01 The African Shuffle
02 California
03 Man In The Middle
04 Walking In The Rain
05 Hey, St. Peter
06 Lady Killer
07 The Man Who Knew The Answer
08 Hole In The Middle
09 Down Among The Dead Men
10 First And Last
Flash and the Pan were formed in Sydney, Australia in mid-1976, initially as a studio-only pop rock band, by Harry Vanda and George Young both on guitar, keyboards and vocals. The duo had been members of the Easybeats, and subsequently worked as songwriters and producers, Vanda & Young, both in Australia and in the United Kingdom (UK). They were A&R agents for Albert Productions, and its in-house producers at Albert Studios in Sydney, from mid-1973.
Flash and the Pan's debut single, "Hey, St. Peter" was issued in September 1976 on Albert Productions, which they had co-written and co-produced "as an engaging diversion from the real job of record production for other artists." It peaked at No. 5 on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart in November. Australian musicologist Ian McFarlane felt "The music was based around an accessible, yet inventive synthesiser-based pop rock sound with an emphasis on George's spoken-word vocals and shouted chorus."
John Paul Young (no relation), speaking to Kathy McCabe of News Corp Australia, remembered the story of the song: "George was in New York chatting to the hotel doorman about the weather and the African American guy says 'Oh well, man, when my time comes, I am going to say to St Peter "You can't send me to hell, I have done my time in hell in New York!"' George just picked up things you and I would say and turn them into songs." John Paul Young had hit singles written and produced by Vanda & Young including "Yesterday's Hero" (1975) and "Love Is in the Air" (1977).
"Hey, St. Peter" was released internationally in July 1977 on Mercury Records for continental Europe, where it reached No. 6 on the Belgian Ultratop 50 Singles chart and No. 7 on the Netherlands' Dutch Top 40. In the United Kingdom it appeared on the Ensign Records label, and for the North American market it was issued in July 1979 on Epic Records – it peaked at No. 76 on the Billboard Hot 100 in August of that year. "Down Among the Dead Men", their second single, was issued in Australia in July 1978, which peaked at No. 4 on the Kent Music Report. On the UK Singles Chart it reached No. 54 (re-titled "And the Band Played On"). In November they followed with their third single, "The African Shuffle".
The group's debut album, Flash and the Pan, was issued in Australia in December 1978 on Albert Productions, and internationally in the following year on Mercury, Ensign and Epic. It was recorded at Albert Studios in Sydney; the duo co-produced it and co-wrote nine of its ten tracks. Aside from Vanda and Young, the studio musicians included Ray Arnott on drums, Les Karski on bass guitar and Warren Morgan on piano. Arnott was signed by Vanda & Young to Alberts for a recording contract; Karski produced Arnott's solo debut album, Rude Dudes (1979), as well as providing bass guitar. The Ray Arnott Band, which included both Karski and Morgan, toured to support the album.
Although Flash and the Pan appeared on various national charts – including reaching No. 14 on Sweden's Swedish Albums Chart and No. 80 on the US Billboard 200 – the duo did not support its release with a tour: "they preferred the sanctity of their 24-track Albert Studio enclave." AllMusic's Steven McDonald rated the album as four-and-a-half stars out of five and explained, that it had "some seriously deranged songwriting, with quirky but attention-grabbing music peppered with pointy, strange lyrics. A soundtrack for the dark side of the moon that's well worth searching out."
For the group's second studio album, Lights in the Night (early 1980), Vanda and Young again used Arnott, Karski and Morgan. All eight tracks were co-written by Vanda and Young, who also co-produced it. The album reached the top 100 in Australia, and peaked at No. 1 on the Swedish Albums Chart in June. It provided two singles, "Welcome to the Universe" (July 1980) and "Media Man"
(December 1980).
In October 1981, UK-based artist Grace Jones released her cover version of "Walking in the Rain", the B-side of "Hey, St. Peter", as a single, which peaked at No. 34 in New Zealand. Dmetri Kakmi provided Stereo Stories with his recollection of first hearing it: "I was transported. Vanda and Young's lyrics and Jones's detached delivery captured the restlessness, alienation and pent-up emotions of a stifled adolescence... By the end of the track I was liberated, lifted out of a traditional Greek upbringing and pointed toward a future filled with wide horizons."
Headlines, their third studio album, appeared in August 1982. Joining Vanda and Young in the studio were Arnott; Alan Dansow; Lindsay Hammond on backing and lead vocals (on loan from Cheetah); Ian Miller on guitar; Ralph White on brass instruments and keyboards; and Stevie Wright on backing vocals, as well as lead vocals on two tracks, "Where Were You?" (July 1982) and "Waiting for a Train" (December 1982), both of whichwere issued as singles. McFarlane felt that Headlines "featured a more basic rock approach, but with no loss of power or originality. Headlines reached No. 13 on the Swedish Albums Chart.
Hammond's group Cheetah, had been signed by Vanda & Young to Alberts in 1978. Arnott, Karski and Miller were all members of Cheetah during 1982, alongside Hammond and her sister, Chrissie. Wright was the duo's bandmate from the Easybeats, and they had written and produced material for his solo career, including his number one hit "Evie" (April 1974).
"Waiting for a Train" reached the top 100 in Australia, but had greater chart success in Europe when issued there in April 1983: it peaked at No. 7 in the UK, No. 15 in Belgium and No. 26 in the Netherlands. According to Duncan Kimball of MilesAgo, it is "a song with definite drug overtones that could well have been written about Stevie's predicament."
Late in 1984, they issued their fourth studio album, Early Morning Wake Up Call, which Neil Lade of The Canberra Times opined showed that the duo were "content to rest on their laurels... they have lapsed into the world of 'gimmick' songs... [and] an exercise of the bland and boring... Trite lyrics are made even more limp by droning vocal work." Their next studio album, Nights in France, appeared in October 1987 via Epic Records. It provided two singles, "Ayla" in September and "Money Don't Lie" in April 1988. Their final studio album, Burning up the Night, was issued in October 1992 with two further singles, "Burning up the Night" (October) and "Living on Dreams" (March 1993). Thereafter the duo concentrated on their songwriting and production work for other artists.
Hey! I can't open this file. Not with the password IS AJH (as it is written), or with ISAJH...where do I go wrong?
ReplyDelete/J, Sweden
just plain AJH no IS
ReplyDeleteErr...this was painfully embarrassing. It was 6:07AM 20hrs ago, and I'd been watching 6-7 movies in a row all day and night since I got four movie channels free for a while...actually, I was looking to DL their 1st, €Uropean album which was the only one I bought back when (in 1979, a year after its original release)...yeah, I'm an old geezer, but at 59 I'm not dead, and still listen to old and new stuff, but more prog/blues/stoner/acid/electronic rock than pop. Some of my last concerts before corona were with King Crimson, Jeff Beck, Gary Numan, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Chrome, Steve Hackett, Goblin, The Residents, Eddie & The Hot Rods, Fu Manchu, Nebula, Monster Magnet - and OMD in Feb. 2020. Anyway, the few links I've found (including all the Russian) are dead or deleted.
DeleteBtw, are you Aussie? I'm looking for an 80s band from down under that I thought were called The Books, but there's only been an American electronic folk/pop duo by that name (2000-2012). This was a band whose 1st album I had. It was a quirky little guitar pop bands with a synth (but not synth-pop), typical for its time and sounding like...I dunno, a mix of Kiwi band Split Enz 1984 and and Flash & The Pan? I just can't seem to remember - and I sold all my vinyl (5,500 LPs) in 2007...any bells ringing? My old schoolmate (b. 1960) lives outside Sydney, and her Aussie husband has no idea what I'm talking about, but he's never even heard of The Saints, whose 3 first albums from 1977/78 I still listen to...
I've tried The Book-Ends, The Booklets (duh), The Brooks...got any friend or relative born ~1965?
Thx anyway, am listening to my fave, 'Walking In The Rain' right now...
/Jörg
PS. It took me some 25 years to hear and know the expression "like a flash in the pan"...
PPS. I juz luved AC/DC 1976-1980. And then I hated them...70s UK hard rockers Geordie (a "Geordie" is someone from Newcastle" near Scotland, and that they were...) were just reuniting after a two-year break when Brian Johnson got a call from Angus. He changed his singing style for the worse, but I can understand the money was tempting with a band on the rise to int'l stardom. Yada, yada, yada...
Yes I';m an Aussie and older than you add another 10 years. The name doesn't ring any bells but it was the eighties you say, not my fave decade. If you were more specific with the name I could ask around just to vague.
ReplyDeleteSo you're ~70? Anyway, I was so sure they were called The Books, I never even thought of anything else...and that was 30 years ago.
ReplyDeleteThanx still,
J.