Donnerstag, 15. Oktober 2020

Chumbawamba - Never Mind The Ballots (1987)

"Never Mind the Ballots" (occasionally called "Never Mind the Ballots... Here's the Rest of Your Life" by fans and distributors) is the second studio album by anarchist punk band Chumbawamba. Most of the songs centre on lying politicians and their search for more voter control. It was originally released as a cassette and LP, then re-released in the '90s as half of the Chumbawamba compilation CD "First 2", which was a combination of their first two LP albums released on a single CD.

The lyrics to all the songs are direct, largely undisguised political commentary describing at the same time the futility of democracy in general and the political situation of the three major parties in Britain at the time of recording. This piece, like the band's earlier album, "Pictures of Starving Children Sell Records", is all based on a single theme, rather than confronting a range of themes, issues and ideas as was typical of their later albums. In terms of style, lyrical content and political focus, it was a follow up to the earlier album and is more similar to it than any subsequent work by the band.

To about the same extent as their earlier record, the album features "characters" that the vocalists assume for certain songs. The two most prominent characters are "The Candidates". The Candidates appear together on two tracks, "Always Tell The Voter What the Voter Wants to Hear" and "The Candidates Find Common Ground" (as well as in the Epilogue on the cassette version). The male candidate, or at least a character very much like him and also played by Danbert Nobacon, appears on "Today's Sermon." The female candidate, played by Alice Nutter, appears alone singing some parts of "The Wasteland."

The male and female candidate are shown to be two equally uncaring political candidates who seem to have opposing view on subjects at first, but essentially want the same things. This issue is discussed in "The Candidates Find Common Ground" where the two discuss how their means of solving a problem may differ, but they seek the same ends; for example, while one candidate wants "conventional weapons, to kill people nicely," the other candidate wants "nuclear weapons, to keep the peace". In the end they reason that they need "weapons, definitely; either way, [they] must defend [them]selves."


Tracklist:
"Always Tell the Voter What the Voter Wants to Hear" – 2:51
"Come on Baby (Let's Do the Revolution)" – 1:39
"The Wasteland" – 4:23
"Today's Sermon" – 2:28
"Ah-Men" – 2:29
"Mr. Heseltine Meets His Public" – 3:51
"The Candidates Find Common Ground" – 4:29
"Here's the Rest of Your Life" – 13:22


Chumbawamba - Never Mind The Ballots (1987)
(192 kbps, cover art included)

8 Kommentare:

Jobe hat gesagt…

Many thanks

zero hat gesagt…

You are welcome!

nayramir hat gesagt…

thank you for posting!!! just found out about your blog and now i wanna listen to everything! greetings from maceió, BRA :)

zero hat gesagt…

Thanks for your feedback. Hope you enjoy the music. Best wishes & stay safe!

Martin hat gesagt…

coincidence, I was listening to Chumba's The Boy Bands Have Won. and thought of you and your blog listening to the track "(Words Flew) Right Around the World" ABOUT Bertold Brecht (2007) (in teh booklet they say Bert told Brecht, Brecht told Bert was taken from a poet by a leeds poet - and include a fragment from one of Brcht writings about the radio: "radio is one-sided when it should be ttwo It is purely an apparatus for distribution, for mere sharing out. So here is a positive suggestion: change this apparatus over from distribution to communication. The radio would be the finest possible communication apparatus in public life, a vast network of pipes. That is to say, it would be if it knew how to receive as well as to transmit, how to let the listener speak as well as hear, how to bring him into a relationship instead of isolating him."

["Der Rundfunk als Kommunikationsapparat" sodacity.net/system/files/Bertolt_Brecht_The_Radio_as_an_Apparatus_of_Communication.pdf
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JYv3c9yk9UI

Bert told Brecht
Brecht told Bert
Words like birds flew right around the world
Right around the world
Right around the world
Words flew right around the world
Beware! Don't look away!
Hear what the poet has to say
Songs and rhymes for the worst of times
Paper feeds the fire In the coldest winter
Bert told Brecht
Brecht told Bert
Words like birds flew right around the world
Right around the world
Right around the world
Words flew right around the world
Wake up! Look around!
The painter learnt to juggle like a clown
Poet he shouts till they chase him out
Marching into exile with an old typewriter
Bert told Brecht
Brecht told Bert
Words like birds flew right around the world
Right around the world
Right around the world
Words flew right around the world
Take care! Open up your eyes!
Words can take you by surprise
Poet he writes fights the best of fights
Taking on the painter with a pen and paper...
Bert told Brecht
Brecht told Bert
Words like birds flew right around the world
Right around the world
Right around the world
Words flew right around the world
Right around the world
Right around the world
Words flew right around the world

Songwriters: Judith Abbott / Neil Ferguson / Allan Whalley / Louise Watts

Martin mantxo hat gesagt…

http://www.mediafire.com/folder/wajqk1ioh63xj/Chumbawamba_-_The_Boy_Bands_Have_Won_(2007)

Martin mantxo hat gesagt…

also this record by The Chieftains + Ry Cooder
http://www.mediafire.com/folder/qbilo11np4t0n/The+Chieftains
about the the San Patricio battalion—a group of mainly Irish immigrant volunteer soldiers who deserted the U.S. Army in 1846 to fight on the Mexican side in the Mexican–American War (1846–1848). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Patricio_(album)

zero hat gesagt…

Wow, thank you very much for sharing your thoughts and the music with us. All the best!

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