
George Galloway is rarely seen in the House of Commons - he says he prefers to give speeches and interact with the public. The shy and retiring MP's extra-parliamentary activities have included meeting Saddam Hussein, castigating US senators and going on Celebrity Big Brother - where he wore a skin-tight red leotard to dance with transvestite singer Pete Burns and pretended to be a cat lapping cream from another contestants' hands. What next but releasing a hit single? Galloway has a record out on 1 January - a re-release of the Edwin Starr hit "War" ("Huh. Yeah. What is it good for? Absolutely nothing" etc) which is "a musical referendum" on Blair.
Gorgeous George is pictured above in the pop video, sporting one of the more restrained costumes from his dressing-up box. The plot, such as it is, concerns the spoof reunion of Blair's student band, Ugly Rumours, at a Beatles-style rooftop gig. Cue the arrival of Sgt Galloway to investigate noise disturbance. "Anthony Charles Lynton Blair," he says, "I'm arresting you on the charge of spreading Ugly Rumours, which have led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people around the world."
Pre-orders for the 79p track (20p goes to the Stop the War Coalition) can be placed on Galloway's website. Sadly his vocal contribution is limited and most words belong to The Drifters vocalist Patrick Alan. Still, let's hope it fares indefatigably in the charts.
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story from HERE
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It was an original hit for The Temptations, so this report from The Independent is incorrect. I did some searching and found a few versions. Click the links below to hear them - on listening as an impartial bugger I'd have to say the Edwin Starr version is the best even so...
Here's a quote from Edwin Collins - "War' was originally recorded by the Temptations, it was buried on one of their albums. But then a lot of mail came in, mostly from students, asking why they didn't release it on a 45. Well, that was a touchy time, and that song had some implications. It was a message record, an opinion record, and stepped beyond being sheer entertainment. It could become a smash record, and that was fine, but if it went the other way, it could kill the career of whoever the artist was."
The Temptations
Edwin Starr
Frankie Goes To Hollywood