Dominic's Staff Pick: July 30, 2025

Hey there everyone. Thanks for taking the time to check in with us this week. Hopefully it serves as a distraction from the horrible news and bs that’s all around us these days.

We have had a lot of cool shit come through the store in the last week or so. Restocks on current bangers, reissues of classics, and more obscure deep cut titles. One that caught my eye and has proved to be a winner is my pick for you this week. It’s a compilation too, and anyone who knows me will tell you I love a good comp.

Various Artists – All The Young Droids (Junkshop Synth Pop 1978-1985). School Daze

This is a lovingly compiled collection of obscure and under the radar synth pop and DIY sounds from a bygone era. It has been curated by Phil King, bass player from Lush (among his many credits) and put out by Glasgow-based label School Daze, which is a subsidiary label to Night School Records. They have done a nice job indeed. Twenty-four tracks of synth-based pop and punkier sounds from artists whose names, for the most part, will be known only to the keenest collectors of music from this period. Almost all the tracks originate from the United Kingdom, but there are one or two Euro and World entries included for good measure. The collection comes with a nice booklet, reproducing sleeves and providing artist and track information. The copies we received were on pink vinyl, and there is supposed to be a clear version too. These are stated to be in a run of just 500 each, but there looks to be a more available black vinyl pressing. Obviously, once we sell the copies we have here, there is no guarantee that we will get more of the same, but hopefully we should get something. Should demand require it, naturally.

Synth pop, I know, isn’t everybody’s cup of tea. Often looked down on by some, as a genre it’s almost a poor cousin to the cooler punk and guitar-based styles of the day. Every genre has good and bad examples of the respective music. I would argue that, if anything, a lot of the synth-based music being made during this pioneering period of the late 1970s and early 1980s was far more progressive, new and exciting than a lot of the stodgy rock music being made then. I’ve always had a soft spot for it, probably beginning with my love for Soft Cell, Human League, Heaven 17, OMD and the like. I still dig those records out and enjoy them to this day. I’m not opposed to pop music at all. A good tune is a good tune at the end of the day.

On this compilation, the focus isn’t on the known names, but rather those who were on smaller labels and those who just put out one or two records independently. There are some names, like Ian North from Milk ‘N Cookies fame, who might be recognized, but probably not this track by him. One of my favorite tracks is “I’m On A Rocket” by Harry Kakoulli, who was in Squeeze. His contribution is potentially the more post-punkish of the set and has guitars on it too. Great cut that sort of reminds me of the stuff Elton Motello was doing. Kakoulli released one album in 1980 under his name and it’s not too bad. It includes the Rocket track and a couple of other good ones. You should be able to find it cheaply, especially in the U.K.

For me, the cuts that work the best on the compilation are those like Kakoulli’s which are less than obvious synth pop. Out of the twenty-four tracks, it’s the ones that pull out all the pop cliches that are the least interesting. You’ll always have one or two tracks on a double LP collection that aren’t your faves, especially when digging into more obscure selections, but thankfully on this one there aren’t many. I’ve only had the record a week or so and played it a few times, but didn’t hear anything that made me say, “this sucks.” Naturally, individual experiences will vary, but dollar for dollar this set is great value in my opinion.

For archivists, historians and just those interested, the full-size color booklet is a treasure trove of information. Informative notes, photos, record sleeve scans and even a rundown of the electronic instruments used on the records heard. Phil King is no stranger to curating compilations of this nature, but on this one he has done an exceptional job I believe. Kudos, sir. It sounds great too. To make the package even more attractive, you will find some real rarities and some unreleased tracks that those of us stateside are very unlikely to stumble across in the wild.

I’ll leave by repeating the quote from NME music journalist Nick Kent that is printed in the booklet.

“And then came the rise of synth pop: blokes with dodgy haircuts hunched over keyboard-operated machines stuffed with wires and do-it-yourself tone oscillators making sounds like a brood of geese passing gas in a wind tunnel. Whoopee! This is the way the ‘70s ended: not with a blood-curdling bang but with a cheap, synthesized, emasculating whimper.”

Hilarious. He thought he was being clever by putting down the music, but of course, as we all know, electronic music wasn’t the end of pop, rock or anything else. It continued to grow and evolve and spawn a whole new culture. Whether you like it or not. The dinosaurs of bloated ‘60s and ‘70s rock are the ones that sound dated now and barely hold up, whilst a lot of the “new” music made back then still sounds fresh today. I’ll take Depeche Mode over Foghat any flippin’ day, mate. Kent was also wrong in thinking synth-based music was new. He obviously hadn’t heard of Wendy Carlos or Delia Derbyshire or picked up a copy of Switched On Moog, which coincidentally we had a copy of the other day, and I was jamming in the store and sold right off the turntable. Don’t be a Luddite. Sewing machines didn’t end the world, and neither has a Moog synth. Will we eventually be killed by robots in the future? Possibly. But for now, let’s enjoy the noises they can make.

Cheers and see you all next time.

-Dom

 


Leave a comment