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Nostalgia is not...

FEATURE BY MAX NOBLE
23/04/2025

...what it used to be.

Ah! And there is a thing. Esteemed Editor Balfe recently wrote about the sad demise of Clem Burke the long-time Blondie drummer. Mr Balfe then suggested a series of mighty fine tracks from the band's golden years to ease the pain of people lost. I promptly turned to Apple Music and dived back into the late 1970's with a smile on my face as I cruised the far-too-straight roads of Perth. American Gigolo, and Blondie's Call Me remain a 1980 cultural highlight.

So it is that I've had a happy-sad driving experience these last few days listening to Heart of Glass, Union City Blues, Atomic, Tide is High, Dreaming, Call Me, and a stack of other great songs the band hammered out in rapid succession. Parallel Lines, their third studio album, came out in September 1978. That's 47 years ago dear reader. Ouch.

F1 season 1978? Mario Andretti was drivers' champion piloting his JPS-Lotus to the win. Ronnie Peterson was second. A position tragically awarded posthumously as he died from injuries sustained at Monza that year. Carlos Reutemann was third in the Ferrari, while defending champion Niki Lauda had left Maranello the previous season and managed fourth in his Brabham.

Mario won six of sixteen races that season. Carlos managed four wins, While Ronnie in the other Lotus-Ford managed two wins prior to his tragic demise. Gillies Villeneuve took the final victory of the year for Ferrari at the Canadian GP. What a season!

Ford, despite lengthy time away from F1, remains the third most successful engine manufacturer behind Mercedes and Ferrari. Ford have powered ten Constructors' Championship wins, thirteen Drivers' Championships and a total of 174 GP victories.

Between 1967 and 1983 the Ford DFV V8 won 155 GPs, the first being Jim Clark at the 1967 Dutch GP, and the last being Keke Rosberg at the 1983 Monaco GP.

Ferrari meanwhile were in the middle of their revered flat-12 history. The first generation Ferrari 312T was an evolution of the 1974 312B3. Mauro Forghieri designed it for a 1975 debut and it raced on in various evolutions until 1980. 1978 saw the switch from Goodyear to Michelin tyres, and a power output from the naturally aspirated flat-12 in the region of 515hp (around 384Kw). Screaming to a 12,500 rpm redline. Now that was an engine which made a noise!

This was a golden age for Ferrari in terms of romance and drivers. Niki Lauda, Clay Regazzoni, Carlos Reutemann, Jody Scheckter, Gilles Villeneuve. Each to prove a masterful pilot of their classic motor racing cars.

Brabham! This was in the days when Bernie owned the team and Gordon Murray was manipulating the set-square, paper and pencils. The BT46 was a well resolved car. Like the Ferrari it was powered by a flat-12, but this one claimed to be supplied by Alfa Romeo. Niki Lauda and John Watson managed to pedal the car to one win, and third in the constructors'. Not too bad.

The BT46-B was the infamous 'fan car'. No, not a Liberty Media push to sell more merch. It had a huge fan underneath the car to wonderfully enhance downforce. Niki cheerfully won in it first time out. The FIA considered it legal... Yet Brabham pulled it of their own accord. Some years later Gordon claimed this was because Bernie was trying to build his standing with the other manufacturers so he could gain control of F1. He felt pummelling them into the ground with his fan-car was not going to win him too many friends. The rest, as we all know, is now history.

V8, V12, V6, Turbo, No turbo. Supercharged, Flat-12, Fans, Aero, Wings, Wide rubber, Tyre wars, Increasing safety. Jackie Stewart still the only human who can get away with tartan trousers in public. Rolex watches. Tag Heuer Watches. Sir Lewis' fashion choices.

What makes a beautiful day? Rain at Silverstone? Rain at Monaco? Hometown hero winning home race? Scotsman in a kilt running down the back straight? Daniel doing a Shoey?

The Hunt vs. Lauda season? Both of them now removed from this plain of existence. Howling Ferrari flat-12 F1 engine which was at least slightly related to the flat-12 in the road going Berlinetta Boxer?

Gilles flying into those horrid catch fences at the Belgian GP? Jacques being so ironclad he raced and won the championship despite the manner of his father's death?

Colin Chapman and Jim Clark being a single entity? Graham Hill being a legend?

Max Mosley and Bernie being a double act for the ages? The golden age of tobacco money, and girls on the grid (I'm looking at you Camel...).

Sixteen races made one season. Driving was dangerous, which made heroes. There was no money in it. The teams and drivers did it for love of the sport, speed and raw competition. So legends were built. Myths created. Memories burned into minds across the world. Which Liberty Media has now monetised. Our joint nostalgia has been sold out. So. Nostalgia is not, and never will be again, what it was. And that's ok. No one can take those memories from each of us. History has been written, and for the most part, correctly recorded and recalled.

Remember mix tapes? When we'd spend hours getting our current favourite tracks on to a C90 cassette for road trips? I've still got a stash of around fifteen cassettes for one of those moments when I find myself in a 1970's Dino and the options are (a) engine noise, or (b) cassette player. You know what? I think I'm going to go engine noise, and then stream my favourites in high-definition digital glory when I get home.

Synchromesh. Light clutch pedal. High revving engine. Our F1 heroes were better then. The road cars more fun. And... simply face it, the music was superior.

I'll take a Ferrari tee-shirt. A Berlinetta Boxer to go. And an eight-track of Blondie's best. Oh, and a bloody good French Red and a pair of Persol sunglasses. Thanks. Nostalgia road trip here I come! Gee... why am I seeing a pair of old man's hands on the steering wheel...?

Max Noble

Learn more about Max and check out his previous features, here

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1. Posted by Editor, 22 minutes ago

"@ all

For what it's worth, here's my piece from a recent newsletter which inspired Max's feature.

If you’re not into nostalgia look away now, better still feel free to unsubscribe.

On Tuesday we learned of the sad death of Clem Burke, powerhouse drummer with Blondie, in yours truly’s humble opinion one of the finest pop/rock bands ever.

Since forming in 1974 the band has sold 40 million records and continues to this day.

The New York band first grabbed attention at the time Punk was emerging and though it continued producing hits after the world had moved on to Disco, its most successful period was between 1976 and 1979 with hits like Denis, Hanging on The Telephone and Heart of Glass.

Ah, ’76 to ’79… what a time to be alive.

1976, of course, was the year that Niki Lauda almost came to grief in his titanic battle with James Hunt. The Austrian not only cheated death, a year later he came back to claim his second title.

1978 and 1979 saw Mario Andretti and Jody Scheckter come out on top, both fully and faithfully supported by highly talented, and honourable, teammates, Ronnie Peterson and Gilles Villeneuve, both of whom were lost to us far too young.

And it wasn’t just the drivers of the time who were legends, look at the teams, Tyrrell, Brabham, March, BRM, Shadow, Surtees, Ligier, Penske…

So, at some point over the weekend find the album, the 45 or hit You Tube and play Blondie at 11 as you recall those heady days when the music was real and F1 had yet to be blighted by Liberty Media, Mohammed ben Sulayem, DRS Trains, (un)social media or Drive to Survive and even Bernie was yet to gain a real foothold.

Might I suggest the magnificent Dreaming, a track which composer Chris Stein claims was a rip-off of Abba’s Dancing Queen and which Clem Burke insists shouldn’t have used his stunning drum track because he felt it was OTT and he was merely “experimenting”.

Choose your year, ’76, ’77, ’78 or 1979; it’s summer, Blondie’s on the radio and in just over an hour the race starts, will it be Niki, James, Jody, Mario, Gilles or Ronnie?

After all, as the lady sang: “Dreaming is free!”

Next week, I’ll recall the summer of ’72, and being driven through Regents Park by a redhead in her Daddy’s Triumph Stag to the strains of Schools Out, Silver Machine and I Can See Clearly Now."

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2. Posted by Spindoctor, 30 minutes ago

""Erase & Rewind"... (not Blondie, but I couldn't resist).
As a certified old git I loved this piece, which inevitably led me to recall those halcyon days. The filter of youth makes the colours brighter & the music better, though Parallel Lines remains a classic!

I never got to 'enjoy' the delights of C90's in the 70's - I drove only old bangers, none of which boasted anything as posh as a cassette player, though a friend who was in the motor trade had an 8-track in his car (I don't think it worked).

This key phrase evokes the passion of the era, which needs no amping up from fond memory:
'...The teams and drivers did it for love of the sport, speed and raw competition. So legends were built. Myths created. Memories burned into minds across the world...'

Thanks for the memories"

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3. Posted by Max Noble, 8 hours ago

"@ClarkwasGod - Quite so! I’m toying with an article on Ken, and Mike (Costin) as a prelude to the up-coming 2026 engine changes. Rather like Daimler called their V12 a “double six” I loved the quirky naming of it as double four valve rather than ‘eight’ which would have got lost in the crowd.

@all - …and remember easing jammed C90’s from the dashboard, and then rewinding by hand with a HB pencil to reduce the tension on the tape!? Try doing that when Spotify refuses to work!!

"

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4. Posted by Max Noble, 8 hours ago

"@Celtic Tiger - Yes, funny how many bands ”rebel” against their own songs at some points in their careers. David Bowie stopped playing mush of his really old stuff live (Glass Spider Tour), James Taylor said he sang a number of his most popular tunes through gritted-teeth during the middle of his career… I was at a Genesis concert in the early 1980’s where Phil gave an amusing monologue at one point which started “People come up to us and say ‘why do you play this piece of ca-ca, and not this slightly less piece of ca-ca…?’” Before they launched into a medley of their old stuff (in the cage, firth of firth, I know what I like, musical box…). Compressing about 45 minutes of original music into about 12 minutes. Better than nothing!! Queen also went to early music mash-ups later in their touring career (I’m thinking the Freddie years). However… if they had failed to do Bohemian Rhapsody at any major show I think they’d have been pelted with beer cans!

Thankfully, while they have reduced the amount of old stuff they play, Coldplay at least still include the utter classics live (Green eyes, Scientist, Yellow). Let’s see what Oasis elect to do… assuming they stay together long enough to perform live once more!!
"

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5. Posted by Celtic Tiger, 9 hours ago

"Sounds like someone got into the 'member berries. Heart of Glass is indeed a classic, even if Blondie bassist Nigel Harrison apologized to the fans for it and Clem Burke refused to play it live for a short time. Now the song is synonymous with the band, funny how that plays out. 'Twas a good read and I enjoyed the trip down memory lane that it provoked. I will also add that back in the day I had making mix tapes down to an art. "

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6. Posted by ClarkwasGod, 16 hours ago

"Lovely piece - brought back so many memories - but....Not really Ford - yes, they stumped up the wonga/cash/spondulix, call it what you will, but a certain Keith Duckworth was the genius behind the DFV, and after a certain time, cam covers changed to show the real name behind it.

As for the 46B, as Chapman said at the time, if it wasn't banned, within 3 weeks, all the teams would have a fan on the back of their cars.

Those were the days - when sex was safe and racing dangerous....and it was Alboreto, of course, the 155th and last victory.
"

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7. Posted by Tyrbiter, 23 hours ago

"You speak for all us old geezers Max, and of course one of the oldest of those geezers is still with us, having just sold his collection of cars. I hope he outlasts Liberty Media."

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8. Posted by Pawsche, 24/04/2025 12:16

"Agree with most of it, but not the Berlinetta Boxer... I had one for a few months - looked like an angel, handled like a heffalump. Plus, like all Ferraris of the day, the steering wheel was too close to the pedals so if you were anything over 5'6" (and I am, considerably) you needed arms like a gibbon if you actually wanted to sit back in the seat. :-)"

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9. Posted by Max Noble, 24/04/2025 8:46

"@ffracer - glad you enjoyed… and yes… I stand corrected. Alboreto won the Detroit GP in June, while Keke won Monaco in May (and also finished 2nd in Detroit). I’ve checked. Even back then June came *after* May!

"

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10. Posted by ffracer, 24/04/2025 1:07

"Absolutely brilliant seguey of all things awesome during that era!

Don't want to sound like a daft pr!@k but... I believe the late, great Michele Alboreto is credited with the last Ford Cosworth win, after Rosberg's brilliant 83 Monaco triumph, in Detroit 83, aptly in one of Uncle Ken Tyrrell's 012s.

Mr. Noble, loved your reminiscing of all things 78 : what a symphony of sound then with the V8s, V6 turbo and the 12 cylinder Alfa Romeos and Ferraris. Epic. "

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11. Posted by Superbird70, 23/04/2025 23:59

"Max, thank you.
No Milli Vanilli for me thank you very much.

I want my Beatrice Lola with all the sprinkles."

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12. Posted by yakker, 23/04/2025 13:47

"Brilliant Max, with you all the way."

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