The Only Ones – Live At The Paradiso (1979)

FrontCover1The Only Ones were an English rock band formed in London in 1976, whose original band members are Peter Perrett, Alan Mair, John Perry and Mike Kellie, they first disbanded in 1982. They were associated with punk rock, yet straddled the musical territory in between punk, power pop and hard rock, with noticeable influences from psychedelia.

The Only Ones reformed in 2007 after their biggest hit “Another Girl, Another Planet” experienced a resurgence of public interest. The band completed a comeback UK tour in June 2007, and continued touring throughout 2008 and 2009. New material was recorded in 2009 and played live, but was never released.

The Only Ones were originally formed in August 1976 in South London by Peter Perrett. Perrett had been recording demos since 1972, and in late 1975 he was looking for a bass player. He was introduced to John Perry as a possible candidate, but Perry wanted to concentrate on playing guitar instead. By August 1976, Perry and Perrett had found drummer Mike Kellie (ex-Spooky Tooth) and bass guitarist Alan Mair, who previously had huge success with the Scottish band The Beatstalkers. Their first single, “Lovers of Today”, self-released on the Vengeance record label, was immediately made “record of the week” by three of the four main music papers. A year later they signed to CBS. Their next single “Another Girl, Another Planet” became a popular and influential song, and remains the band’s best-known song. It is often featured on various musical box-sets featuring a punk rock or new wave theme. After its inclusion on the 1991 compilation album The Sound of the Suburbs, it was re-released as a single and reached no. 57 in the UK singles chart.

TheOnlyOnes01

The band released their debut studio album The Only Ones in 1978, which was well received by both reviewers and fans.[3] The band’s follow-up album, Even Serpents Shine, was released the following year. A year later, they released their final studio album, Baby’s Got a Gun. In the summer of 1980, they supported the Who on their tour of the United States, and in 1982 the band officially disbanded. In subsequent years, the Only Ones retained a following and their posthumously released records – live performances, BBC Television and radio shows, and compilation albums – now outnumber their studio albums. Unusually, The Only Ones’ discs were never deleted from the CBS catalogue and remain in-print.

TheOnlyOnes03

In an interview published in the 10 November 2006 issue of the tabloid newspaper, The Daily Record, Alan Mair commented that he was set to reform The Only Ones after “Another Girl, Another Planet” was used in a Vodafone ad campaign in 2006, and picked up as the introduction theme to Irish DJ Dave Fanning’s radio show.[4] On 21 February 2007, Perry confirmed via his MySpace page that the band would reform for a five-date UK tour in June. Besides these dates, they played a number of festivals, debuting at All Tomorrow’s Parties festival in Minehead, England, on 27 April. During the summer, they also played at the two-part Wireless Festival in Hyde Park, London, Harewood House, (near Leeds), and the Connect Music Festival at Inveraray Castle in Scotland on 1 September.

News of the tour prompted coverage in several UK national newspapers and the dates were met with positive reviews. During these gigs, the band played a new song called “Dreamt She Could Fly”.

OnlyOnes03

The press also reported that three of the band were keen to record a new studio album following the tour, but that Perrett seemed hesitant. In April 2008, the band were seen on Later… with Jools Holland performing their song, “Another Girl, Another Planet”, and a new song entitled “Black Operations”. The band also played other new songs including “Is This How Much You Care” and “Magic Tablet” live on a Canal+ TV special in Paris and an acoustic/unplugged session for Radio 6 Queens of Noize. A live DVD of the Shepherds Bush Empire show was released in March 2008. Other rumoured releases included DVDs from a show on the band’s last US tour, and a re-release of Faster Than Lightning, which was released on VHS in 1991 and on DVD in 2012.

All three CBS studio albums, remastered by Alan Mair, were re-released with bonus tracks in February 2009. “Another Girl, Another Planet” was used in the film D.E.B.S. (2004), as well as in the 2010 hit film Paul. Sony BMG announced a January 2012 release date for an Only Ones box set in the “Original Album Classics” series. The set comprised the three remastered studio albums, plus various B-sides and out-takes. The Only Ones topped the bill at the 2012 Rebellion Festival in Blackpool on 4 August of that year.

TheOnlyOnes02In late 2014 the Only Ones (minus Mike Kellie) played some gigs in Tokyo, co-headlining with the Flamin’ Groovies. In August 2014 Perrett began playing solo shows (Felipop festival, Spain) using his sons’ band Strangefruit, followed by more dates in 2015 (Hebden Bridge, Bristol, London etc.) with the same formation. The band ceased activity after the death of drummer Mike Kellie, but Perrett, Mair and Perry reunited to play a three-song set in summer 2019.

The band members’ musical proficiency distinguished them from most of their peers. Their dominant drug-related lyrical themes on songs such as “Another Girl, Another Planet,” and “The Big Sleep,” also fit in with the Zeitgeist of the era on both sides of the Atlantic. Perrett and Kellie caught the eye of Johnny Thunders, founding member of the New York Dolls and the Heartbreakers, and worked as sidemen on Thunders’ solo debut album, So Alone, notably appearing together on the classic “You Can’t Put Your Arms Around a Memory”. However, drug addiction, particularly heroin use,[11] derailed their career, and singer/guitarist/songwriter Perrett has only sporadically been heard from since the band split in 1982. He briefly resurfaced in the mid 1990s with the album, Woke Up Sticky, and released his debut solo album, How The West Was Won in 2017.

Lead guitarist Perry went on to play as a session guitarist for artists including The Sisters of Mercy, Evan Dando and Marianne Faithfull. More recently, he has written several well received music biographies on the Who’s seminal hits compilation Meaty Beaty Big and Bouncy, the Rolling Stones’ double album Exile on Main Street and in 2004, Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland. During 2005–2006, he played and recorded with singer-songwriter Freddie Stevenson.

The Only Ones have been influential on the indie rock and alternative rock scenes ever since their initial success, on bands such as The Replacements, Blur, Nirvana, and more recently The Libertines. Several bands have covered their song “Another Girl, Another Planet”, including The Libertines (at London Forum with Perrett guesting),[13] The Replacements and Blink 182. Their song “The Whole of the Law” was covered by Yo La Tengo on their album, Painful. (wikipedia)

TheOnlyOnes04

And here´s is an excellent bootleg:

This show was recorded at the Paradiso, the famous Amsterdam concert hall, and captured on the 3rd of November 1979, some months before their last LP Baby’s Got A Gun was released. It was apparently broadcasted by a Dutch radio but I don’t know which one. If the playing is far from being perfect and often Peter Perrett seems a little elsewhere (not too much vocally, but his guitar is quite erratic , there are some stunning versions of “Big Sleep” or “The Beast” where one can understand why for some of us the Only Ones will remain among the greatest and most exciting and moving band of our lives. (thefatangelsings.com)

Recorded live at The Paradiso, Amsterdam, Holland  November 3, 1979
(excellent broadcast recording)

BackCover1

Personnel:
Mike Kellie (drums)
Alan Mair (bass)
John Perry (guitar)
Peter Perrett (vocals, guitar)

Alternate frontcover:
AlternateFrontCover

Tracklist:
01. As My Wife Says 3.27
02. In Betweens 4.43
03. Programme 2.17
04. Oh Lucinda Love Becomes A Habitb 3.31
05. Big Sleep 5.27
06. Language Problem 3.02
07. Miles From Nowhere 4.10
08. The Beast 6.09
09. Another Girl, Another Planet 3.11
10. Peter And The Pets 3.17
11. City Of Fun 3.43
12. Trouble In The World 3.20
13. Me And My Shadow 4.39
14. The Immortal Story 3.05

All songs written by Peter Perrett

*
**

MikeKellie01

Michael Alexander Kellie (24 March 1947 – 18 January 2017):

…from the iconic introduction of “Waiting For The Wind” by Spooky Tooth to the manic psychedelic rhythm pictures of “Another Girl, Another Planet” by The Only Ones, Mike Kellie’s career has spanned over 3 decades & his picturesque drumming accompanied some of contemporary music’s most successful artists…..

Paradiso World Aids Night, Amsterdam

The Paradiso is a Dutch music venue and cultural centre located in Amsterdam.

It is housed in a converted former church building that dates from the nineteenth century and that was used until 1965 as the meeting hall for a liberal Dutch religious group known as the “Vrije Gemeente” (Free Congregation). It is located on de Weteringschans, near the Leidseplein, one of the nightlife and tourism centers of the city. The main concert hall in the former church interior has high ceilings and two balcony rings overlooking the stage area, with three large illuminated church windows above the stage. The acoustics are rather echoey, but improvements have been made over the years. In addition to the main concert hall, there are two smaller cafe stages, on an upper floor and in the basement.

Paradiso was squatted by hippies in 1967 who wanted to convert the church to an entertainment and leisure club. The police ended the festivities the same year. In 1968, the city opened Paradiso as a publicly subsidized youth entertainment center. Along with the nearby Melkweg (Milky Way), it soon became synonymous with the hippie counterculture and the rock music of that era. It was one of the first locations in which the use and sale of soft drugs was tolerated. From the mid-1970s, Paradiso became increasingly associated with punk and new wave music, although it continued to program a wide variety of artists. Starting in the late 1980s, raves and themed dance parties became frequent.

The Paradiso Amsterdam02

In 1994, Paradiso, along with the Institute for Sonology and The ArtScience Interfaculty (Amsterdam), initiated Sonic Acts together. In recent years, the venue has settled into an eclectic range of programming, which, besides rock, can include lectures, plays, classical music, and crossover artists. Long associated with clouds of tobacco and hashish smoke, Paradiso banned smoking in its public areas (except for a small smoking room) in 2008 in accordance with a nationwide ban on smoking in public venues. (wikipedia)

The Only Ones – Live At The Electric Ballroom (1980)

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAIn 1980, the Only Ones were maybe the most stoned junkie bunch of musicians in activity but on stage they were no less than magical. I can’t imagine a more intemporal music than this one. Listen to this version of “The Beast” before deciding what is genius. Catch this incredible document here. PS to iceman. The Paradiso concert was re-up recently (here) and is totally available on M.

Here we find the band 6 months after the Paradiso concert (here) but it’s a rather different band. Tensions are strong between members (some of them want to “place” their songs and begin to be unease with the position of sole composer of Peter Perrett… they were wrong actually, it was a good thing) and desillusion begins to grow (Baby’s Got A Gun album was badly produced by a producer mandatory sent by the label, it sells rather poorly, Ajouter une imageno single succeeded in the charts and drugs were beginning to eat every bit of motivation). The concert is very different from the one played at the Paradiso. Faster (they sometimes seem to call for a quick end), tighter (Peter Perrett plays much better and the band seems to behave as a whole and unique entity), it’s a dynamic set with some ups (the songs from Baby’s Got A Gun, here in their truly Only Ones versions) and some downs (some older songs, sometimes botched or with bad options, for example what the fuck is this half-reggae version of “Miles From Nowhere”?).

Onlyones01

This concert was captured on 2 nights at the Electric Ballroom of Camden and released in 1989 on Mau Mau label under the name of Live (I did another cover sleeve cos’ I thought the official album one, a close shot ot Peter Perrett’s face, was rather unappropriate). Note that it was wrongly suggested on the back cover sleeve to be captured at the Speakeasy in 1977. Among my interrogations, is this strange (and scandalous) fade at the end of “Why Don’t You Kill Yourself”. If someone could tell me WTF. To conclude, I would say that this concert, in spite of all its low parts, is for me the symbol of what I would have dreamed to do on stage with a band. Yes, nothing can be more close to this dream than this concert. Therefore, you understand the fixation I do about this band. (by dkandroughmix-forgottensongs.blogspot)

Ineresting to hear Mike Kellie (ex-Spooky Tooth) in this famous punk/new wave band.

OnlyOnes03

Personnel:
Mike Kellie (drums)
Alan Mair (bass)
Peter Perrett (vocals. guitar)
John Perry (guitar)

Only Ones Electric Ballroom Back.jpg

Tracklist:
01. Trouble In The World (Perrett) 2.50
02. Programme (Perrett) 2.12
03. The Beast (Perrett) 5.46
04. The Happy Pilgrim (Perrett) 2.39
05. Lovers Of Today (Perrett) 2.56
06. Strange Mouth (Perrett) 2.18
07. Why Don’t You Kill Yourself (Perrett) 2.47
08. No Peace For The Wicked (Perrett) 2.06
09. As My Wife Says (Perrett) 3.10
10. Miles From Nowhere (Perrett) 3.41
11. The Big Sleep (Perrett) 4.36
12. Another Girl Another Planet (Perrett) 2.56
13. City Of Fun (Perrett) 3.08
14. Me And My Shadow (Perrett) 4.51

OnlyOnes04

*
**

MikeKellie01

Mike Kellie passed away on 18th January 2017.

…from the iconic introduction of “Waiting For The Wind” by Spooky Tooth to the manic psychedelic rhythm pictures of “Another Girl, Another Planet” by The Only Ones, Mike Kellie’s career has spanned over 3 decades & his picturesque drumming accompanied some of contemporary music’s most successful artists…..