9PTPOpU?si=nYvzdF5aBAZbrTwF
The Pretenders: https://youtu.be/9xb9A125Dgw?si=rTDNM3CaqBL-aupy
Devo: https://youtu.be/XTNGg0Tj5Aw?si=TrIwWl0Cmwyg2Wo6
The Blasters: https://youtu.be/2Y8PvPBRtjQ?si=qi5olc-D7oGnxb8K
Plasmatics: https://youtu.be/oUo5LoT41gA?si=-sHIBKpPJl8LhKXG
Stray Cats: https://youtu.be/jiFq8_BISSA?si=a8uRGN5qRef4vuTm
Tom Petty: https://youtu.be/b2nbHpF7-qk?si=C5psE1upOn4FueFF
Graham Parker: https://youtu.be/GPFOU-GWIEQ
The Cars: https://youtu.be/QzDmo1LVLsc
The Bus Boys: https://youtu.be/GKb_NBNJIvk
Sir Douglas Quintet: https://youtu.be/D6PoOT44zUo?si=85E0BLGL-N_jFumo
King Crimson: https://youtu.be/7MFb1Vv-RbY?si=FDxPip474F3OJ9RD
All I need from this list is W.O.W. R.I.P. Halloween, Wendy O'Williams as president of the USA. Bring Her Back, Bring! Her! Back!, BRING! HER! BACK!
DeleteI remember seeing The Plasmatics on Fridays. The guitar player with the mohawk wearing bunny ears and a French maid outfit was scary to see as a kid. Good memories. Great time to be young. Loved buying vinyl. Reading the sleeves, checking out all the artwork, lyric sheets or poster. I remember getting Elvis Costello Armed Forces Lp that came with a live 3 song 45.
DeleteBest regards
Zippy
My favorite TV appearance by the Plasmatics was when they were on SCTV as part of John Candy's "Fishin' Musician" skit!
Deletehttps://youtu.be/xRnKnYz3kG0?si=drg1XQqU5muOjbJ4
Too bad there aren't many live recordings of the Plasmatics. Would have loved to heard Monkey Suit live.
DeleteBest regards,
Zippy