Among the few recordings that haven't been reissued and repackaged nearly constantly since
Soft Cell's original breakup are the duo's two sessions for BBC Radio -- not for
John Peel, as almost seemed to be required for just about any other British group of the time, but for
Richard Skinner in 1981 and
David "Kid" Jensen in 1983.
At the BBC fills this gap along with including two CD-ROM video tracks as a bonus, taken from their appearance on a 1982 edition of The Old Grey Whistle Test, along with appreciative, context-placing liner notes from critic David Stubbs. The
Skinner session, at five songs, captures the band right when "Tainted Love" was a few weeks away from going number one -- but perhaps already weary and wary of the song that essentially grew to overshadow the band,
Marc Almond and
David Ball concentrate on originals from
Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret instead. Though the more straightforward one-take production often lacks the sense of space and careful arrangements from
Mike Thorne, on the flip side these takes probably capture what a live set would have sounded like,
Almond's voice rushed but clear,
Ball throwing in unexpected touches and different sounds as the mood seizes him. "Chips on My Shoulder" is a frenetic standout, while the version of "Youth," though far less murky than the album take, is still entrancingly unsettling,
Ball's keyboards sounding downright creepy. The three-song
Jensen session, in contrast, covers
This Last Night in Sodom material, a snapshot of a band soon to call it quits for reasons of mutual sanity. "Soul Inside" is strong but not quite as harrowing as the 12" mix, but "Where Was Your Heart When You Needed It Most?" is excellent. As for the TV performances, featuring
Almond in (apparently) full leather and playing up the drama, "Youth" is a strong slow burn while "Sex Dwarf," hyperactive TV lighting aside, is hysterical, evil genius, vocal samples and drop-ins adding even more crazed atmosphere.
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Ned Raggett, Rovi