3 Jan Keep Your Hands Off My Baby Little Eva (30)
3 Jan Can Can '62 (re-entry of course) Peter Jay and the Jaywalkers (36)
3 Jan Always You And Me (re-entry) Russ Conway (35) His final hit. Obviously.
3 Jan Up On The Roof Julie Grant (33) Mention of that entire lost genre of the Parochial Brit Cover Version reminds me of the last great example, Sweet Dreams' version of Abba's "Honey Honey", because it's a very clever EEC-referendum-era *de-Europeanisation* of its source, turning Musikladen production into Seaside Special brassiness just as Marty Wilde could render American Bandstand into Juke Box Jury with a mere shake of the upper lip. This isn't anything to do with EEC membership in the mid-70s, obviously.
3 Jan Let's Go The Routers (32)
3 Jan Don't You Think It's Time Mike Berry and the Outlaws (6) A routine uptempo jig through a song-style clearly on the way out. His comeback cover of "Sunshine Of Your Smile" from 1980 is a weird relic from the days when Radio 2 didn't even have to be Radio 1-and-a-half to influence the charts (was he in "Are You Being Served?" by then?)
10 Jan Funny All Over Vernons Girls (39)
10 Jan Just For Kicks Mike Sarne (35) Why the 1960s were neccessary etc etc.
10 Jan Globetrotter The Tornados (5) An exciting enough retread of magnificence past, but was the moment already fading?
10 Jan Coming Home Baby Mel Torme (13) Amazingly, the second of only two UK hits for MT. At the time of the 1997 election, my mother used to sing to the intro of his other hit: "on the first of May, it is election day, spring is here so blow your top, throw that lot away ..."
10 Jan The Lonely Bull Tijuana Brass (22) Note who *isn't* credited.
17 Jan All Alone Am I Brenda Lee (7) The Brits were wise to resist her ballads for so long; they were insipid affairs without even the hilarious earnestness that makes Connie Francis' "Mama" an interesting relic. This was one such.
17 Jan Don't Hang Up The Orions (39)
17 Jan It's Up To You Rick Nelson (22) Oddly, "Garden Party" in '72 only made #41 in the UK. There's at least a chance that some of you might be able to sing it, though, unlike this.
17 Jan Because Of Love (re-entry) Billy Fury (35)
17 Jan Ruby Ann Marty Robbins (24) His last hit. "El Paso" used to make me cry.
17 Jan Diamonds Jet Harris and Tony Meehan (1) Shadows breakaway knocks Hank and the boys' "Dance On" off number one even though the golden age of the rock instrumental is well past: just about says it all for early '63. I like this, though: it has a modicum of menace.
24 Jan Loo-Be-Loo The Chucks (22)
24 Jan My Little Girl The Crickets (17)
24 Jan Charmaine The Bachelors (6) The start of an ongoing 60s tendency which proved a continually enervating counter-reaction to everything that the below really kickstarted (cf two versions of "Elusive Butterfly" in the Top 10 the week Wilson won his landslide). The Westlife who would have been honest enough to admit to reading the People's Friend are usually missed out of radio nostalgia chart rundowns these days, as if they can sense that Engelbert holding "Strawberry Fields" off the top started here.
24 Jan Please Please Me The Beatles (2 in Record Retailer and therefore Guinness; 1 everywhere else and acknowledged as such at the time, which gives them 18 number ones - see 4 July) All been said so many times, of course, but the flow on the repeated come-ons is reason enough why it became what it was. It snowed here today; I thought of the vast drifts of 40 winters ago, the ancient road signs, and hearing this for the first time (always associate it with Bromsgrove / Kidderminster, for family reasons).
24 Jan A Taste Of Honey Mr Acker Bilk (16) Also recorded by the Beatles, if memory serves, assuming it's the same one etc etc. Appropriate.
24 Jan Wayward Wind Frank Ifield (1) "Ooooh, he's going to last, the Beatles have no talent" said a character in "Oh Doctor Beeching" (yes, I know). Appropriately enough, this record was already as antiquated as a steam-operated country branch line the moment it came out, and like them it was living on borrowed time.
24 Jan Sukiyaki Kenny Ball and his Jazzmen (10) The instrumental one and their last Top 10 hit - sort of like their equivalent of "Better Day" or "Sound of Drums", then. See 4 July.
24 Jan Big Girls Don't Cry The Four Seasons (13) See all these new entries in one week! That's New Pop Excitement, that is. A fine piece of Stateside swagger thrown into the Big Freeze, though their best moment was yet to come (see 4 April).
24 Jan Some Kinda Fun Chris Montez (10) How did his comeback "The More I See You" fit into the summer of '66? It would have sounded so tame, surely. Straight in at #16 but utterly unrecalled; by the end of the year everyone would be laughing at "Let's Dance".
24 Jan Little Town Flirt Del Shannon (4) Trying to recapture the glory he lost when Larry said goodbye, but the Other isn't answering. He'll have to follow the sun to get it back (see 14 Jan 1965 if anyone ever does that year) and then he'll burn himself, back into the production lab and oblivion.
31 Jan What Now Adam Faith (31) See that chart position? Says it all. If he didn't pronounce "when" as "w'hen" he was a bore.
31 Jan Walk Right In Rooftop Singers (10) The TW3 gang would have mocked a line like "Daddy let your mind roll on" as easily as a Henry Brooke speech, but then they were essentially conservative satirists (as Billy Bragg is a conservative socialist) from day one. I like this song.
31 Jan The Alley Cat Song David Thorne (21)
― robin carmody (robin carmody), Wednesday, 8 January 2003 01:15 (twenty-three years ago)
― kate, Wednesday, 8 January 2003 01:19 (twenty-three years ago)
7 Feb Blame It On The Bossa Nova Eydie Gorme (32) Belongs to a different year than 1962, maybe ... but I can't think of anything to say about it. It was just *there* on Radio 2 when I was a kid, and now it isn't.
7 Feb The Night Has A Thousand Eyes Bobby Vee (3) His last Top 10 hit, unsurprisingly. Pam Ayres once informed R2 listeners in her usual absurd cottage-loaf-and-Miss-Read accent that she once "had the hots" for Vee; there is the paradox of the Macmillan government explained for those with a nose to smell it.
7 Feb Hava Nagila The Spotnicks (13) Some hoary old Rolling Stone rock book defined the degradation of disco by the fact that a cash-in album included a disco version of this song. I guess I'm entitled to say that this marked a similar moment for the rock instrumental.
14 Feb Hey Paula Paul and Paula (8) Ozzy Osbourne loved this song at the time. A bit like if Tim Westwood had been named as head boy of his school in a Daily Telegraph announcement, really: what modern icons did before the world they now inhabit had been created.
14 Feb I Saw Linda Yesterday Doug Sheldon (36)
14 Feb Boss Guitar Duane Eddy (27) Come back Piltdown Men all is forgiven.
14 Feb Like I've Never Been Gone Billy Fury (3) But he had; the Other could never return.
14 Feb Queen For Tonight Helen Shapiro (33) What Marcello said. Trapped by everything she'd been in '61.
14 Feb That's What Love Will Do Joe Brown (3) His last Top 10 etc etc. More Ealing Studios "youthfulness".
21 Feb From A Jack To A King Ned Miller (2) A 1957 relic dusted up and bizarrely becoming a hit (see 25 April, if you can bear it). Like if an Ocean Colour Scene album track was reissued and hit #2 now, I suppose. But maybe beyond even that.
21 Feb Hi-Lili Hi-Lo Richard Chamberlain (20)
21 Feb Summer Holiday Cliff Richard and the Shadows (1) "Wonderful Life", next to "A Hard Day's Night" in the summer of '64, would look like a Jessie Matthews musical. This deserved to, really. Darren Day's cover should have made any sane person hate it even if they'd previously dismissed it as an irrelevant relic: like, can you *believe* a cover of "Summer Holiday" charted in 1996? The sad truth is that if Cowell and the exhausted Waterman got their way, a cover of "Summer Holiday" would be number one in 2010.
28 Feb Saturday Night At The Duck Pond The Cougars (33)
28 Feb Pied Piper (The Beeje) Steve Race (29) Without Steve Race and his hatred of rock'n'roll, "Move It" would never have been written. What a sad loss that would have been to Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Club.
28 Feb Trouble Is My Middle Name Brook Brothers (38) Oh, fuck off. And they did.
28 Feb Cupboard Love John Leyton (22) Ditto. Humiliating.
7 Mar Town Crier Craig Douglas (36) No prizes for guessing that this was his la ...
7 Mar In Dreams Roy Orbison (6) A quiver in a cathedral. A tiny plea in a vast open space. He never escaped or transcended his fantasies. Marcello said it all; few others have understood.
7 Mar Say Wonderful Things Ronnie Carroll (6) Eurovision has always existed in its own parallel universe, to pop music what the Children's Film Foundation and the big international Italian-funded movies of the 60s were to cinema. This was our entry (yes, him again) and the unsettling thing is that I can imagine us entering an identical song for quite a few years even after this.
7 Mar My Kind Of Girl Frank Sinatra with Count Basie (35)
7 Mar Rhythm Of The Rain The Cascades (5) I once heard an a capella version of this song recorded as part of Common Ground's Confluence project. I failed to learn the lesson. Its beauty has gained added poignancy for me since. The last pre-Beatles American masterpiece?
7 Mar Foot Tapper The Shadows (1) Used for about 183 years as the theme music to Radio 2's "Sounds of the Sixties", as if to say forget all that nasty threatening avant-delia or whatever it was called that that Peel johnny used to play when he started, *this* was the definitive 1960s hit. Their last #1 and one of their weakest hits; I'm starting to think they peaked with the rumble-drone of "F.B.I."
7 Mar One Broken Heart For Sale Elvis Presley (12) Note that chart position my lad. You have been having number ones by default.
14 Mar How Do You Do It? Gerry and the Pacemakers (1) You will find out the same hard truth, boys. In time. Enjoy your moment.
14 Mar Brown-Eyed Handsome Man Buddy Holly (32) There's something uniquely pathetic about the idea of him doing the 10th generation of "Raining In My Heart" and getting trounced in '63. Remember him this way.
14 Mar Let's Turkey Trot Little Eva (13) I'd rather swing on a star.
21 Mar Good Golly Miss Molly Jerry Lee Lewis (31) The Killer on a perfunctory run-through of Little Richard's formulaic stomp as if to warn those pesky Merseybeaters off before they even tried (see 19 Dec). Ask yourself - do you *really* think this would have added anything to the song?
21 Mar Mr Bass Man Johnny Cymbal (24) 50s rock'n'roll reduced to heritage industry exhibit 35.
21 Mar Robot The Tornados (17) A sad moment. A sad, sad moment. What is in reality at this stage a rather clumping, amateurish movement has stolen the magic. The world didn't end last October. Sadly these spirits have to decompose within the world itself, rather than beyond it. But see 8 Aug, all the same.
21 Mar The Folk Singer Tommy Roe (4) The theme to a moralistic US children's film, I always think, like the CFF controlled by Billy Graham.
21 Mar End Of The World Skeeter Davis (18) One of the great moments of desolation in music. There is no day-to-day and no Other left, just a quiet tear, and that can be enough. Pete Waterman's decline still started when he got Sonia to cover this, though; it wasn't the choice of song, so much as the insensitivity. Expect it in Pop Idol II, then, utterly fucked about and misunderstood as usual.
28 Mar Say I Won't Be There The Springfields (5) The late '62 entry "Island of Dreams" only peaked at #5 this week and was about to be overtaken by this wholesome French-derived singalong. The proto-Dusty was a strange pop beast, her professional name (which she probably wouldn't have used had she started out on 28 Nov this year) presumably meant to evoke this song's contrived atmosphere of hot idyllic Monica Edwards mornings working the land. On the whole, a poor precursor to "Si Tu Dois Partir", which would be arrived at six years hence by a reversal of the same process (in all senses).
28 Mar Don't Set Me Free Ray Charles (37)
28 Mar Can You Forgive Me Karl Denver (32)
28 Mar Can't Get Used To Losing You Andy Williams (2) This is what the mid-90s sniggerers missed in MoR; the *pauses*, the silences. They make this song.
28 Mar So It Will Always Be Everly Brothers (23)
― robin carmody (robin carmody), Wednesday, 8 January 2003 02:40 (twenty-three years ago)
anyway, here goes:
4 April Our Day Will Come Ruby and the Romantics (38) A US number one, but Britain had already passed into somewhere else. The only chart-topping American lesson we needed that year was "Fingertips", but the Wonder was absent for deeper reasons than mere musical ones.
4 April Code Of Love Mike Sarne (29)
4 April Losing You Brenda Lee (10) (qv 17 Jan)
4 April Count On Me Julie Grant (24) Twice I have typed her name in this four-finger exercise. And never in my life I have encountered anyone for whom the name could mean anything except, perhaps, a typist in Bromley ("go girl!" in newsreel commentator's voice)
4 April Walk Like A Man The Four Seasons (12) In stark contrast to Andy Williams, they filled every space available to them, and that's what made it so great. Always loved the intro's swagger, walking down the street blessed with self-regard before it got ugly.
11 April Fireball Don Spencer (32) The Kwiksave Telstar from the Aussie who was still peddling mid-century animal sentimentalism on Play School well into the 80s. Gerry Anderson obsessives probably have a "soft spot" for it.
11 April Nobody's Darlin' But Mine Frank Ifield (4) He'd probably have swept the board at the Brits if they'd existed then, of course.
18 April My Little Baby Mike Berry and the Outlaws (34)
18 April Some Other Guy The Big Three (37)
18 April He's So Fine The Chiffons (16) Check the desperation on "Sooner or later / I hope it's not later"; it's all there, beneath the gloss.
18 April From Me To You The Beatles (1) The consolidatory moment. The song structure is too close to Adam Faith to fully endure.
25 April Two Kinds Of Teardrops Del Shannon (5) Took the art of repetition to new extremes; the entire melody line is identical to that of "Little Town Flirt" (see 24 Jan). Another desperate attempt to recover past glories from the Musitron's very own creation, already losing its will to go on.
25 April Deck Of Cards Wink Martindale (5) Hello, Senator McCarthy. Would you like some tea and cakes?
25 April Young Lovers Paul and Paula (9) Not saying hello to them wherever they are, which would probably have been more interesting.
25 April Scarlett O'Hara Jet Harris and Tony Meehan (2) Enjoyed a lucrative afterlife as a staple up-to-the-news instrumental on the Jimmy Young show. An innocent spring breeze, but somewhere sunny summer's marching to a different drummer.
2 May Just Listen To My Heart The Spotnicks (36)
2 May Woe Is Me Helen Shapiro (35) And it was. Some time in the 80s she appeared on Blue Peter singing "Walkin' Back To Happiness". Five Star are appearing on Blue Peter this week. You know what that means.
2 May My Way Eddie Cochran (23) His final "new" hit. Prepare for heritagisation Mr C.
2 May Pipeline The Chantays (16)
2 May Casablanca Kenny Ball and his Jazzmen (21)
9 May Little Band Of Gold James Gilreath (29)
9 May If You Gotta Make A Fool Of Somebody Freddie and the Dreamers (3) The standing joke of the era, of course. Even then clearly a stopgap phenomenon; can you imagine Garritty singing even "No Milk Today"? In cultural Mancunian terms essentially the non-openly-racist Bernard Manning.
9 May Lucky Lips Cliff Richard and the Shadows (4)
9 May Do You Want To Know A Secret? Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas (2) So you see where we're heading now, don't you? First-gen Merseybeat, second-gen Britpop all the way. It was unspectacular, but it served its purpose, and there's really nothing more to say.
16 May Casanova / Chariot Petula Clark (39) A trip into a lost universe, where the drawings in French and German school textbooks indicated children of the Other, not merely your second cousins. Only a minor novelty hit, of course, but a revealing one: I'd like to hear Sophie Ellis Bextor's laugh if it was suggested to her that she record in foreign languages.
16 May When Will You Say "I Love You" Billy Fury (3) The Other has just about driven him to bursting point. When he next returns it will be with a nasty smile, and the yearnings will have been fudged, not fully resolved at all (see 1 Aug)
23 May Out Of My Mind Johnny Tillotson (34)
23 May Harvest Of Love Benny Hill (20) "We feel the format has passed its sell-by date" - Thames Television 26 years too late
23 May Another Saturday Night Sam Cooke (23) And there's the problem. Great song in theory, great voice in theory, a reality of drudgery and sweat. Somehow I'd always rather listen to "Rhythm of the Rain" or something else that wouldn't get slicked-back Camdenites round a piano, "quality" the only thing on their minds.
23 May Take These Chains From My Heart Ray Charles (5) The same, only more so. This man should be respected, not dragged out for "jam sessions". He'd never know how much he destroys himself in that process.
30 May Foolish Little Girl The Shirelles (38)
30 May (Ain't That) Just Like Me The Hollies (39) First chart entry for a group who may have been more influential than you'd like to think. In their last few years as a tenable nostalgia act now, you feel, but has anyone ever *disliked* them? Listen to "On A Carousel" even once and you'll be a golden ageist without even trying, so maybe you don't want to go that way.
30 May Falling Roy Orbison (9) "In Dreams" was still in the Top 10. Bono could never understand, bless him; he always had to howl, emote, stir things. He couldn't understand that Orbison never howled, never emoted, he *searched*. Actually being able to salvage a Travelling Wilburys record confirms his greatness.
30 May Forget Him Bobby Rydell (13) One by one they all lined up for their last big hits. It could have been worse (cf 27 June).
30 May I Like It Gerry and the Pacemakers (1) And there they go again. Its ascent to the top would probably have been like a particularly giddy rollercoaster; you want to get off, but you're stuck too high, and have to hope your sweet tooth sees you through.
6 June He's The One Billie Davis (40)
6 June Bo Diddley Buddy Holly (4) A rush through Diddley's autobiog. That's it.
6 June Ice Cream Man The Tornados (18) What travesty could make this sound more old-fashioned than "I Like It"? The only thing is the harshness of context, and if you don't understand that, then you really shouldn't be writing about pop music. "It's Hard To Believe It" (Glenda Collins 1966) is incidentally one of only four songs I can't imagine myself listening to now: I don't fear the emotions, I just fear I'd lose my social functions if I felt them again.
6 June Atlantis The Shadows (2) Their last moment in the sun, but too charming for its own good. Prefab Sprout did it better.
13 June It's Been Nice Everly Brothers (26)
13 June Don't Try To Change Me The Crickets (37)
13 June Lonely Boy Lonely Guitar Duane Eddy (35) Well, would YOU trust that title?
13 June Shy Girl Mark Wynter (28) Well, would you?
20 June Da Doo Ron Ron The Crystals (5) When Spector sensed a moment, he *caught* it. The light of the evening, the thrill of new love, everything you were grateful you'd lived to hear after the missiles didn't go off; the Wall of Sound extended almost to the Wall of Life. I've let too many summers fall from my grasp and regret it while crunching on winter frost. We all have, which is why songs like this still captivate us; they are the distillation of all the emotions we wish never left us ever.
20 June Indian Love Call Karl Denver (32)
20 June Rondo Kenny Ball and his Jazzmen (24) If they were the trad boom's Oasis, would this be their "Sunday Morning Call"?
20 June It's My Party Lesley Gore (9) Fabolous is true to its spirit, really; thoroughly childish in a good way.
20 June Welcome To My World Jim Reeves (6) May or may not have been introduced by T.Wogan as "a Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm record". John Denver did it better.
27 June Swing That Hammer Mike Cotton's Jazzmen (36) Unbelievably, their *first* week in the Top 40. Who were the latecomers of Britpop jauntiness? Probably the Supernaturals, and like them I'm sure Cotton was the sound of Upwey and Melcombe Regis for a few minutes (oops, in that case I mean Electrasy).
27 June You Can Never Stop Me Loving You Kenny Lynch (10) Destined for a lifetime of "no, of course I'm not racist, he's a good guy" showbiz chummery. His music is amusingly incidental.
27 June Hey Mama Frankie Vaughan (21) No "Tower of Strength", presumably. I seem to have left "Loop-De-Loop" out of this list, and that nails him down pat; an Old Trooper who could accidentally go beyond, cf the aforementioned Bacharach / David song.
27 June Confessin' Frank Ifield (1) Watch for the next single. In the meantime one last trip down the old branch line.
27 June Bobby Tomorrow Bobby Vee (21) Tempting fate. I shouldn't have to tell you precisely how many more hits he had after this.
4 July Sweets For My Sweet The Searchers (1) "When You Walk In The Room" sounds almost as big as "I Feel Fine", an unexpected giant. The rest is pretty and ineffectual, not least this. No further comment really necessary for anything else in this genre; repeating the point destroys this sort of exercise in cultural history.
4 July Ain't That A Shame The Four Seasons (38)
4 July Sukiyaki Kyu Sakamoto (6) The vocal version. The Other rears its head again; this is pop music defined as such, rewriting life as a game of etiquette.
4 July Nature's Time For Love Joe Brown (26) Just look at that title. Sounds like a sex education film from about 1955, doesn't it?
4 July Devil In Disguise Elvis Presley (1 in Guinness, 2 on the broadcast charts of the time) Time's up, over, *blaaaaw*. Move on. Nothing here.
11 July Walkin' Tall Adam Faith (23)
11 July Faraway Places The Bachelors (36)
11 July It's Too Late Now Swinging Blue Jeans (30) Their first hit. Nothingy.
11 July Twist and Shout Brian Poole and the Tremeloes (4) The Beatles' version was a biggie of course but EPs were excluded from this chart, so the Essex boys have it to themselves. There is a family line linking this record to So Solid's "Oh No", born into innocence, ending up nervous even of walking, from Ted Rogers' cheer to Neutrino's glare.
18 July One Fine Day The Chiffons (40)
18 July If You Wanna Be Happy Jimmy Soul (39) Or, perhaps, Jimmy Proto-Soul; this can only sound like the roughest of blueprints these days.
18 July The Good Life Tony Bennett (36)
18 July By The Way The Big Three (22)
18 July The Cruel Sea The Dakotas (18) The new Shadows. So they hoped.
18 July I Wonder Brenda Lee (14) See 24 Jan and 4 April.
25 July Come On Home The Springfields (31) The folky facade was cracking; they were, after all, aligning themselves with those for whom "The White Heat of Technology" would sound like "The Brown Claw of Satan". The New World Break was coming, and Phil Spector would play a key part.
25 July Go Go Go Chuck Berry (38) Hardly a big hit, but a sign of the New Archivism.
25 July True Love Richard Chamberlain (30)
25 July Wipe Out The Surfaris (5) Too much of a cliche. A little too Hawaii 5-0. Crackly.
25 July I'll Never Get Over You Johnny Kidd and the Pirates (4) Jaunty final fling from fading rockers. And that is all.
25 July Theme From "The Legion's Last Patrol" Ken Thorne (4) What the fuck? Hurtled in from the middle of nowhere, a rumbustious war film theme, a pure fantasy of hurtling drumbeats. I guess the sun had more-or-less set, so in context this probably caught the mood, a sort of valedictory retreat from empire. But even putting those words in the context of pop music and being unable to think of any other appropriate words ... a different world.
― robin carmody (robin carmody), Wednesday, 8 January 2003 06:47 (twenty-three years ago)
― Jeff W, Wednesday, 8 January 2003 16:53 (twenty-three years ago)
Looks good so far, but mention should be made of the sublime quotation from the Chantays' "Pipeline" which materialises just before the long fadeout of "Til I Die" by the Beach Boys. Pity Bruce Johnston had to spoil everything with his ultra-naff discofied cover in '77.
Also, re. Jimmy Soul: this song was the one that goes: "If you wanna be happy for the rest of your life, never make a pretty woman your wife..." Subsequently revived by Joe Dolce as failed follow-up to Shaddap Your Face and again by Rocky Obviously Not Sharpe Enough and the Replays.
― Marcello Carlin, Wednesday, 8 January 2003 17:01 (twenty-three years ago)
― minna (minna), Wednesday, 8 January 2003 18:07 (twenty-three years ago)
― maria b (maria b), Wednesday, 8 January 2003 21:59 (twenty-three years ago)
― naked as sin (naked as sin), Thursday, 9 January 2003 03:10 (twenty-three years ago)
― Marcello Carlin, Tuesday, 14 January 2003 11:28 (twenty-three years ago)
― zaxxon25 (zaxxon25), Tuesday, 14 January 2003 13:37 (twenty-three years ago)
as for Sam Cooke, earlier today I saw the video for "Wonderful World" cobbled together when it was reissued in 1986, a sequence of imagery from around the time it originally came out in 1960 (in fact probably shortly before that): the Coronation, Liz and Phil with the children at Balmoral, Harold Macmillan in full paternalistic mode, etc, etc. So utterly unconnected to the song that it could only be topped by a reissue of "Night Fever" as a tribute to Maurice Gibb with a video full of National Front marches and The Rubbish In Leicester Square. I wonder if it had anything to do with DLT's Golden Oldie Picture Show?
― robin carmody (robin carmody), Thursday, 16 January 2003 12:30 (twenty-three years ago)