Monday, April 6, 2026

VA - Kenny Everett, The World's Worst Record Show [1978]

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VA - Kenny Everett, The World's Worst Record Show [1978]

There is a certain kind of compilation that only makes sense once it is playing, and Kenny Everett The World's Worst Record Show falls straight into that category. On paper it reads like a novelty idea, a radio personality gathering deliberately odd, awkward, or outright baffling records. In practice it feels closer to tuning into a late-night broadcast where the rules have quietly slipped away.

Curated by Kenny Everett, the set reflects the sensibility he brought to his radio work, irreverent, playful, and slightly chaotic, but always rooted in a deep familiarity with records. The sequencing does not aim for musical flow in the usual sense. Instead, it leans into contrast. A straight-faced performance might sit next to something unintentionally comic, followed by a track that sounds perfectly normal until a small detail throws it off balance.

What gradually emerges is a different kind of pacing. Rather than building mood, the record resets itself again and again, each track acting like a new sketch. Novelty songs, curious spoken word pieces, and offbeat performances take their turns without warning. The effect is less about judging the records as good or bad and more about hearing how strange the edges of popular music can be when placed side by side.

Because Everett approached the material as a broadcaster rather than a historian, the selection feels personal. These are not obscure tracks gathered for rarity alone, they are chosen for reaction, for the way they land when heard unexpectedly. That sense of timing carries through the entire set.

The compilation becomes something closer to a radio programme preserved on vinyl. The humour arrives in waves, sometimes obvious, sometimes subtle, and occasionally not intentional at all. It leaves space for the listener to decide what belongs and what does not, which is part of the appeal. (B)

Thanks to Marty who shared this. (Thanks Marty)

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Track list

01 Jimmy Cross - I Want My Baby Back 3:28

02 Zarah Leander - Wunderbar 2:39

03 Legendary Stardust Cowboy - Paralysed 2:13

04 Pat Campbell - The Deal 3:23

05 Nervous Norvus - Transfusion 2:22

06 Jess Conrad - This Pullover 2:24

07 Mel & Dave - Spinning Wheel 2:47

08 Dickie Lee - Laurie 3:00

09 Mrs. Miller - A Lover's Concerto 2:29

10 Ferlin Husky - The Drunken Driver 2:26

01 Jess Conrad - Why Am I Living? 2:08

02 Trashmen - Surfin' Bird 2:13

03 Steve Bent - I'm Going to Spain 2:29

04 Duncan Johnson - The Big Architect 3:53

05 Jess Conrad - Cherry Pie 2:04

06 Eamonn Andrews - The Shifting Whispering Sands 2:54

07 Tub Thumper - Kick Out The Jams 2:41

08 Adolph Babel - My Feet Start Tapping 2:01

09 Skip Jackson - The Greatest Star of All 3:03

10 Raphael - Going Out of My Head 2:45

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Music weaves itself into the fabric of our emotions, dances through the corridors of memory, and whispers to the soul of who we are. Sharing these stories deepens the connection, turning the experience into something timeless and profound.

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21 comments:

  1. Kenny Everett is my all-time favorite DJ. I was living the London area when he was very popular 1968-1976, and we tried to catch every show. I had hours of him on open reel tape, but most of it was lost over the ages. He had an incredible mind and was a joy to listen to...

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    1. Hi Mike,
      What a fantastic stretch of radio to have lived through, Kenny at his peak was something else entirely. That mix of sharp wit, wild imagination, and total fearlessness made every show feel like it could go anywhere and usually did. Those old reel‑to‑reel recordings must have been gold while you had them. He really was one of a kind, and it’s great to hear how much joy he brought you in those years.
      Cheers.

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  2. What a treat it is to find this. I only saw the record for sale once, when it first came out, and passed on the chance to buy it that time, so it's wonderful to see it here. Many thanks, BB.

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    1. Hi Richie,
      Great timing then, this one doesn’t surface often, so I’m glad it found its way to you here. It really is a quirky little treasure, and easy to miss when it first appeared. Happy it finally landed in your hands.
      Cheers.

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  3. Never seen this one before so thanks BB - now for Vol 2,3,4,5........

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    1. Hi Dr Robert,
      Glad this one was new to you, it’s a real oddball gem. Marty shared this, he may have more I don't know. Here's to hoping more show up...
      Cheers.

      Delete
  4. Thanks BB. I used to have this on vinyl and am delighted to see it turn up here. It will fit in beautifully with my Dr Demento material.

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    1. Hi Tom,
      It’s such a fun oddity, and it really does sit well alongside the Dr Demento universe. Nice when something you once had on vinyl circles back like this.
      Cheers.

      Delete
  5. Butterboy, this is inspirational . . . and must give hope to the tone deaf that they too have a place in the musical firmament. In truth, this is music for those who cannot tell a crochet from a hatchet, don't know their brass from their oboe and have van Gogh's ear for music.

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    1. Hi Man from Mordor,
      Everett really did champion the gloriously off‑key and the wonderfully misguided. Proof that even the tone‑deaf and rhythm‑averse can still leave their mark on the musical universe. His selections always walked that fine line between chaos and charm, and that’s exactly why they endure.
      Cheers.

      Delete
  6. Interesting, thanks!!! I remember when I grew up outside Philadelphia, as a teenager on the later 70s, or maybe early 80s, all of a sudden some tv station started running the crazy UK 'Kenny Everett Video Show'...didn't know who the was but it was a fun import at the time!!!

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    1. Hi Jim,
      Great memory, that TV run really did catch a lot of people off‑guard. The Kenny Everett Video Show was such a wild import at the time, full of that same unpredictable humour he brought to radio. Perfect late‑70s/early‑80s chaos, and a fun way to discover him if you hadn’t heard the radio years.
      Cheers.

      Delete
  7. Thanks. Strange album. I hear lots of familiar tunes. Thrashmen , The Legendary Stardust Cowboy , Jimmy Cross, Mrs Miller. I could easily add Wild Man Fisher, GertJan Tschaikovski, Napoleon XIV or De Aal
    https://www.discogs.com/release/3899612-Various-Laugh-Story
    https://www.discogs.com/release/9774351-Various-De-Lach-Explosie
    Maybe you are familiar with those albums. These are more comedy opposed to the underestimated genius of The Ledge. Shouldn't Tiny Tim's Tip Toe Thru The Tulips be on there too?

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    1. Hi Richard,
      It really is a strange little beast, half‑familiar, half‑forgotten, and all stitched together with Everett’s mischievous taste. I do know those Laugh Story and Lach Explosie comps, definitely more on the comedy side, whereas The Legendary Stardust Cowboy sits in his own universe of misunderstood brilliance.
      Cheers.

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  8. I remember Kenny as a champion of the Beatles. He had world premiers of their singles. I remember listening to my tranny in the playground before school started. He had a weird side to him yes, but he played all the songs we wanted to hear. Thanks for sharing.

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    1. Hi lemonflag,
      Kenny really was one of the Beatles’ earliest and loudest champions. Those world‑premiere spins were events in themselves. He had his eccentric streak, sure, but he always knew how to deliver the songs people were waiting for.
      Cheers.

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  9. Replies
    1. H LOFC.
      It was my pleasure to present it.
      Cheers.

      Delete
  10. I remember this LP was referenced in my long-lost 1980 edition of The Book of Heroic Failures, The Official Handbook of the Not Terribly Good Club of Great Britain by Stephen Pile. It sounded clunkingly hilarious but I never found the record anywhere, so this is a real Easter treat! Thanks BB and Marty for making this available, your generosity in sharing sounds is greatly appreciated!

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