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    Pop music would be a different beast without the B-side. Music history is riven with songs deemed throwaway that revolted against their lowly status and refused to be denied. Be it rock’n’roll’s national anthem (‘Rock Around The Clock’), disco’s enduring game-changer (‘I Feel Love’) or hip-hop’s most notorious dis track (‘Hit ’Em Up’), all three started life as the so-called ‘lesser’ track on releases primed for maximum chart impact. But the B-side has done much more than make stars of Bill Haley, Donna Summer and 2Pac.

    Whether it was the Beatles, the Kinks and the Yardbirds in the 60s, Elton John, the Who and Queen in the 70s, Depeche Mode, the Cure and Prince in the 80s, or Oasis, Pulp and Radiohead in the 90s, the B-side allowed many of the world’s greatest acts freedom to experiment with no commercial constraints in an age where physical product ruled the roost.

    My first book, B-Side: A Flipsided History of Pop, rounds up over 500 most important flips and is published by Headpress.com. This site is an adjunct to the book, bonus tracks if you like, where I’ll be gradually working my way through some personal favourites plus other B-sides I had to omit from the book for reasons of space.

    Buy B-Side here
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    Pop music would be a different beast without the B-Side. Music history is riven with songs deemed throwaway that revolted against their lowly status and refused to be denied. Be it rock’n’roll’s national anthem (‘Rock Around The Clock’), disco’s enduring game-changer (‘I Feel Love’) or hip-hop’s most notorious dis track (‘Hit ’Em Up’), all three started life as the so-called ‘lesser’ track on releases primed for maximum chart impact. But the B-side has done much more than make stars of Bill Haley, Donna Summer and 2Pac.

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    Andy Cowan graduated from cut-and-pasting fanzines Only A Rumour and White Lie in his teens to working on Hip-Hop Connection — the world’s first rap monthly — in the late 80s, becoming its editor in the 90s and publisher in the 00s. He has also contributed to podcasts, documentaries, museum exhibits and is MOJO’s jazz columnist. He has been a B-side obsessive since he first started buying singles in 1978.

    Can’t believe your favourite B-side is missing? Have a cool B-side tale to tell? Please get in touch. All suggestions taken into account for future editions.

    Buy B-Side here

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    '‘If Sugar Was As Sweet As You’'
    Joe Tex
    DIAL 1966
    A-side:  ‘The Love You Save (May Be Your Own)’
    Long before he secured his pension with 1977’s clowning disco biscuit ‘Ain’t Gonna Bump No More (With No Big Fat Woman)’, Joe Tex was a prolific singles artist whose shaky hit rate belied his true talents. The Texas-born singer-songwriter moved to New York in the 50s to make his fortune, regularly slaying the Apollo Theater’s talent contests with his distinctly southern take on R&B. A fierce rival of James Brown, their mutual antipathy extended to Tex writing 1962’s dis ‘You Keep Her’ after Mr Dynamite moved in on ex-wife Bea Ford. Tex’s tenure at producer Buddy Killen’s Dial imprint caught him in his prime, epitomised by the smooth slow dance A-Side here, later used in the closing-credits of Quentin Tarantino’s <em>Death Proof</em> (the filmmaker first declared his Tex fandom on <em>Reservoir Dogs</em>’ soundtrack). ‘If Sugar Was As Sweet As You’ is its better half though, a fat-free slab of taut rustic soul with Tex warbling its pay-off (“You make sugar taste just like salt”) over a stomping beat, swinging horns and great twangy electric guitar. Later covered by Rockpile, it’s right up there with raspy spoken-word efforts ‘Buying A Book’, ‘Hold What You’ve Got’ and ‘Skinny Legs And All’. While the latter was namechecked on MF DOOM’s ‘Accordion’, Tex also called his style of talking over verses ‘rapping’, cementing his influence on hip-hop. Tex’s B-side form continued when ‘I Gotcha’ [‘A Mother’s Prayer’, DIAL 1972] was flipped and soared to number two.

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