Tuesday, 17 October 2017
724 Hello M People - How Can I Love You More ?
Chart entered : 26 October 1991
Chart peak : 29 ( 8 in a remix in 1993 )
Number of hits : 19
While I never got into this band's music, I think they get an unfair amount of stick just for winning some meaningless musical award once.
M People had come together from all points of the musical compass in 1990.
Singer Heather Small ( born 1965 ) started out in an English soul band called Hot House in 1987. I remember them performing their first single "Don't Come To Stay" on The Tube and The Last Resort with Jonathan Ross and thinking they were quite good,. a bit like Simply Red with a female singer who sounded like Gladys Knight. The single was a very minor hit on Deconstruction but they never managed to push on from there. The brassy follow up "The Way That We Walk" featuring the guys from Londonbeat, flopped and they didn't recover. The label kept faith with them through two albums , "South "( 1988 ) and "Movers and Shakers" ( 1990 ) but it just didn't happen. They split in 1990, the guys in the band going on to found the Rock's Backpages website.
Keyboard player and programmer Mike Pickering ( born 1958 ) was from the Manchester music scene. He was a friend of New Order's manager Rob Gretton and through him became a regular DJ at The Hacienda, then an A &R man for Factory signing both Happy Mondays and James. Mike also wanted to make music and founded the group Quando Quango in 1981. They periodically released records on Factory, most of which were collated on the LP "Pigs + Battleships" released in 1985. Their music veered between electrodance and jazz funk but it was flatfooted and boring despite the assistance of Johnny Marr and Vinni Reilly and Mike's vocals were so mediocre and one dimensional he made Bernard Sumner sound like Frank Sinatra.
The band folded in 1986. Mike and percussionist Simon Topping formed the house outfit T-Coy with keyboard player Ritchie Close. They signed for Deconstruction and released a few 12 inch singles in 1987-88 for the dance floor. The Latin-tinged "Carino" and "Night Train" are not as fearsomely boring as Quando Quango but I wouldn't recommend them either.
The other keyboard player Paul Heard was in another dance outfit Ace of Clubs headed by a dancer called Jerry Barry. They released three 12 inch singles between 1988 and 1991 which are acid house with more of a jazzy flavour. He also did some session work for Orange Juice and Working Week.
Their first release was a white label pressing of the song "Colour My Life". It's a solid dance pop number with moody strings that give it a dark feel despite the optimistic lyrics and Heather's upbeat vocal. It became their second hit when properly released in 1992.
I must confess to finding "How Can I Love You More ?" quite boring by comparison. Paul and Mike wrote the song about a relationship where the woman is more committed than the man but Heather never sounds that cut up about it . The tune doesn't go anywhere very interesting and the piano breaks sound formulaic.
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