Private Eye recordingsPrivate Eye, the British fortnightly satirical magazine, has produced various comedic audio recordings since its founding in 1961. The most famous of the recordings from the 1960s and 1970s were pressed on thin floppy 7" vinyl (sometimes known as "flexi-discs" or "flimsies") [1] [2] and they were distributed as "cover-mounts" attached to the front cover of the magazine, which for those issues doubled its price to cover the costs of the recordings. The discs were played at a phonogram speed of either 33 1/3 rpm or 45 rpm and had a duration of approximately 6 minutes. Private Eye also recorded material released on other configurations including 7" vinyl singles, EPs, 12" vinyl albums, audio-cassettes and compact disc. The content for the recordings was written and performed by Private Eye staff members, contributors and friends. Among those prominently featured on the classic 1960s and 1970s recordings were: Peter Cook, Dudley Moore, Barry Humphries, John Bird, John Wells, Eleanor Bron, William Rushton, Barry Fantoni and Richard Ingrams. In addition to their original releases, some of the recordings have been reissued on vinyl and audio-cassette. Discography7" flexi-discs released as "cover-mounts"• His Master's Vass - Issued: 2 October 1964. Themed around the upcoming October 1964 UK general election • I Saw Daddy Kissing Santa Claus - Issued: 18 December 1964. A Christmas-themed recording • The Rites of Spring - Issued: 1 April 1965 • BBC Gnome Service - Issued: 23 December 1966. A Christmas-themed recording. (Label & Catalogue number: Lyntone LYN 1138) • Abominable Radio Gnome - Issued: 8 December 1967. A Christmas-themed recording. (Label & Catalogue number: Lyntone LYN 1354). • The Loneliness of the Long Playing Record - Issued: 14 February 1969. (Label & Catalogue number: Lyntone LYN 1677) • Dear Sir, is This A Record? - Issued: 5 December 1969. A Christmas-themed recording. (Label & Catalogue number: Lyntone LYN 1962) • Just For The Record - Issued: 4 December 1970. A Christmas-themed recording. (Label & Catalogue number: Lyntone LYN 2140) • Hullo Sailor - Issued: 1 December 1972. A Christmas-themed recording. (Label & Catalogue number: Lyntone LYN 2558) • Farginson - Issued: 21 March 1975. (Label & Catalogue number: Lyntone LYN 3034) • The Sound of Talbot - Issued: 5 December 1980. A Christmas-themed recording • Record Damages - Issued: 11 December 1987 A Christmas-themed recording • Skeye Flexi-Dish - Issued: 1 April 1989
7" vinyl singles and E.P.s• Private Eye Sings Private Eye -7" E.P. Issued: 1962. (Label & Catalogue number: Artists & Repertoire ARP 1212) [3] • Neasden - 7" single. Issued: 1972. (Label & Catalogue number: Spark SRL 1059). [4] 12" vinyl albums• Private Eye's Blue Record. -12" album, Issued: 1965. (Label & Catalogue number: Transatlantic Records. TRA 131) [5] • Ho-Ho Very Satirical! -12" album, Recorded 1971 but not issued. (Eventually released on audio-cassette in 1998.) Compact Discs• Private Eye's CD-ROMP - Issued: 2001 ReissuesIn 1973, Private Eye pressed a limited edition 12" vinyl album titled Private Eye's Golden Years of Sound - containing its first eight flexi-discs. The album was for private circulation only among friends and it was never commercially released. In 1980, comedy producer Martin Lewis, a longtime associate and friend of Private Eye owner Peter Cook [7] acquired exclusive rights to all the Private Eye recordings produced from 1962-1980 and arranged for the commercial release of the first ten flexi-discs on a 12" vinyl album to coincide with the 20th anniversary of Private Eye magazine in October 1981. The album - titled Private Eye Presents Golden Satiricals [The Top Ten Flexi-Discs!] was released on Lewis' Springtime Records label, distributed by Island Records. The release included a facsimile of the first-ever issue of Private Eye. [8] [9] In 1998, the flexi-discs album was reissued by Springtime Records as a double audio-cassette set distributed by MCI (Music Collection International) - with the 1962 E.P. "Private Eye Sings Private Eye" as bonus content. At the same time, Springtime also reissued the 1965 album "Private Eye's Blue Record" and gave the first-ever release to the unissued 1971 album "Ho-Ho Very Satirical!" as companion releases to the flexi-discs reissue. The three releases were sub-titled Volumes One, Two and Three respectively. All three releases were on audio-cassette only. A takeover of MCI's parent company VCI by the Kingfisher Group [10] shortly before the release date [11] [12] led to a corporate restructuring of MCI [13] and the closing of the label's comedy division. This resulted in the release of the three Private Eye audio cassette being effectively still-born and very few copies were distributed - making copies hard to find. The cassettes sell for a premium on auction sites such as eBay. A promotional CD compilation was issued with the Guardian newspaper in 2011, the first and (as at 2015) only digital release of any of the pre-2000 tracks. • Private Eye's Golden Years of Sound - Issued: 1973 (private release only) (Label & Catalogue number: Lyntone LYN 2745/6) [14] • Private Eye Presents Golden Satiricals [The Top Ten Flexi-Discs!] - Issued: 1981. (Label & Catalogue number: Springtime Records. HAHA 6002) [15] • The Best Of Private Eye: Golden Satiricals Presents Volume One: The Famous Flexies! - Issued: 1998. Springtime/MCI. Audio-cassette only. • The Best Of Private Eye: Golden Satiricals Presents Volume Two: The Swingeing Sixties - Issued: 1998. Springtime/MCI. Audio-cassette only. • The Best Of Private Eye: Golden Satiricals Presents Volume Three: The Sarcastic Seventies - Issued: 1998. Springtime/MCI. Audio-cassette only. [16] • Highlights From Private Eye's Legendary Comedy Recordings - Issued: 2011. Guardian newspaper free CD. [17] External links |