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Frankie says relax book
Frankie says relax book








Then I’m going to try and write an ad that will upset mine and every other mum in the land. When you want to come (sorry not sorry), book tickets to see the exhibition. Trevor Horn and his ZTT records deserve endless thanks for delivering us Frankie. To this day they are only one of two bands to have consecutive number 1’s with their first three singles. The video to Relax remains provocative even by today’s standards. Also, incidentally, exactly the reaction good bands should trigger. Again, a sign of less liberal & enlightened times. Relax got turned off in our house if it came on the telly or (non BBC) radio. Holly Johnson strutted around in sharp suits while his band mates wore leather biker caps, long macs and even bondage style chaps – all within a video set akin to the last days of Rome. įrankie was unashamedly provocative, sweaty, edgy and predatory. Headlines like ‘Gay Plague’ look and sound like something from the Middle Ages today because thankfully, social attitudes have evolved massively and for the better. Curtain twitching disapproval at its worst. Gay with attitude – and thank God it happened too.ĪIDS had shone a big bright light on sexuality but in doing so, had also demonised homosexuality in the media with negative headlines and assertions about a ‘gay plague’ sweeping the planet.

#FRANKIE SAYS RELAX BOOK TV#

Non-threatening mumsy gay would regularly grace prime time Saturday night tv but this was a different kind of gay. Im taking Frankies advice this week as Jane and I. This was needed because shamefully, back then, the whole gay movement was still something carefully censored within mainstream outlets like Radio 1 and TOTP. Frankie Says Relax was an icon song in the early 80s by the English band Frankie Goes to Hollywood. Those with a sniffy, homophobic disposition had the stick up their arse swiftly swapped for a giant, rubberised poker. Medium: Mixed media and screenprint on vintage comic book collage. Loud, proud and with stonking beats just made for the clubs, I’ll admit to finding ‘Frankie’ very scary at the time.Īt the age I was and coming from a pretty ordinary background, I guess the whole gay backdrop to this glorious 5 piece, with its risqué imagery and x rated lyrical content, was all a bit much for a 12 year old.īut that’s why I think they’re great – both musically and for helping to change attitudes.

frankie says relax book

(It’s also the seventh highest selling UK single of all time). Post ban, Relax surged to number 1.įor five weeks. Pre BBC ban the single sat at number six. Well (not) played Mike, because that was arguably the biggest boost you could give a new band with a record out. I would’ve been around 12 and Mike Read had refused to play ‘Relax’ on Radio 1 in the interests of decency. I was at school when they first hit the radio playlists. That’s why I was so pleased to read about a new exhibition wholly dedicated to the Scouse band : However, it’s fair to say that few bands with short careers are as formidable or boast an impact as considerable as Frankie goes to Hollywood. It all happened far too long ago for that.








Frankie says relax book