Sweet Gene Vincent
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“Sweet Gene Vincent” | |||||
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Single by Ian Dury | |||||
B-side | "You're More Than Fair" | ||||
Released | 27 November 1977 (U.K.) | ||||
Format | 7" single | ||||
Recorded | 1976 | ||||
Genre | Punk/Rock | ||||
Length | 3:41 | ||||
Label | Stiff Records | ||||
Writer(s) | Ian Dury / Chas Jankel | ||||
Producer | 'Nobody' / Pete Jenner | ||||
Ian Dury singles chronology | |||||
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"Sweet Gene Vincent" is a song and single by Ian Dury. Taken from his first solo album New Boots and Panties!! it was his second solo single and third solo release and is a tribute to Rock 'n' Roll singer Gene Vincent. It was released November 1977 on the single BUY 23 Sweet Gene Vincent / You're More Than Fair and there was no picture sleeve released.
It is a common misconception that "Sweet Gene Vincent" and its B-side "You're More Than Fair" is credited to and played by Ian Dury and The Blockheads.
Sweet Gene Vincent remained in Ian Dury's set list for almost his entire career, even after other faster paced songs like "Plaistow Patricia" and "Blackmail Man" had been dropped because of the singer's worsening health and was played at his very last concert at the London Palladium in February 2000. It is still in The Blockheads set in 2007.
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[edit] Ian Dury and Gene Vincent
Ian Dury was a fan of Gene Vincent since his early to mid teens and claims to have bought every single he produced until his death (Vincent's). In an interview reprinted in Sex And Drugs And Rock And Roll: The Life of Ian Dury Dury says that he first heard of Vincent via Be-Bop-A-Lula's inclusion in film The Girl Can't Help It and admitted to being reduced to tears by the single as an adolescent. For his whole career Dury would talk very sentimentally, sometimes poetically about Gene Vincent.
It was Vincent's death in 1971 that was a major prompt for Dury to make Kilburn & The Highroads a serious endeavour and his stage clothes of the time often reflected Vincent's influence, notably black leather gloves. He also namechecked the singer in one of his earliest original songs "Upminster Kid", albeit under the singer's 'full' name Gene Vincent Craddock.
Curiously Dury constantly denied that identification with the singer, also crippled and forced to wear a leg brace, was in any way an attraction. He apparently didn't even known Vincent was crippled when he first became a fan. What drew Dury's attention to the singer was his voice and his look.
Dury chose "Woman Love" the B-side of "Be-Bop-A-Lu-La" as one of his 8 songs when he appeared on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs show.
[edit] Lyrics
Ian Dury spent six weeks researching his lyric and read two autobiographies on Gene Vincent before finishing it and handing it to the song's co-writer Chas Jankel. Had it been kept in its original draft, Jankel jokes it would have taken 15 minutes to sing.
Dury’s research and knowledge allowed a large percentage of the lyric, which tells the rough life-story of Vincent, to be made up of references and/or extracts from Vincent’s songs. For instance the Song’s opening line Blue Gene Baby is a faithful re-creation of the first line of Blue Jean Bop and the line Who, who, who slapped John? shouted as the song speeds up to its full tempo is directly lifted from Who Slapped John. Another line 'and you lay that pistol down' is a bastardisation of a lyric from Pistol Packin' Momma used to reference Vincent's partial for waving guns around in-studio (an act that once scared The Beatles). Be-Bop-A-Lula is also referenced at least once, as one character in the in the song 'Uncanny Annie' is 'the one with the flying feet', 'she's the one with the flying feet' being a line in Be-Bop-A-Lula.
Referencing Dury's interest in Vincent's look, the song contains two sections solely focussing on Vincent's typical black and white dress. Dury would constantly forget the second set Black gloves, white frost, black crepe, white lead, white sheet, black knight, jet black, dead white when singing Sweet Gene Vincent live and replace them often with totally different lyrics.
Suggs from Madness quoted repeatedly from the lyrics to Sweet Gene Vincent in his tribute song to Ian Dury Oranges and Lemons which he recorded with Jools Holland and his Rhythm and Blues Orchestra for the Small World, Big Band Volume 1 album and also in his introduction for re-runs of On My Life a documentary about Ian Dury.
[edit] B-side
Sweet Gene Vincent's b-side You're More Than Fair was written some years before its eventual release while Ian Dury was a member of his pub-rock band Kilburn & The Highroads where it was a live favourite and was frequently in their set. And as of 2008 still appears in The Blockheads’ set.
The song features Ian Dury singing in a mock-Jamaican accent (such as, for instance, the Kinks' Apeman) to a reggae tune and tells the amusing story of a couple having sex as they move through the house, with foreplay beginning in the hall and the song ending with the male's ejaculation on the roof. Its lyrics are still noteworthy even by modern standards where songs are much more sexually explicit because of its unusual use of the word 'clitoris'.
Earlier versions of the song, recorded with Kilburn & The Highroads feature different lyrics that do not keep up the 'sexual act in a location in the home' theme and replace 'clitoris' with the more crude term 'fanny' (in Britain fanny is used to mean the vagina, rather than the backside as it is in America).
[edit] Re-releases
Sweet Gene Vincent was the first and only single to be released from Ian Dury's solo debut New Boots and Panties!! (although the album's opening track "Wake Up And Make Love With Me" was included on the What A Waste single) and was previously available as the album's second track, and is still included on its CD-reissues. It has constantly featured on Ian Dury compilations since including his first, Jukebox Dury.
[edit] Versions
A live version of the song can be found on Dury's Warts 'N' Audience album, it is preceded by a short introduction by Dury in the form of him singing another song and Dury shouting 'Oi oi! to the crowd. It features a totally different verse replacing the second set of 'black/white' lyrics and Wilko Johnson on guitar. Another version has been released, recorded live after Ian Dury's death appears on The Blockhead's first release without their former lead singer Straight From The Desk - 2.
Robbie Williams sings the song on Brand New Boots and Panties, a re-creation of New Boots and Panties!! with various other lead singers that acted as a tribute album to Ian Dury. Williams and Dury met while working for UNICEF and Williams adds and additional repetition of the song's title near his versions' close, Dury often did this live.
The backing track to Sweet Gene Vincent (that is, an instrumental version) has recently been released on Edsel Records 2-Disc re-issue of New Boots and Panties!!.
[edit] Sources
- Sex And Drugs And Rock And Roll: The Life Of Ian Dury by Richard Balls, first published 2000, Omnibus Press
- Ian Dury & The Blockheads: Song By Song by Jim Drury, first published 2003, Sanctuary Publishing.