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20/20 VISIONARIES

Record Collector

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August 2025

In the space of two days in June, we lost two giants of popular music, aged 82: Brian Wilson and Sly Stone. Both were leaders of family bands, both deeply troubled, yet both created radically beautiful/brilliant music in the studio. Here, Bob Stanley pays tribute to the adored Beach Boy while on page 84, Kris Needs salutes the genius formally known as Sylvester Stewart.

20/20 VISIONARIES

Like Sly Stone and George Michael after him, Brian Wilson kicked off his career writing party songs. Unadulterated fun. In Brian’s case it was by transcribing his brother Dennis’ love of going to the beach with a surfboard — if they’d grown up elsewhere the songs could have been about speedway, or fishing. There was no guarantee that this super-localised Californian sound would translate across America, let alone to Britain and Europe.

And at first, it didn’t. Even though it was a No 6 hit in the US, Be True To Your School was so unrelatable to anyone in the UK (what kind of square loved school that much?) that EMI didn’t even bother releasing it. But a year later, I Get Around and its unique production — so full of odd changes, handclaps out of nowhere, and an irresistible joie de vivre — was in the UK Top 10. This single was the first suggestion that writer/producer Brian Wilson might have something going on that was some way beyond surf and car obsessions, and it made sense internationally; on the flipside, to cement this thought, was Don’t Worry Baby, a sensuous and fragile ballad which still managed to include a verse about racing cars.

As an agent of change, Brian Wilson’s singularity came from combining unlikely source material: Four Freshmen harmonies; lyrics that evoked an endless summer; Phil Spector's dense, orchestrated wall of sound; and George Gershwin’s uptown jazz arrangements. He could come up with heart-melting chord changes as easily as most people type, according to Tony Asher, his sometime co-writer.

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BOOM BOOM!

Bob Geldof leads The Boomtown Rats through 50th anniversary celebration

time to read

10 mins

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UNDER THE RADAR

Artists, bands, and labels meriting more attention

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4 mins

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THE ENGINE ROOM

The unsung heroes who helped forge modern music

time to read

4 mins

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STAR FAKER

How did a Long Island teenager persuade the cream of UK/US talent to appear on his private press albums? Welcome to the strange world of Steve Kaczorowski, where nothing is as it seems.

time to read

6 mins

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LABEL OF LOVE IN A SPIN VINYL

We are based in Devon; we release rare and obscure mod/psych/garage tracks from the 60s in 7” vinyl format, giving them a new lease of life and the exposure they deserve.

time to read

2 mins

January 2026

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Heard Ya Missed Us WELL WE'RE BACK!

Formed in 1976 from the ashes of two great protopunk groups, London-based The Boys rode the first wave of the new musical revolution, recording four albums before disappearing only to rise again.

time to read

4 mins

January 2026

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THIS WAS THE MODERN WORLD

In the late 70s, as punk’s blast of insurrectionary fire began to flame out, many of those inspired to get up onstage began to look further back for inspiration – to the mods of the previous decade, all sharp sense of style and gritty R’n’B pop.

time to read

20 mins

January 2026

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Record Collector

The Collector

This month: DJ Nevio Bencivenni

time to read

6 mins

January 2026

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Record Collector

Not Forgotten

Gary ‘Mani’ Mounfield, died 20 November, age 63. The bassist was a member of The Stone Roses and Primal Scream. Joining the Roses in 1987 – replacing bass player Pete Garner – Mani’s presence proved a galvanising force as the group became kingpins of the emergent Madchester scene.

time to read

8 mins

January 2026

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Record Collector

ALL HAIL "THE CABS

Key movers in the growth of electronic music in the north of England in the 70s, Cabaret Voltaire influenced a host of nascent electronic bands who would take those sounds into the mainstream: neighbours The Human League, Mancunian friends New Order and US industrial behemoths like Nine Inch Nails to name but three.

time to read

14 mins

January 2026

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