top of page

Hidden Treasures - B-Movie

  • Writer: Jasmine Storm
    Jasmine Storm
  • 4 days ago
  • 4 min read

In May 1981 B-Movie and Soft Cell went into Advision Studios in London with the


same producer, Mike Thorne (Wire, Bronski Beat, China Crisis, The Communards) to


record singles for the label they were both signed to.



Phonogram had really wanted to sign B-Movie but had also committed to Soft Cell,


having been coerced into it by Stev0, who managed both artists and wouldn’t let


them have one without the other.



B-Movie commenced recording the dark moody anti-fame anthem ‘Marilyn Dreams’,


whilst Soft Cell got underway on a cover of an obscure Northern Soul classic. When


both songs were released in July 1981, ‘Tainted Love’ became a worldwide hit and


shot Soft Cell to international fame, making them the biggest artist of 1981.


Unfortunately, for B-Movie, ‘Marilyn Dreams’, despite pleasing their fanbase, failed to


make the charts and disappeared without trace, pushing the band back into the


shadows.



B-Movie had formed in 1979, in Mansfield, a typical northern town in the middle of


the Nottinghamshire coalfield. Originally a three piece of vocals/bass, guitar and


drums, they expanded by adding a keyboard player to broaden their initial post punk


sound. Local Lincoln independent record label, Dead Good Records, firstly put them


on the compilation LP ‘East’, followed by the 7 inch “Take 3” EP and the “Nowhere


Girl” 12 inch EP. The latter having an A-side that played at 45RPM and a B-side at


33RPM, which led to production issues (only around 900 were pressed) and making


this release something of a rarity.



B-Movie then came to the attention of Stev0, who was DJ’ing at the Chelsea


Drugstore, playing the bands songs at his night and featuring them in his Futurist


Chart, which was published weekly in the ‘Sounds’ music paper.


With the creation of Some Bizarre by Stev0, B-Movie were chosen to feature on the


labels legendary first release, the Some Bizarre compilation LP, - alongside the likes


of Blancmange, Depeche Mode, Soft Cell and The The, amongst others – the album


once described as the ‘dead sea scrolls’ of the new wave / post-punk scene.



Live performances and the compilation appearance led to major label and press


interest in B-Movie, from which the deal with Phonogram materialised. Phonogram


quickly sent B-Movie into Scorpio Sound Studios in London with producer Mike


Thorne in 1981 to re-record the track ‘Remembrance Day’, which had initially


appeared on the Dead Good 12” and was a live favourite. The resulting single


reached No 61 in the UK chart and, more importantly, was played by BBC Radio 1 DJ


John Peel, appearing in his Festive 50 for two consecutive years.



This really helped build a fanbase for B-Movie, with more sell out shows and an


anticipation of great things to come. Obviously following up with “Marilyn Dreams”


and the spectacular rise of Soft Cell, temporarily derailed the B-Movie train.



However, not to be deterred, the band went back into the studio with the late


producer Steve Brown (The Cult, Manic Street Preachers) to re-record “Nowhere


Girl” – the original version also featuring on that Dead Good 12” single. The resulting


single was deemed to be a surefire bona fide smash hit, the perfect 80’s anthem,


equal to anything or anyone out there. Released in March 1982, despite good


reviews, radio airplay and a UK tour, it inexplicably stalled at No67 in the UK charts.



This signalled the beginning of the end for the original B-Movie, as Soft Cell


continued their domination of the charts, the Some Bizarre management roster


burgeoned, not to mention the emergence of The The with their own trio of


magnificent singles for CBS.



With B-Movie temporarily ‘grounded’, any thoughts of a debut album were shelved, a


couple of members left, and although the band regrouped and eventually signed to


Sire Records, releasing a couple of further singles and the ‘Forever Running’ album


in 1985, they finally disbanded in 1986.



All of the recordings the band made during their Phonogram period were consigned


to the Universal Music vault for several decades and after years of enquiries and


negotiations, the band finally managed to have these returned in 2024. The various


tapes were digitised and restored, the result being the creation of that 1982 debut LP


‘that never was’, ten tracks including the three singles plus seven previously


unreleased recordings. The CD version containing a further seven tracks including


the 12” versions, single B-sides and “Moles’” from the Some Bizarre compilation.



So, finally here we have the ‘debut’ album “Hidden Treasures” from B-Movie, only


four decades late but still able to sit seamlessly alongside contemporaries like The


Chameleons and The Sound. The LP is a darker, brooding and almost psychedelic


infused affair, probably more akin to the gothic elements of the Bunnymen or Joy


Division, than the ‘pop sensations’ Phonogram wanted them to become.


Hopefully by opening and closing this chapter of B-Movie, it will put them firmly on


the same footing as their new wave and post-punk contemporaries, which is the


least they deserve, as one of the great ‘lost’ bands of the early 1980’s.



"It’s nice to hear B-Movie are finally getting a chance to release their forgotten


gems’” Matt Johnson (The The)




Comentários


A Jasmine Storm Production 

bottom of page