SOME people (not everyone, but certainly many millions) may not realise but this bald man in his two-up, two-down house banging on about toy soldiers and stinkbombs is perhaps the GREATEST English songwriter of his generation. His talent and imagination is simply jawdropping. It's not his fault, or mine, that the majority don't know and obviously greatness is not measured in sales (otherwise Westlife are winning in the greatness chart) but that's the way it is. I could list album titles but if you've got a finger and Google... If you like the cut of this man's jib, you have got a FEAST in store!
XTC, surely one of the greatest ever bands, and Andy Partridge one of the best songwriters and nicest people on the planet. Thanks for posting this. 😊😊
Greatly enjoyed seeing Andy again. I was lucky enough to work on artworks for XTC releases including Oranges and Lemons, Nonsuch, Skylarking, as well as singles and the Dukes of Stratosphear albums. Spent many hours at Andy's kitchen table in Swindon eating cheese and pickle sandwiches, drinking endless mugs of tea while talking through ideas for covers. Like this interview, discussions would take off on a tandem taking many diversions down winding highways and byways en route. Happy treasured days.
@@thepollyannasociety Me too! I'd forgotten about Andy's toy soldiers, but do remember free gifts in ('50s) cereal packets, like the plastic submarine that floated to the surface fuelled by baking powder.
@@qualaup As you probably know, there are 2 versions of the Skylarking cover. The 1st release with the drawing of the couple, the re-release with the flowers. When Virgin Records saw the photographs of Andy's original thought for the cover, which was partly inspired from a passage in DH Lawrence's 'Lady Chatterley's Lover', they became nervous of a possible backlash from record retailers in refusing to display it instore. A compromise was struck and I supplied a line drawing of the reclining couple. Years later on it's re-release, Andy finally got the cover he really wanted. After all these years I can now reveal that after I collected the photographs of the flower shots from the photographer, I left the bag that contained them on a train. Realising my loss as the train pulled out of my station I reported it straight away. After spending an anxious night wondering if the bag would be handed in, especially because of its content, the following morning I was relieved to learn that it had been retrieved intact. Until now, not a lot of people have known that.
I look at the crap that's on telly and I look at things like this and I have to shake my head at the dullness of thought of telly producers and commissioners who fail to understand that hearing interesting people being allowed to talk freely and without agenda is entertainment at its best.
Andy is always so much fun to listen to. He excels at so many things but storytelling is somewhere near the top of that list. In songs and just in casual chatting. What a delightfully engaging man.
To be honest, up until a week ago I couldn’t name one XTC song. I’d heard the name for years and always assumed they were some 70s style funk band. Had no idea they had such amazing songs. Can’t believe I’ve never listened to them before!
qwargy, I used to go to the record store every few days to find out what was new so I got into Xtc right away. I kind of envy you in your recent discovery of the band. Their music still is high among my favourites but there’s something about that rush when you first hear it. It was a Holy Shit moment.
Andy is so much easier to take as an older fellow. There was something about his youthful energy that could be a little over the top for me, singing and otherwise. He's mellowed nicely and is now lots of fun in most interviews, talking about anything with enthusiasm. He really is a sort of Rain Man of music!
I became aware of AP as a personality years before I became a serious XTC fan - listening to him pontificate memorably on the Round Table Friday night new singles review show on Radio One from 1980-ish. Always something memorable and entertaining to say. It must be time for an AP UA-cam channel.
Bloody wonderful. The most that I've laughed all lockdown. I'm a little younger than Andy, but I had a brother his age. Fantastic memories. We were so creative then.
They are such a talented group and Andy the great writer-arranger. As soon as I saw them mid 70 I was intrigued and then 1979 a friend lent me a record 'Go 2' he won from a radio phone in. - Amazing.
Andy Partridge Whose " Cultural Vignettes " Have Been A Source Of Inspiration For Over 40 Years !! " A Wonderfully Constructed Interview " !!! From Adrian Browne 1965
Amazing, thanks for posting this. I was obsessed with the Apple Venus albums as a teenager (thanks Dad for introducing me), now 20 years on I’m discovering XTC’s earlier work.
Perfect for my wet Sunday afternoon by the fire. First XTC record? Drums & Wires. Fav XTC song? Life Begins at the Hop, tied with Summer's Cauldron. Age? 61. Im a Kiwi Anglophile - I place XTC beside The Kinks and The Jam and The Smiths as England distilled. Bless you Andy.
Yes, Andy is theee eternal popmusic hero.....songwriter, singer guitarist like no other......first the fab four, but then imediately... Andy Partridge & XTC.
One of the best gigs I ever attended - XTC, supported by Wilco Johnson's Solid Senders, plus Dozy, Beaky Mick and Titch (no Dave Dee) in Swindon, 1978. I was there as the rep from the Southampton evening paper (slightly off our patch!) and it was a local celebration par excellence. Making Plans for Nigel was the current XTC hit, but the gig was so much more than that. I must admit, I felt something of an interloper, but what a great evening!
It’s all true, the wonder of bygone ages, great times. The things you recall from your formative years, wondrous tales and so much plastic! Fave cereal toy: red fire engine and The Move’s “Get the Fire Brigade” on the transistor radio. Those big, square, “Eveready” battery packs for the projector anchored it while you fed the slideshow through it, Dick Tracy in Technicolor. And I bet you thought jumpers for goalposts was fun, Andy’s infectious enthusiasm spills over more than the stains on his “sick jumper”.
I put this one off for ages because I didn't think xtc would interest me. How wrong I was, it's great fun. The recording at the train station is an epic 'back in my day' story.
It’s a superb album but then Side 3 is not all that great. I think a far worse travesty is that Partridge was not on the list of Top 100 songwriters of all time! He didn’t even make the Top 100! He should be top 5!
i appreciate all your conversations but this one is very special for me.you couldn"t have a better guest.huge andy partridge and xtc fan over here.andy is always an excellent interview.thank you so much for this,much,much appreciated!
Whenever I have a funny thought or some wordplay based on something Andy said, and then he says it, I feel warm inside. When he said water on the moon was a Police song, I had thought of that 2 seconds before he said it. He is one talented, fascinating fella.
The David Bowie song Andy was thinking of is ‘Move On’ from the ‘Lodger’ LP where the backwards voices are the chorus of ‘All The Young Dudes.’ A Brian Eno song he might be thinking of is ‘Tzima N’Arki’ from the ‘After The Heat’ LP (Moebius/Roedelius/Eno) that includes the chorus of ‘Kings Led Hat’ backwards. There’s also the song ‘Driving Me Backwards’ from the ‘Here Come The Warm Jets’ LP where the vocals sound like vocals purposely sung backwards, but played forwards.
My hero...(and my one time friend!)...who gave me the greatest peak behind the Wizard's curtain a fan could ever want! Hope you're doing well, Andy! So great to hear and see you (and loved the Robyn collab!) More music and more SINGING, please!
This man has written some of my favourite songs ever, such a joy to hear him talk about so many different things, with such detailed knowledge. Wasn't sure where it was going at the beginning after his comment about still being alive, but it turned into a joyous conversation.
When we were kids, we'd go up to my grandmother's summer house which was LOADED with antiques and she had an old 4' tall Edison record player from about the turn of the century that had two drawers loaded with the records that were to be played on it and, if we spent the night there, as we could barely get any t.v. at all, what we'd do for entertainment at night, besides playing cards and having pillow fights, is to get two flashlights and two people at one end of the room would just quickly wiggle them up and down pointed at the persons near the record player and they'd put a record on and act out silent skits made up on the spot and it looked like we were watching Charlie Chaplin movies with those records as the background music!
Andy I recently got a copy of the purple barrier the uk beat group from the 60s they were metal punk before the fact I loved the dukes in high school as I am a syd Freak in delco yes tods land and where original punk emulated from xtc are a great band love black sea cheers
Fantastic stuff from Mr P. Respect for the shout out to Can's Rite Time and the unearthly powers of Malcolm Mooney. It's an oft-overlooked late entry to their peerless catalogue. Andy's also correct about Robin Gibb's "Saved By The Bell". I read the reviews, bought it and was expecting an undiscovered Scott Walker-ish gem. It is not. Andy's kicking of the CD is spot on.
This reminds me of building elaborate battle scenes in the back yard with “army men”. At the time you could buy firecrackers. So we had a full pyrotechnic thing going. The crackers were placed in the dirt and lit. The explosions were great and one of my favourite parts was seeing the crater with smoke drifting out. We also found some concrete to build bunkers and walls etc. And you really needed to have some water features like streams to cross and ponds. Thanks for the memories.
An absolute full tilt, self-starter dishing out gem after gem. I may have to start a petition for part 2. We *must* know the story of the drive by cyclist with a tennis ball-sized head.. Fantasticus tip on Autumn Almanac too... I believe Captain Sensible wrote a few tunes based on TV jingles in reverse.. Pop fact: the B side of Bowie's Boys Keep Swinging single - Fantastic Voyage, uses the BKS chord sequence in reverse..
I was amazed at how many of the things AP talked about were shared experiences for me in the late 60's re: toys and daft things we did as kids. Had the projector BUT a real old one (donated to us from a lady up the street who's kids were grown up) this one had a hand crank and it fed the strips through we "customised" that too.. Plus all the crappy spud guns , cap firing red plastic rockets , parachutists and God knows what else they could churn out in Hong Kong made of plastic... torches with bonkers coloured lenses (I think I had one shaped like a ray gun) and come on Magic Robot was mind-bending for us little kids.... how engrossed we were.... with just rudimentary technology at our disposal... battle scenes with airfix soldiers (trying to get those match firing canons or spud guns to wipe out the enemy) ahh the fruitless search for source of salt peter (for gunpowder) ... happy days.... I had the insides of an old valve radio gram in the top of the horrible built in wardrobe / unit in my bedroom with a dangling wire to an extension speaker that was originally a 'posh' varnished veneered wood - but I painted it yellow and covered it with banana stickers I was forever trying to find the ultimate spot for that one... later got used as a guitar amp. AP deals with these nostalgic gems with a great deal of charm....and a good memory.... enjoyed it very much.... thanks guys
Incidentally, if you want to buy some of the toy soldiers that Andy's sculpted, they're available from Irregular Miniatures. I think they're mostly in the 'Deutsche Homage' range in the 42mm section.
One of my favourite records as a kid was the bright red "Ten Feet Tall" flexi-disc that Smash Hits gave away, and it's still a favourite song of mine... so thanks for that gentlemen (I'm only forty years late) : )
" Making Plans For Nigel" And " Senses Working Overtime " Are Confirmation That Andy Partridge Was " Tinged With Musical/ lyrical Genius " !!! From Adrian Browne 1965
SOME people (not everyone, but certainly many millions) may not realise but this bald man in his two-up, two-down house banging on about toy soldiers and stinkbombs is perhaps the GREATEST English songwriter of his generation. His talent and imagination is simply jawdropping.
It's not his fault, or mine, that the majority don't know and obviously greatness is not measured in sales (otherwise Westlife are winning in the greatness chart) but that's the way it is. I could list album titles but if you've got a finger and Google...
If you like the cut of this man's jib, you have got a FEAST in store!
Amen to that. 👍
I agree
XTC, surely one of the greatest ever bands, and Andy Partridge one of the best songwriters and nicest people on the planet. Thanks for posting this. 😊😊
Dave Sanderson If he’d only written ‘Love on a Farmboy’s Wages’, he should be carried around in a sedan chair for the rest of his life.
@@patrickcrowther9195 I volunteer to shoulder one of the poles.
Greatly enjoyed seeing Andy again. I was lucky enough to work on artworks for XTC releases including Oranges and Lemons, Nonsuch, Skylarking, as well as singles and the Dukes of Stratosphear albums. Spent many hours at Andy's kitchen table in Swindon eating cheese and pickle sandwiches, drinking endless mugs of tea while talking through ideas for covers. Like this interview, discussions would take off on a tandem taking many diversions down winding highways and byways en route. Happy treasured days.
Extremely jealous over here as I do love a good cheese and pickle. 😉
David Dragon, so you did that timeless beautifull XTC Covers.....a great artist you are!
@@thepollyannasociety Me too! I'd forgotten about Andy's toy soldiers, but do remember free gifts in ('50s) cereal packets, like the plastic submarine that floated to the surface fuelled by baking powder.
Skylarking...beautiful artwork!
@@qualaup As you probably know, there are 2 versions of the Skylarking cover. The 1st release with the drawing of the couple, the re-release with the flowers. When Virgin Records saw the photographs of Andy's original thought for the cover, which was partly inspired from a passage in DH Lawrence's 'Lady Chatterley's Lover', they became nervous of a possible backlash from record retailers in refusing to display it instore. A compromise was struck and I supplied a line drawing of the reclining couple. Years later on it's re-release, Andy finally got the cover he really wanted. After all these years I can now reveal that after I collected the photographs of the flower shots from the photographer, I left the bag that contained them on a train. Realising my loss as the train pulled out of my station I reported it straight away. After spending an anxious night wondering if the bag would be handed in, especially because of its content, the following morning I was relieved to learn that it had been retrieved intact. Until now, not a lot of people have known that.
I look at the crap that's on telly and I look at things like this and I have to shake my head at the dullness of thought of telly producers and commissioners who fail to understand that hearing interesting people being allowed to talk freely and without agenda is entertainment at its best.
It's the purposeful dumbing down of everything. It's tragic.
@@bandcouver ... Mark, it's the method of madness, or true insanity that would be a logical desire and dream for a bully.
Hear, hear! Longform interviews are close to extinct.
Andy is always so much fun to listen to. He excels at so many things but storytelling is somewhere near the top of that list. In songs and just in casual chatting.
What a delightfully engaging man.
I came here expecting to hear about the early days of XTC........I'm kinda glad I didn't. Loved this.
Andy's music is one of the best things that ever happened in this crazy world.
Bloody Hell!!! Andy Partridge likes our Naxos Early Music Collection!!! My work here is done!!
😆
Andy's spontaneous wit is always a delight, could listen to his stories all day
To be honest, up until a week ago I couldn’t name one XTC song. I’d heard the name for years and always assumed they were some 70s style funk band.
Had no idea they had such amazing songs. Can’t believe I’ve never listened to them before!
Welcome, the water is warm.
qwargy, I used to go to the record store every few days to find out what was new so I got into Xtc right away. I kind of envy you in your recent discovery of the band. Their music still is high among my favourites but there’s something about that rush when you first hear it. It was a Holy Shit moment.
Andy needs his own UA-cam show. Tell him!
Agreed.
Second that!
that's true 🙌🙌🙌🙌
My goodness! Pure gold!
Andy is so much easier to take as an older fellow. There was something about his youthful energy that could be a little over the top for me, singing and otherwise. He's mellowed nicely and is now lots of fun in most interviews, talking about anything with enthusiasm. He really is a sort of Rain Man of music!
That “record your own voice” story is hilarious. Amazing.
I thought so, too. As a former poor kid I appreciate that kind of extreme resourcefulness. Lovely.
I became aware of AP as a personality years before I became a serious XTC fan - listening to him pontificate memorably on the Round Table Friday night new singles review show on Radio One from 1980-ish. Always something memorable and entertaining to say. It must be time for an AP UA-cam channel.
Great stuff. Andy mentioned he had a lot more to talk about so let’s have an episode 2 please
Love his Wiltshire accent xx
Bloody wonderful. The most that I've laughed all lockdown. I'm a little younger than Andy, but I had a brother his age. Fantastic memories. We were so creative then.
Love Andy what a song writer, a bit of a lost gem. XTC were a superb band, he looks and speaks well, a true music legend
They are such a talented group and Andy the great writer-arranger. As soon as I saw them mid 70 I was intrigued and then 1979 a friend lent me a record 'Go 2' he won from a radio phone in. - Amazing.
Christ alive its the greatest living human.... Well done Mr P
He would be if he played live
Utterly fantastic. A talented man and a real character.. Thanks guys.
Andy Partridge Whose " Cultural Vignettes " Have Been A Source Of Inspiration For Over 40 Years !! " A Wonderfully Constructed Interview " !!! From Adrian Browne 1965
Hard to believe Andy will be 70 years old in three years time. But still the same guy. Thanks for this upload.
Wow. He's looking good. Well contented.
I saw XTC at a college in Chicago long ago and they were awesome!
Can never get enough Andy. Parts 2-10, please!
Loved this - The Word should be on TV. Andy Partridge is always great raconteur. Please have him on again and ask him to pick up a guitar and talk XTC
Amazing, thanks for posting this. I was obsessed with the Apple Venus albums as a teenager (thanks Dad for introducing me), now 20 years on I’m discovering XTC’s earlier work.
Great to hear Andy again - always a pleasure listening to what he has to say (& sing).
And all the world is Andy Patridge's head shaped
Biscuit?
Haha! Good one!
It's just for me to feed my brain.
And it's not like a 'football' thank goodness.
@@michaelthomas366 in England, football is soccer...
I could listen to Andy Partridge forever. Great show!
This is quite brilliant. Fantastic to see Andy. I wish this was about twelve hours long and I could loop it. I could listen endlessly.
Perfect for my wet Sunday afternoon by the fire. First XTC record? Drums & Wires. Fav XTC song? Life Begins at the Hop, tied with Summer's Cauldron. Age? 61. Im a Kiwi Anglophile - I place XTC beside The Kinks and The Jam and The Smiths as England distilled. Bless you Andy.
Brilliant. More Andy please.
Dansette law! Priceless again
Aaaw!...I could listen to Andy all day...This has made my day !...Thanks so much !
Came her to say exactly this!
I'd love to have a cup of tea and a chat at Andy's house. What a legend.
Brilliant. Miss Andy on Twitter so much, always a day brightener.
Wonderful. What a rare treat. I could listen to Andy talking about plastic toys and childhood recording experiments for hours.
Great Andy is so entertaining, XTC one of the best
My favourite Andy interview :)
Brings to mind a very important question. Is Andy Partridge single?
I'm married and a continent away, but WHAT A CHARMER
He looks comfortably married.
superb interview,great fun guys,love ANDY,LEGEND.
Bless you Andy, that was wonderful.
Yes, Andy is theee eternal popmusic hero.....songwriter, singer guitarist like no other......first the fab four, but then imediately... Andy Partridge & XTC.
OH MY GOD!! They've got A N D Y P A R T R I D G E on the show!!!
I remember Magic Robot. At a young age it really was magic. Does anyone remember Gigantor?
The Duke of Swindon.
Lookin' good there, Marc 😉
Love seeing Andy.
In a long line of English eccentrics, wonderful chat with Andy
I love Andy Partridge
“Never trust record reviews’ and yet “it’s like someone arguing with a drum machine” is a review I trust implicitly
Someone on 45cat also likened Robin Gibb's solo stuff to Paul O'Grady singing in the shower!
One of the best gigs I ever attended - XTC, supported by Wilco Johnson's Solid Senders, plus Dozy, Beaky Mick and Titch (no Dave Dee) in Swindon, 1978. I was there as the rep from the Southampton evening paper (slightly off our patch!) and it was a local celebration par excellence. Making Plans for Nigel was the current XTC hit, but the gig was so much more than that. I must admit, I felt something of an interloper, but what a great evening!
XTC...... what Steely Dan would have sounded like if they would have come from Swindon
It’s all true, the wonder of bygone ages, great times. The things you recall from your formative years, wondrous tales and so much plastic! Fave cereal toy: red fire engine and The Move’s “Get the Fire Brigade” on the transistor radio. Those big, square, “Eveready” battery packs for the projector anchored it while you fed the slideshow through it, Dick Tracy in Technicolor. And I bet you thought jumpers for goalposts was fun, Andy’s infectious enthusiasm spills over more than the stains on his “sick jumper”.
Fire brigade the move early 68 .
I put this one off for ages because I didn't think xtc would interest me.
How wrong I was, it's great fun. The recording at the train station is an epic 'back in my day' story.
Why "English Settlement" isn't high on all the lists of the greatest albums of the last 60 years I'll never understand.
because skylarking is better lmfao
It’s a superb album but then Side 3 is not all that great. I think a far worse travesty is that Partridge was not on the list of Top 100 songwriters of all time! He didn’t even make the Top 100! He should be top 5!
i appreciate all your conversations but this one is very special for me.you couldn"t have a better guest.huge andy partridge and xtc fan over here.andy is always an excellent interview.thank you so much for this,much,much appreciated!
Whenever I have a funny thought or some wordplay based on something Andy said, and then he says it, I feel warm inside. When he said water on the moon was a Police song, I had thought of that 2 seconds before he said it. He is one talented, fascinating fella.
Andy Partridge is a legend!
That Robin Gibb CD is one of the best ever! Utterly extraordinary, other worldly, strange, brilliant. Recommended!
What a treat listening to these three.🎵
what a Treat. Thankyou guys
Thats cheered me up ! One of the best so far - have to get Andy back soon!
best Word in your Attic yet..Love AP
The David Bowie song Andy was thinking of is ‘Move On’ from the ‘Lodger’ LP where the backwards voices are the chorus of ‘All The Young Dudes.’
A Brian Eno song he might be thinking of is ‘Tzima N’Arki’ from the ‘After The Heat’ LP (Moebius/Roedelius/Eno) that includes the chorus of ‘Kings Led Hat’ backwards. There’s also the song ‘Driving Me Backwards’ from the ‘Here Come The Warm Jets’ LP where the vocals sound like vocals purposely sung backwards, but played forwards.
Commer Van or shooting brake!! Translation needed for the non UK folks required, priceless
My hero...(and my one time friend!)...who gave me the greatest peak behind the Wizard's curtain a fan could ever want! Hope you're doing well, Andy! So great to hear and see you (and loved the Robyn collab!) More music and more SINGING, please!
I really enjoyed Planet England as well, but it was pretty much a given that one would.
OMG ! Magic Robot & the chemistry set ..... memories
I had the chemistry set and my friend had the robot - mad memories
Real value all the way through from A.P. Thank you.
Currently playing XTC 12” GO+ at a decent volume, magical!
Brilliantly fun!!! Thank you. I desperately needed that!
This man has written some of my favourite songs ever, such a joy to hear him talk about so many different things, with such detailed knowledge. Wasn't sure where it was going at the beginning after his comment about still being alive, but it turned into a joyous conversation.
Legend. A national treasure!
More, please.
When we were kids, we'd go up to my grandmother's summer house which was LOADED with antiques and she had an old 4' tall Edison record player from about the turn of the century that had two drawers loaded with the records that were to be played on it and, if we spent the night there, as we could barely get any t.v. at all, what we'd do for entertainment at night, besides playing cards and having pillow fights, is to get two flashlights and two people at one end of the room would just quickly wiggle them up and down pointed at the persons near the record player and they'd put a record on and act out silent skits made up on the spot and it looked like we were watching Charlie Chaplin movies with those records as the background music!
Nice show, looking forward to hearing Andy's rejected songs! We had a Show & Tell when I was a kid here in Canada, those were awesome.
great stuff,lots of my young memories rekindled.thnks,ian from oxford.
This should be a recurring series
Andy I recently got a copy of the purple barrier the uk beat group from the 60s they were metal punk before the fact I loved the dukes in high school as I am a syd Freak in delco yes tods land and where original punk emulated from xtc are a great band love black sea cheers
Fantastic stuff from Mr P. Respect for the shout out to Can's Rite Time and the unearthly powers of Malcolm Mooney. It's an oft-overlooked late entry to their peerless catalogue. Andy's also correct about Robin Gibb's "Saved By The Bell". I read the reviews, bought it and was expecting an undiscovered Scott Walker-ish gem. It is not. Andy's kicking of the CD is spot on.
thank you for posting this . . . deeply appreciative
This reminds me of building elaborate battle scenes in the back yard with “army men”. At the time you could buy firecrackers. So we had a full pyrotechnic thing going. The crackers were placed in the dirt and lit. The explosions were great and one of my favourite parts was seeing the crater with smoke drifting out. We also found some concrete to build bunkers and walls etc. And you really needed to have some water features like streams to cross and ponds. Thanks for the memories.
I am the same vintage as you lot. Damn good times.
An absolute full tilt, self-starter dishing out gem after gem. I may have to start a petition for part 2. We *must* know the story of the drive by cyclist with a tennis ball-sized head..
Fantasticus tip on Autumn Almanac too... I believe Captain Sensible wrote a few tunes based on TV jingles in reverse..
Pop fact: the B side of Bowie's Boys Keep Swinging single - Fantastic Voyage, uses the BKS chord sequence in reverse..
I was amazed at how many of the things AP talked about were shared experiences for me in the late 60's re: toys and daft things we did as kids. Had the projector BUT a real old one (donated to us from a lady up the street who's kids were grown up) this one had a hand crank and it fed the strips through we "customised" that too.. Plus all the crappy spud guns , cap firing red plastic rockets , parachutists and God knows what else they could churn out in Hong Kong made of plastic... torches with bonkers coloured lenses (I think I had one shaped like a ray gun)
and come on Magic Robot was mind-bending for us little kids.... how engrossed we were.... with just rudimentary technology at our disposal... battle scenes with airfix soldiers (trying to get those match firing canons or spud guns to wipe out the enemy) ahh the fruitless search for source of salt peter (for gunpowder) ... happy days.... I had the insides of an old valve radio gram in the top of the horrible built in wardrobe / unit in my bedroom with a dangling wire to an extension speaker that was originally a 'posh' varnished veneered wood - but I painted it yellow and covered it with banana stickers I was forever trying to find the ultimate spot for that one... later got used as a guitar amp.
AP deals with these nostalgic gems with a great deal of charm....and a good memory.... enjoyed it very much.... thanks guys
Excellent chat 👍
Incidentally, if you want to buy some of the toy soldiers that Andy's sculpted, they're available from Irregular Miniatures. I think they're mostly in the 'Deutsche Homage' range in the 42mm section.
Fascinating banter! I hope there’s going to be an episode 2
I love XTC, great band and Andy is a great guy
Thank you Andy for you.
You have saved many a soul
Would love Andy to get together with Colin, Dave & Terry for one last hurrah.....With Barry coming on for the Encores!!
22.32 and it is .... suicidally maudlin
Add the laughs from Hepworth and Du Noyer. Excellent.
Splendid guest!
One of my favourite records as a kid was the bright red "Ten Feet Tall" flexi-disc that Smash Hits gave away, and it's still a favourite song of mine... so thanks for that gentlemen (I'm only forty years late) : )
R. ROOKSBY think that is on Coat Of Many Cupboards?
@@kennybrown1315 It ended up on the B-side of Wait Till Your Boat Goes Down too.
And on Drums and Wires
You've just delved into the recesses of my youth. The projector was deepest.
Andy interviewing John Leckie on the making of the Dukes album (on you tube) is a joy to behold.
First band I ever saw. October 1978 at Cinderella's in Gloucester. Always interesting.
My cousin had that Magic Robot game in the 1960s... great fun!
How wonderful! Feel all warm and cosy now! Get him back pronto - #RocknRollRepairShop ;)
" Making Plans For Nigel" And " Senses Working Overtime " Are Confirmation That Andy Partridge Was " Tinged With Musical/ lyrical Genius " !!! From Adrian Browne 1965
Making Plans for Nigel was written by Colin Moulding, not by Andy
Wore out English Settlement in ‘82 and continue to do so
Yes! Yes!!!! Andy!!