The Fab Threeโ€™s studio swansong, with B-sides, demos, vids and a live gigโ€ฆ

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The Gift remains a mysteriously unloved part of The Jam canon. For many Jam loyalists itโ€™s a record thatโ€™s tainted by Wellerโ€™s decision to split the band at the height of their popularity, the headstone to a premature burial.

Itโ€™s also a record that, for many, strays a little too far out of The Jamโ€™s comfort zone. While the introductory chimes of the opening track โ€œHappy Togetherโ€ recall the fractured post-punk of Sound Affects, weโ€™re quickly into the Motown beats, the wah-wah guitars, the big horn sections: the birth of what sneerier commentators later dubbed โ€œsoulcialismโ€.

Lyrically, The Gift does not have the cohesiveness of the two Jam LPs generally regarded as classics โ€“ All Mod Cons and Sound Affects โ€“ but it certainly has at least as many great songs as either of them. Thereโ€™s no arguing with the singles โ€œTown Called Maliceโ€ (effectively โ€œYou Canโ€™t Hurry Loveโ€ reimagined by Ken Loach) or โ€œPreciousโ€ (hypnotically itchy punk-funk, with a nod to Beggar & Co), but, for all Wellerโ€™s professed โ€œanti-rockโ€ agenda of this period, there is plenty here to please any element of The Jamโ€™s fanbase. You want Ray Davies-style kitchen-sink realism? Try the militant vaudevillian turn โ€œJust Who Is The 5 Oโ€™Clock Heroโ€. You want a stunningly poetic ballad with heart-wrenching chord changes? Try โ€œCarnationโ€ (โ€œI am the greed and fear/and every ounce of hate in youโ€). You want haunting and graceful post-punk? Listen to โ€œGhostsโ€, with its elegant horns, fluid bassline and uplifting lyric (โ€œthereโ€™s more inside you that you wonโ€™t showโ€).

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The first CD contains all 11 LP tracks, along with a further 10 singles, B-sides or covers from this period which didnโ€™t make it onto the album. Weller has always upheld the uniqueness of the flipside (โ€œI always felt the shackles were off,โ€ he says. โ€œYou can experiment a bitโ€), and all of the supplementary tracks on CD1 share that same spirit of adventure, creating a secondary album thatโ€™s almost as good as the primary one. Even the covers, which were approached as enthusiastic recreations of the bandโ€™s new favourite songs, add a twist to the originals. โ€œMove On Upโ€ replaces Curtis Mayfieldโ€™s sweet-voiced earnestness with punky urgency; The Chi-Litesโ€™ โ€œStoned Out Of My Mindโ€ benefits from Rick Bucklerโ€™s heavily syncopated, Afro-Cuban rhythm track.

As well as a riotous live CD, and an excellent DVD of promos and Top Of The Pops appearances, thereโ€™s a CD that comprises demos of most of the album tracks and B-sides. It includes early versions of some contemporary sides not included on CD1, such as โ€œTales From The Riverbankโ€ (here titled โ€œWeโ€™ve Only Startedโ€), โ€œAbsolute Beginnersโ€ (titled โ€œSkirtโ€), and a Northern soul-style re-reading of the Small Faces โ€œGet Yourself Togetherโ€. All of them are multi-tracked solely by Weller on guitars, bass, piano, keyboards and even drums. Unfashionable though it might be to point this kind of thing out, Weller really is an extraordinarily accomplished musician; even his drumming has a certain wonky, Stevie Wonder-ish flair. Some of the demos are virtually identical to the finished versions, only without the horns: a couple (โ€œThe Plannerโ€™s Dreamโ€ฆโ€, โ€œShoppingโ€) sound better. One gets the impression that three or four Wellers might have made a great stadium rock band.

The Jamโ€™s studio versions of โ€œA Solid Bond In Your Heartโ€ (separate mixes of which have previously appeared on The Sound Of The Jam and Direction Reaction Creation) are notably absent from CD1 of this package, although Wellerโ€™s drumless original demo does appear on CD2, with a piano-led arrangement thatโ€™s almost identical to the version later recorded by The Style Council. There are certainly premonitions of The Style Council all over The Gift, be it the heavy duty funk workout of โ€œPreciousโ€, the militant call-to-arms of โ€œโ€˜Trans-Global Expressโ€™โ€, or the insistent Northern soul drumbeats on at least half the tracks. And, with veteran Trinidadian percussionist Russ Henderson playing steelpan, โ€œThe Plannerโ€™s Dream Goes Wrongโ€ is an early example of the outsourcing philosophy that Weller and Talbot would later adopt (the song also shares the same lyrical territory as โ€œCome To Milton Keynesโ€).

In fact itโ€™s the 10 extra tracks on CD1 that seem to prefigure The Style Councilโ€™s revolving door policy. Most of the singles of this period are dominated by hired hands, not least the backing vocals of Jennie McKeown from The Belle Stars (on โ€œThe Bitterest Pillโ€) or future Respond starlet Tracie (who almost steals the show on โ€œBeat Surrenderโ€). โ€œBitterest Pillโ€, โ€œBeat Surrenderโ€ and โ€œMaliceโ€ are all dominated by Peter Wilsonโ€™s piano or organ lines; while โ€œPreciousโ€ and the three soul covers are dominated by the horns of Steve Nichol and Keith Thomas. Other tracks point out the limitations of the three-piece. A jazz waltz like โ€œShoppingโ€, or the off-kilter โ€œThe Great Depressionโ€ are the kind of beats that Style Council drummer Steve White would breeze through; likewise you could imagine an early incarnation of the Council transforming โ€œPity Poor Alfieโ€ into a more limber soul gem. And that maybe explains why The Gift rankles a little for certain Jam loyalists: itโ€™s a reminder that Weller really did need to break up the biggest British band since The Beatles to pursue his musical vision.

John Lewis