Label: Page One
Year of Release: 1982
Roger Greenaway is a hugely successful songwriter whose list of tracks would be the envy of anyone trying to get the public's ear. From "Something's Gotten Hold Of My Heart" to Andy Williams' under-praised "Home Lovin' Man", to the... er... unique novelty talents of The Pipkins, his abilities and work with Roger Cook often seemed effortless throughout the sixties and seventies.
Besides his attempts to crack the charts, he also had a successful career writing songs for television adverts, some of them among the most iconic jingles of the period. This is a two-sided single boasting two of his better known efforts retooled for home listening, released on the short-lived relaunched eighties version of the Page One label.
A-side "Sorry" is actually the music used by Allied Carpets to flog their wares to excited home improvers, and would usually be accompanied by the slogan "Allied for carpets for you". However, it's only in this rewritten seven inch guise with the corporate sponsorship removed that you realise how much the damn jingle sounded like a Sparks tribute. "Sorry" suffers from a slightly cheap, Rumbelows synthesiser production, but besides that the jerkiness of the arrangement, the wryness of the lyrics and the vocal stylings smack of Ron and Russ Mael. All this begs the question - how on earth did anyone in the marketing department think that a subtle reference to the Mael brothers might have put people in mind of luxury carpet fittings? Did Ron's hypnotic stare indirectly help to sell many a roll of quality feltback? Could he, even today, resuscitate the ailing fortunes of the carpet showroom and cause a shift away from the modern trend in wooden floorings and laminates? We may never find out.
The flip side "Beautiful Gas", on the other hand is - if you haven't guessed already - an atmospheric synthesiser driven version of the "Cookability" theme for British Gas. I'd have preferred a vocal version myself, but what we have here is interesting enough, sounding strangely futuristic (especially next to its rather more minimally produced A-side) and almost ambient in style. If it doesn't make you want to install a new gas hob in your kitchen, I don't know what will.
Carpetbaggers were obviously a studio group and not a going concern, but it would be interesting to find out who sung on the A-side. If anyone knows, drop me a line.
6 comments:
"Gavin de Grunweg"? Ho, ho. (Translate "Grunweg" out of German and you get...)
I don't get it! My limited German is failing me, I'm afraid.
Grune Weg more or less translates as "Green Way", which is a cycle trail running close to the East / West german border....or maybe it's being used here as a pseudonym for Roger Greenaway!
Thank you so much for this post! I was on the hunt for the composer of the music to this ad and FINALLY ended up here. You not only wrote about it, you even posted the music itself. So cool. Thanks again!
I remember seeing the ad which featured the 'Beautiful Gas' theme on a VHS tape on which some relatives of mine recorded with some British comedy shows from the 1980s (Three of a Kind, The Goodies, and Ronnie Barker in "Porridge" if you must know). I was always fascinated by the electronic score and also the almost clinical depiction of the kitchen and cooking in the ad, and have always wondered who the composer was. Googling it, although Roger Greenaway did turn up as the composer for some British Gas ads, the musical style was much more conventional, so I assumed it was someone completely different who'd done the electronic score.
Long story short, I finally ripped the ad from the VHS tape last night, and put it up on Youtube, and also a reference to it in a forum I frequent. Another forum member with better Googling skills found your blog page shortly after.
Finally, here is the music in its original context, with the one minute advertisement for British Gas: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-7zjGyNWQg .
Thank you so much for posting it! Love both sides - instrumental is very dreamy (and I simply love those early 1980s not overproduced electronics), and the song is very nice. If Russell sang in this register more often, I'm sure I'd have liked Sparks more.
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