other titles...

Various Artists

4LP (36 Tracks)

LP One

Side A

1. The Human League / Being Boiled
(Fast Product Version)
2. Tubeway Army / Down In The Park
3. Fad Gadget / Back To Nature
4. Vice Versa / New Girls Neutrons
5. Throbbing Gristle / Hot On The Heels Of Love
 
Side B
1. The Normal / Warm Leatherette
2. Cabaret Voltaire / Nag Nag Nag
3. John Foxx / Burning Car
4. Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark / Electricity
(Dindisc 1980 Version)
5. Shock / R.E.R.B
 
LP Two
 
Side C
1. Ultravox! / Hiroshima Mon Amour
2. Magazine / Permafrost
3. Hot Chocolate / Put Your Love In Me
4. Visage / Moon Over Moscow
 
Side D
1. Sparks / The Number One Song In Heaven
(Long Version)
2. The Glitter Band / Makes You Blind
3. The Regents / 7 Teen
4. Roxy Music / Angel Eyes (Extended Remix)

LP Three
 
Side E
1. The Men / I Don’t Depend On You
2. Barry De
Vorzon / Theme From ‘The
Warriors’
3. Rinder And Lewis / Willie And The Hand
Jive (12” Version)
4. Grace Jones / La Vie En Rose
 
Side F
1. Kraftwerk /
Schaufensterpuppen
2.
Ultravox / Passing Strangers
3. Iggy Pop / Nightclubbing
4. Gina X Performance / No G.D.M.
 
LP Four
 
Side G
1. Mick Ronson / Only After Dark
2. Simple Minds / Changeling
3. Skids / Animation (Edit)
4. Japan / Life in Tokyo (1979 Single
Version)
5. Amanda Lear / Follow Me
6. Spandau Ballet / To Cut A Long Story
Short
 
Side H
1. Yello / Bostich (album version
2. Giorgio Moroder / Chase (From ‘Midnight Express’ Soundtrack)
3. Visage / Fade To Grey (1980 Dance Mix)
4. Lou Reed / Perfect Day
 

 

Rusty Egan Presents… Blitzed!

Various Artists

edsel
  • black 4lp

    Released: 28th Jun 2024

    £61.99
    Buy

Compiled exhaustively from his DJ sets, ‘Rusty Egan Presents The Blitz’ brings together the sounds of a night at the club circa 1980.

Beautifully presented with contemporary photography from Sheila Rock, Peter Ashworth and Terry Smith, the booklet also contains sleeve notes from Alexis Petridis and Rusty himself. London, 1979. From the rubble and ashes of punk a new youth cult was emerging. Divinely inspired by Bowie, Roxy Music and Kraftwerk, a new tribe the press started labelling New Romantics, or Futurists, discarded punk’s old hat claims towards authenticity and protest, in pursuit of glamour, make up, dressing up and dancing. Their home was The Blitz Club, a tiny wine bar at the edge of Covent Garden and what went on there between 1979 and 1980 would genuinely change the world.

The other name for this cult? Blitz Kids. Without necessarily knowing it, The Blitz was birthing the next wave of British pop stars. A young Boy George ran the cloakroom, its host and doorman was a young Steve Strange, soon to be the frontman of Visage, Spandau Ballet played their first gig there and on a given night you might find yourself dancing next to a member of Ultravox . Fashion designers in Regency ballgowns mingled with secretaries in rubber, post boys dressed as Biggles danced next to art school kids dressed as Pierrot. David Bowie assembled his extras for the ‘Ashes To Ashes’ video from the Blitz kids. Mick Jagger was refused entry. Too square. And the club had a mighty soundtrack, assembled painstakingly by its resident DJ Rusty Egan.

Rusty’s sets brought together heroes like Eno, Iggy, and Lou Reed cool European electronic pioneers like Kraftwerk, Telex and Yello , the electronic side of disco Cerrone , Hot Chocolate, Amanda Lear) and cutting edge film soundtracks from the likes of Vangelis, Giorgio Moroder and Barry De Vorzon . Rusty also span the nascent sounds of Britian’s next new wave Japan, Landscape, the Human League, Visage, Ultravox , Fad Gadget…