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  1. This is where things get difficult. I was sat in the pub recently talking with a friend about separating the music from the person who made it. We were talking in terms of people like Clapton and Morrissey, both of whom I detest both for their music and their obnoxious “views”. Now many of you will already know that Miles is my brother, some of you may have worked that out from reading between the lines in this blog. My brothers music has meant as much to me over the years as anything by Bowie or Paul Weller or Bruce Springsteen or any other of my musical heroes. I could count on one finger the number of his songs where I would say “ooh…I really don’t like that one” but here we are at a point where I have to separate the music from the person that made it.

    Well, I cant ! Since releasing The Wonder Stuff album “Oh No It's... The Wonder Stuff” in 2012 each subsequent release has been what I hear as “the best thing he’s ever done”, whether it be another TWS album (“Oh No…”, “30 Goes Around The Sun” and “Better Being Lucky”) or solo (2 volumes of “The Custodian” and “Things Can Change”) or as here with everyone’s favourite violinist Erica Nockalls. He’s been on a creative roll for the past 11 years that has been a pleasure and an awe inspiring thing to behold.

    This was Miles and Erica’s 3rd album together following “Not An Exit” in 2007 and “Catching More Than We Miss” in 2009. While both of those albums had a “full band” feel about them the stark black and white cover shot (taken in the tunnel beneath Amsterdam Centraal Station trivia fans) of “We Came Here To Work” heralds a more stripped back, acoustic duo feel. Miles has said of it

    The music that The Wonder Stuff make is for nights out with your friends, what Erica and I have hopefully done with ‘We Came Here To Work’ is make music for nights spent at home in more genteel company.”

    It starts out with “When The Currency Was Youth”, I guess the title reveals some of the subject matter, which has some delicious lyrics and a melody to get you hooked from the off

    For the avoidance of the truth we couldn’t give it away any cheaper,

    But when the currency was youth our pockets were so much deeper

    Erica’s violin soars through the song as do her strings everywhere during this record. 

    The centrepiece of the record is “We Came Here To Work”, obviously, the whole album got named after it. Miles has been writing little introductory lines to his songs on the lyric sheets of albums for years, for this song he writes

    I raise my glass to every brave soul that has ever had the courage to leave their homeland behind them in search of a safer and happier existence.

    And a pox upon those that would attempt to deny anyone that right

    Miles doesn’t often write politically motivated songs but this one nails his argument. If it’s something you have difficulty with then perhaps re-read the second sentence above and react accordingly. We’re all human after all.

    The door was open and the journey was long, We came here to work,

    And now we’re told that we don’t belong, And that really hurts

    It is a more gentle and less bouncy record than much of Miles Wonder Stuff stuff. It’s thought provoking and very personal in places. It is difficult for me to write about these records with my confessed bias. If you’re a fan you don’t need me to tell you, if you’ve never heard Miles & Erica or TWS now might not be a bad time to start.

    We Came Here To Work - https://youtu.be/BbhFyPCnkwo

  2. Yes I know it’s out of sequence alphabetically but as it is really an extension of “Dare” then it sits here in my collection right next to its parent album. 

    Taking inspiration from the name of Barry White’s Love Unlimited Orchestra, the Human League and producer Martin Hannett set about creating a remix/instrumental album out of 7 of the tracks from “Dare” and one of their B-sides (“Hard Times”).

    The tracks missing from “Dare” are “Darkness”, “Get Carter” and “I Am The Law”. “Hard Times” is added I guess because it was a big club hit even as a B-side.

    It’s an enjoyable, very 80’s romp through the sort of tracks that were usually hidden away on 12” remix singles, all segued together to create a non-stop dance record. Not much more to say about it really

    Hard Times - https://youtu.be/011wrLtZ36k

  3. In 1980, after some disagreements over musical direction, Martyn Ware and Ian Craig Marsh left the Human League. This left the group as singer Phil Oakey and Adrian Wright, “Director of Visuals”, whose job it was to provide lighting and slides for Human League shows. Not a lot of musicians then ! This also happened 10 days before a European tour which promoters started to threaten to take legal action over if the shows did not go ahead.

    In a matter of days Oakey recruited Susan Ann (Susanne) Sulley and Joanne Catherall after seeing them dancing together at the Crazy Daisy nightclub in Sheffield and Ian Burden from Sheffield synth band Graph so that the tour could be completed. 

    Post tour Oakey was introduced to Producer Martin Hannett by staff at Virgin Records. Hannett moved the group to his studio in Berkshire away from the Sheffield studio they were still sharing with Ware and Marsh who were now known as Heaven 17. In Berkshire they recorded “The Sound Of The Crowd” which became their first Top 40 hit. Finally, manager Bob Last suggested former Rezillos guitarist Jo Callis join the band and the stage was set.

    “Dare” was recorded between March and September 1981 and released in October. The songwriting was pretty evenly split between Phil Oakey, Jo Callis, Adrian Wright and Ian Burden, 9 originals and a cover of the theme tune from the film “Get Carter”. The album gave up 4 Top 15 singles (“The Sound Of The Crowd” #12, “Love Action” #3, “Open Your Heart” #6 and of course “Don’t You Want Me”, the Xmas 1981 #1 single) and reached number 1 in the album charts 2 weeks after release.

    Oakey got exactly what he wanted, a shiny pop sheen almost entirely removed from the groups previous sound, and hits. The singles, especially “The Sound Of The Crowd” and “Love Action”s B-side “Hard Times”, were still big club favourites, filling the floor at Romeo & Juliets and the like. But it’s musically a very different Human League from the first two albums, lyrically too. These are mostly sparkly pop tunes set in a synth-pop world and not the experimental sci-fi electronic music of “Reproduction” and “Travelogue”. There’s still darkness within (see what I did there?), “Seconds” recounts an assassination (JFK, Lennon maybe) and “I Am The Law” has a title culled from 2000AD comics superstar Judge Dread’s catchphrase.

    None of this is to say that “Dare” isn’t a good album, it absolutely is, a pristine chunk of slick 80’s pop. But if you ask me to choose, I’ll take “The Black Hit Of Space” over a drunken singalong to “Don’t You Want Me” every time.

    The Sound Of The Crowd - https://youtu.be/xK9uUqvpLyQ