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Some Friendly

Some Friendly is the debut studio album of British rock band the Charlatans that was released on 8 October 1990 through Beggars Banquet Records imprint Situation Two. After forming in 1988, the band went through line-up changes before settling on vocalist Tim Burgess, guitarist John Baker, bassist Martin Blunt, keyboardist Rob Collins and drummer Jon Brookes. The band wrote material at a prolific rate and released their debut single "Indian Rope" in early 1990. Soon afterwards, they signed to Beggars Banquet and began recording their debut album. Between March and August 1990, sessions took place with producer Chris Nagle at Strawberry Studios in Stockport and The Windings in Wrexham. Some Friendly is considered an acid-pop, baggy and dance-pop album that draws influence from The Beatles' psychedelic period.

Some Friendly
Studio album by
Released8 October 1990
RecordedMarch – August 1990
Studio
Genre
Length47:54
LabelSituation Two
ProducerChris Nagle
The Charlatans chronology
Some Friendly
(1990)
Between 10th and 11th
(1992)
Singles from Some Friendly
  1. "The Only One I Know"
    Released: 14 May 1990
  2. "Then"
    Released: 10 September 1990
  3. "Sproston Green"
    Released: 4 February 1991

In May 1990, "The Only One I Know" was released as the lead single from Some Friendly; it earned the Charlatans their first appearance on the BBC Television music show Top of the Pops and the band embarked on their first headlining tour of the United Kingdom. Following their first overseas show in August 1990, "Then" was released as the album's second single in September 1990. The band played several shows in the United States and were forced to amend "UK" to their name because of an identically named American band. The Charlatans ended 1990 with a tour of the UK and mainland Europe with support from Intastella. In early 1991, they went on their first full US tour, coinciding with the release of "Sproston Green" as a single in February 1991.

Some Friendly received mixed reviews from music critics, many of whom noted of the band's influences rather than their sound. Collins' keyboard work was highly praised but Burgess' vocals were negatively received. Retrospective reviews were more favourable, though some still pointed out the influences. The album peaked at number one the UK Albums Chart and the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) certified it gold three days after its release. It also charted in Australia, New Zealand, Sweden and the US. "The Only One I Know" and "Then" both reached the top 20 in the UK and number 11 in Ireland. Both Melody Maker and Sounds included Some Friendly on their lists of the year's best releases, being listed in the top 10 in the former and in the top 30 in the latter. "The Only One I Know" has been viewed as one of the defining tracks of the Madchester and baggy scenes.

Background edit

After the demise of their band The Gift Horses, bassist Martin Blunt, vocalist and guitarist Baz Ketley, and drummer Jon Brookes regrouped and held a jam session, marking the formation of The Charlatans in 1988.[1][2][3] They engaged several keyboardists before finding one who fit the sound they were aiming for. This new keyboardist, however, died after four-to-five rehearsals.[4] Blunt then engaged Rob Collins, who had played in a band with Brookes when they were teenagers.[5] The band recorded two sets of demo recordings and began looking for a manager. Steve Harrison, owner of a record shop called Omega Music, had been interested in managing bands.[6] Blunt, who he knew from his time in Makin' Time,[7] contacted Harrison to see his band perform.[6] After the set, Harrison was impressed and agreed to manage the band.[8] The Charlatans' first attention from national music publications came in August 1988 when they supported Broken English at Walsall Overstrand; the Charlatans' set received a lukewarm reception.[9]

Harrison took his friend Tim Burgess of The Electric Crayons to see the Charlatans; Burgess enjoyed the performance but thought they could sound better with a different singer.[10][11] The Electric Crayons supported the Charlatans for one show in September 1988.[12] Collins had tried to convince Blunt to draft Burgess into the band; Blunt instead invited him to do backing vocals for their set.[13] The Charlatans supported various American bands and later the Stone Roses at several shows as that act were rising in popularity.[14] Brookes said the band were impressed with the confidence the Stone Roses' frontman Ian Brown had, wishing they had a vocalist like him.[15] Ketley left the Charlatans after his girlfriend left him, though Harrison said the decision came from Ketley, who felt the band were heading nowhere.[16][17] By June 1989, the Charlatans were looking for a replacement vocalist and guitarist.[18]

Blunt had earlier asked guitarist John Baker of Liquid Egg Box, who had booked the Charlatans at Walsall Overstrand, to practice with them but Baker had declined.[16] When Blunt asked Baker again in July 1989, Baker suggested another guitarist, who appeared for a few rehearsals and left thereafter; Baker joined The Charlatans shortly afterwards.[16][19] The band auditioned a number of other people before considering Burgess, whose band had now broken up.[20] Blunt went to ask Harrison if he could persuade Burgess to join them; Harrison plastered a "vocalist required" sign on the window of Omega Music that caught Burgess's attention. Burgess was unaware Ketley had left the Charlatans and went to the audition in Walsall.[16] Burgess's audition was initially unsuccessful because he was emulating Iggy Pop.[21] After an attempt at performing naturally, Burgess became the band's new vocalist by August 1989.[22] Burgess and Baker did not like the material the band had accumulated up to that point; Burgess found no emotional connection to the lyrics and Baker being unable to play the guitar parts.[16]

Writing and label signing edit

All of the members of the Charlatans were tired of their jobs; they practised as often as they could and wrote new songs at a prolific rate.[21] The first song the new line-up wrote together was "Flowers"; they played their first show together at the end of August 1989.[23] While Brookes was on holiday in Ibiza, the rest of the band wrote "Indian Rope", "The Only One I Know" and "Sproston Green" in a single weekend.[24] The Charlatans were unable to secure a recording contract so Harrison decided to form his own label, which he called Dead Dead Good.[21][25] Harrison signed the Charlatans to a contract for one album and three singles; they made a gentlemen's agreement in which the band could join another label should they receive an adequate offer.[25] They made a demo tape comprising "Indian Rope", "You Can Talk to Me" and "White Shirt", selling copies at gigs in October 1989.[26][27] Around this time, the Madchester and baggy scenes had risen to prominence with acts such as the Stone Roses and Happy Mondays after the release of "Fools Gold" and the Madchester Rave On EP, respectively.[21][28]

In December 1989, the band played a show at The Boardwalk in Manchester supporting Cactus World News. The majority of the audience left after the Charlatans finished their set, which was attended by Chris Nagle,[29] an engineer for Factory Records and assistant to Factory producer Martin Hannett.[30][31] Towards the end of the month, Nagle contacted Harrison, who sent him a tape of a gig that included "Indian Rope" and "Sproston Green". Nagle later attended a rehearsal and another show.[30] Press coverage followed soon after and the members quit their jobs to focus on the band full-time.[32] In January 1990, the band recorded a demo tape consisting of "Polar Bear", "Sonic", "The Only One I Know" and "White Shirt".[33] Harrison packaged copies of the tape with press kits, one of which came into the possession of Manchester Evening News writer Sarah Campion.[34] Campion passed the tape to Alison Martin, with whom she ran the press agency Scam. Martin liked the tape and had a meeting with Harrison. She left the meeting as the band's radio plugger and press agent.[35]

Nagle produced the Charlatans' debut single "Indian Rope", which was released in January 1990.[25] It peaked at number one on the UK Independent Singles Chart; the band sold all of the copies they had within a week, prompting Harrison to put his house up for payment so he could press more copies.[21][25] The band promoted the single with their first headlining UK tour, commencing January 1990.[36] During the tour the band received requests for radio interviews, including one from Key 103, Manchester's biggest station. While touring, the band discussed what to release as their next single; the band chose "Polar Bear" but Martin thought "The Only One I Know" was superior, as did other people, and told the band.[37] A&R staff from several labels, such as Island, Phonogram, PolyGram and Sire Records, attempted to sign the band.[38][39][40] A number of their contemporaries, including Intastella, the Mock Turtles and Paris Angels, were signed in quick succession.[41] Following a performance in London, the Charlatans met with representatives of Beggars Banquet Records, with whom they signed a six-album deal.[39][42] According to Dominic Wills in The Charlatans: The Authorised History (1999), the band had at least two reasons for the signing; Beggars Banquet were upfront about their deals with Omega Music and they were able to promote a band into the mainstream with the Cult.[43] Harrison stipulated the Dead Dead Good logo would appear on the band's next few releases.[44]

Recording edit

 
Strawberry Studios in Stockport, where "The Only One I Know" was recorded with Chris Nagle.

Shortly after signing their contract, the Charlatans were also considering "Flowers" for their second single.[45] When the band went to record "Polar Bear", a friend said they were recording the wrong song, alluding to "The Only One I Know". In the studio, the band found a fax from Beggars Banquet's A&R man Roger Trust asking them to record "The Only One I Know".[46][42] The song and its later-accompanying B-sides were recorded in one week in March 1990 at Strawberry Studios, Stockport. The band chose Nagle as their producer[47][48] for his modern approach to recording, which balanced the band's 1960s-esque sound.[31] Burgess had wanted to record his vocals as quickly as possible, but Nagle encouraged him to sing more.[49]

The remainder of Some Friendly was recorded in three sessions in five weeks in mid-1990 between live performances.[50][51][52] These sessions were held—again with Nagle producing—at The Windings near Wrexham.[51] The studio had been a storage area for a coal mine from the early 1900s.[53] For "Flower" and one other song, Nagle recorded Burgess' vocals in the studio's garden.[54][55] The band's main problem was a lack of quality material to record, having been together for only a short period.[51] Burgess said they would previously record songs soon after writing them, only allowing them to evolve through subsequent live performances.[53] Burgess did not think the band left The Windings "on very friendly terms" after experiencing "studio bust-ups between the owners and the group". Blunt and Collins were accused of smashing equipment, of which Harrison had no recollection.[51]

Recording concluded with some B-sides in August 1990 at Strawberry Studios, where Nagle would mix the album.[47][56] Growing confident as musicians, the band members suggested ways that some of the songs should sound; this included asking for distortion to be added to a particular instrument.[54] Nagle said the band were "paranoid" about The Stone Roses' 1989 self-titled album: "They were trying to copy it, be [better than] it and be completely different from it all at the same time".[56] Burgess later said they were not ready to make an album at the time: "We had some great stuff, but also some stuff that had to go on there just to make up the numbers".[53] As a result, "You're Not Very Well" and "Opportunity" were written late in the sessions.[57] Blunt felt the process was too rushed while Burgess felt there would not have been an album at all if they had not quickly recorded it.[53] Burgess later regretted the version of "Polar Bear" they had recorded, stating; "it was a live favourite but we'd overproduced it and destroyed it in the studio".[50] The band thought the bass was under-produced; Wills agreed, saying "it 'moves' rather than 'drives'" the material forward.[53]

Composition and lyrics edit

 
The psychedelic period of the Beatles (pictured in 1967) acted as an important influence on Some Friendly.

Themes and sound edit

Some Friendly has been classified as acid-pop, baggy and dance-pop; Burgess said the Beatles' psychedelic period had a major influence on the album.[58] In his book Pink Floyd FAQ, writer Stuart Shea said the Charlatans and Some Friendly owed a debt to "Echoes" (1971) by Pink Floyd; these influences include the use of found sounds in the songs "109 Pt.2" and "Polar Bear". He also said the "slow, building groves" of "Believe You Me", "Flower" and "Sproston Green", all of which "overflow with creamy Hammond organ, psychdelic guitar effects, aggressive bass, and winsome vocals, owe as much to 'Echoes' as to any other influence".[59] Author Michael Heatley said the Charlatans had more of a "traditional" sound than their contemporaries Happy Mondays and the Stone Roses because of their Rolling Stones-like "swagger" and Collins' organ.[60]

Journalist John Robb in his biography The Charlatans: We Are Rock (1998), refers to Some Friendly as the band's "Hammond album", adding, "the record was stamped with Collins' brooding complex personality and just beyond the record's poppy vibe you can hear the great crashing keyboard played with an intense passion by a young man working out his inner turmoil through rock & roll".[61] Jon Wiederhorn of Spin said the band's music "float[s] on gently lapping waves of sound, blending light, iridescent instrumentation and heavy-lidded vocals with loose hypnotic dance beats".[62] According to Burgess, a number of Brookes' drum patterns were likely influenced by club music, specifically songs they would hear at Manchester club The Haçienda.[63] He said the album is representative of some of the members' home town Northwich "because all the songs, lyrically especially, came from my childhood and that was based all around Northwich".[64]

Tracks edit

Some Friendly's opening track, "You're Not Very Well", is about leaving home and moving to a big city; Burgess moved from Northwich to the Isle of Dogs in London.[65] The song was originally named "Some Friendly"; Burges said he gave their early songs "mood titles" to give them a sense of mystery.[66] They changed the song's name because they felt it worked better as an album title. Burgess described its new title of "You're Not Very Well" as being a love letter to city life, specifically visiting Manchester, where he felt like an outsider.[67] "White Shirt" is largely inspired by the work of Felt and an attempt to shift Collins' musical interests away from The Beatles and Deep Purple.[31] Burgess cites Sonic Flower Groove (1987) by Primal Scream and Armstrong’s Revenge & Eleven Other Short Stories (1985) by the Claim as influences,[68] and said its title refers to a dress code for one town's clubs during his youth.[69] The song's bassline recalls the one in "She Bangs the Drums" (1989) by the Stone Roses.[26] In an interview, Burgess said he had taken the chord progression from Felt's "Ballad of the Band" (1986).[70]

"The Only One I Know" began as an instrumental; Burgess said he was buying cigarettes when he thought of the melody that became the song. He rushed home to get his dictaphone before he forgot it. The lyrics discuss teenage emotions. Burgess said the song has an abnormal structure and that he was unsure which part is the chorus section.[46] The title came from "You're Not the Only One I Know" (1990) by the Sundays and the song's hook is found in the verse sections.[46][71] Blunt said Baker recorded repetitive guitar parts that are similar to those in "You Keep Me Hangin' On" by the Supremes to give the song a "bit more urgency". Following the second chorus, every instrument except the bass is removed, a technique the band learnt from music on Stax Records.[46] The song was compared to the work of the Spencer Davis Group and Deep Purple—specifically their version of the 1967 song "Hush"—while one line of the chorus was directly taken from "Everybody's Been Burned" (1967) by the Byrds.[72][73]

The title of "Opportunity", which was originally"Love Senses Chaos", was taken from "Opportunities (Let's Make Lots of Money)" (1986) by Pet Shop Boys.[74] "Opportunity"'sfirst half was inspired by Burgess's experience in London following a band rehearsal.[53][74] He was travelling on the London Underground and found himself walking amidst the poll tax riots. He observed broken windows, mounted police and looting and became "overawed by the violence".[53] Partway through, Burgess sings of hating his own body. The music was influenced by "Life's What You Make It" (1985) by Talk Talk.[74] When talking about "Then", Burgess said Collins' strength on an organ was equivalent to guitar solos by John Squire of the Stone Roses.[63] Burgess said the song discusses his friends settling down while he wanted to find meaning in his life.[75] The song's drum beat was inspired by one Brookes heard in Three Feet High and Rising (1989) by De La Soul.[31] "109 Pt.2" evolved from "Imperial 109", a song with which the Charlatans used to open their earlier Ketley led-era live shows.[76][77] The title is taken from a book about flying boats.[77] This newer version was inspired by the work of Throbbing Gristle,[78] and includes a sample of Robert De Niro from Angel Heart (1987).[79]

"Polar Bear" was initially titled "Looking for the Orange One", a line from the song.[80] Burgess realised that "oblique lyrics—which might seem incongruous—can end up being quite memorable".[81] The song's intro has woodwind played by Pete "Peewee" Coleman and the outro alludes to "Hey Bulldog" (1969) by The Beatles.[82][83] Burgess said "Believe You Me", which was originally called "Who Killed Your Lover", is about being a Gemini.[84][85] In "Flower", which has a Pixies-esque bass part, Burgess wishes death upon a person from his youth.[86][87] Its lyrics evolved from a note Blunt had passed to Burgess that read "Don't bring me flowers, I am not dead", and is anchored around the phrase "Time to say goodbye bye to the bad bad girl".[88] Burgess wrote the lyrics for "Sonic" while working in an office at the Runcorn branch of Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI).[89] Part of the lyrics discuss Burgess wanting to live in a painting while another part talks about a girl who disappears after consuming drugs. Its title is a reference to Sonic Boom of Spacemen 3 and the Sonics.[55] The closing song, "Sproston Green", is a jam centred around Collins' keyboard work.[90] The name is borrowed from a lane in Sproston, Cheshire.[86] The song's intro was altered to the point it evoked "Won't Get Fooled Again" (1971) by the Who rather than its drawn-out live performances.[53] Blunt borrowed the bassline from a Midlands hard-rock band he had seen in a pub.[91] Burgess said it follows a repetitive, three-chord build-up in the style of Spacemen 3. The lyrics are about a liaison in a local park.[92]

Release edit

"The Only One I Know" and "Then" singles, and initial promotion edit

In April and May 1990, the Charlatans toured the UK, performing at 1,000-capacity venues.[44][93] The Beggars Banquet's imprint Situation Two released "The Only One I Know" as Some Friendly's lead single on 14 May that year.[47][94] The single includes "Everything Changed", "You Can Talk to Me" and an edit of "Imperial 109" as its B-sides.[95] Harrison's friend Kim Peters, who was a graphic designer with no prior experience of filming videos, directed the music video for "The Only One I Know".[96] The video depicts the band replicating a live show, and was recorded in Sandbach at a warehouse owned by a friend of Harrison. It was recorded in the evening with an audience comprising friends and fans. Police officers, having been informed that an illegal rave was happening at the venue, arrived[44] but recording continued after brief negotiations. Some of the police officers appear in the completed video.[97] The band played a session for BBC Radio 1 presenter Mark Goodier to promote the single, performing "You're Not Very Well", "White Shirt" and "The Only One I Know", as well as making their debut appearance on the BBC Television music programme Top of the Pops.[47][98]

The Charlatans continued touring through to June 1990;[99] Madchester's popularity continued to rise as the Stone Roses reached their zenith with a performance at Spike Island and Happy Mondays' performance at Glastonbury Festival.[100] In August 1990, the Charlatans played at Hultsfred Festival in Sweden, marking their first show abroad.[101] "Then" was released as the album's second single on 10 September 1990, with "Taurus Moaner", an instrumental version of "Taurus Moaner" and an alternative take of "Then" making up the release.[50][102][103] The choice of song for the single caused tension within the band, some of whom wanted to release "Polar Bear". Blunt, however, did not, citing overproduction on the song and threatening to quit if it was chosen. The band felt uncomfortable releasing a second single from the album; according to Wills: "Assuming that 'The Only One I Know' was to be on the album, this would make two singles from the same record, which they still regarded as ripping-off the fans". As a compromise, "The Only One I Know" was later removed from the vinyl edition of the album, which they saw as "the real" iteration of Some Friendly.[50] It was included on the CD versions at the label's request because CDs had become the dominant medium for consuming music.[71]

A music video for "Then" was filmed partially in a cave, with Peters directing. Collins became ill on the day of filming so a friend mimed in his place.[50][104] Other parts of the video show the band performing on a hillside in Shropshire that is partly obscured by smoke.[105] The band promoted "Then" with a gig at Legends, a venue in Warrington.[50] During this time, the UK press noted a decline in the popularity of the Madchester scene. Burgess and Brookes went on a promotional press trip in the United States; the band then played several shows there in October 1990.[50] The Charlatans were forced to append UK to their name for this tour because the name was already being used by an American band.[106] The US tour included a performance at the Gathering of the Tribes,[107] where the band played a 40-minute set despite only being scheduled to play for 20 minutes.[51] On one occasion during the tour, the band members failed to leave their beds for a cover story with Rolling Stone, upsetting the band's US label RCA Records.[108]

Album release, "Sproston Green" single and further touring edit

Some Friendly was released in the UK on 8 October 1990 through Situation Two; the vinyl version was packaged in a white plastic sleeve.[109] It was issued in the US through RCA on 23 October 1990.[110] The cover artwork includes an out-of-focus photograph of the band, chosen over a photograph of wax models of the members.[53] The Charlatans ended 1990 with a tour of the UK and mainland Europe with support from Intastella, who were offered the tour when their manager played Burgess a tape of their music.[109][111] In February and March 1991, the Charlatans embarked on their first full tour of the US; because the Stone Roses were unwilling to tour North America, the Charlatans became the most-popular baggy band there.[112][113] A side effect of this was the Stone Roses being compared to the Charlatans rather than vice versa.[113] "Sproston Green" was issued as a single in that market on 4 February 1991, the release featuring the album version and a remix version as well as an extended remix of "Opportunity".[112][113][114] A French release includes 7" and 12" edits of "Sproston Green" and "You're Not Very Well", and a remix of "Opportunity" by Flood titled "Opportunity Three".[115] Peters filmed a music video for "Sproston Green" consisting of live footage from the Apollo in Manchester.[116]

Plans to record a video for "White Shirt" with director Julien Temple were ultimately scrapped.[116] Beggars Banquet was still interested in releasing another UK single from the album. The band gave the label three new songs and a previously released remix.[117] The "Over Rising" EP was released on 25 February 1991. It includes "Over Rising", "Happen to Die", "Way Up There" and the "Opportunity Three" remix.[118][119][120] The remix had been available as a promotional club-only release, but when it started gaining national airplay, people mistook it for a single. Because there was demand for the remix, it was included on the EP.[121] To the surprise of the band, "Sproston Green" started gaining traction in the US, which made them worry that the tour would be extended and thus delay future recording sessions.[122] They asked RCA to withdraw the single, which again angered the label. Harrison said this request "compromised us in just about every territory on the planet". Alongside this, Burgess had insulted American culture. The band returned to the UK to recover from the tour. This retreat marked the end of both the band and the Madchester scene attempting to gain market share in the US, leaving an opportunity for grebo acts such as EMF and Jesus Jones to do so later that year.[108]

Reissues, related releases and events edit

In June 2009, Burgess said he wanted to play a one-off gig to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Some Friendly, though mentioned that not all of the members of the Charlatans were interested in the idea.[123] In May 2010, Beggars Banquet Records reissued Some Friendly to mark the anniversary. The reissue includes a bonus disc of B-sides and BBC sessions.[124] This version surfaced after a failed attempt by Beggars Banquet to compile a more expansive box stalled with the band's management two years earlier.[125] Coinciding with this, the band performed the album in its entirety in London, Glasgow, Blackpool and at Primavera Sound in Barcelona, Spain.[124][126] The three UK performances were recorded and released as live albums through the service Concert Live immediately after the end of the shows.[127][128][129]

In 2019, Some Friendly was re-pressed on vinyl with the addition of "The Only One I Know" in the US market for that year's Record Store Day.[130] The January 1990 demo of "The Only One I Know" was re-released in 2020, coinciding with its 30th anniversary.[73] "The Only One I Know", "Then", the US remix of "Sproston Green" and "Opportunity Three" were included on the band's first compilation album Melting Pot (1998).[131] "The Only One I Know" was also included on the band's third and fifth compilation albums, Forever: The Singles (2006) and A Head Full of Ideas (2021).[132][133] The deluxe vinyl box set version of A Head Full of Ideas also includes demos of "White Shirt" and "The Only One I Know".[134] As part of the 2019 Record Store Day event, "The Only One I Know" and "Then" were released as part of the seven-inch vinyl box set Everything Changed (2019).[135]

Critical reception edit

Original release
Review scores
SourceRating
Entertainment WeeklyB+[136]
New Straits Times     [137]
NME8/10[138]
Select2/5[139]
Sounds     [138]
The Village VoiceC[140]

Contemporary reviews edit

Upon its release, Some Friendly was met with mixed reviews from music critics, a number of whom highlighted the band's influences rather than the contemporary nature of their sound. Collins' keyboard parts were lauded, but Burgess' vocals received negative comments.[109]

Wiederhorn said that unlike the Stone Roses, the Charlatans have their "feet firmly planet on the ground". He called the album "lush and warm, teeming with spinning rhythms and soothing melodies".[62] R.S. Murthi of New Straits Times said the songs are "palatable but scarcely poignant" while the lyrics "border on the bathetic".[137] Entertainment Weekly writer Elysa Gardner said the band successfully "capture the moodiness of a lot of late-'60s rock and, on their better cuts ... the shimmering buoyancy of that era’s pop".[136]

In his review for Select, journalist Andrew Harrison called the album "doggedly authentic, if inconsistent". He highlighted "109 Pt.2" as an example of the band's "infatuation with a shagged-out rock past that's been done over several times too many already".[139] Elizabeth Wurtzel of New York said the album is "like falling into a time warp", singling out the use of the organ and wah-wah guitar effects as "so quintessentially sixties that it resembles music from the soundtrack of a very dated movie". Despite this, she found it added to the band's charm because they appeared "so unpretentious".[141]

The staff at Q said that the band were being weighed down by allusions to the work of the Stone Roses, but chose "Polar Bear" and "Sproston Green" as the album's "twin peaks" that showed that the band "posses enough wit, style and personality to transcend mere nostalgia and produce something vigorous and exciting".[142] Terry Staunton of NME countered, saying that any influence that the Stone Roses had is non-existent on Some Friendly.[138] The Sounds staff agreed, adding it "buried any preconceptions about the band being also-rans on the Manchester playing field". They praised every song for being a "positive gem", concluding by calling the album one of the "finest and most challenging records of the past two years".[138]

Retrospective reviews
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [90]
Alternative Rock8/10[143]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music     [144]
MusicHound Rock4/5[145]
The New Rolling Stone Album Guide     [146]
Record Collector     [147]

Retrospective reviews edit

Reviewing the 2010 reissue, Iain Moffat said that Some Friendly provides the "best evidence that, whether anyone realised it at the time or not, the Charlatans were thoroughly versed in being enduring, and endearing, from the off". He added that few of the bonus tracks are "wholly essential from anything other than a historical viewpoint".[148] According to Record Collector's Ian Shirley, the debut is "an awesome first album establishing the band as their own men".[147] Robb wrote that despite the album being a "great attempt to capture the flavour of the times", it is not "quite the classic that, say, the Roses had dealt the year before".[149] Author Dave Thompson, in his book Alternative Rock (2000), wrote that what makes the band stand apart from their contemporaries is their "occasional nod to Mod (especially the Who); that and Tim Burgess' wistful, delicate vocals."[143]

AllMusic reviewer Ned Raggett said that Some Friendly offers "everything from '60s beat groove to Madchester bagginess with verve".[90] Wills said that its production history lends the album a sense of charm: "its evident desire to make something of itself, the way it loses momentum then claws its way back into the groove. Though some of it, in retrospect, is a little thin-sounding and overly twee", adding that Burgess's interest in 1960s psychedelia got the "better of him".[53] Ian Gittins of The Guardian said that upon revisiting Some Friendly, "you realise how much of the album was unadventurous filler".[150] The staff of The New Rolling Stone Album Guide said that the album's "derivative ode to dippy, Hammond-happy psych-pop didn't help" to stop comparisons between the Charlatans, Happy Mondays and the Stone Roses.[146]

Commercial performance and legacy edit

Some Friendly entered the UK Albums Chart at number one, marking the first time in a few years a new act had debuted at that position.[109] It was certified silver and gold in the UK by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) on the same day, three days after the album's release.[151] It reached number 27 in Sweden,[152] number 48 in New Zealand,[153] number 73 in the US and number 79 in Australia.[154][155] By the release of the band's second studio album Between 10th and 11th in early 1992, Some Friendly had sold 350,000 copies in the US.[156]

"The Only One I Know" topped the UK Independent Singles Chart and reached number nine on the main UK Singles Chart.[38][157] It also charted at number 11 in Ireland and number 56 in the Netherlands.[158][159] In the US, it reached number five on the Mainstream Rock Songs chart.[160] The song was certified silver in the UK by the BPI in 2019.[161] "Then" charted at number at number 11 in Ireland and number 12 in the UK.[157][158]

Melody Maker ranked Some Friendly sixth on their list of the best releases from 1990 while Sounds included it on their list at number 25.[162] James Forryan for HMV and Richard Luck in his book The Madchester Scene (2002) regarded "The Only One I Know" as one of the defining songs from the Madchester scene, which Heatley also selected for his list of key songs from the period.[163][164][165] Lois Wilson of Record Collector noted both it and the album as key baggy releases.[13] Andy Bell of Ride had learnt the Charlatans had a song called "Polar Bear"; he liked the name and used it for a song of Ride's own on their debut album Nowhere (1990).[80] "Sproston Green" has been used as a closing number for the majority of the Charlatans' live shows, through to 2022.[166]

Accolades for Some Friendly
Publication List Rank Ref.
Melody Maker Albums of the Year 6
Sounds Albums of the Year 25

Track listing edit

Writing credits per booklet.[47]

1990 CD edition
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."You're Not Very Well"
3:31
2."White Shirt"
  • Blunt
  • Burgess
  • Collins
3:25
3."The Only One I Know" (not on all vinyl versions)
  • Baker
  • Blunt
  • Brookes
  • Burgess
  • Collins
3:58
4."Opportunity"
  • Blunt
  • Brookes
  • Burgess
6:41
5."Then"
  • Blunt
  • Brookes
  • Burgess
  • Collins
4:11
6."109 Pt.2"
  • Blunt
  • Brookes
  • Burgess
  • Collins
3:18
7."Polar Bear"
  • Baker
  • Blunt
  • Brookes
  • Burgess
  • Collins
4:56
8."Believe You Me"
  • Blunt
  • Brookes
  • Burgess
  • Collins
3:41
9."Flower"
  • Baker
  • Blunt
  • Burgess
  • Collins
5:27
10."Sonic"
  • Brookes
  • Burgess
  • Collins
3:32
11."Sproston Green"
  • Baker
  • Blunt
  • Burgess
  • Collins
5:08

Personnel edit

Personnel per deluxe booklet, except where noted.[47]

Charts and certifications edit

See also edit

  • Pills 'n' Thrills and Bellyaches – the 1990 album by Happy Mondays, released a month after Some Friendly
  • Spartacus – the 1991 album by contemporaries the Farm, who similarly founded their own label to release their debut

References edit

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  27. ^ The Charlatans (1989). October 89': The Charlatans Demo (inlay). Dead Dead Good.
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Bibliography edit

Books edit

Journals and magazines edit

  • Harrison, Andrew (November 1990). "The Only One They Know". Select (5). ISSN 0959-8367.
  • Mann, Bill, ed. (12 May 1990). "Advertisement" (PDF). Sounds. ISSN 0144-5774.
  • Murthi, R.S. (3 March 1991). "Pleasant blend of folk and pop". New Straits Times. from the original on 27 June 2022. Retrieved 29 June 2022.
  • Wiederhorn, Jon (January 1991). "Platter du Jour". Spin. 6 (10). ISSN 0886-3032. from the original on 29 June 2022. Retrieved 29 June 2022.
  • Wurtzel, Elizabeth (12 November 1990). "The Garden of Edie". New York. 23 (44). ISSN 0028-7369. from the original on 28 June 2022. Retrieved 29 June 2022.

External links edit

  • Some Friendly at YouTube (streamed copy where licensed)
  • Some Friendly at Discogs (list of releases)
  • Interview with Shiiine On

some, friendly, debut, studio, album, british, rock, band, charlatans, that, released, october, 1990, through, beggars, banquet, records, imprint, situation, after, forming, 1988, band, went, through, line, changes, before, settling, vocalist, burgess, guitari. Some Friendly is the debut studio album of British rock band the Charlatans that was released on 8 October 1990 through Beggars Banquet Records imprint Situation Two After forming in 1988 the band went through line up changes before settling on vocalist Tim Burgess guitarist John Baker bassist Martin Blunt keyboardist Rob Collins and drummer Jon Brookes The band wrote material at a prolific rate and released their debut single Indian Rope in early 1990 Soon afterwards they signed to Beggars Banquet and began recording their debut album Between March and August 1990 sessions took place with producer Chris Nagle at Strawberry Studios in Stockport and The Windings in Wrexham Some Friendly is considered an acid pop baggy and dance pop album that draws influence from The Beatles psychedelic period Some FriendlyStudio album by the CharlatansReleased8 October 1990RecordedMarch August 1990StudioStrawberry Stockport The Windings Wrexham WalesGenreAcid pop baggy dance popLength47 54LabelSituation TwoProducerChris NagleThe Charlatans chronologySome Friendly 1990 Between 10th and 11th 1992 Singles from Some Friendly The Only One I Know Released 14 May 1990 Then Released 10 September 1990 Sproston Green Released 4 February 1991In May 1990 The Only One I Know was released as the lead single from Some Friendly it earned the Charlatans their first appearance on the BBC Television music show Top of the Pops and the band embarked on their first headlining tour of the United Kingdom Following their first overseas show in August 1990 Then was released as the album s second single in September 1990 The band played several shows in the United States and were forced to amend UK to their name because of an identically named American band The Charlatans ended 1990 with a tour of the UK and mainland Europe with support from Intastella In early 1991 they went on their first full US tour coinciding with the release of Sproston Green as a single in February 1991 Some Friendly received mixed reviews from music critics many of whom noted of the band s influences rather than their sound Collins keyboard work was highly praised but Burgess vocals were negatively received Retrospective reviews were more favourable though some still pointed out the influences The album peaked at number one the UK Albums Chart and the British Phonographic Industry BPI certified it gold three days after its release It also charted in Australia New Zealand Sweden and the US The Only One I Know and Then both reached the top 20 in the UK and number 11 in Ireland Both Melody Maker and Sounds included Some Friendly on their lists of the year s best releases being listed in the top 10 in the former and in the top 30 in the latter The Only One I Know has been viewed as one of the defining tracks of the Madchester and baggy scenes Contents 1 Background 2 Writing and label signing 3 Recording 4 Composition and lyrics 4 1 Themes and sound 4 2 Tracks 5 Release 5 1 The Only One I Know and Then singles and initial promotion 5 2 Album release Sproston Green single and further touring 5 3 Reissues related releases and events 6 Critical reception 6 1 Contemporary reviews 6 2 Retrospective reviews 7 Commercial performance and legacy 8 Track listing 9 Personnel 10 Charts and certifications 10 1 Weekly charts 10 2 Certifications 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 13 1 Books 13 2 Journals and magazines 14 External linksBackground editAfter the demise of their band The Gift Horses bassist Martin Blunt vocalist and guitarist Baz Ketley and drummer Jon Brookes regrouped and held a jam session marking the formation of The Charlatans in 1988 1 2 3 They engaged several keyboardists before finding one who fit the sound they were aiming for This new keyboardist however died after four to five rehearsals 4 Blunt then engaged Rob Collins who had played in a band with Brookes when they were teenagers 5 The band recorded two sets of demo recordings and began looking for a manager Steve Harrison owner of a record shop called Omega Music had been interested in managing bands 6 Blunt who he knew from his time in Makin Time 7 contacted Harrison to see his band perform 6 After the set Harrison was impressed and agreed to manage the band 8 The Charlatans first attention from national music publications came in August 1988 when they supported Broken English at Walsall Overstrand the Charlatans set received a lukewarm reception 9 Harrison took his friend Tim Burgess of The Electric Crayons to see the Charlatans Burgess enjoyed the performance but thought they could sound better with a different singer 10 11 The Electric Crayons supported the Charlatans for one show in September 1988 12 Collins had tried to convince Blunt to draft Burgess into the band Blunt instead invited him to do backing vocals for their set 13 The Charlatans supported various American bands and later the Stone Roses at several shows as that act were rising in popularity 14 Brookes said the band were impressed with the confidence the Stone Roses frontman Ian Brown had wishing they had a vocalist like him 15 Ketley left the Charlatans after his girlfriend left him though Harrison said the decision came from Ketley who felt the band were heading nowhere 16 17 By June 1989 the Charlatans were looking for a replacement vocalist and guitarist 18 Blunt had earlier asked guitarist John Baker of Liquid Egg Box who had booked the Charlatans at Walsall Overstrand to practice with them but Baker had declined 16 When Blunt asked Baker again in July 1989 Baker suggested another guitarist who appeared for a few rehearsals and left thereafter Baker joined The Charlatans shortly afterwards 16 19 The band auditioned a number of other people before considering Burgess whose band had now broken up 20 Blunt went to ask Harrison if he could persuade Burgess to join them Harrison plastered a vocalist required sign on the window of Omega Music that caught Burgess s attention Burgess was unaware Ketley had left the Charlatans and went to the audition in Walsall 16 Burgess s audition was initially unsuccessful because he was emulating Iggy Pop 21 After an attempt at performing naturally Burgess became the band s new vocalist by August 1989 22 Burgess and Baker did not like the material the band had accumulated up to that point Burgess found no emotional connection to the lyrics and Baker being unable to play the guitar parts 16 Writing and label signing editAll of the members of the Charlatans were tired of their jobs they practised as often as they could and wrote new songs at a prolific rate 21 The first song the new line up wrote together was Flowers they played their first show together at the end of August 1989 23 While Brookes was on holiday in Ibiza the rest of the band wrote Indian Rope The Only One I Know and Sproston Green in a single weekend 24 The Charlatans were unable to secure a recording contract so Harrison decided to form his own label which he called Dead Dead Good 21 25 Harrison signed the Charlatans to a contract for one album and three singles they made a gentlemen s agreement in which the band could join another label should they receive an adequate offer 25 They made a demo tape comprising Indian Rope You Can Talk to Me and White Shirt selling copies at gigs in October 1989 26 27 Around this time the Madchester and baggy scenes had risen to prominence with acts such as the Stone Roses and Happy Mondays after the release of Fools Gold and the Madchester Rave On EP respectively 21 28 In December 1989 the band played a show at The Boardwalk in Manchester supporting Cactus World News The majority of the audience left after the Charlatans finished their set which was attended by Chris Nagle 29 an engineer for Factory Records and assistant to Factory producer Martin Hannett 30 31 Towards the end of the month Nagle contacted Harrison who sent him a tape of a gig that included Indian Rope and Sproston Green Nagle later attended a rehearsal and another show 30 Press coverage followed soon after and the members quit their jobs to focus on the band full time 32 In January 1990 the band recorded a demo tape consisting of Polar Bear Sonic The Only One I Know and White Shirt 33 Harrison packaged copies of the tape with press kits one of which came into the possession of Manchester Evening News writer Sarah Campion 34 Campion passed the tape to Alison Martin with whom she ran the press agency Scam Martin liked the tape and had a meeting with Harrison She left the meeting as the band s radio plugger and press agent 35 Nagle produced the Charlatans debut single Indian Rope which was released in January 1990 25 It peaked at number one on the UK Independent Singles Chart the band sold all of the copies they had within a week prompting Harrison to put his house up for payment so he could press more copies 21 25 The band promoted the single with their first headlining UK tour commencing January 1990 36 During the tour the band received requests for radio interviews including one from Key 103 Manchester s biggest station While touring the band discussed what to release as their next single the band chose Polar Bear but Martin thought The Only One I Know was superior as did other people and told the band 37 A amp R staff from several labels such as Island Phonogram PolyGram and Sire Records attempted to sign the band 38 39 40 A number of their contemporaries including Intastella the Mock Turtles and Paris Angels were signed in quick succession 41 Following a performance in London the Charlatans met with representatives of Beggars Banquet Records with whom they signed a six album deal 39 42 According to Dominic Wills in The Charlatans The Authorised History 1999 the band had at least two reasons for the signing Beggars Banquet were upfront about their deals with Omega Music and they were able to promote a band into the mainstream with the Cult 43 Harrison stipulated the Dead Dead Good logo would appear on the band s next few releases 44 Recording edit nbsp Strawberry Studios in Stockport where The Only One I Know was recorded with Chris Nagle Shortly after signing their contract the Charlatans were also considering Flowers for their second single 45 When the band went to record Polar Bear a friend said they were recording the wrong song alluding to The Only One I Know In the studio the band found a fax from Beggars Banquet s A amp R man Roger Trust asking them to record The Only One I Know 46 42 The song and its later accompanying B sides were recorded in one week in March 1990 at Strawberry Studios Stockport The band chose Nagle as their producer 47 48 for his modern approach to recording which balanced the band s 1960s esque sound 31 Burgess had wanted to record his vocals as quickly as possible but Nagle encouraged him to sing more 49 The remainder of Some Friendly was recorded in three sessions in five weeks in mid 1990 between live performances 50 51 52 These sessions were held again with Nagle producing at The Windings near Wrexham 51 The studio had been a storage area for a coal mine from the early 1900s 53 For Flower and one other song Nagle recorded Burgess vocals in the studio s garden 54 55 The band s main problem was a lack of quality material to record having been together for only a short period 51 Burgess said they would previously record songs soon after writing them only allowing them to evolve through subsequent live performances 53 Burgess did not think the band left The Windings on very friendly terms after experiencing studio bust ups between the owners and the group Blunt and Collins were accused of smashing equipment of which Harrison had no recollection 51 Recording concluded with some B sides in August 1990 at Strawberry Studios where Nagle would mix the album 47 56 Growing confident as musicians the band members suggested ways that some of the songs should sound this included asking for distortion to be added to a particular instrument 54 Nagle said the band were paranoid about The Stone Roses 1989 self titled album They were trying to copy it be better than it and be completely different from it all at the same time 56 Burgess later said they were not ready to make an album at the time We had some great stuff but also some stuff that had to go on there just to make up the numbers 53 As a result You re Not Very Well and Opportunity were written late in the sessions 57 Blunt felt the process was too rushed while Burgess felt there would not have been an album at all if they had not quickly recorded it 53 Burgess later regretted the version of Polar Bear they had recorded stating it was a live favourite but we d overproduced it and destroyed it in the studio 50 The band thought the bass was under produced Wills agreed saying it moves rather than drives the material forward 53 Composition and lyrics edit nbsp The psychedelic period of the Beatles pictured in 1967 acted as an important influence on Some Friendly Themes and sound edit Some Friendly has been classified as acid pop baggy and dance pop Burgess said the Beatles psychedelic period had a major influence on the album 58 In his book Pink Floyd FAQ writer Stuart Shea said the Charlatans and Some Friendly owed a debt to Echoes 1971 by Pink Floyd these influences include the use of found sounds in the songs 109 Pt 2 and Polar Bear He also said the slow building groves of Believe You Me Flower and Sproston Green all of which overflow with creamy Hammond organ psychdelic guitar effects aggressive bass and winsome vocals owe as much to Echoes as to any other influence 59 Author Michael Heatley said the Charlatans had more of a traditional sound than their contemporaries Happy Mondays and the Stone Roses because of their Rolling Stones like swagger and Collins organ 60 Journalist John Robb in his biography The Charlatans We Are Rock 1998 refers to Some Friendly as the band s Hammond album adding the record was stamped with Collins brooding complex personality and just beyond the record s poppy vibe you can hear the great crashing keyboard played with an intense passion by a young man working out his inner turmoil through rock amp roll 61 Jon Wiederhorn of Spin said the band s music float s on gently lapping waves of sound blending light iridescent instrumentation and heavy lidded vocals with loose hypnotic dance beats 62 According to Burgess a number of Brookes drum patterns were likely influenced by club music specifically songs they would hear at Manchester club The Hacienda 63 He said the album is representative of some of the members home town Northwich because all the songs lyrically especially came from my childhood and that was based all around Northwich 64 Tracks edit Some Friendly s opening track You re Not Very Well is about leaving home and moving to a big city Burgess moved from Northwich to the Isle of Dogs in London 65 The song was originally named Some Friendly Burges said he gave their early songs mood titles to give them a sense of mystery 66 They changed the song s name because they felt it worked better as an album title Burgess described its new title of You re Not Very Well as being a love letter to city life specifically visiting Manchester where he felt like an outsider 67 White Shirt is largely inspired by the work of Felt and an attempt to shift Collins musical interests away from The Beatles and Deep Purple 31 Burgess cites Sonic Flower Groove 1987 by Primal Scream and Armstrong s Revenge amp Eleven Other Short Stories 1985 by the Claim as influences 68 and said its title refers to a dress code for one town s clubs during his youth 69 The song s bassline recalls the one in She Bangs the Drums 1989 by the Stone Roses 26 In an interview Burgess said he had taken the chord progression from Felt s Ballad of the Band 1986 70 The Only One I Know began as an instrumental Burgess said he was buying cigarettes when he thought of the melody that became the song He rushed home to get his dictaphone before he forgot it The lyrics discuss teenage emotions Burgess said the song has an abnormal structure and that he was unsure which part is the chorus section 46 The title came from You re Not the Only One I Know 1990 by the Sundays and the song s hook is found in the verse sections 46 71 Blunt said Baker recorded repetitive guitar parts that are similar to those in You Keep Me Hangin On by the Supremes to give the song a bit more urgency Following the second chorus every instrument except the bass is removed a technique the band learnt from music on Stax Records 46 The song was compared to the work of the Spencer Davis Group and Deep Purple specifically their version of the 1967 song Hush while one line of the chorus was directly taken from Everybody s Been Burned 1967 by the Byrds 72 73 The title of Opportunity which was originally Love Senses Chaos was taken from Opportunities Let s Make Lots of Money 1986 by Pet Shop Boys 74 Opportunity s first half was inspired by Burgess s experience in London following a band rehearsal 53 74 He was travelling on the London Underground and found himself walking amidst the poll tax riots He observed broken windows mounted police and looting and became overawed by the violence 53 Partway through Burgess sings of hating his own body The music was influenced by Life s What You Make It 1985 by Talk Talk 74 When talking about Then Burgess said Collins strength on an organ was equivalent to guitar solos by John Squire of the Stone Roses 63 Burgess said the song discusses his friends settling down while he wanted to find meaning in his life 75 The song s drum beat was inspired by one Brookes heard in Three Feet High and Rising 1989 by De La Soul 31 109 Pt 2 evolved from Imperial 109 a song with which the Charlatans used to open their earlier Ketley led era live shows 76 77 The title is taken from a book about flying boats 77 This newer version was inspired by the work of Throbbing Gristle 78 and includes a sample of Robert De Niro from Angel Heart 1987 79 Polar Bear was initially titled Looking for the Orange One a line from the song 80 Burgess realised that oblique lyrics which might seem incongruous can end up being quite memorable 81 The song s intro has woodwind played by Pete Peewee Coleman and the outro alludes to Hey Bulldog 1969 by The Beatles 82 83 Burgess said Believe You Me which was originally called Who Killed Your Lover is about being a Gemini 84 85 In Flower which has a Pixies esque bass part Burgess wishes death upon a person from his youth 86 87 Its lyrics evolved from a note Blunt had passed to Burgess that read Don t bring me flowers I am not dead and is anchored around the phrase Time to say goodbye bye to the bad bad girl 88 Burgess wrote the lyrics for Sonic while working in an office at the Runcorn branch of Imperial Chemical Industries ICI 89 Part of the lyrics discuss Burgess wanting to live in a painting while another part talks about a girl who disappears after consuming drugs Its title is a reference to Sonic Boom of Spacemen 3 and the Sonics 55 The closing song Sproston Green is a jam centred around Collins keyboard work 90 The name is borrowed from a lane in Sproston Cheshire 86 The song s intro was altered to the point it evoked Won t Get Fooled Again 1971 by the Who rather than its drawn out live performances 53 Blunt borrowed the bassline from a Midlands hard rock band he had seen in a pub 91 Burgess said it follows a repetitive three chord build up in the style of Spacemen 3 The lyrics are about a liaison in a local park 92 Release edit The Only One I Know and Then singles and initial promotion edit In April and May 1990 the Charlatans toured the UK performing at 1 000 capacity venues 44 93 The Beggars Banquet s imprint Situation Two released The Only One I Know as Some Friendly s lead single on 14 May that year 47 94 The single includes Everything Changed You Can Talk to Me and an edit of Imperial 109 as its B sides 95 Harrison s friend Kim Peters who was a graphic designer with no prior experience of filming videos directed the music video for The Only One I Know 96 The video depicts the band replicating a live show and was recorded in Sandbach at a warehouse owned by a friend of Harrison It was recorded in the evening with an audience comprising friends and fans Police officers having been informed that an illegal rave was happening at the venue arrived 44 but recording continued after brief negotiations Some of the police officers appear in the completed video 97 The band played a session for BBC Radio 1 presenter Mark Goodier to promote the single performing You re Not Very Well White Shirt and The Only One I Know as well as making their debut appearance on the BBC Television music programme Top of the Pops 47 98 The Charlatans continued touring through to June 1990 99 Madchester s popularity continued to rise as the Stone Roses reached their zenith with a performance at Spike Island and Happy Mondays performance at Glastonbury Festival 100 In August 1990 the Charlatans played at Hultsfred Festival in Sweden marking their first show abroad 101 Then was released as the album s second single on 10 September 1990 with Taurus Moaner an instrumental version of Taurus Moaner and an alternative take of Then making up the release 50 102 103 The choice of song for the single caused tension within the band some of whom wanted to release Polar Bear Blunt however did not citing overproduction on the song and threatening to quit if it was chosen The band felt uncomfortable releasing a second single from the album according to Wills Assuming that The Only One I Know was to be on the album this would make two singles from the same record which they still regarded as ripping off the fans As a compromise The Only One I Know was later removed from the vinyl edition of the album which they saw as the real iteration of Some Friendly 50 It was included on the CD versions at the label s request because CDs had become the dominant medium for consuming music 71 A music video for Then was filmed partially in a cave with Peters directing Collins became ill on the day of filming so a friend mimed in his place 50 104 Other parts of the video show the band performing on a hillside in Shropshire that is partly obscured by smoke 105 The band promoted Then with a gig at Legends a venue in Warrington 50 During this time the UK press noted a decline in the popularity of the Madchester scene Burgess and Brookes went on a promotional press trip in the United States the band then played several shows there in October 1990 50 The Charlatans were forced to append UK to their name for this tour because the name was already being used by an American band 106 The US tour included a performance at the Gathering of the Tribes 107 where the band played a 40 minute set despite only being scheduled to play for 20 minutes 51 On one occasion during the tour the band members failed to leave their beds for a cover story with Rolling Stone upsetting the band s US label RCA Records 108 Album release Sproston Green single and further touring edit Some Friendly was released in the UK on 8 October 1990 through Situation Two the vinyl version was packaged in a white plastic sleeve 109 It was issued in the US through RCA on 23 October 1990 110 The cover artwork includes an out of focus photograph of the band chosen over a photograph of wax models of the members 53 The Charlatans ended 1990 with a tour of the UK and mainland Europe with support from Intastella who were offered the tour when their manager played Burgess a tape of their music 109 111 In February and March 1991 the Charlatans embarked on their first full tour of the US because the Stone Roses were unwilling to tour North America the Charlatans became the most popular baggy band there 112 113 A side effect of this was the Stone Roses being compared to the Charlatans rather than vice versa 113 Sproston Green was issued as a single in that market on 4 February 1991 the release featuring the album version and a remix version as well as an extended remix of Opportunity 112 113 114 A French release includes 7 and 12 edits of Sproston Green and You re Not Very Well and a remix of Opportunity by Flood titled Opportunity Three 115 Peters filmed a music video for Sproston Green consisting of live footage from the Apollo in Manchester 116 Plans to record a video for White Shirt with director Julien Temple were ultimately scrapped 116 Beggars Banquet was still interested in releasing another UK single from the album The band gave the label three new songs and a previously released remix 117 The Over Rising EP was released on 25 February 1991 It includes Over Rising Happen to Die Way Up There and the Opportunity Three remix 118 119 120 The remix had been available as a promotional club only release but when it started gaining national airplay people mistook it for a single Because there was demand for the remix it was included on the EP 121 To the surprise of the band Sproston Green started gaining traction in the US which made them worry that the tour would be extended and thus delay future recording sessions 122 They asked RCA to withdraw the single which again angered the label Harrison said this request compromised us in just about every territory on the planet Alongside this Burgess had insulted American culture The band returned to the UK to recover from the tour This retreat marked the end of both the band and the Madchester scene attempting to gain market share in the US leaving an opportunity for grebo acts such as EMF and Jesus Jones to do so later that year 108 Reissues related releases and events edit In June 2009 Burgess said he wanted to play a one off gig to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Some Friendly though mentioned that not all of the members of the Charlatans were interested in the idea 123 In May 2010 Beggars Banquet Records reissued Some Friendly to mark the anniversary The reissue includes a bonus disc of B sides and BBC sessions 124 This version surfaced after a failed attempt by Beggars Banquet to compile a more expansive box stalled with the band s management two years earlier 125 Coinciding with this the band performed the album in its entirety in London Glasgow Blackpool and at Primavera Sound in Barcelona Spain 124 126 The three UK performances were recorded and released as live albums through the service Concert Live immediately after the end of the shows 127 128 129 In 2019 Some Friendly was re pressed on vinyl with the addition of The Only One I Know in the US market for that year s Record Store Day 130 The January 1990 demo of The Only One I Know was re released in 2020 coinciding with its 30th anniversary 73 The Only One I Know Then the US remix of Sproston Green and Opportunity Three were included on the band s first compilation album Melting Pot 1998 131 The Only One I Know was also included on the band s third and fifth compilation albums Forever The Singles 2006 and A Head Full of Ideas 2021 132 133 The deluxe vinyl box set version of A Head Full of Ideas also includes demos of White Shirt and The Only One I Know 134 As part of the 2019 Record Store Day event The Only One I Know and Then were released as part of the seven inch vinyl box set Everything Changed 2019 135 Critical reception editOriginal releaseReview scoresSourceRatingEntertainment WeeklyB 136 New Straits Times nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 137 NME8 10 138 Select2 5 139 Sounds nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 138 The Village VoiceC 140 Contemporary reviews edit Upon its release Some Friendly was met with mixed reviews from music critics a number of whom highlighted the band s influences rather than the contemporary nature of their sound Collins keyboard parts were lauded but Burgess vocals received negative comments 109 Wiederhorn said that unlike the Stone Roses the Charlatans have their feet firmly planet on the ground He called the album lush and warm teeming with spinning rhythms and soothing melodies 62 R S Murthi of New Straits Times said the songs are palatable but scarcely poignant while the lyrics border on the bathetic 137 Entertainment Weekly writer Elysa Gardner said the band successfully capture the moodiness of a lot of late 60s rock and on their better cuts the shimmering buoyancy of that era s pop 136 In his review for Select journalist Andrew Harrison called the album doggedly authentic if inconsistent He highlighted 109 Pt 2 as an example of the band s infatuation with a shagged out rock past that s been done over several times too many already 139 Elizabeth Wurtzel of New York said the album is like falling into a time warp singling out the use of the organ and wah wah guitar effects as so quintessentially sixties that it resembles music from the soundtrack of a very dated movie Despite this she found it added to the band s charm because they appeared so unpretentious 141 The staff at Q said that the band were being weighed down by allusions to the work of the Stone Roses but chose Polar Bear and Sproston Green as the album s twin peaks that showed that the band posses enough wit style and personality to transcend mere nostalgia and produce something vigorous and exciting 142 Terry Staunton of NME countered saying that any influence that the Stone Roses had is non existent on Some Friendly 138 The Sounds staff agreed adding it buried any preconceptions about the band being also rans on the Manchester playing field They praised every song for being a positive gem concluding by calling the album one of the finest and most challenging records of the past two years 138 Retrospective reviewsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 90 Alternative Rock8 10 143 The Encyclopedia of Popular Music nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 144 MusicHound Rock4 5 145 The New Rolling Stone Album Guide nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 146 Record Collector nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 147 Retrospective reviews edit Reviewing the 2010 reissue Iain Moffat said that Some Friendly provides the best evidence that whether anyone realised it at the time or not the Charlatans were thoroughly versed in being enduring and endearing from the off He added that few of the bonus tracks are wholly essential from anything other than a historical viewpoint 148 According to Record Collector s Ian Shirley the debut is an awesome first album establishing the band as their own men 147 Robb wrote that despite the album being a great attempt to capture the flavour of the times it is not quite the classic that say the Roses had dealt the year before 149 Author Dave Thompson in his book Alternative Rock 2000 wrote that what makes the band stand apart from their contemporaries is their occasional nod to Mod especially the Who that and Tim Burgess wistful delicate vocals 143 AllMusic reviewer Ned Raggett said that Some Friendly offers everything from 60s beat groove to Madchester bagginess with verve 90 Wills said that its production history lends the album a sense of charm its evident desire to make something of itself the way it loses momentum then claws its way back into the groove Though some of it in retrospect is a little thin sounding and overly twee adding that Burgess s interest in 1960s psychedelia got the better of him 53 Ian Gittins of The Guardian said that upon revisiting Some Friendly you realise how much of the album was unadventurous filler 150 The staff of The New Rolling Stone Album Guide said that the album s derivative ode to dippy Hammond happy psych pop didn t help to stop comparisons between the Charlatans Happy Mondays and the Stone Roses 146 Commercial performance and legacy editSome Friendly entered the UK Albums Chart at number one marking the first time in a few years a new act had debuted at that position 109 It was certified silver and gold in the UK by the British Phonographic Industry BPI on the same day three days after the album s release 151 It reached number 27 in Sweden 152 number 48 in New Zealand 153 number 73 in the US and number 79 in Australia 154 155 By the release of the band s second studio album Between 10th and 11th in early 1992 Some Friendly had sold 350 000 copies in the US 156 The Only One I Know topped the UK Independent Singles Chart and reached number nine on the main UK Singles Chart 38 157 It also charted at number 11 in Ireland and number 56 in the Netherlands 158 159 In the US it reached number five on the Mainstream Rock Songs chart 160 The song was certified silver in the UK by the BPI in 2019 161 Then charted at number at number 11 in Ireland and number 12 in the UK 157 158 Melody Maker ranked Some Friendly sixth on their list of the best releases from 1990 while Sounds included it on their list at number 25 162 James Forryan for HMV and Richard Luck in his book The Madchester Scene 2002 regarded The Only One I Know as one of the defining songs from the Madchester scene which Heatley also selected for his list of key songs from the period 163 164 165 Lois Wilson of Record Collector noted both it and the album as key baggy releases 13 Andy Bell of Ride had learnt the Charlatans had a song called Polar Bear he liked the name and used it for a song of Ride s own on their debut album Nowhere 1990 80 Sproston Green has been used as a closing number for the majority of the Charlatans live shows through to 2022 166 Accolades for Some Friendly Publication List Rank Ref Melody Maker Albums of the Year 6 162 Sounds Albums of the Year 25 162 Track listing editWriting credits per booklet 47 1990 CD editionNo TitleWriter s Length1 You re Not Very Well John BakerMartin BluntJon BrookesTim BurgessRob Collins3 312 White Shirt BluntBurgessCollins3 253 The Only One I Know not on all vinyl versions BakerBluntBrookesBurgessCollins3 584 Opportunity BluntBrookesBurgess6 415 Then BluntBrookesBurgessCollins4 116 109 Pt 2 BluntBrookesBurgessCollins3 187 Polar Bear BakerBluntBrookesBurgessCollins4 568 Believe You Me BluntBrookesBurgessCollins3 419 Flower BakerBluntBurgessCollins5 2710 Sonic BrookesBurgessCollins3 3211 Sproston Green BakerBluntBurgessCollins5 08Personnel editPersonnel per deluxe booklet except where noted 47 The Charlatans John Baker guitar Martin Blunt bass Jon Brookes drums Tim Burgess vocals Rob Collins keyboardsAdditional musicians Pete Coleman woodwind Polar Bear 82 Production and design Chris Nagle producer mixing 56 Pete Coleman engineer K10 AD concept Derek Philip cover photography Steve Double additional photography Ian Lawton additional photography Derek Ridgers additional photography Peter Wals additional photography Nick Provan additional photographyCharts and certifications editWeekly charts edit Chart performance for Some Friendly Chart 1990 1991 PeakpositionAustralian Albums Chart ARIA 154 79New Zealand Albums Chart RMNZ 153 48Swedish Albums Chart Sverigetopplistan 152 27UK Albums OCC 167 1US Billboard 200 155 73 Certifications edit Certifications for Some Friendly Region Certification Certified units salesUnited Kingdom BPI 151 Gold 100 000 Shipments figures based on certification alone See also editPills n Thrills and Bellyaches the 1990 album by Happy Mondays released a month after Some Friendly Spartacus the 1991 album by contemporaries the Farm who similarly founded their own label to release their debutReferences edit Wills Sheehan 1999 pp 21 22 Robb 1998 pp 17 23 Erlewine Stephen Thomas The Charlatans Biography Songs amp Albums AllMusic Archived from the original on 21 October 2020 Retrieved 29 June 2022 Robb 1998 p 23 Robb 1998 pp 23 24 a b Wills Sheehan 1999 p 22 Mead Matt 10 October 2018 Steve Harrison Here Are The Young Men Louder Than War Interview Louder Than War Archived from the original on 18 September 2021 Retrieved 3 April 2023 Wills Sheehan 1999 pp 22 3 Wills Sheehan 1999 p 24 Wills Sheehan 1999 p 17 Robb 1998 p 59 Wills Sheehan 1999 p 18 a b Wilson Lois 12 June 2010 Tim Burgess Record Collector Archived from the original on 16 May 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Robb 1998 pp 42 43 Robb 1998 p 44 a b c d e Wills Sheehan 1999 p 25 Robb 1998 p 45 Robb 1998 p 46 Robb 1998 pp 59 67 Robb 1998 p 68 a b c d e Wilson 1997 p 11 Robb 1998 p 69 Robb 1998 pp 70 71 Wills Sheehan 1999 p 27 a b c d Wills Sheehan 1999 p 31 a b Wills Sheehan 1999 pp 28 9 The Charlatans 1989 October 89 The Charlatans Demo inlay Dead Dead Good Robb 1998 p 75 Robb 1998 p 76 a b Robb 1998 p 77 a b c d Ritchie Gayle 14 May 2022 The Charlatans Scottish gigs to celebrate delayed 30th anniversary The Courier Archived from the original on 15 May 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Wilson 1997 p 12 The Charlatans 1990 Jan 1990 inlay Self released Robb 1998 pp 78 79 Robb 1998 p 79 Robb 1998 p 86 Robb 1998 p 100 a b Wilson 1997 p 14 a b Wills Sheehan 1999 p 33 Burgess 2013 p 46 Robb 1998 p 101 a b Burgess 2013 p 47 Wills Sheehan 1999 p 36 a b c Wills Sheehan 1999 p 39 Robb 1998 p 105 107 a b c d Simpson Dave 15 November 2021 The Charlatans how we made The Only One I Know I m still not sure which bit s the chorus The Guardian Archived from the original on 15 April 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 a b c d e f The Charlatans 2010 Some Friendly booklet Beggars Banquet BBQCD 2068 Robb 1998 p 108 Robb 1998 pp 108 109 a b c d e f g Wills Sheehan 1999 p 51 a b c d e Wills Sheehan 1999 p 52 Robb 1998 p 115 a b c d e f g h i j Wills Sheehan 1999 p 54 a b Robb 1998 p 122 a b Burgess 2013 p 79 a b c Robb 1998 p 121 Tim Burgess looks to celebrate anniversary with Scotland gig Daily Record 14 March 2010 Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Citations for musical style Acid pop Robb 1998 p 121 Baggy Browne Chris Nye 2 June 2004 The Charlatans Up At The Lake Yahoo Launch Archived from the original on 3 June 2004 Retrieved 5 February 2023 Buscovic Alix 12 September 2001 The Charlatans Wonderland Universal Playlouder Archived from the original on 19 November 2006 Retrieved 14 September 2022 Wilson Lois 12 June 2010 Tim Burgess Record Collector Archived from the original on 16 May 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 The Beatles Wolfe Danielle de 1 December 2010 Lennon s legacy ShortList Archived from the original on 27 June 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Dance pop Bergstrom John 12 March 2012 Can t Even Be Bothered Two Great British Indie Rock Albums Turn 20 PopMatters Archived from the original on 27 June 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Shea 2009 p 192 Heatley 2007 p 466 Robb 1998 pp 120 1 a b Wiederhorn 1991 p 74 a b Nissim Mayer 20 January 2015 A Beginner s Guide to The Charlatans with Tim Burgess Digital Spy Archived from the original on 28 June 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Pennington Josh 23 February 2018 The Charlatans album The Melting Pot turns 20 today but Tim Burgess says it s Some Friendly that sums up Northwich Northwich Guardian Archived from the original on 27 June 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Burgess Tim Tim Burgess 23 March 2020 1 You re not very well About leaving home I moved away from Northwich to the Isle of Dogs this song is about the fear and wonder of the big city London was like a real life Monopoly board Tweet Archived from the original on 24 March 2020 Retrieved 29 June 2022 via Twitter Burgess 2013 p 36 Burgess 2013 p 74 Burgess 2013 p 74 5 Burgess 2019 p 35 Wallace Wyndham 18 July 2011 Tim Burgess On Loving Lawrence amp Felt Birmingham s Best Band The Quietus Archived from the original on 2 August 2013 Retrieved 1 February 2023 a b Burgess 2013 p 75 Wills Sheehan 1999 p 45 a b Marotta Michael O Connor 14 May 2020 The Charlatans post The Only One I Know demo on its 30th anniversary Vanyaland Archived from the original on 15 August 2020 Retrieved 28 June 2022 a b c Burgess 2013 p 76 Burgess Tim Tim Burgess 23 March 2020 4 Then I still love that opening line It s about searching I could see my friends settling down but I felt I had to get out there and find something that would give my life some meaning Tweet Archived from the original on 23 March 2020 Retrieved 29 June 2022 via Twitter Robb 1998 p 70 a b Burgess 2013 p 77 Petridis Alexis 4 December 2014 The Charlatans revitalised by Twitter Transcendental Meditation and coffee Music The Guardian Archived from the original on 22 October 2020 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Burgess 2013 p 160 a b Burgess 2013 p 78 Burgess 2019 p 29 a b Burgess Tim Tim Burgess 23 March 2020 6 Polar Bear A live favourite A clarinet played by our engineer at The Windings Pee Wee C Walking home after a club a change of scene is all I need to breathe again the world was changing it felt like opportunities in life were coming my way Tweet Archived from the original on 24 March 2020 Retrieved 29 June 2022 via Twitter Wolfe Danielle de 1 December 2010 Lennon s legacy part two ShortList Archived from the original on 22 October 2011 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Burgess Tim Tim Burgess 23 March 2020 7 Believe You Me It s about being a Gemini I There s someone else inside of me II Open it up and take it out removing the other part of me Rob Collins incredibly double tracked all the Hammond on this track he was beyond brilliant There was nobody like him A genius Tweet Archived from the original on 24 March 2020 Retrieved 29 June 2022 via Twitter Burgess Tim Tim Burgess 23 March 2020 Setlist from Stoke Wheatsheaf on January 10th 1990 New song was Opportunity and Who Killed Your Lover was an early version of Believe You Me Some Friendly AKA You re Not Very Well Tweet Archived from the original on 24 March 2020 Retrieved 29 June 2022 via Twitter a b Robb 1998 p 123 Burgess Tim Tim Burgess 23 March 2020 8 Flower Pixies inspired bass line One of the first songs we wrote when the five of us came to be The Charlatans Tweet Archived from the original on 23 March 2020 Retrieved 29 June 2022 via Twitter Burgess 2019 p 9 Burgess Tim Tim Burgess 23 March 2020 9 Sonic I wrote the lyrics while I worked in an office in Runcorn ICI I wanted the band to be the answer to our dreams I never imagined it would last so long or that we would go through so much Tweet Archived from the original on 24 March 2020 Retrieved 29 June 2022 via Twitter a b c Raggett Ned Some Friendly The Charlatans AllMusic Archived from the original on 30 March 2016 Retrieved 28 March 2016 Burgess 2019 p 31 Burgess 2013 p 37 Robb 1998 p 116 Wills Sheehan 1999 p 41 The Charlatans 1990 The Only One I Know sleeve Situation Two SIT 70 CD Burgess 2013 p 49 Wills Sheehan 1999 pp 39 40 Robb 1998 p 110 Mann ed 1990 p 37 Robb 1998 pp 115 116 Robb 1998 p 118 The Charlatans 1990 Then sleeve Situation Two SIT 74 CD Singles The Charlatans Archived from the original on 1 May 2006 Retrieved 19 July 2022 The Charlatans 1991 Some Friendly sleeve BMG Video RCA Records 3050 3 H Robb 1998 p 119 Sutherland 2003 p 184 Thompson 2000 p 251 a b Wills Sheehan 1999 p 60 a b c d Wills Sheehan 1999 p 55 Some friendly performed by the Charlatans UK Library of Congress Archived from the original on 29 June 2022 Retrieved 27 June 2022 In theSearch forbox enterSome Friendly selectTitlethen clickBegin Searchthen click on the 12th result Robb 1998 pp 120 126 a b Wills Sheehan 1999 p 56 a b c Robb 1998 p 139 The Charlatans 1991 Sproston Green sleeve Beggars Banquet RCA Records 2777 2 HDJ The Charlatans 1991 Sproston Green sleeve Virgin Situation Two 35 013 a b Burgess 2013 p 80 Burgess 2013 p 81 Burgess 2013 pp 81 82 Wills Sheehan 1999 p 61 Robb 1998 p 137 Robb 1998 p 138 Wills Sheehan 1999 pp 56 60 Charlatans ponder special debut album gig NME 16 June 2009 Archived from the original on 3 July 2021 Retrieved 13 February 2023 a b Colothan Scott 3 March 2010 The Charlatans Debut Album Some Friendly Gets 20th Anniversary Re Release Gigwise Archived from the original on 22 September 2010 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Young Alex 26 February 2010 The Charlatans reissue Some Friendly celebrate in style Consequence Archived from the original on 28 June 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Murray Robin 12 March 2010 The Charlatans Add Some Friendly Dates Clash Archived from the original on 4 July 2022 Retrieved 4 July 2022 The Charlatans 2010 Some Friendly and Greatest Hits Live Recorded Live at Glasgow Barrowlands 14 05 2010 sleeve Concert Live CLCD433 The Charlatans 2010 Some Friendly and Greatest Hits Live Recorded at the Roundhouse London 31 05 2010 sleeve Concert Live CLCD278 The Charlatans 2010 20th Anniversary Some Friendly Concerts 15 5 2010 Blackpool Empress Ballroom sleeve Concert Live The Charlatans UK 2019 Some Friendly sleeve Beggars Banquet Records BBL30LPE The Charlatans 1998 Melting Pot booklet Beggars Banquet Records BBQCD 198 The Charlatans 1998 Forever The Singles booklet Island Records 1712411 The Charlatans 2021 A Head Full of Ideas booklet Then Records thenCD1 then1CD 1 The Charlatans 2021 A Head Full of Ideas booklet Then Records then1LP XX The Charlatans 2019 Everything Changed sleeve Beggars Banquet Records BBQ2155SXE a b Gardner Elysa 26 October 1990 Some Friendly Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on 21 September 2016 Retrieved 28 March 2016 a b Murthi 1991 p 17 a b c d Robb 1998 p 126 a b Harrison 1990 p 90 Christgau Robert 3 December 1991 Turkey Shoot The Village Voice Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 28 March 2016 Wurtzel 1990 p 90 Robb 1998 p 125 a b Thompson 2000 p 252 Larkin 2007 p 70 Graff Durchholz eds 1999 p 222 a b Stewart 2004 p 153 a b Shirley Ian 30 May 2010 Some Friendly The Charlatans Record Collector Archived from the original on 29 June 2022 Retrieved 6 March 2017 Moffat Iain 9 June 2010 The Charlatans The Quietus Archived from the original on 29 June 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Robb 1998 p 120 Gittins Ian 2 June 2010 The Charlatans The Guardian Archived from the original on 27 June 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 a b British album certifications Charlatans Some Friendly British Phonographic Industry Retrieved 27 June 2022 a b The Charlatans Some Friendly Swedishcharts com Archived from the original on 23 May 2021 Retrieved 30 June 2022 a b Search for the charlatans Charts nz Archived from the original on 30 June 2022 Retrieved 30 June 2022 a b Ryan Gavin 2011 Australia s Music Charts 1988 2010 Mt Martha VIC Australia Moonlight Publishing a b The Charlatans UK Billboard Archived from the original on 27 March 2018 Retrieved 30 June 2022 Wills Sheehan 1999 p 84 a b Charlatans full Official Chart History Official Charts Company Archived from the original on 21 April 2022 Retrieved 30 June 2022 a b Irish Singles Irishcharts ie Archived from the original on 3 June 2009 Retrieved 30 June 2022 In theSearch by Artist box enterCharlatansthen clicksearch Dutch Singles Dutchcharts nl Archived from the original on 30 June 2022 Retrieved 30 June 2022 The Charlatans UK Chart history Mainstream Rock Songs Billboard Archived from the original on 23 September 2016 Retrieved 30 June 2022 British certifications Charlatans The Only One I Know British Phonographic Industry Retrieved 30 June 2022 a b c Robb 1998 p 132 Forryan James 25 May 2017 Where to Start With The Charlatans HMV Archived from the original on 29 September 2020 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Heatley 2007 p 468 Luck 2002 p 63 Davies Richard 19 May 2022 Gig Review The Charlatans at Rock City LeftLion Archived from the original on 27 June 2022 Retrieved 28 June 2022 Charlatans Artist Official Charts UK Albums Chart Retrieved 30 June 2022 Bibliography editBooks edit Burgess Tim 2013 Telling Stories London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 241 97196 3 Burgess Tim 2019 One Two Another Line by Line Lyrics from the Charlatans Solo and Beyond London Constable ISBN 978 1 4721 3031 0 Graff Gary Durchholz Daniel eds 1999 MusicHound Rock The Essential Album Guide Farmington Hills Michigan Visible Ink Press ISBN 1 57859 061 2 Heatley Michael 2007 Rock and Pop La historia Completa in Spanish Ediciones Robinbook ISBN 978 8496222854 Archived from the original on 29 June 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2022 Larkin Colin 2007 The Encyclopedia of Popular Music 5th concise ed Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 85712 595 8 Archived from the original on 29 June 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2022 Luck Richard 2002 The Madchester Scene Harpenden Hertfordshire The Pocket Essentials ISBN 1 903047 80 3 Robb John 1998 The Charlatans We Are Rock London Ebury Press ISBN 0 0918 6568 9 Shea Stuart 2009 Pink Floyd FAQ Milwaukee Wisconsin Backbeat Books ISBN 978 0 87930 950 3 Stewart Allison 2004 Charlatans U K In Brackett Nathan Hoard Christian eds The New Rolling Stone Album Guide 4th ed Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 7432 0169 8 Sutherland James 2003 The Charlatans In Buckley Peter ed The Rough Guide to Rock London Rough Guides ISBN 978 1 84353 105 0 Archived from the original on 29 June 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2022 Thompson Dave 2000 Alternative Rock Third Ear The Essential Listening Companion San Francisco California Miller Freeman Books ISBN 0 87930 607 6 Wills Dominic Sheehan Tom 1999 The Charlatans The Authorised History London Virgin Books ISBN 0 7535 0194 5 Wilson Susan 1997 The Charlatans Northwich Country Boys London UFO Music ISBN 0 7535 0494 4 Journals and magazines edit Harrison Andrew November 1990 The Only One They Know Select 5 ISSN 0959 8367 Mann Bill ed 12 May 1990 Advertisement PDF Sounds ISSN 0144 5774 Murthi R S 3 March 1991 Pleasant blend of folk and pop New Straits Times Archived from the original on 27 June 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2022 Wiederhorn Jon January 1991 Platter du Jour Spin 6 10 ISSN 0886 3032 Archived from the original on 29 June 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2022 Wurtzel Elizabeth 12 November 1990 The Garden of Edie New York 23 44 ISSN 0028 7369 Archived from the original on 28 June 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2022 External links editSome Friendly at YouTube streamed copy where licensed Some Friendly at Discogs list of releases Interview with Shiiine On Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Some Friendly amp oldid 1180245800, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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