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TELEVISION PERSONALITIES - THEY COULD HAVE BEEN BIGGER THAN THE BEATLES


TITLE:
They Could Have Been Bigger Than The Beatles
LABEL:
CATNO:
FIRELP230X
FORMAT:
Vinyl record
DESCRIPTION:
RSD 2107 - SEALED

PRICE:
£34.99
RELEASED YEAR:
SLEEVE:
Mint (M)
MEDIA:
Mint (M)

BUY:
 
 
LISTEN:
Play       Cue Sample

TRACK LISTING:

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PLAY
 
CUE
MP3
1
Three Wishes
1
Three Wishes
2
David Hockney's Diary
2
David Hockney's Diary
3
In A Perfumed Garden
3
In A Perfumed Garden
4
Flowers For Abigail
4
Flowers For Abigail
5
King And Country
5
King And Country
6
The Boy In The Paisley Shirt
6
The Boy In The Paisley Shirt
7
Games For Boys
7
Games For Boys
8
Painter Man
8
Painter Man
9
Psychedelic Holiday
9
Psychedelic Holiday
10
14th Floor
10
14th Floor
11
Sooty's Disco Party
11
Sooty's Disco Party
12
Makin' Time
12
Makin' Time
13
When Emily Cries
13
When Emily Cries
14
The Glittering Prizes
14
The Glittering Prizes
15
Anxiety Block
15
Anxiety Block
16
Mysterious Ways
16
Mysterious Ways

YOUTUBE VIDEOS:

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Last FM Information on Television Personalities

Please note the information is done on a artist keyword match and data is provided by LastFM.
The Television Personalities are an English post-punk group with a varying line up. The only constant member is singer/songwriter Dan Treacy. Their first release (January 1978) was the single "14th Floor / Oxford Street W1". Their second release, the EP Where's Bill Grundy Now? features one of their best-known songs, "Part Time Punks". The Television Personalities' first album And Don't the Kids Just Love It was released in 1981. It set the template for their subsequent career: neo-psychedelia, an obsession with youth culture of the 1960s, a fey, slightly camp lyrical attitude, and the occasional classic pop song. Their second album Mummy Your Not Watching Me [sic] demonstrated increased psychedelic influences. Their third album, ironically entitled They Could Have Been Bigger Than The Beatles showed Treacy's sense of irony: the TVPs (as they are affectionately known) were never to have any major commercial success. The first three albums featured Treacy and schoolmate Ed Ball; Ball left the band to found The Times, but rejoined in 2004. The 1985 album The Painted Word was unexpectedly dark in content, reflecting Treacy's despair at Thatcherite Britain and his personal circumstances. Various line up changes prevented their next album (Privilege) from appearing until 1990. Their next album Closer to God was a combination of fey sixties style pop and darker material, similar in tone to The Painted Word. The album Don't Cry Baby, It's Only a Movie was released in 1998. Since then Treacy has battled mental health problems, and his addictions to heroin, amphetamine and alcohol. He has been homeless on various occasions and was briefly arrested and imprisoned in 2003/2004. However, since his release, Treacy has attempted to get his life back together and in February 2006 a new TVPs album My Dark Places was released. Despite their small sales the TVPs were very influential on British music in the 1980s, especially the so-called C86 generation and many of the bands on Creation Records. In an article in The Guardian on April 24 2006, it was implied that Dan Treacy is in some way behind the Arctic Monkeys, although this is based on little more than a perceived similarity between their lyrical style and that of Treacy, and the fact that the lead singer of Arctic Monkeys is mysteriously not credited with their songwriting.[1] Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.