In the late 80s, a lot of musical snobbery was directed at Stock Aitken & Waterman. They were derided for their phenomenal success in producing hits for the likes of Rick Astley, Kylie Minogue and Jason Donovan. Real soul fans loathed what they regarded as this plastic, manufactured pop. But they adored “obscure” old American funk tracks like this one – extremely rare with only a few white-label promos in circulation. Once demand for it was off the scale, Stock, Aitken & Waterman revealed the truth: it was them all along. This “authentic” rare groove track was a fake. They knocked it up one afternoon, and the vocalists were just girls from the office. Their critics looked very foolish. They could hardly now claim that they didn’t like it. And why would they? “Rare groove” or not, it’s still a great track. So whatever you think of Pete Waterman, the one thing he’s not is a fool.
The perfect parable for April Fool’s Day

- The man who m...19th May 2014
- The reason I'...18th May 2014
- Highbury and ...17th May 2014
- Cruising.16th May 2014
- It's not that...15th May 2014
- Beautiful day...14th May 2014
- The Radio Aca...13th May 2014
- I watched Son...12th May 2014
- A song about ...11th May 2014
- If Nigel Fara...10th May 2014
- To Soho House...9th May 2014
- Ever wondered...8th May 2014
- The session s...7th May 2014
- From Chav Gra...6th May 2014
- It's sunny.5th May 2014 prev next