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‘It was an I Will Survive for the 1990s’: how McAlmont & Butler made Yes

4 days ago
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‘David only had words for one verse,“Just sing it twice,” I said,“We can worry about that later,” But we never got around to it – and people don’t seem to notice’I’d just left Suede and was living in a basement flat in Highgate, London, making music in my tiny box room,It was a lonely time, but a lovely summer and I decided to do something uplifting and joyous.

There were a bunch of records I loved listening to on a sunny day – Dusty Springfield’s I Only Want to Be With You, The First Picture of You by the Lotus Eaters, You on My Mind by Swing Out Sister, which has Bacharach key changes and strings,I wanted to make a piece of music that gave me the buzz those songs did,I didn’t want to worry about an album or sleeve artwork or how the video was going to go,I just wanted people to hear the song and feel like the sun had come out,I needed strings for the demo and found a fellow who was advertising samples in Loot magazine – this was 1994, before you could get anything you needed on your laptop.

I remember going round to his flat and waiting for hours while he copied them on to a floppy disc.There was never a plan to sing the song myself.I’d been writing with Julianne Regan, who was in All About Eve, so she was the first person to have a crack at writing a melody and lyrics.After she went her own way, Geoff Travis at Rough Trade played the demo to Morrissey, who asked for a meeting – we ended up playing pinball.A week later, I got a letter from him that just said: “Dear Bernard, I’m sorry, I can’t.

” Then I spent an afternoon with Kirsty MacColl, who really loved what I’d done but still wanted to change everything.Someone suggested I go and see David McAlmont playing at the Jazz Cafe.During his first song, the drummer Makoto Sakamoto came on and started smashing the shit out of his drums – it was the greatest sound I’d ever heard.Then David started singing and I was like, “Well, there it is.” I knew I needed both of them.

I gave David a tape of the instrumental and two days later he came round to my flat with what he’d written.He only had words for one verse.I said: “Just sing it twice.We’ll worry about that later.” But we never got around to it and people don’t seem to notice.

I love the message of the lyric: it’s a big “fuck you”, but delivered in the most positive way.We recorded the strings then spent a couple of days in producer Mike Hedges’ chateau in Normandy.We set the drums up in the old stone cellar – Mako didn’t speak English but I directed him with my arms and remember the room shaking as he produced that eruption you hear at the start of the record.David recorded his vocals in the ballroom – he seemed to find the key-change leap effortless.I was standing 10ft away thinking: “This is going to be great.

”Yes is my favourite out of all the records I’ve ever made,To make a song that people put on to feel good is just magic,Years after it came out, I was at a fireworks display with my kids,They always finished the night with a banger,That year, they closed with Yes.

That just blew my mind.Knowing three artists before me had been given the option to do something with this great piece of music was very motivating.Bernard had evoked Motown, Burt Bacharach and Dusty Springfield, but he’d added a rocky thing.I wanted to try something simple.Initially, I came up with something quite T Rex but my flatmate said: “It’s a bit one dimensional, dear.

” I remember sticking my finger into my vinyl pile, touching the soundtrack to Judy Garland’s version of A Star Is Born, and thinking: “What would Judy do?” Lyrically, it was such a punt.I’d been dating somebody who I really liked, but he’d just kind of ghosted me.I was thinking: “What would I say to him if I became famous?” I just started singing: “So you want to know me now?” It was delusional, really.Before Yes came out, a friend asked me: “What kind of a song is it?” I said: “It’s an I Will Survive for the 90s.”I remember getting to the climactic point after the second chorus where the song builds and builds and I sing: “I’m better, better, Ye-e-e-e-es!” I was thinking I was done, but then Bernard said: “We need something for the end, a kind of refrain.

” I thought: “Smokey Robinson!” And I used my falsetto to repeat: “I feel well enough to tell you what you can do with what you got.” The recording actually uses varispeed to pitch that part a semitone out of my comfort zone, so I was much happier performing the song with a live band on Later With Jools Holland than I was singing along to the backing track on Top of the Pops.Over the years, I’ve met women who have told me they left abusive relationships thanks to Yes.After our second Top of the Pops appearance, the sister of the show’s producer came over to say she’d been unable to walk and the song had helped her to get up.It has a power I can’t account for.

After it had reached the Top 10, I went to see Jimmy Somerville live – and the guy who inspired the lyric was there.He said: “Oh my god, David, you’re doing so well!” I was standing there biting my lip, thinking: “You have no idea.” Butler, Blake & Grant play Cambridge Junction on 6 June before touring the UK.Hifi Sean & David McAlmont’s album Twilight is out now.
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Weight loss drugs linked to higher risk of eye damage in diabetic patients

Weight loss drugs could at least double the risk of diabetic patients developing age-related macular degeneration, a large-scale study has found.Originally developed for diabetes patients, glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) medicines have transformed how obesity is treated and there is growing evidence of wider health benefits. They help reduce blood sugar levels, slow digestion and reduce appetite.But a study by Canadian scientists published in Jama Ophthalmology has found that after six months of use GLP-1 RAs are associated with double the risk of older people with diabetes developing neovascular age-related macular degeneration compared with similar patients not taking the drugs.Academics at the University of Toronto examined medical data for more than 1 million Ontario residents with a diagnosis of diabetes and identified 46,334 patients with an average age of 66 who were prescribed GLP-1 RAs

about 17 hours ago
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Housing bosses press Rachel Reeves to unlock more funds for affordable homes

Housing bosses representing 1.5m social homes across England will press Rachel Reeves to reclassify affordable housing as critical infrastructure spending, amid a battle between the chancellor and Angela Rayner.There is deep dissatisfaction with the level of funding for social homes in the spending review due next week. Rayner, the housing secretary, is one of the last remaining holdouts in negotiations with the Treasury over departmental spending settlements.The Department for Housing, Communities and Local Government has been battling for more funding for the affordable homes programme as well as trying to preserve cash for local councils, homelessness and regional growth initiatives

about 22 hours ago
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Millions in west do not know they have aggressive fatty liver disease, study says

More than 15 million people in the US, UK, Germany and France do not know they have the most aggressive form of fatty liver disease, according to research.Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) – the formal name for non-alcoholic fatty liver disease – occurs in people who drink no or minimal amounts of alcohol whose liver contains more than 5% fat.About two-thirds of patients with type 2 diabetes are thought to have the condition, which is also associated with obesity, heart and circulatory disease.Approximately 5% of adults globally have the most aggressive form of MASLD. Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) causes fibrosis (scarring) and can lead to cirrhosis and is linked to greater risk of cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney disease and liver cancer

about 23 hours ago
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I thought it was being gay that made my life so difficult. Then, at 50, I got an eye-opening diagnosis …

I spent far too many years lonely and angry, thanks to schoolmates who called me ‘weird’ and bosses who dismissed me as ‘hysterical’. But was it my sexuality that put their backs up – or the autism I am still coming to terms with?My earliest memory is of feeling different. I’m gay, and grew up in the 1980s, in a tough, working-class town in the north of England at the height of the Aids crisis. My gayness was obvious in the way I walked and talked. I was bullied at school, called a “poof”, “pansy” and “fairy”; other children did impressions of me with their wrists limp

1 day ago
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Contraception warning over weight-loss drugs after dozens of pregnancies

Women using weight-loss drugs have been urged to use effective contraception after dozens have reported becoming pregnant while taking the medication.The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) has issued its first alert to the UK public regarding contraception and weight-loss medications after it received 40 reports relating to pregnancies while using drugs such as Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro.Ozempic and Wegovy, which both contain semaglutide, work by mimicking a hormone called GLP-1 that triggers an increase in the production of insulin, slows the rate at which food is digested in the stomach and reduces appetite.Mounjaro, which contains the active ingredient tirzepatide, also acts on a second hormone involved in appetite and blood sugar control. Although these have been referred to as “weight-loss injections”, not all are authorised for weight loss

1 day ago
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People with cancer face ‘ticking timebomb’ due to NHS staff shortages

People with cancer face a “ticking timebomb” of delays in getting diagnosed and treated because the NHS is too short-staffed to provide prompt care, senior doctors have warned.An NHS-wide shortage of radiologists and oncologists means patients are enduring long waits to have surgery, chemotherapy or radiotherapy and have a consultant review their care.Hold-ups lead to some people’s cancer spreading, which can reduce the chances of their treatment working and increase the risk of death, the Royal College of Radiologists (RCR) said.NHS cancer services are struggling to keep up with rising demand for tests, such as scans and X-rays, and treatment, created by the growing number of people getting the disease.Evidence the RCR collected from the heads of NHS cancer centres across the UK and the clinical directors of radiology departments shows that delays to potentially “life-saving” care occur because of “chronic” workforce gaps

1 day ago
cultureSee all
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The ones we love: all 16 of REM’s albums – ranked!

about 21 hours ago
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‘My biggest fear’: the artist spending three days banged up in a jail cell

about 21 hours ago
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Footballer, Bachelor star … fantasy writer? The TikTok furore over Luke Bateman’s book deal

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel: ‘We are living in the golden age of stupid’

2 days ago
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He’s been hanged, stabbed and cut in galleries – now artist Carlos Martiel is being buried alive

2 days ago
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‘Tudor high drama’: English Heritage looks for descendants of abbey rebels

2 days ago