Showing posts with label Royal Family and The Poor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal Family and The Poor. Show all posts

FACT 24 in 24 Bits


Various Artists - A Factory Quartet
Ripped from a double vinyl album released on Factory Records (FACT 24) in 1980 to high resolution 24-bit flac audio. Here is a much requested re-post using my original 24/96 files from a few years back.

The second Factory Records sampler was originally planned as a double 10" set, but thankfully the label settled on this beautifully packaged double album with an embossed polaroid-style sleeve. Like the first 7" sampler, each artist gets one side of vinyl to introduce themselves, though The Durutti Column had already appeared on the label. The diversity of the chosen artists is huge, ranging from the ethereal beauty of The Durutti Column, through the distorted jazz-rock of Blurt, to scouse dirge noise terrorists The Royal Family And The Poor. Kevin Hewick supplies a difficult mix of live sets, where perhaps his 1980 Graveyard sessions would have fitted better, but as history says, he never got to finish five songs (with New Order).
Vini Reilly recruits ACR drummer Donald Johnson with a Martin Hannett production, and the three resulting tracks are among his best, For Belgian Friends being the highlight.
Hewick is joined onstage by ACR's Peter Terrell with his noisebox, but heckles and banter between Hewick and his audience spoil it for me. Blurt are an acquired taste, but like a post-punk Beefheart they pound a twisted beat with ear-splitting sax. The RFATP set is saved by Martin Hannett's presence in the production suite. It's a deep, dark noise funk-muck dirge, where the distorted guitars resemble early Section 25 whilst Joy Division's synths washaway deep in the mix.

Strangely, the album was never reissued for the CD generation, though some tracks have appeared as extras on various other reissues.

A1  The Durutti Column – For Mimi
A2  The Durutti Column – For Belgian Friends
A3  The Durutti Column – Self-portrait
B1  Kevin Hewick – Rubble
B2  Kevin Hewick – 1940
B3  Kevin Hewick – A Little Feeling
B4  Kevin Hewick – Forget
B5  Kevin Hewick – Morphia
B6  Kevin Hewick – The Enchanted Kiss
B7  Kevin Hewick – Haystack
C1  Blurt – Puppeteer
C2  Blurt – Dyslexia
C3  Blurt – Some Come
C4  Blurt – Benighted
D1  The Royal Family And The Poor – Dirge
D2  The Royal Family And The Poor – Vaneigem Mix
D3  The Royal Family And The Poor – Dirge
D4  The Royal Family And The Poor – Death Factory
D5  The Royal Family And The Poor – Dirge
D6  The Royal Family And The Poor – Rackets

Project: Veil


Royal Family & The Poor - The Project : Phase 4
Ripped from a 12" vinyl single released on Gaia Communications (PHASE 4) in 1988 to high resolution 24-bit flac audio. Another Factoryesque artist which has featured heavily here, so just catching up with a missing single from their discography. The a-side is the the sweeping gentle Restrained In A Moment from a 1982 session recorded with Gary Daly from China Crisis. The flipside features two more up-to-date synth-based  pieces, including a personal favourite, the majestically melodic Behind The Veil

A1 Restrained In A Moment
B1 When The Shadow Falls
B2 Behind The Veil

Unrestrained


Royal Family And The Poor  -  Live 1983-1985

Ripped from a vinyl album released on Recloose Organisation (LOOSE 13) in 1986 to high resolution 24-bit flac audio. Generously donated by blog follower thehappyone, here's the rare Royal Family And The Poor live album snuck out on obscure audio/visual label Recloose. Some of the tracks were featured during the recent round of RFATP tapes, but here they are in exemplary vinyl quality. Were any other blog followers at the Islington Michael Sobell New Order gig in January 1985? (I know at least one of you were ...with me) The New Order show was videoed from the audience, I wonder if the same taper caught Mike Keane and his chums.
A1  Restrained In A Moment
A2  Dawn Song
A3  Visions
A4  Transparent
B1  Something Someone
B2  Destiny
B3  Heartbeat

He Loves The Moon


A Bloggers Guide To ....Royal Family And The Poor
I was going to round off the recent series of RFATP posts with the Anthology CD, as a sort of Best Of.. But no. I put my hand up and admit that I just can't get on with all the infatuation of the occult which encompasses and shrouds most of the Michael Anthony Keane back catelogue. Other bands did it a lot better and with more originality. You have to dig deeper behind the imagery, and if you probe deep enough, it will become clear that Keane is decent songwriter who can put together a decent tune or two.
So, here is my little compilation of eighteen lossless tracks, acquired from various analogue and digital sources to help even the most ardent conscientious objector find something to like. I've included a few of the very early FAC releases when the gravelly voice of Arthur McDonald fronted the band. For me it just doesn't get better that the simplicity of Time. Compiled in no particular order - Pick your favourite.

The Dawn Song
Time
I Love You (Restrained In A Moment)
Behind The Veil
Power Of Will
Honesty
Discipline
Visions
When The Shadow Falls
Living Light
Dark And Light
We Love The Moon
Feast Of The Supersensualists
Motherland
Voices
Art On 45
Dirge #1
Rackets

Spontaneous Release


Royal Family And The Poor - Live (Tape 8)
Ripped from a cassette album released on Project Tapes (008) around 1985/6 to high quality lossless flac audio. Courtesy of a generous blog follower, here is the next in a series of very limited cassette albums released by Mike Keane on his own Project Tapes label. This tape features two gig recordings from the RFATP gig at The Caribbean Club in Reading during March 1984, and a performance at the Bolton Dance Factory in April 1984.Scans of the tape and inserts are also in the archive. This concludes the series of RFATP cassette pets.

A1 Voices
A2 Distant Shores
A3 Dark + Light
A4 Ritual
A5 Radio Egypt
A6 Tribal Genocide
B1 Voices
B2 Distant Shores
B3 Dark + Light
B4 Restrained In A Moment
B5 Tribal Genocide
B6 Return To Nowhere
B7 Spontaneous Release

Live In The Wasteland


Royal Family And The Poor - Live (Tape 7)
Ripped from a cassette album released on Project Tapes (007) around 1985/6 to high quality lossless flac audio. Courtesy of a generous blog follower, here is the next in a series of very limited cassette albums released by Mike Keane on his own Project Tapes label. This tape features two gig recordings from the RFATP gig at The Left Bank Bistro in Liverpool during July 1983, and a performance at Liverpool's Soup Kitchen in April 1985. Scans of the tape and inserts are also in the archive.

A1 Dark And Light
A2 Love Is A Feeling
A3 The Wasteland Is Here
A4 Something Someone
A5 Leaves In The Wind
A6 Restrained In A Moment
A7 Tightrope Generation
B1 Visions
B2 Heartbeat
B3 Transparent
B4 White Stains And Chaos
B5 Sex Goddess

Something Somewhere


Royal Family And The Poor - Live (Tape 6)
Ripped from a cassette album released on Project Tapes (006) around 1985/6 to high quality lossless flac audio. Courtesy of a generous blog follower, here is the next in a series of very limited cassette albums released by Mike Keane on his own Project Tapes label. This tape features two soundboard captures from the RFATP gig at Staffordshire Polytechnic on the 6th May 1983, and a performance at London's ICA on March 21st 1983. Scans of the tape and inserts are also in the archive.

A1 Destiny
A2 Something Someone
A3 Leaves In The Wind
A4 I Love You
A5 Distant Shores
A6 Jesus On Acid
A7 I.A.O. Hymn To Pain
B1 Distant Shores
B2 Voices
B3 Dawn Song
B4 Dark And Light
B5 Restrained In A Moment
B6 Visions
B7 Heartbeat
B8 Sex Goddess
B9 Transparent

Terrified of Genesis


Royal Family And The Poor - The Genetic Terrorists
Ripped from a cassette album released on Project Tapes (002) in 1986 in high quality lossless flac audio. I posted this many many years ago in a lossy format, so here it is for you lossless. I wasn't so kind about this back then, and my feelings haven't changed much - further evidence that the drugs clearly just don't work.
1 Liber Stella Rubbie
2 Voice Of The Silence
3 718
4 Savage Garden
5 The Autumn Song
6 Kali #1
7 Kali #2
8 The Flaming Sword
9 Nightside Of Eden
10 Therion
11 Pasival
12 Nightside Of Eden (Original)
13 Liberal
14 Unholy Communion 1
15 Unholy Communion 2

Noncommercial Genocide


Royal Family And The Poor - Tribal Genocide
The next cassette in the series distributed by Mike Keane in the mid-eighties is this peculiar mix of minimal techno-blabbery, disturbing live noise and dreamy instrumental demos. I would hazard a guess and date these recordings between 1981 and 1983, as there are a couple of tracks which eventually were re-shaped for the first Factory album. The cassette wears no catelogue number except for an indication that it is "tape 6". There already is a live tape 6 among the Project Tapes collection, so this is either unconnected (it has a differing style of painted box with no insert), or Mr Keane had lost track of his numbering system early into the Project. Ripped from a generously donated cassette to lossless high quality 16bit flac.
A1 Untitled
A2 Untitled
A3 Untitled
A4 Untitled
A5 Untitled
A6 Untitled
A7 Untitled Live Track
B1 Untitled Live Track
B2 Untitled Live Track
B3 Untitled
B4 Untitled
B5 Untitled
B6 Untitled


Visions


Royal Family And The Poor - In The Studio
Ripped from a cassette album released on Project Tapes (004) in 1985/6 to high quality lossless flac audio. In The Studio is a compilation of alternative takes, demos and unreleased tracks recorded before and during the sessions for the two RFATP albums for Factory Records. Taking at stab at this, but we can assume that Peter Hook is involved in some of the recordings, as it is very much his voice at the beginning of Radio Egypt. A note on the insert states that the lengthy Midnight Symphony was recorded in Liverpool during 1980.
A1 Discipline
A2 Voices (Instrumental)
A3 Ritual 1
A4 Voices (Vox)
A5 Pagan Day
A6 Distant Shores
A7 Dark + Light
A8 Radio Egypt
B1 Transparent 1
B2 Transparent 2
B3 White Stains
B4 Visions
B5 Sex Goddess
B6 Radio Egypt (Dub)
B7 Midnight Symphony

From Not So Distant Shores


Royal Family And The Poor - Live (Tape 1)
Ripped from a cassette album released on Project Tapes (001) around 1985/6 to high quality lossless flac audio. Courtesy of a generous blog follower, here is the first in a series of very limited cassette albums released by Mike Keane on his own Project Tapes label. The first two will feature today and the remainder over the coming weeks. The first live tape is a compilation of soundboard recordings at Manchester's Cloud Nine on May 24th 1984 (supporting Stockholm Monsters), and from RFATP's support slots to New Order in Glasgow and Edinburgh in February 1985. 
A1 Voices
A2 Distant Shores
A3 Dark + Light
A4 I Love You
A5 New Moon Rising
B1 Distant Shores
B2 Voices
B3 Dawn Song
B4 Dark And Light
B5 I Love You
B6 Visions
B7 Heartbeat
B8 Transparent

A Factory Quartet


Various Artists - A Factory Quartet
The second Factory Records sampler was originally planned as a double 10" set, but thankfully the label settled on this beautifully packaged double album with an embossed polaroid-style sleeve. Like the first 7" sampler, each artist gets one side of vinyl to introduce themselves, though The Durutti Column had already appeared on the label. The diversity of the chosen artists is huge, ranging from the ethereal beauty of The Durutti Column, through the distorted jazz-rock of Blurt, to scouse dirge noise terrorists The Royal Family And The Poor. Kevin Hewick supplies a difficult mix of live sets, where perhaps his 1980 Graveyard sessions would have fitted better, but as history says, he never got to finish five songs (with New Order).
Vini Reilly recruits ACR drummer Donald Johnson with a Martin Hannett production, and the three resulting tracks are among his best, For Belgian Friends being the highlight.
Hewick is joined onstage by ACR's Peter Terrell with his noisebox, but heckles and banter between Hewick and his audience spoil it for me. Blurt are an acquired taste, but like a post-punk Beefheart they pound a twisted beat with ear-splitting sax. The RFATP set is saved by Martin Hannett's presence in the production suite. It's a deep, dark noise funk-muck dirge, where the distorted guitars resemble early Section 25 whilst Joy Division's synths washaway deep in the mix.
Strangely, the album was never issued for the CD generation, though some tracks have appeared as extras on various other reissues. Here for the first time, it's a lovely clean 24/96000 rip.

Ripped from a double vinyl album released on Factory Records (FACT 24) in 1980 to high resolution 24-bit FLAC audio.


A1. The Durutti Column – For Mimi
A2. The Durutti Column – For Belgian Friends
A3. The Durutti Column – Self-portrait
B1. Kevin Hewick – Rubble
B2. Kevin Hewick – 1940
B3. Kevin Hewick – A Little Feeling
B4. Kevin Hewick – Forget
B5. Kevin Hewick – Morphia
B6. Kevin Hewick – The Enchanted Kiss
B7. Kevin Hewick – Haystack
C1. Blurt – Puppeteer
C2. Blurt – Dyslexia
C3. Blurt – Some Come
C4. Blurt – Benighted
D1. The Royal Family And The Poor – Dirge
D2. The Royal Family And The Poor – Vaneigem Mix
D3. The Royal Family And The Poor – Dirge
D4. The Royal Family And The Poor – Death Factory
D5. The Royal Family And The Poor – Dirge
D6. The Royal Family And The Poor – Rackets

Royal Family & The Poor - We Love The Moon / Live: 1983-1985

I featured an unreleased Factory album by this lot in an earlier post. Though not to everybody's taste, RF&TP have come up with the occasional gem, and We Love The Moon is rather lovely. Regrettably the flip-side White Stains regresses back into post-TG territory and fails to interest me, but included for completeness.

After quite a few requests, I've ripped the limited live album, which I didn't realise until now that I actual was at one of these shows, when the band were supporting New Order at the Michael Sobel Sports Centre in Islington in 1985.

Ripped from a 7" picture disc released on Factory Records (FAC 139) in 1986
A. We Love The Moon
B. White Stains
















Live: 1983-1985 :ripped from a limited edition live vinyl album released in 1986 on Recloose Records (LOOSE 13)
A1. Restrained In A Moment (I Love You)
A2. Dawn Song
A3. Visions
A4. Transparent
B1. Something Someone
B2. Destiny
B3. Heartbeat

Listen

Royal Family & The Poor - Genetic Terrorists

I could never describe Royal Family & The Poor as a band who made me rush out and buy every release. The tracks on A Factory Quartet dbl album were bloody awful, the Art on 45 12" (recorded with A Certain Ratio) was rather good, snippets of their first album Temple of the 13th Tribe (produced by Peter Hook) were lovely crafted pop tunes and the We Love The Moon single was delightful. I can only describe the majority of Mike Keane's output as sheer drivel cloaked in inane ramblings of Gaia, Temple ov Psykic Youth (or whatever) and other "pagan" self-sacrificial bullshit.
Whilst it was clear that Keane could write a bloody good pop tune, he was more interested in chasing the listener who GPO and Psychic TV had abandoned in years previous.
I saw RF&TP live in 1985, supporting New Order and was quite impressed with the full band performance, it was only when I got the chance to listen closer on subsequent releases was I disappointed.
In 1986, RF&TP and Factory Records parted company. There was a new album ready for release but for one reason or another it never left the can. Keabe circulated tapes of the album amongst friends and followers - here is that tape, call it the unreleased Factory album....!


From a 1986 cassette tape Genetic Terrorists:
1. Liber Stella Rubbie
2. Voice of the Silence
3. 718
4. Savage Garden
5. The Autumn Song
6. Kali #1
7. Kali #2
8. The Flaming Sword
9. Nightside of Eden
10.Therion
11.Pasival
12.Nightside of Eden (Original)
13.Liberal
14.Unholy Communion 1
15.Unholy Communion 2

Listen