I used to vaguely know some Welsh kids TV presenters and they for sure would have known. They spent a fair proportion of their work time off their chops on heavy duty psychedelics.I guess most people at the kids TV would have had no idea what he was singing about with the patois he was using
Reading Dance Your Way Home by Emma Warren, recommended for anyone with an interest in this thread's subject matter, she writes about this clip in it:
Yep, combined memoir/social history of the dancefloor, really fun read:Definitely one of the most memorable clips of all time. Sorry- is 'Dance your way home' a book? In a similar context, I never quite understood how Anthem never quite made it on to their live in Manchester EP
Definitely one of the most memorable clips of all time. Sorry- is 'Dance your way home' a book? In a similar context, I never quite understood how Anthem never quite made it on to their live in Manchester EP
The one I'm reading at the moment.....Yep, combined memoir/social history of the dancefloor, really fun read:
Dance Your Way Home by Emma Warren | Books & Shop | Faber
Dance Your Way Home: A Journey Through the Dancefloor is a landmark social history of the dancefloor that gets to the heart of what it is that makes us move.www.faber.co.uk
Oh, that reminds me, cos I don't know if there's a general "books about dancing" thread, Party Lines sounds interesting too:
Party Lines by Ed Gillett review – the politics of dancing
A buzzing study of how the cat-and-mouse game played by partygoers and the state shaped contemporary Britainwww.theguardian.com
Will give it a go!!!Yep, combined memoir/social history of the dancefloor, really fun read:
Dance Your Way Home by Emma Warren | Books & Shop | Faber
Dance Your Way Home: A Journey Through the Dancefloor is a landmark social history of the dancefloor that gets to the heart of what it is that makes us move.www.faber.co.uk
Oh, that reminds me, cos I don't know if there's a general "books about dancing" thread, Party Lines sounds interesting too:
Party Lines by Ed Gillett review – the politics of dancing
A buzzing study of how the cat-and-mouse game played by partygoers and the state shaped contemporary Britainwww.theguardian.com