Definitely. You can always hear an Accelerator track on these EPs as they stand out a mile in terms of maturity.
A brief post about the first Q 12", which I just realised should have been much later in the year, but it's done now, so we'll have to have it now. Mental Cube - Q
-Q (Original)
-Q (Santa Monica Mix)
It's been a while since a bit of weird obscure FSOL knowledge appeared, and today I've just discovered this.
There are three different versions of Calcium.
This image shows the waveforms of the mixes from Pulse Three, The Pulse EPs and Accelerator, with the 1991/2016 version of Accelerator with the different indexing at the bottom for comparison.
It's not all just different edits, either, they're different arrangements, with the piano appearing in different sections, and a subtly different bassline on the version on The Pulse EPs.
Ok, on with today's blog, and I've done two EPs today!
Spent the last week or so working through every interview, article and story I could find to get all the facts down and hopefully be able to fill these with quotes from the band. Anyway, it's all back now.
“Pinn had decided that one track was what they got for £100
Pure Pinn economics. The promoters rushed backstage ‘great the crowd love it but go and play more’
‘No we’ve only brought one song’
Things turned nasty, bouncers were called.”
Papua New What Now? It's only taken a month to get to the first standalone FSOL release. Turns out the Qube Mix is a very early version of the track, a mixdown from shortly after Brian took over duties reworking Gaz's ideas.
Couple of remixes to cover tomorrow, and then it's off to 1992, a year of huge change which starts with a couple of alias releases and ends with their debut release on Virgin and their first radio transmissions.