A LOT OF WIND - The Fall and Sleaford Mods at Beacons Festival
On the album Shift-work MES rails against verbose and vacuous media pundits in a track called 'A Lot of Wind'. At Beacons festival the curmudgeonly Canute railed against the elements as the festival big-top strained against the tail end of a hurricane.
Halfway through The Fall's set a woman in headset and Barbour manifested herself onstage to ask the audience to step outside while they "assessed the situation". This meant the inebriated masses stepping out into a full on rain and wind storm lashing the site. She was roundly booed. (In fairness, warning the crowd the immense tent might fall on their heads is more public spirited, albeit less cool, than warning "watch out for the brown acid").
The Fall thundered on, two drummers stomping out their trademark Krautabilly. The power was switched off. The Fall continued to thunder on with MES bellowing from the stage, gurning and grinning. The band continued to grind out their music through monitors and sans amplification. When a jobsworth tried to lead MES offstage, he swatted out in annoyance, the curmudgeonly Caligula. The crowd lapped it up, cheering and hooting, few choosing to go out into the maelstrom. The reviled interceder approached Mrs Smith at her keyboard, got short shrift. Inevitably, after a few minutes of refusenik riffing The Fall left the stage, bemused and amused.
Once outside, the Culturebergers could see that tent poles were out of the ground, the roof was leaking, parts of the festival site were cordoned off. It was grim up north. The Seasoned Fall Watchers I spoke to weighed up the chances of a restart. Negligible to non-existent was the consensus. It's hard enough to get him on stage in the first place. The health and safety totalitarianism will have royally naffed him off. They're half way to Manchester by now.
Never second guess The Fall.
Mark and band slouched back on, with an added pullover the only concession to the elements, and announced sarcastically, "Aww. I don't feel safe anymore!" and launched straight into 'Mr Pharmacist' to the biggest cheer of the day. It was a great moment.
The Fall thundered even further on. It was one to have been at. To my mind there is more rock and roll in a 50+ man strolling strangely round the stage, nudging his guitarist in the back mid-solo like a mischievous uncle, than in most of the foot on the riser, festival by number gestures of the weekend. You cannot take your eyes of MES. You daren't.
The set made no concession to expectation. I recognised (I think) a couple of tracks from recent ep The Remainderer and a barked out yelp of "Yorkshire Dales-ah". The band was mesmeric, MES hypnotic. After a bit MES seemed to tire of his curmudgeonly Spartacus role and handed a sheaf of scrawled lyrics to the 2nd drummer who bawled out the previously unseen screed in a very creditable impersonation-ah of MES as the curmudgeonly James Brown ambled off. Talking to Seasoned Fall Watchers this is not a new thing for The Fall. Mrs Smith is often left to carry on the show in similar fashion. My view is that it's a showbiz tradition, I saw Bobby Womack do something similar last year. At Beacons you didn't know what might happen next, and the possibility that the tent might fall down was forgotten as The Fall rumbled on. Some bands act like they don't want to be a member of any club that will have them as a member. The Fall would rather leave than discuss the possibility.
Earlier, one of The Fall's spiritual heirs, Sleaford Mods, were on the smaller Noisey stage. Now when a band is rapidly coming ot public awareness, as the Mods are currently, interest spills over. The Noisy tent was rammed.
Jason Williamson commands attention in the same way as MES. He has carved out a unique persona. His East Midlands accent is almost absent from popular culture, but you can hear echoes of Shane Meadows' self-limiting avatars and Arthur Seaton's rampant hedonism and belligerent obfuscation in there.
Are they authentic? The answer is both yes and no, in the same way that The Ramones were and weren't authentic. If the Mods' barrage of swearing and vitriol wasn't harnessed by a keen artistic intelligence it would rapidly become boring, but their vision is finely honed, as narrow yet seductive as The Ramones first album. They're not pinheads.
The music is similarly narrow. These days anyone with a few quid and two index fingers can harness a pretty professional sound on keyboard and drum machine. It takes nous to limit your sound to the rinky dink throb of the Mods punk rock without the rock. You can hear the antecedents in rap, dancehall and toasting, all imbued with the guttersnipe perspective of 1977. One of their songs (possibly called Yesterday's heroes) was a piece of punk year zero snide, swiping at Johnny Marr and Pubic Hair Ltd, conflating No More Heroes and The Clash's 1977 for the Acrid House massive.
There are 2 Mods on stage. Andrew Fearn is The Uber-Bez. He stands back of the machinery, hollow-cheeked and dodgy looking. Where Bez was the embodiment of the Monday's audience, dancing on-stage with elated abandon, Andrew is the Mods' audience, swaying along, swigging lager from the bottle, shouting along to the best lines with a preoccupied grin. His apparent nonchalance - he pushes a button to kick off the next tune every few minutes-is in contrast to the frenetic knob-twiddling of the Titans of Dance like Jon Hopkins and ilk who buzz across their equipment like Duracell Bunnies. He seems to be saying "This is easy, this is cheap, go and do it."
After the show - and it is a show- people are quoting great lines to each other. There wasn't much of that with other bands. Tourette's delivery, self absorbed belligerence and insouciant swagger -part of a great tradition. All they need to do now is to ignore the invitation.
Wednesday, 3 September 2014
Saturday, 16 August 2014
CULTUREBERG VENTURES OUT TO BEACONS FESTIVAL 2014
As this was only some two miles from Cultureberg Mansions so allowed a taxi home at close of play and the avoidance of trenchfoot and pneumonia. Beacons' reputation is rising with the cognoscenti, an enterprising mix of up and coming acts, indie favourites and a number of Titans of Donk. So, Residents' discounted ticket in hand, Cultureberg strode forth and can report seeing, amongst others.....
DZ Rayguns -The bastard sons of Royal Blood and Cheap Trick
East India Youth - The bastard son of Thomas Dolby and Doctor Who
Action Bronson - The bastard son of Eminem and Giant Haystacks
Darkside - The bastard sons of Jean Michel Jarre and Dire Straits (If feeling generous, Pink Floyd, if feeling cruel, Chris Rea)
September Girls - The bastard daughters of The Go-Gos and Jacqueline Suzanne
Daughter - The bastard daughters (!) of The Cocteau Twins and The Corrs
Sleaford Mods - The bastard sons of a bastard and an even bigger bastard
Tall Ships - The bastard sons of Coldplay and cold sick
Money - The bastard son of Morrissey and Jonsi
The Fall - The bastard sons of no-one and everyone
British Sea Power (accompanying a film) - The bastard sons of Powell and Pressburger and Carl Davis
Golden Teacher - The bastard sons of Was (not Was) and Wayne Sleep
I could go on. Well, I do, so I shall....
There were a lot of bands who sounded a bit like Hawkwind in 1975, pounding drums, motorik guitar and synth, which was no bad thing. Take a bow Championlover. Menace Beach played a set like it was 1995 - 90's American guitar bands are far enough in the past now to be apeable. Not unremarkably for a festival, some big names disappointed a bit and some total unknowns shone out. Joan As Police Woman (whose records I like) was curiously out of place, her muso band slick but vapid, Neneh Cherry didn't do it for me, nor did Toy's Classic Rock By Numbers, but I was impressed by Jaws (young indie band, terrible name, got something) and Galaxians (a hit last year, I'm told, and I was not suprised, the best of the two man drum and synth combo of the weekend, cooking up a maelstrom. Vessels from Leeds, Money, Metz all impressed. Though Dam Funk's mentor Snoop Doggy Dogg didn't venture into the Yorkshire Dales (he was in Manchester the next night, so who knew?), Mr Funk served up a tasty mix of P-Funk and 80's Solar Records which got the marquee moving. I ventured in the dance tent where Cultureberg junior and friends spent a lot of their time. Without prior knowledge I wouldn't have known Daphni is the same guy who records as Caribou - the segment of his set I caught was hypnotic and organic and alongside Jon Hopkins Saturday night headliner florescent beach-ball extravaganza the best dance music of the weekend. Any way, I'm posting some more in depth stuff,so see below, or above...
Sunday, 2 February 2014
ALAN VEGA - BORN IN THE USA
I'd never made the connection between Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska and Alan Vega and Suicide before recently reading Clinton Heylin's E Street Shuffle book. Bruce is open about it, and with his version of Dream Baby Dream on the new High Hopes album he might now have sent some royalties their way. Play Nebraska next to Frankie Teardrop and the debt is obvious, and it's also clear how much further out Suicide are, and how classic their songwriting is. I dug out the 2 Vega albums that are in The Wall of Sound - sadly I don't think I listened to 'em after buying them. Anyway, this track from 1982's Collision Drive - no synths, only echo, guitar and slow pounding drums - is a bit of a sequel to Frankie, and would divide the Brooce fans out there. The story line is pure Nebraska, too.
SGT. BILKO BUYS AN EMPTY STORE
I didn't expect to encounter a critical parable about celebrity capitalism and the hollow nature of the American Dream when settling down to a Sgt. Bilko box set, but there it was - Episode 2 of series 1 - an episode called 'The Empty Store'.
The plot is that Bilko inexplicably loses the platoon's money in a card game - due to a strategically placed mirror - so plots to get his and his new recruits money back. He rents an empty store downtown. As word spreads across Fort Baxter, everyone is asking "What is Bilko up to now?" Everyone is desperate for a piece of the action. If Bilko has rented this store he must be onto something! The cardsharps beg to be allowed to buy a 3rd share in what Bilko tells them is only an empty store. Sure it is!
Through the miracles of the Youtube link I've included below so you can get a taste of the toadying and personality cult worship rarely seen outside of "Jamie has a good idea to make money and give something back" or "Mary Queen of Shops Manipulates False Needs Snazzily". If I could remember my CSE Structuralism I'd bamboozle you with some French concepts. This is just Sgt Bilko - Hatten-Hup! Quick march quick march! (I also didn't know that The Phil Silver's Show was originally going to be called You'll Never Get Rich.)
There's a twist in the tale but enjoy Phil Silver's pitch perfect balance of avarice, revenge and comic timing. I'm not suggesting that Nat Hiken was a misunderstood Dalton Trumbo figure, just that this 25 minute sit-com is a sentiment free slice of Capra-corn and this layer of interpretation takes nothing away from the slick surface. Remember, that's how Woolworths started - with an empty store.
The plot is that Bilko inexplicably loses the platoon's money in a card game - due to a strategically placed mirror - so plots to get his and his new recruits money back. He rents an empty store downtown. As word spreads across Fort Baxter, everyone is asking "What is Bilko up to now?" Everyone is desperate for a piece of the action. If Bilko has rented this store he must be onto something! The cardsharps beg to be allowed to buy a 3rd share in what Bilko tells them is only an empty store. Sure it is!
Through the miracles of the Youtube link I've included below so you can get a taste of the toadying and personality cult worship rarely seen outside of "Jamie has a good idea to make money and give something back" or "Mary Queen of Shops Manipulates False Needs Snazzily". If I could remember my CSE Structuralism I'd bamboozle you with some French concepts. This is just Sgt Bilko - Hatten-Hup! Quick march quick march! (I also didn't know that The Phil Silver's Show was originally going to be called You'll Never Get Rich.)
There's a twist in the tale but enjoy Phil Silver's pitch perfect balance of avarice, revenge and comic timing. I'm not suggesting that Nat Hiken was a misunderstood Dalton Trumbo figure, just that this 25 minute sit-com is a sentiment free slice of Capra-corn and this layer of interpretation takes nothing away from the slick surface. Remember, that's how Woolworths started - with an empty store.
Sunday, 5 January 2014
Nostalgia is a mild form of depression; Steely Dan thunders on
Donald Fagen used the above quote - he attributed it to Abbie Hoffman (Who should know) - on this Steely Dan live concert from (I think) 1996 I was just listening to, before the band played "Hey,19" off Aja. Well, Donald would know, having written largely about nostalgia and battling the ageing process even when comparatively young in1979. I've been listening to 3 Dan related records lately. They made me nostalgic for the real thing.
First up, Musically Adrift by Samuel Purdey on Tummy Touch records. You can stream it on the label's website, as I did. Originally recorded in the mid-90's (and re-released with attention to detail and commodity fetishism) by a Brighton duo, neither of whom are called Samuel or Purdey, I was rooting for this record but it didn't quite take off for me (in any sense of the phrase). Playing on the record is Elliot Randall-well known to dan cognoscenti-, Neil Cowley (a british jazzer woh's well -regarded, I unsderstand), someone called Frank Floyd (who played on Gaucho and The Nightfly-but not well known to those in the know, I'd argue.) And this gives it away - the original bassist from Jamiroquai. I don't want to fall into knee-jerkism - Heaven forfend!- but the jazz-funkiness of it all left me lukewarm. AOR Jazz - Delicious hot, unappetising lukewarm.
I listened to my next album for the first time today. The Mark Masters Ensemble - Everything You Did. It's 10 jazz reworkings of Steely Dan numbers, some like Charlie Freak and Showbiz Kids unlikely candidates for a jazz makeover. I downloaded it so listened without a track listing at hand. I recognised the 3rd one as Do It Again, as the melody is played pretty straight. The first 2 , no idea. Even now as the version of Showbiz Kids is on the computer in the background, and I know what it's supposed to be, I don't get it. Black Cow, with a supper club vocal, was obvious, and I liked the (possibly perverse) way Aja (possibly the most jazzy Dan tune in some senses ) was truncated to 3 minutes 24. Chain Lightning is played straight for 11 an a half minutes and gets a bit dull...and then I found this review on the site All About Jazz by Jeff Dayton-Johnson "It's a mark of the band's characteristically sloppy multi-layered ironies that they seemed to parody smooth jazz even as they genuinely dug playing the smooth jazz. So a jazz treatment of their music could be more tricky than it first appears,especially for a serious guy like Masters." This helped me "get it." It's the proper jazzers revenge. Nice? Not nice. That said, the big-band sound, the tasty charts, the chops - mmm, nice. Jeff concludes, "He makes no concession to the original sound of the songs." If he and the band are using the originals to spring off in time honoured fashion, then that's groovy. If it's passive-aggressive in a straight from the fridge style, then that's a stone drag.
Thirdly, Ed Motta's 2013 album AOR. Now, according to the Wiki- Oracle Ed has played with Roy Ayers, 4 Hero, Seu Jorge, Icognito, Bo Diddley, Ryuichi Sakamoto and translated Phil Collins' lyrics for Tarzan into Portuguese. Respect. The album is - colours on mast here- the best of the three. It's termed a tribute to the aor of the Doobies, Hall and Oates, Steely Dan but is almost chromosomatically Becker and Fagen. The electric piano, the lazy horns, the loose but tight drumming is all there. It's languid and bittersweet. It comes from a place of love without judgement, unconditional. It's smart but not condescending. It does not seek to improve or comment on, but to flatter by floating between imitating and intimating. Haver a listen. the album comes in English and Portuguese. Both are great.
First up, Musically Adrift by Samuel Purdey on Tummy Touch records. You can stream it on the label's website, as I did. Originally recorded in the mid-90's (and re-released with attention to detail and commodity fetishism) by a Brighton duo, neither of whom are called Samuel or Purdey, I was rooting for this record but it didn't quite take off for me (in any sense of the phrase). Playing on the record is Elliot Randall-well known to dan cognoscenti-, Neil Cowley (a british jazzer woh's well -regarded, I unsderstand), someone called Frank Floyd (who played on Gaucho and The Nightfly-but not well known to those in the know, I'd argue.) And this gives it away - the original bassist from Jamiroquai. I don't want to fall into knee-jerkism - Heaven forfend!- but the jazz-funkiness of it all left me lukewarm. AOR Jazz - Delicious hot, unappetising lukewarm.
I listened to my next album for the first time today. The Mark Masters Ensemble - Everything You Did. It's 10 jazz reworkings of Steely Dan numbers, some like Charlie Freak and Showbiz Kids unlikely candidates for a jazz makeover. I downloaded it so listened without a track listing at hand. I recognised the 3rd one as Do It Again, as the melody is played pretty straight. The first 2 , no idea. Even now as the version of Showbiz Kids is on the computer in the background, and I know what it's supposed to be, I don't get it. Black Cow, with a supper club vocal, was obvious, and I liked the (possibly perverse) way Aja (possibly the most jazzy Dan tune in some senses ) was truncated to 3 minutes 24. Chain Lightning is played straight for 11 an a half minutes and gets a bit dull...and then I found this review on the site All About Jazz by Jeff Dayton-Johnson "It's a mark of the band's characteristically sloppy multi-layered ironies that they seemed to parody smooth jazz even as they genuinely dug playing the smooth jazz. So a jazz treatment of their music could be more tricky than it first appears,especially for a serious guy like Masters." This helped me "get it." It's the proper jazzers revenge. Nice? Not nice. That said, the big-band sound, the tasty charts, the chops - mmm, nice. Jeff concludes, "He makes no concession to the original sound of the songs." If he and the band are using the originals to spring off in time honoured fashion, then that's groovy. If it's passive-aggressive in a straight from the fridge style, then that's a stone drag.
Thirdly, Ed Motta's 2013 album AOR. Now, according to the Wiki- Oracle Ed has played with Roy Ayers, 4 Hero, Seu Jorge, Icognito, Bo Diddley, Ryuichi Sakamoto and translated Phil Collins' lyrics for Tarzan into Portuguese. Respect. The album is - colours on mast here- the best of the three. It's termed a tribute to the aor of the Doobies, Hall and Oates, Steely Dan but is almost chromosomatically Becker and Fagen. The electric piano, the lazy horns, the loose but tight drumming is all there. It's languid and bittersweet. It comes from a place of love without judgement, unconditional. It's smart but not condescending. It does not seek to improve or comment on, but to flatter by floating between imitating and intimating. Haver a listen. the album comes in English and Portuguese. Both are great.
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