Some Bizzare Album
View on Wikipedia| Some Bizzare Album | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compilation album by various artists | ||||
| Released | January 1981[1] | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Label | Some Bizzare | |||
| Various artists chronology | ||||
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Some Bizzare Album is the first compilation album issued by Some Bizzare Records. It was released in January 1981 as a sampler of the label's musical ethos. The acts were not signed exclusively to the label at the time.
Information
[edit]The album consisted of tracks by unsigned synth-pop groups, including future alternative icons Depeche Mode, Soft Cell, the The and Blancmange. Depeche Mode's contribution was their first recording to be released.[2] Some Bizzare Album was the vision of Stevo Pearce, who believed in the album's music as opposed to fashion or style aspects.[3] Some Bizzare Album was re-released on CD format in 1992 for a limited time. It was re-released in 2008 with extra bonus tracks.
Soft Cell – "The Girl with the Patent Leather Face"
[edit]After meeting with Pearce, Soft Cell decided to include a track on the album. They recorded The Girl with the Patent Leather Face at a studio owned by John Darling.[3] Almond describes the song as a "tinny-sounding, trashy synthesizer song" that owed much to "Warm Leatherette", a track by the Normal.[3]
Depeche Mode – "Photographic"
[edit]Formed in 1980, Depeche Mode were cautious when first approached by Pearce, as they were indecisive about being included on a "futurist" compilation album. They first brought their demo tape to other record companies but were rejected.[4] In late 1980, Depeche Mode recorded "Photographic" in an East London studio. Daniel Miller of Mute Records, who acted as an informal producer during the recording, wanted to place a good track on the compilation album, but not the band's best.[5] The track was recorded and mixed in one day.[6]
The song, which differs from the version later found on Speak & Spell, was later included in the 1998 reissue of The Singles 81→85 as a bonus track.
Neu Electrikk – "Lust of Berlin"
[edit]London-based Neu Electrikk comprised singer songwriter Derek Morris, guitarist and electronics Steve Parry, bass player Nicholas Chamberlain Hunt, sax/flute/treatments Steve Sherlock and Barry Deller on drums/percussion. Neu Electrikk released two single/EPs on the Synethesia label: "Lust of Berlin"/"Distractions" (1979) and "Cover Girl"/"Practically Isolate"/"Hand"/"Converse of Tapes" (1980). Pearce discovered the band in an advert in Sounds magazine and contacted them through their distributor, Rough Trade Records. Pearce convinced Parry to contribute to the album by claiming that Pearce managed The The. The version of "Lust of Berlin" on the Some Bizzare Album was recorded at ARK Studios, Kingston upon Thames.[7]
The The – "Untitled"
[edit]The The's contribution was recorded at SGS Recording Studio in South London and was originally titled "Strawberry Sunset." Steve Parry suggested the studio to Matt Johnson after having previously recorded there with Neu Electrikk. The recording was complicated by an uncooperative studio engineer who did not appreciate the music. The master tape was given to Parry and remained in his possession until Pearce asked the The to contribute a track to the Some Bizzare Album.
Illustration – "Tidal Flow"
[edit]Illustration was formed in 1979 by Tony Harrison (vocals) and Timm Johnson (guitar). They were joined by Paul Lancaster (Bass) George Terry AKA Morgan King (drums) and Andy Prasher (keyboards) who was soon replaced by Julia Adamson. Together they made various demos for record companies and agreed to release one of these songs, Tidal Flow onto the Some Bizzare Album which was engineered, mixed and produced by Phil Ault at Revolution Studios, Stockport. Though Illustration toured to promote the album with the other bands and made a follow-up record "Dancable" with the legendary producer Martin Hannett at Strawberry Studios, Stockport, it was never officially released as they broke up in 1981.
Reception
[edit]Track listing
[edit]Source:[8]
Fish side
- Illustration - "Tidal Flow"
- Depeche Mode – "Photographic"
- The The – "Untitled"
- B-Movie – "Moles"
- Jell – "I Dare Say It Will Hurt a Little"
- Blah Blah Blah – "Central Park"
Eye Lamp side
- Blancmange – "Sad Day"
- Soft Cell – "The Girl with the Patent Leather Face"
- Neu Electrikk – "Lust of Berlin"
- Naked Lunch – "La Femme"
- The Fast Set – "King of the Rumbling Spires"
- The Loved One – "Observations"
The 1981 cassette edition positioned the "Eye Lamp" side of the album as Side 1, with the "Fish" side as Side 2, but the 1992 CD edition features "Fish" on Side 1 and "Eye Lamp" on Side 2.
2008 CD reissue bonus tracks
- The Normal – "Warm Leatherette"
- Fad Gadget – "Back to Nature"
- The Residents – "The Act of Being Polite"
Personnel
[edit]- Stevo Pearce – Compiler
- Steve Bush – Designer
References
[edit]- ^ Burmeister & Lange 2017, pp. 16–23.
- ^ Redefining the Prologue booklet, 2006
- ^ a b c Page 100, Marc Almond, Tainted Life, Sidgwick & Jackson
- ^ Page 14, Steve Malins, Depeche Mode Biography
- ^ Page 18, Steve Malins, Depeche Mode Biography
- ^ Page 21, Steve Malins, Depeche Mode Biography
- ^ Panciera, Mario. 45 Revolutions, The Bible of Punk/Mod/Powerpop/New Wave/NWOBHM/Indie Singles(1976/79).Volume 1 UK/Ireland. Italy: Hurdy Gurdy Books. p. 446. ISBN 978-88-95592-00-8.
- ^ a b "Some Bizzare Album". Allmusic.com. Allmusic.com. Retrieved 2010-05-25.
- Burmeister, Dennis; Lange, Sascha (2017). Depeche Mode: Monument. New York: Akashic Books. ISBN 978-1-61775-593-4.
External links
[edit]Some Bizzare Album
View on GrokipediaBackground
Label Origins
Some Bizzare Records was founded in 1981 by Stevo Pearce, a Dagenham-born DJ and promoter, as an independent British label based in London and dedicated to synth-pop and new wave acts within the post-punk landscape.[5][6] Operating from addresses like 4 Denmark Street, the label emerged as a vehicle for promoting innovative electronic music during a time when the industry was shifting toward more experimental sounds.[7] Pearce's vision centered on prioritizing musical innovation and raw creativity over the visual fashion trends dominating the New Romantic scene, distinguishing "Futurists" like Soft Cell from image-focused "Blitz Kids" such as Duran Duran. With zero interest in commercial formulas, he scouted talent from underground sources including squats, fanzines, and clubs, aiming to elevate edgier, avant-garde artists who defied conventional post-punk aesthetics.[3][5] This ethos positioned the label as a mission-driven entity loyal to artistic vision rather than chart-driven trends.[5] The label's initial funding relied on Pearce's personal investments and early partnerships with major distributors, enabling self-financed productions that could later be licensed to larger companies. Some Bizzare Album (1981) served as the inaugural release—a compilation sampler designed to showcase and promote unsigned bands, effectively launching the label's roster and establishing its role in bridging underground talent with broader audiences.[8][1][5]Compilation Concept
The Some Bizzare Album, released in January 1981, was conceived as a showcase for emerging electronic and synth-pop talent, highlighting experimental sounds from unsigned acts to capture the innovative spirit of the early 1980s post-punk and futurist scenes.[8][2] Stevo Pearce, the label's founder, envisioned the compilation as a platform to propel these artists toward mainstream success, drawing from his DJ nights and personal curation to assemble twelve tracks that blended minimalist synth aesthetics with avant-garde edge.[3] A key artistic decision was structuring the album as a double-sided vinyl, divided thematically into the "Fish Side" for more atmospheric and introspective tracks and the "Eye Lamp Side" for energetic, rhythm-driven pieces, creating a dynamic listening experience that mirrored the label's eclectic ethos.[2] This bifurcation extended to cassette formats, with "Eye Lamp" as the A-side and "Fish" as the B-side, emphasizing Pearce's intent to balance subtlety and intensity within the electronic genre.[2] Pearce played a hands-on role in discovering and signing the featured bands during 1980, actively scouting talent through live shows at his "Some Bizzare" evenings in London venues and reviewing unsolicited demos sent to him.[3][9] His proactive approach, including placing ads in music magazines like Sounds and attending gigs, allowed him to identify promising unsigned groups such as Depeche Mode and Soft Cell, securing their inclusion before major label deals materialized.[2][3]Production and Release
Track Selection
Stevo Pearce curated the Some Bizzare Album by selecting twelve unsigned UK acts, drawing from his scouting efforts at underground club scenes and evaluations of demo tape submissions to capture emerging electronic talent.[5][8] His process emphasized intuition and raw potential, prioritizing artists from squats, fanzines, and non-mainstream networks over established names.[5] Key inclusions featured first recordings from Depeche Mode and Soft Cell, showcasing pre-fame demos that highlighted innovative synth-driven sounds. Depeche Mode contributed "Photographic," an early demo recorded during their time as Composition of Sound, selected by Pearce to represent minimalist electronic experimentation.[10][8] Similarly, Soft Cell's "The Girl with the Patent Leather Face," recorded on a minimal budget of approximately seven pounds, brought a provocative, cabaret-infused edge to the compilation's diverse electronic palette.[11][8] To preserve the album's avant-garde ethos, Pearce deliberately excluded more commercial pop-oriented material, focusing instead on boundary-pushing tracks from UK-based unsigned artists like Blancmange, The The, Naked Lunch, Neu Electrikk, and B-Movie.[5][12] This curation ensured a cohesive yet varied showcase of post-punk and synth influences, aligning with Pearce's vision of uncompromised outsider creativity.[8]Formats and Distribution
The Some Bizarre Album was originally released in January 1981 as a vinyl LP on Some Bizzare Records.[13] A cassette version was also issued simultaneously in the UK.[13] The album was funded by Phonogram and distributed through independent UK channels, primarily via Rough Trade Records.[3] In 1992, a limited CD reissue was released on Some Bizzare Records, available for a short period and featuring a reversed track order compared to the original vinyl sides.[14] This edition was pressed in Europe but suffered from disc rot issues in some copies.[14] The 2008 expanded CD edition, remastered and enhanced, added bonus tracks such as "Warm Leatherette" by The Normal, "Back to Nature" by Fad Gadget, and "The Act of Being Polite" by The Residents.[2] Distributed by Plastic Head Music Distribution Ltd., this reissue broadened international availability.[15]Musical Content
Track Breakdown
The Fish Side of Some Bizzare Album commences with Illustration's "Tidal Flow," an ambient synth-based track that opens the compilation with innovative early experimentation in electronic textures and passionate vocals layered over analogue modeling synthesizers.[2] This is succeeded by Depeche Mode's "Photographic," a minimalist synth rendition presented as an alternative version of their debut single, characterized by prominent synthesizers, driving synthetic drums, and bold electronic soundscapes that highlight the band's nascent synth-pop ethos.[2] The side continues with The The's abstract "Untitled," a precursor to Matt Johnson's evolving artistry, featuring a joyful cacophony of experimental vocals, hypnotic bass lines, and muffled effects that evoke an unfinished, dark humor.[2] It proceeds with B Movie's "Moles," a quirky new wave track blending gothic and frivolous elements.[2] Jell's "I Dare Say It Will Hurt a Little" follows as an obscure electronic piece, and Blah Blah Blah's "Central Park" closes the side with plinky-plonky synths and spoken word delivery.[2] Shifting to the Eye Lamp Side, Blancmange's "Sad Day" delivers a melancholic instrumental, adopting a sedate pace with melodious synthesizer waves, fluttering guitar melodies, and soothing drones reminiscent of Brian Eno's ambient influences, building emotional depth through subtle segues.[2] Soft Cell's "The Girl with the Patent Leather Face" follows as a cabaret-electronic piece, blending naïve repetitive melodies on Korg synthesizers with distorted, tinny soundscapes and Marc Almond's outstanding, distressed vocals to explore themes of outsider longing and seedy urban life.[2] Neu Electrikk's "Lust of Berlin" continues as an industrial-leaning synth-driven track that fuses dislocated dub and mutant funk elements, haunted by precipice-like drumming and atmospheric electronics, capturing the band's short-lived electronic intensity.[2] The side then features Naked Lunch's "La Femme," a moderately successful electronic track with moderate chart performance.[2] The Fast Set's "King of the Rumbling Spires" offers an electronic-punk fusion covering Tyrannosaurus Rex.[2] It concludes with The Loved One's "Observations," an obscure closing track that faded into post-release obscurity.[2] Overall, the album's runtime approximates 40 minutes, with each side clocking in around 20 minutes, underscoring the lo-fi production values achieved through budget recordings in local studios, garages, and basements—such as the Soft Cell track costing about seven pounds and the entire project totaling around 1,500 pounds—as recounted by label founder Stevo Pearce.[11] These raw, embryonic contributions from unsigned artists emphasize the compilation's role in capturing the unpolished edge of early 1980s electronic and post-punk scenes.[13]Styles and Influences
The Some Bizzare Album exemplifies the early 1980s fusion of synth-pop and new wave, characterized by electronic melodies, repetitive rhythms, and minimalist arrangements that captured the era's shift toward synthetic sounds. Tracks across the compilation draw from post-punk experimentation, blending it with emerging electro-pop elements to create a cohesive yet diverse sonic palette. Influences from krautrock are evident, particularly through Neu Electrikk's contribution, which echoes the motorik rhythms and experimental ethos of Neu!, infusing the album with hypnotic, driving grooves. Similarly, industrial aesthetics permeate the collection, with Soft Cell's distorted soundscapes reflecting echoes of Throbbing Gristle's raw, confrontational noise experiments.[2][11][16] The album's sound is rooted in a DIY electronic aesthetic, achieved through the use of affordable synthesizers and basic recording techniques on a limited budget of around £1,500. Artists employed instruments like Korg synthesizers—utilized by Soft Cell for their tinny, trashy tones—and similar entry-level gear to produce raw, unpolished textures that prioritized innovation over studio polish. This approach fostered a gritty, accessible electronic style, emphasizing drum machines and vocal effects to evoke a sense of immediacy and rebellion against mainstream production values.[11][2][9] Thematically, the compilation explores urban alienation and sexuality, drawing from post-punk's introspective edge to portray seedy city life, outsider isolation, and provocative desires. Soft Cell's fetishistic lyrics, for instance, delve into erotic undercurrents and emotional detachment in modern environments, while broader contributions amplify a sense of societal disconnection through atmospheric electronics. This blend of sonic experimentation and lyrical candor positions the album as a bridge between punk's raw energy and pop's accessibility, influencing subsequent electronic genres.[2][11][4]Reception and Legacy
Critical Reviews
Upon its release in 1981, the Some Bizzare Album received mixed reactions from UK music press.[2][3] In retrospective reviews, AllMusic awarded the album 4 out of 5 stars, commending it as a vital time capsule of early synth-pop experimentation that captured the raw energy of unsigned acts on the cusp of breakthrough.[17] Post-2000 assessments have increasingly highlighted the album's prescience in charting the evolution of electronic music, with aggregate user scores averaging 3.6 out of 5 on sites like Rate Your Music as of 2025, reflecting its enduring appeal as a foundational document despite its lo-fi inconsistencies.[18]Cultural Impact
The Some Bizzare Album served as a vital launchpad for the mainstream success of Depeche Mode and Soft Cell by offering early exposure to these unsigned electronic acts in 1981. Depeche Mode's contribution, "Photographic," marked their first studio recording and was subsequently reissued on their debut album Speak & Spell later that year, solidifying the compilation's role in their breakthrough. Soft Cell's appearance on the album similarly accelerated their rise, paving the way for hits like "Tainted Love," which sold over one million copies in the UK and reshaped perceptions of synth-pop accessibility. The compilation played a defining role in shaping the early 1980s UK independent electronic music scene, emerging as a vanguard of innovative outsider art alongside labels such as Mute Records. Its eclectic tracklist showcased experimental synth techniques that influenced broader electronic trends, while label founder Stevo Pearce's endorsement directly connected Depeche Mode to Mute's Daniel Miller, facilitating their pivotal signing and amplifying the scene's cross-label synergies.[2] In the 2020s, the album has garnered retrospective acclaim as a foundational artifact of synth-pop origins, evidenced by the 2023 publication Conform to Deform: The Weird and Wonderful World of Some Bizzare, which underscores its enduring influence on electronic music pioneers. Despite limited initial availability, it retains cult status among collectors, with expanded reissues and anniversary reflections highlighting its lasting relevance in documenting the era's underground creativity.Track Listing
Fish Side
The Fish Side of Some Bizzare Album comprises six tracks that emphasize ambient and experimental electronic sounds, creating a subdued and introspective opening to the vinyl release. These selections highlight emerging artists in the post-punk and synth scenes, with a focus on atmospheric textures rather than high-energy rhythms.| Track | Artist | Title | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Illustration | Tidal Flow | 5:00 | Ambient electronic opener that establishes a flowing, ethereal mood with layered synthesizers and minimal percussion. |
| 2 | Depeche Mode | Photographic | 4:40 | Early synth demo showcasing the band's nascent minimal electronic style, driven by stark keyboard riffs and spoken vocals.[19] |
| 3 | The The | Untitled | 6:20 | Experimental noise track featuring dissonant soundscapes, feedback, and abstract vocal manipulations for a raw, avant-garde feel.[18] |
| 4 | B Movie | Moles | 3:25 | [1] |
| 5 | Jell | I Dare Say It Will Hurt a Little | 3:50 | [1] |
| 6 | Blah Blah Blah | Central Park | 3:10 | [1] |
Lamp Side
The Lamp Side of the vinyl edition of Some Bizzare Album presents a dynamic sequence of six tracks emphasizing electronic experimentation and emerging post-punk sensibilities, contrasting the subtlety of the Fish Side.[1]- Blancmange – "Sad Day" (3:11) – A melancholic synth-pop piece characterized by fragile melodies and poignant lyrics evoking emotional introspection.[1][20]
- Soft Cell – "The Girl with the Patent Leather Face" (4:56) – An electronic track infused with cabaret elements, featuring repetitive synth lines and themes of urban longing drawn from seedy nightlife imagery.[1][2]
- Neu Electrikk – "Lust of Berlin" (2:46) – An industrial homage to krautrock, blending motorik rhythms with raw electronic textures to evoke Berlin's underground scene.[1][21]
- Naked Lunch – "La Femme" (3:00) – [1]
- The Fast Set – "King Of The Rumbling Spires" (3:37) – [1]
- The Loved One – "Observations" (4:00) – [1]
- The Normal – "Warm Leatherette" (3:22) – A stark, minimalist electronic cover highlighting tension through sparse instrumentation.[15]
- Fad Gadget – "Back to Nature" (5:50) – An angular post-punk electronic track exploring primal urges with jagged synths and spoken-word delivery.[15]
- The Residents – "The Act of Being Polite" (1:05) – A brief, avant-garde sound collage underscoring social absurdity in experimental noise.[15]