![Biography](biography.gif) Back in 1980, Buddy Love was the powerpop
project of Doug Khazzam and Alan Milman, both typical "Long Island Middle Class Jew
Boys" as they stamped themselves. A couple of years before, they had recorded a
7-inch EP, "Stitches in my Head" under the name Alan Milman Sect which is now
highly sought-after by punk collectors. After having started out another outfit called
ManKazaM, they
released another EP called Spankathon (ManKazaM, Alan Milman Sect and Buddy Love shared a
good bunch of musicians, some of whom played in all three groups at one time or another).
They eventually surfaced with the first Buddy Love lineup as it featured on the
impossible-to-find 7" single Sheila, released in 1980 on a private tiny label. Two years later a
self-titled LP on Davco Records was out and was their last material officially released,
although they went on cutting some demos that never came out until the "Sheila And
Other Delights" CD. On the East Coast, as Doug Khazzam can remember, "the Punk
and New Wave scene was really happening while musicians were convinced that Power Pop was
gonna be the Next Big Thing and the bands around town were all ready to be crowned the new
Beatles". Buddy Love played Max's Kansas City, CBGB's, Tramps and a bunch of other
clubs around NYC. They used to play on the same bill as Justin Trouble, and opened for The
Dead Boys and Squeeze. Doug Khazzam plays now with Gary Feldman (who also played bass in
ManKazaM during the "ManKazaM Goes Surfin" period), formerly of Radio City and
The Breakaways, in a new band named
RC Flyers. Doug
regularly updates his Buddy Love website at
http://BuddyLove.us. |
- Doug Khazzam : guitar,vocals (1,2)
- Alan Milman :
words,music,vocals (1,2)
- Joey Kelly : lead vocals (1)
- Scott Nevin : bass (1)
- Rich Starr : drums,vocals (1)
- Brett Rizzo :
bass,piano,vocals (2)
- Robbie Wise : drums (2)
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- 7" « Sheila »
b/w « Party Girl » (USA [private label #BL-1] 1980) Led by a carefree saxophone "Sheila" is a great exuberant pop song
vitamins-enriched, surfing on the `80s new wave but bursting out with echoes of early `60s
wall of sound. It seems that the single got considerable airplay on the Vince Scelsa show
on WNEW-FM in New York.
- LP « BUDDY LOVE »
(USA [Davco #1001] 1982) The LP starts out with 50 seconds of
"Rock'n'Roll", a Gary Glitter cover, probably to bear in mind that a pop record
can't be taken too seriously, and maybe like a deliberate provocation because fun music
had been unhip for too long. Next was "Why
Can't We Make Believe We're In Love" (which appeared on the Yellow Pills volume 1
CD) that might call to mind a rockiest Joe Jackson. As good as were the opening tracks,
the *true* pop songcraft actually appeared on the three next very catchy tracks which
followed. "Liar" reveals that Elvis' "This Years Model" was probably
(as once admitted Doug Khazzam who appeared on the front cover LP -- with penciled-in
mustache!) one of the original template that Buddy Love was stamped out of. In the more
powerpop vein were "Dead Ringer" and "Ticket To Your Heart" : imagine
the bursting sound of The Knack-meeting-The-Jags mixed with a blend of `60s fun, Nick
Lowe's pure pop and late `70s New York beat. Anglophile pop for sure, but worth
investigating even 20 years later. A cover of "Who Slapped John?" closed side
one. On the flip, "Closer To Heaven", "I Just Wanna Hold You" sounds
like Sylvain Sylvain fronting a mod-pop band, accented with Shangri-Las theatrics: an
attempt to re-inject fun, innocence and romance in the newborn eighties. "Dream
Baby" and the neat glam-ish "Wild Angel" ended up the LP. As Ira Robbins
wrote in his Trouser Press review "Virtually unknown, but great".
- CD « SHEILA AND OTHER
DELIGHTS » (USA [Rockville Records #1001] 1980-1984/1998) The CD includes both sides of
the "Sheila" 7", the entire LP as well as a bunch of demos. I'm tempted to
say that the inclusion of the impossible-to-find "Sheila" in there is worth
alone the price of admission for lovers of the genre ! Among the numerous bonus tracks,
"Something In My Eye", "Love Is A
Martial Art", "Liar" (second version) are catchy as hell and on par
with Buddy Love best early stuff. According to what Doug Khazzam remembered, Liar (version
2) was recorded after the LP ; the band was working with a new producer and he wanted to
try out a few of the older songs and that was one of them. This new version was more
geared toward somewhat of a `60s intrumentation (as is confirmed by the inclusion of a
Knickerbockers' "Lies" cover) and it definitely sounds great.
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