Elton Motello

Elton Motello was an English punk and new wave band.

Elton Motello is both the moniker of Alan Ward, the lead singer and songwriter, and the name of the band itself.[1] Alan Ward was formerly a member of the glam punk band Bastard along with Damned guitarist Brian James, Dez Lover and Nobby Goff.

Motello then recruited a new set of musicians including Mike Butcher (aka "Jet Staxx" who had played on Jet Boy, Jet Girl), Willie Change (bass), and Nobby Goff (drums), to record debut album Victim of Time, which also featured guest appearances from former Pretty Things and Pink Fairies drummer John "Twink" Alder, Tony Boast, and Peter Goff (guitar).[1][2]

Motello returned in 1980 with a second album, Pop Art, now backed by Butcher, Andrew Goldberg, J.P. Martins, and Walter Meter.[1] Two singles followed towards the end of the year, after which the band split up.[1]

Jet Boy Jet Girl

Alan Ward had toured Belgium with Bastard. Through his connections there, he had his new moniker, Elton Motello, debut on the Belgian label Pinball with the single "Jet Boy, Jet Girl" in 1977. The song was backed by session musicians[3] Mike Butcher (guitar), John Valcke (bass) and Bob Dartsch (drums), instead of Elton Motello's regular musicians. That exact same backing track was simultaneously used by Belgian artist Plastic Bertrand on his internationally successful hit single "Ça plane pour moi". Since then, "Jet Boy, Jet Girl" has sometimes been wrongly thought to be a cover for "Ça plane pour moi", with new lyrics over the same backing track,[1] but the truth is, the two songs were simultaneous adaptations of one same backing track.[4]

While Bertrand's single was an international hit, Motello's single in English made little impact, except in Australia, where it was released on the RCA label and hit #33 on the National Top Forty (and regionally in Melbourne at #11 and in Sydney, at #10). Also in Australia, "Jet Boy Jet Girl" has appeared in a television commercial, though the commercial only included the chorus and none of the once-controversial lyrics.

Discography

Albums

Year Title UK AU Label
1978 Victim Of Time - - Attic
1980 Pop Art - - Passport
2001 Jet Boy (Compilation) - - AMC

Singles

Year Title UK AU

Kent

AU

Book

1977 "Jet Boy, Jet Girl"[5][6] - 33 37
1978 "Pinball" - - -
1978 "Lightning" - - -
1980 "20th Century Fox" - - -
1980 "Pop Art" - - -

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Strong, Martin C. (2003) "Elton Motello", in The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 1-84195-335-0
  2. Interview: Alan Ward and Mike Butcher - 'Attacking the Beat' (2 March 2009)
  3. Larkin, Colin (1992) The Guinness Who's Who of Indie and New Wave Music, Guinness Publishing, ISBN 0-85112-579-4
  4. La véritable histoire de Ca Plane Pour Moi (in French)
  5. https://australian-charts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=Elton+Motello&titel=Jet+Boy+Jet+Girl&cat=s
  6. The book Top 40 research 1956-2010 / Jim Barnes, Stephen Scanes P.279


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