31st December 2023

Titus writes:
 
A New Year has dawned and I hope you all enjoyed the Festive Season. I look forward to listening to WTF is this in 2024 and to telling you more about some of the alternative bands & people who have impressed me over the years. I’ve always believed that there is a whole world of music out there waiting to be listened to, and that ‘TOTP’, plus many so called music radio stations are not really that representative of the stuff that people enjoy. A great example of this, is my recent blog focus on the great British band Bob. If their superb single 'Convenience' had been on say Radio One’s playlist, and had been embraced & promoted by the media, it would surely have gained its true accolade of ‘a perfect pop record’, just as ‘Teenage Kicks’ by the Undertones quite rightly did some years before (well done Peely as always for your persistence in promoting this masterpiece)........ well, that’s just my opinion, which you can take or leave – the majority of you are probably leaving this very minute!
 
This leads me nicely onto a band that was one of the best bands that never quite made it. I refer to the Would Be’s from Northern Ireland, who Peel really championed in 1990 and beyond. The band was set up by the Finnegan brothers in 1989 and at the time the group’s average age was around seventeen. Astonishingly Paul Finnegan was only 13 at the Would Be’s conception. The band sent a copy of of their first single ‘I’m hardly ever wrong’ on Decoy records to J.P, bearing in mind that they had had only 250 pressings done. At this time, many Indie bands did similar, in the hope that the great man would have time to listen to them and give them some air time on his radio programme. To cut a long story short, Peely loved the record and even played it on his BBC World Service programme, in addition to his regular slot on Radio 1. Very soon after they recorded a session for the Peel Show, and it was then that the A & R people, always scouting for hot property, came to sign them. They were persistent in that they apparently contacted the schools that vocalist Julie McDonnell & trombonist/saxophonist & violinist Aideen O’Reilly attended for information.
 
Against all odds, the band chose the small Decoy label, but unfortunately this company had no money to spend on an album, which would have arguably been the icing on the cake for such a  talented bunch. Julie McDonnell returned to her studies and was replaced by Eileen Cogan, but the writing was on the wall for a band without sound financial backing. After recording their third E.P. the Would Be’s split in 1991, without a debut album and its proceeds to fall back on.
 
A short-lived reunion happened in the Millennium year, and then a more successful one in 2012, when the original line up got back together, minus drummer Pascal Smith. In 2013 they FINALLY released their much awaited debut L.P. ‘Beautiful Mess’.
 
On the Peel Session broadcast in 1990, the band performed 4 songs : ‘All this rubbish is true’ / ‘Must it be’ / ‘Funny ha ha’ / ‘My radio sounds different in the dark’, which is the track I have requested lex to play this coming Friday,  or the original Decoy track
 
In conclusion, the track I have requested, is arguably  a near as dammit a ‘perfect pop record’......just like the Undertones ‘Teenage Kicks’ and Bob’s ‘Convenience’. The title of the track always reminds me of growing up in the 1950’s, listening in the dark to Radio Luxembourg on my radio at low volume, which was concealed beneath the bed clothes. In hindsight, I’m sure my parents knew that I was listening. Happy days.