Jim Rafferty – I See Red

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Attention, aficionados of sublime pop music! Jim is, in fact, the older brother of pop singer Gerry Rafferty. Following two albums of sophisticated, melodic material with strong emphasis on vocal harmonies (not dissimilar to his brothers work), Jim entered


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Attention, aficionados of sublime pop music! Jim is, in fact, the older brother of pop singer Gerry Rafferty. Following two albums of sophisticated, melodic material with strong emphasis on vocal harmonies (not dissimilar to his brothers work), Jim entered the 80s with no record deal, but good new tunes to shop. His original demos provided chart fodder for Frida (late of Abba), Clannad and Ian Matthews, but Jims versions outshine them all!

Should the name Jim Rafferty sound a tad familiar, he is in fact the older brother of Gerry Rafferty, of Baker Street and Stuck In The Middle with You fame. As a songwriter, Jim had signed a solo deal with Decca in the late 70s. With Gerry in the producers chair, and a crack team of the several of the same musicians whom Gerry later recruited for his hit album City To City, Jim produced the album Dont Talk Back, comprising the kind of sophisticated, melodic material typified, like his brothers work, by strong emphasis on vocal harmonies the popular style at end of the 1970s.

Decca went out of business concurrent with their release of Jims arguably superior second album, Solid Logic, produced by Martin Levan. Times were changing across the music business, and Jim, always seeking new challenges, continued to write interesting, idiosyncratic material. He signed a self-penned, nervy and minimalist new work I See Red, to Hit & Run publishing, which was picked up by Phil Collins for Abba star Fridas solo album. The songs outsider narrative and implied reggae rhythm, made somewhat cartoonishly explicit in Fridas version, also found favor with a number of other artists, notably Clannad, whose album Magical Ring included their near identical version of I See Red, and gained chart placing in the UK. The same song was subsequently covered by brother Gerry on his Wing and A Prayer album.

The flip-side of Jims I See Red has its own cover history Fear Strikes Out first appeared on Ian Matthews 1984 LP, Shook. Matthews, a journeyman whod once sung in Fairport Convention alongside Judy Dyble and Sandy Denny and later hit the charts several times as a solo act, roots his version firmly in Jims ineffable arrangement, which makes sense but Jims version notches up the excitement brightly, showcasing sharp guitar and keyboard textures in the mix. And sounding more like a hit.

Shortly after this, Jim teamed up with producer Hugh Murphy and his then-wife, American born singer songwriter Betsy Cook, to form The Urbane Planners, working out of Hughs Buckinghamshire studio on smart pop singles, such as Spirit of the Thing, for release on Mays Records. These gained radio exposure in the UK, but failed to get the kind of promotion they deserved. . . possibly a little too smart for the charts at that point.

Jim continued to write, and returned to his earlier career as a graphic designer, then moved to Canterbury, where he found to his surprise that multi instrumentalist Geoffrey Richardson of Prog-Rock outfit Caravan lived right across the street. The two struck up an immediate musical friendship and began working on material together at Geoffreys studio nearby.

And to the present, where Jims relatively unheard 1982 recordings finally make their splendidly remastered debut on Drag City. Its a surprise and delight, not just for Jim, but for collectors of sublime pop songs all around the world.

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