Unreleased Final City Boy LP Surfaces
11/17/2009

Seventies British outfit was acclaimed but never fulfilled its Stateside potential.
By Blurt Staff
Along the lines of 10cc, Be-Bop Deluxe, Roxy Music, Alex Harvey and countless other bands of the UK Art-Rock movement in the '70s and early '80s comes City Boy, who also garnered much attention. In the course of their history, City Boy released several albums to much critical praise from fans and music press across both sides of the Atlantic. On November 10th foremost US reissue label Renaissance Records in conjunction with ItsAboutMusic.com (who have released all of the City Boy catalog) issued the band's unreleased album from 1982 called 'It's Personal'.
Formed in the UK in the
early 1970s, Lol Mason, Steve Broughton, Max Thomas and Mike Slamer were
playing folk music in the Birmingham
area. Towards the end of 1975 they were offered a contract by Phonogram records
on the condition that they add drums and a bass. So Roger Kent and Chris Dunn
were recruited. Although some critics wrote quite favorable reviews for 'City
Boy' (1975) and 'Dinner At The Ritz' (1976), it was not until 1978 and their
hit song "5-7-0-5" on the subsequent album 'Book Early' that the
public began to take notice. The single went right into the Top 10 of the
British charts, and the album entered the Top 30 in the album charts.
"We were on tour in Germany at the time, and I remember one of our
managers talking to Steve and Lol for ages on the phone as we were lying around
in this hotel room in Munich," Max Thomas recalled "Lol said 'Right,
I've got an idea...we'll give them a telephone love-song - '5-7-0-5' (or
something like that anyway!) So the vocal was re-recorded, the record company
expressed delight, and promised to really plug the song, and lo and behold, out
of the blue - because it seemed like that at the time - we had a hit single on
our hands in the UK, two
months before we were committed to a four month tour in America! Fine,
we thought, with a bit of luck, we'll carry our success to the States and will
become extremely rich and famous."
They were able to repeat their success with their 1979 album 'The Day The Earth
Caught Fire' and its title song as a single release. City Boy had one more
successful album with 'Heads Are Rolling' in 1980, which many critics believe
to be their best, before their recording contract with Atlantic
expired. "Atlantic had already written us
off," said Thomas. "They responded to 'Heads' very lukewarmly, and
delivered the last part of the advance most reluctantly for us to record 'It's
Personal', which they never released. I think it was only released in Scandinavia because we were still signed to Polygram in
certain territories. Zomba half-heartedly tried to sell 'It's Personal', but by
1982, all the contracts, including our management contract expired...and then the
money ran out, and suddenly there were no more wages. And we were all out of a
job, and out of a career."
Unable to secure a contract with a major label, the band released a single on
their own City Boy label in 1982. After this failed completely to attract
anyone's attention, the group split. Now much to the elation of City Boy fans
worldwide, the band's final album 'It's Personal' has been reissued on CD from
the master tapes.











