Disc 1 1. Headstart for Happiness  2. Long Hot Summer  3. My Ever-Changing Moods  4. Walls Come Tumbling Down!  5. Party Chambers  6. Wanted (or Waiter, There’s...)  7. Shout to the Top!  8. It Just Came to Pieces in My Hands  9. Come to Milton Keynes 10. Why I Went Missing  11. Waiting  12. Ghosts Of Dachau  13. Down in the Seine  14. The Paris Match  15. Boy Who Cried Wolf 16. Life at a Top People’s Health Farm  17. Homebreakers  18. Dropping Bombs On The Whitehouse (Extended version)
  Disc 2  1. Speak Like a Child  2. The Lodgers (Or She Was Only...)  3. Money Go Round  4. You’re the Best Thing 5. How She Threw It All Away  6. A Man of Great Promise  7. The Piccadilly Trail  8. A Solid Bond in Your Heart  9. All Gone Away  10. Sweet Loving Ways  11. Promised Land  12. Have You Ever Had It Blue  13. It Didn’t Matter  14. Spin’ Drifting  15. Here’s One That Got Away  16. A Woman’s Song  17. Changing of the Guard  18. My Ever-Changing Moods (Demo)  19. Shout To The Top (Instrumental
  When Paul Weller announced The Style Council’s arrival in March 1983, he’d come a very long way. In fact, at the age of just 24, he was already a musical veteran with six albums and nine Top 10 singles under his belt with The Jam. As their leader he had become a deity-like figure and for his fans, The Jam’s split was unimaginable. But creatively restless and of inquisitive mind, Paul jettisoned them at their height to form a collective with an eventual core line-up of Paul with Mick Talbot, Dee C Lee and Steve White.  In a quest for new sounds, the group travelled to realms previously unchartered for a pop group incorporating musical influences as wide ranging as Blue Note jazz and Chicago soul, Claude Debussy and Erik Satie, Chicago House and Jacques Brel.  At the same time, as battle lines were drawn in a decade under Margaret Thatcher culminating in the miner’s strike of 1984-85, Paul’s lyrics spoke with the language of the activist and his state of the nation addresses were both fierce and eloquent. Over four albums and 17 singles, The Style Council made a stand and became the standard bearers of progressive soulful pop and social comment. The Style Council was emblematic of its creator. Paul Weller, smart, fearless, audacious, with a social conscience and totally unafraid to push the possibilities of pop. This is their story... |