Friday 12 October 2012

In The Spotlight: Mel and Kim

Melanie (left) and Kim (right) Appleby
Image Credit: Streetview at www.streetview.co.uk

Mel and Kim were a Pop duo, successful in the 80s with their catchy, 'girl power', pop songs written and produced by 80s songwriting/producing giants, Stock Aitken and Waterman. Active for four years (1986 to 1990) and releasing four top 10 hits in the UK, these London born sisters made a big stamp on my music collection and fashion sense back then.
SISTERS
I was 12 in 1986 when they released their debut single "Showing Out (Get Fresh At The Weekend)" and everyone I knew was singing and shoulder shaking to that tune. The sisters, who were mixed raced, were beautiful, sassy and stylish. Young girls either wanted to be like them or they hated them out of envy and guys would debate over which sister they fancied the most.

Check out the dance moves in the "Respectable" video
(above) to get a real taste of the 80s

Mel and Kim weren't the greatest of singers but they were good for the pop dance scene. After “Showing Out” came "Respectable" 1987, which was the anthem for young women and their first number 1 in the UK.

"Take or leave us, only please believe us
We are never gonna be respectable
Like or hate us, but you'll never change us
We are never gonna be respectable"

Stock, Aitken and Waterman's production style featured many vocal synthesizers on acts they worked with. A popular 80s method was the vocal skipping, similar to when a DJ scratches a record. A lot of vocal skipping was used on this track (Respectable), which made the song hilarious for fans to sing at times.
Mel and Kim with funky open hats
and the 'Pineapple' hairstyles
Their number one success broadened their fan base and celebrity status. The bubbly sisters appeared on many TV shows and graced covers of pop magazines. Their cheeky attitude, Melanie, the youngest being the more feisty of the two, for me, made them more likeable. They dressed in sync and had some fabulous hairstyles, the 'pineapple', the most popular, started a trend. Unfortunately though, as many popular music artists experience today, media interest is a double-sided sword. When the press dug up Melanie's former glamour model career, many parents didn't want their children listening an idolising a "tart". Back in the 80s, attitudes weren't as relaxed and welcoming as of today of girls who got their "boobs out", unless they were on Page 3 of The Sun. Back then a glamour model in layman's terms was a 'glamourised prostitute'. Melanie handled herself well, spoke about it fairly openly and tried to move on.
Melanie left this earth too young,
too soon.
"F.L.M. (Fun Love and Money)", their third single, was another fun and catchy tune. Because of their success and travelling abroad to promote themselves, critics gave the impression Mel and Kim were too lazy or too busy to film a video for the song. Although, at the time, I was a little disappointed the girls weren't busting new styles and grooves, I loved the puppets of the duo, featured in the video. What nobody knew at the time was that Melanie was suffering problems with her back...which turned out to be secondary cancer of the spine.

When the news of Melanie's illness became public (her ex boyfriend (scum) sold pictures of her whilst undergoing chemotherapy, looking fragile and losing her hair), the fans were stunted with shock. I remember feeling very afraid for her because she was so young. Having lost members of my family to the disease, I'd seen the pain. On release of their fourth, and sadly final track "That's The Way It Is" in 1988, it was hoped that Melanie was winning the fight against cancer. "That's The Way It Is" had great chart success and I remember taping it off the radio (the 80s way of downloading music) and singing along to the words on full volume at my grandparents stereo or at school with my girl pals thinking we were stush. Sadly, Melanie wasn't getting better. She died in January 1990 after contracting pneumonia, her immune system weakened by chemotherapy.

"Keep looking after number one"
It was singing "Respectable" to my eight year old daughter this week that inspired me to feature Mel and Kim "In The Spotlight". I want my kids to know about Mel and Kim, the same way they appreciate Rihanna, Lady Gaga and the like. It's so sad that fate was so cruel to them because I know they had so much further to go. Kim did go on to have a mediocre solo career. She released one album Kim Appleby in 1990 which gave her two Top 10 hits. I bought the album, its somewhere in a mountain of cassettes that I refuse to dispose off. It's a good pop album with R&B dance influences. Many of the songs were co-written with Melanie before her passing. Kim is no longer seen in the public eye but I hope she has fond memories of her career, even though she lost her sister in the process. Mel and Kim brought an urban flavour to pop music which was brilliant for young black kids like myself, heavily influenced by the R&B and Reggae of our parents. Despite the lyrics of their most successful song, Mel and Kim were very RESPECTABLE.

Copyright Donna Woolcock 2012

Information source: Wikepedia (Mel and Kim)

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