I've been in email limbo for the last week, having received no list stuff due to BT shafting my Provider (ooer!). I had a hell of a job resubscribing - finally having to subscribe from the website itself! And after a few days away what do I find you chatting about - TOTP and showaddywaddy!!! Bloody hell!! Richard Hutt wrote on 26/9/97
Oh and a question before I depart into the hills. I get the sneaking suspicion that a number of listers, indeed, perhaps even the band, may share a common past. So, then, how many of you were, between the years of 1985 and 1989, what was referred to as "cuties"? Oh come on, admit it. There's no shame in it now. My anorak was green and had fuzzy orange lining. Since I won't be around to hear the answer, would anyone care to explain those topsy - turvy years that seem so much a part of B & S, at least to me, to those that weren't around?
I don't think anybody bothered, but at the risk of bringing up an old thread � I've been as busy as the proverbial bee and tracked down an article which, though probably not definitive, should go a long way to explaining to non-UK listers what the indie/twee/cutie scene was about. I'm sure you'll be able to link some of it to the manner in which we regard our heroes, the relevance of 'proper' songs, feyness, 'Britishness', the list could go on and on. Anyway, I've enclosed it as a text file(only 26K) and am sure you'll find it interesting, even if you're from the UK. By the way, my anorak was reversible, cream or brown depending on mood, but I was never a hard-core cutie (honest!). Bye for now, Paul, <plaird@ndirect.co.uk> "Go to work on an Egg" - The Egg Marketing Board