I missed the
Sleaford Mods last night – but bought a
ticket for Stereolab today – but it’s not like seeing the Sleaford Mods.
I just
listened to Kebab Spiders- I love that pure honesty of what the fuck and this
and that – but it’s the craft of Fearn that’s getting me – there’s the scowl
and undertow and all that rah rah rah – but the tunes become more sublime
everytime – hit hit hit – penny shove gone crazy and paying out non stop for
the masses. Making la la sounds and bringing you in. I haven’t heard the rest
of Eton Lives– but this is good.
This makes
it even more fucking gutting that I missed it.
But I’ve
been missing lots
I got put
out my job sometime back – making it large over December days – you know
smiling and all that whilst walking through some fucking shit mire not knowing.
So back to
the Mods. We are the mods. Always.
I’ve been
clean living in dirty times all my life.
I haven’t
written a thingfor a while. The last
time I saw the Sleaford Mods was at the The Roundhouse in Camden.
I nearly bit
someone’s throat out.
Well I
didn’t bite it out. I wanted to. Not sure if that was a Sleafords Mods reaction or down to the medication I was on at the time - it can get you like that at times - send you off kilter. It was for my chest by the way - antibiotics. But it was a worry. Mods shows and all that weren’t
punctuated with violence – everytime I had seen them there was an air of beauty
– people getting along- listening and
grinning.
At the
Roundhouse – I had experienced something different. Now I am a middle aged man
– I’m 47. Can you say I was too close to the front. I paid the money –
it was free standing - I made my way
down to the first couple of rows – I
didn’t push nor shove I was close – maybe not a close as I wantedbut I was near the stage.
I enjoyed
the set – there was an element that felt removed and the audience weren’t as
into it as they were at Brixton before. Some movement happened – people got
lively. Ok by me.I felt water on my
head. Liveliness. Yet it felt calculated. Looked around and this person was ready
to try it again. I think it he mst have got caught up in the heady nature of the event.
I am a 47
year old man.
I mean you
no harm.
I meant no
one any harm.
I carried on
my evening – it was close to the end. The Mods had been good. Not quite
connecting. Wetness on the head - again. Clearly it was intended. Yes I had shuffled around a little. I had caused no harm.
I ventured
to leave.
I was
kicked.
I was kicked
again.On purpose.
Looked around. Same members of the audience who had spilt a pint on my head. Older than me by my reckoning. What kind of fun is all that?
I came to do
no harm.
But I was ready for a rumble. I told him. I told
him I would wait outside.
He did not
wait outside.
I would have
been a 47 year old man rolling in the Camden gutter.
It didn’t
happen. I was waylaid by my friend who bought a t-shirt. A cautionary move to calm the whole thing down. This is the friend who
offered to get tickets for the 100 Club last night.
He didn’t
get tickets.
I thank him. If the crowd is turning into a freak show of wannabe fighters and scrappers then I can leave it for a while. Best to. Let them drift away on the next 'difficult album'.
We will go
again to see Sleaford Mods. I will be friendly. As I always am. My friend knows this.
I have enjoyed the thrills of live sounds for years and years.
There’s something magical about the experience of seeing something you
committed to your memory through repeated revolutions on record players
suddenly becoming real for your ears in a building with the minds that made it
there in front of you.
I can remember most of the gigs, shows, sets, concerts – what ever
you wish to call them – that I have attended - not the literal evening but
sensations, snippets, sounds and smells that conjure up a moment or an emotion
that was lodged way in my brain. Fleeting images of my heroes played out in
mind films on the surface of my eyes.
Panda Bear at the Village Underground on Tuesday is now firmly
lodged in the cerebral mass of synapses and connections. I am a fan of Panda
Bear – you all should be a fan of Panda Bear – because there’s a beauty within
those electronic collages that soothes the soul.
For those unaccustomed to Panda Bear – he is actually Noah Lennox –
and one part Animal Collective. I came to Animal Collective after listening to
Panda Bear – not the other way round.I
like Animal Collective but I like Panda Bear more. Each tune he has released
has wrapped itself around my heart and made me smile that little longer – not
that they are all happy tunes mind.
I arrive at the Village Underground a little early. So I head off
for a drink in graffiti covered buildings and hip surroundings.I buy a drink. It costs £5.80.Ridiculous really.I think The Smiths t-shirt I bought at one of
my first concerts cost £5.
Some time the city is out to rip you off.
Panda Bear is playing in East London tonight – but this is no rip
off – this is not a rock n roll swindle. And this is his one date in the city as he
waltzes through Europe and beyond. There is only one day to spend with this
homie. Not even a day – it’s only a night.
But I’m glad I spent it with you.
Proceedings begin with Maria Reis who produces sounds that are both
haunting and jaunty – there’s a popness to her MBV meets Eno tunes. The crowd are warm in their appreciation and
the cavernous building- with it’s bar
on the side making it difficult to see the stage- feels intimate as she plays to the swelling
numbers.
And then we wait for PB.I
have managed to find a spot way down the front about two bodies back and to the
right of the stage. The crowd is hip and youthful – but I don’t care - I am an
old man taking space from the youth. I dig this too.
I wait for the arrival of Noah.At 9.30 the lights dim and Panda Bear enters the room – he takes off his
coat- keeps on his hoodie - picks up the microphone and begins to create sonic
alchemy. Tonight’s ‘show’ and to be fair it is a ‘show’ is full of repetitive
visuals and strobed lights and screens there to add and support the wonderful
sounds of the Bear’s workbench.I’m
intrigued by the workbench – it looks cobbled together with MDF to hold
instruments that shake the very soul. Noah works this table of instruments(?)
throughout the set – sounds blending and growing from his array of special
units and keys – drones become fragments of songs and layers of sound build
upon each other into this beautiful digital cacophony offset with sweet
harmonies and honest feelings.
To be honest it’s hard making out what I’m listening to – I never
got hold of the last vinyl only ‘A Day with the Homies’ but I guess this is
what I’m listening to interspersed with songs from when he took on the Grim
Reaper and won. There’s a few older ones too all presented with a backdrop of a
pulsating dancing woman in garish make up and flowing dresses. It’s a trip
maaaaaaan. A real mind bending trip. But the audience are here for the ride –
there’s a group behind me bellowing the words and dancing with wild abandon –
we are here to worship at Lennox’s sonic altar – we are his disciples – which
is apt because it’s just after Easter that he walks amongst us.
The night develops through each sample and repetitive drone with the
Panda adding vocals as loops become recognizable tunes- it’s hard to know where to clap – so I just
grin throughout. The new tunes are harder in terms of beats – there’s elements
of hip hop, drum and bass and the inevitable dubstep – but it doesn’t feel
bandwagon jumping more an evolving landscape of sound that Panda Bear inhabits. The set consisted of this according to setlist.com
Dolphin (New Song)
Flight
Boys Latin
I Know I Don't (New Song)
Part of the Math
Cosplay (No Outro)
Cranked (New Song)
Shepard Tone
Crosswords
Home Free (New Song)
Selfish Gene
Cosplay Demo (Outro)
The end of the set before the encore slowly built into a huge
pulsating bass drone with vomiting visuals and strobes. It was heavy work. But
there’s absolute heavy soul in his squelching
electronic psychedelia.
Lennox is not a dance musician - but we sway in unison at times to his
kinetic rhythms and futuroid B(each) Boy singing – because after allhis voice remains his secret weapon. It’s
what everything hangs on –and follows this incredible set with an encore of three incredible works- Sabbath (New Song), Crescendo (New Song) and finally Sunset with each
one getting better than the last.We are
uplifted and dancing – and then he is gone.
Coat on and out the building – well probably not - but I want to
afford him some rock star status – not that he is that at all but he deserves
to held up a little higher than he is. It’s hard to find music that resonates
and connects in this digital forever streaming age and Panda Bear is making
incredible tunes that will stand up and be re -evaluated in future years.
I’m glad Panda Bear played at the Village Underground and you will be
glad next time he plays – because you’ll be there too.
Here's a Part of the Math from France - I can't find any videos from London - but you get the idea.
It’s been a long time since the
roogie boogie visited this part of town. I’ve been all caught up in suits and
presentations and unable to get any thoughts down other than those that
generate pay slips. I haven’t been
writing about music. And sometimes listening is not enough.
Where’s the fun gone in all of
this? Luckily Euros was back to revive the vibe.
Euros Childs has been
officially released from House Arrest and is now out and about to bring us
light ( and some dark) in the winter evenings.It’s been two years since he was last in this part of town. So it only
seemed right that I should spend time in his company two times – and as luck
will have it he decided to play two wonderfully storming utterly beautiful
‘shows’ in London.
So the roogie boogie is back.
Well - a different type of roogie boogie
Double the time and double the
pleasure.
And it’s always a pleasure when
Euros is in town. His errant psychedelic left field skewed view of the world
can’t fail to delight. And delight it does with the packed house in North and
South London on a Sunday and a Monday evening this week.
Tonight Euros and Rosie are a two piece
bent on giving us a rocking good time. It’s a different experience to the
Roogie Boogie band but no less intense. The addition of a new Moog strengthens
the bass and (rouche) rumble within the mix. Moogie Boogie. And at the Sebright it’s genuinely heart shaking
– the moog that is - although that might have been where I was sat – or where I’m at.
The stage is set up and is reminiscent of a low
budget indie Rick Wakeman – lots of keyboards and wires (and a phone – for the drums - well some of them) and a lonely two piece kit at the back. And whilst Euros
isn’t playing a brand of noodling prog rock ecstasy there’s a nod to it –
especially the wigged out psychedelia of Dust – heard on both nights in a
mighty melee of sound and confusion–
all fingers and palms and repetitive bass. As ever Euros entertains – how can
he not – and there’s something magical
when these songs come alive in packed houses – and both were packed houses.
The 'House Arrest' tour has only
just begun – date after date in carefully considered venues across the land and Euros always seems to choose interesting venues - both shows in London are in great places – I
arrived early on Sunday to the Sebright Arms – a lovely venue – with fantastic
sound- tucked away behind a main road in Cambridge Heath. Euros has a new long player to plug and sometimes you head
into these journeys knowing what to expect – but this time I wasn’t sure – I had
listened to the album once – in fits and starts – I had some idea of melody and
lines but hadn’t yet immersed myself in Euros’s world. So there was that thrill
of the new – the unexpected in the air. This was also Euros without the Roogie Boogie band- it’s a new band I guess.
It’s the new thing.
I also had my picture taken by a
man who was convinced I was Vic Reeves. He wouldn’t letit lie.
Rosie opened up for the main event ( at the Sebright) in the guise of 'Oh Peas' with soaringly tragic and introspective black anthems about loss and love. Not exactly cheery – but bleakly magnificent if you like to shed a tear on a Sunday.
Then Euros arrived to the theme
from Ski Sunday(which is actually
called “Pop Looks Bach’ pop pickers)As
you know by now a Euros concert is one underpinned by incredible songs and
heartfelt laughs – he never misses a beat – the audience murmur to each other
beforehand that seeing him always leaves you happy – that he makes you
laugh ( in a good way)
And that’s the Euros experience
in a nutshell – I’ve been watching him in various venues for years now and
always leave feeling some how happier. The set tonight is a mixture of the new
and some old – but it wasn’t what I expected. Songs are pulled from House Arrest, Refresh,
Cousins, Bora da and Son of Euros – I think. I never got hold of the set list
so I’ve been trying to piece it together in my head.
I wasn’t sure about 'Refresh' on
first hearing – it was difficult and seemed to be facing inwards – explosive in the layers of samples and resamples. But if you keep on in there it is
refreshing (see what I did there?) And 'Pick it Up' is exceptional in its
airing on both nights – basically a rallying call to pick up the shit on the
street, in the park, on the beach. It takes a mundane thing and transcends to
the magically. It’s about shit – shit on your shoe, in your hair – it’s
thoroughly far out.
On stage Rosie and Euros flit
between synths ,drums, guitar ( well not so much the guitar)and phone (for the drums- there’s an App for that) to summon up
melody fuelled monsters of delight. There’s that open honesty in the songs that
is somehow infectious to the watching audience – creating connections from the
darker end of the street. Songs about eating disorders – Euros needs a list tonight
– hastily pushed to the side of the keyboard to name all the foods that 'Christy
and Misty' get through – not to mention the
waiter who ends up on a spit and with its tempo changes and refrain you get a sense
of Sgt Pepper – especially Being for the Benefit of Mr Kite, or the obsessive 'Shower' taker – safe within the waters of his own home, the yearning ambition to
pursue a 'Stuntman' career, the trials of being a bag – a 'yellow bag', an incredible version of 'Peanut Dispenser' - which surely must be it's first airing in years and years - and I haven't been able to shake it from my head for days - or just the
bliss that it is to exist in a 'Happy Coma'. Which gets us all singing the chorus
and empathising that not all things are bad. Well not until your life support
is switched off.
And of course colanders. Mine is
rocking back and forth. How about yours?
The set tonight is wonderful –
the sound is sharp, taut and visceral. And we get 'Look at My Boots '– at first a
stuttering attempt at the end of the set that eventually becomes 'Jane (Not her
real Name)' from Cousins – which is a bonus.
But then correctly in the
encore.A song of studied coolness about
boots and fridges. Waiting for Euros to comeback on after lights down at the
end of the set you can feel that energy he creates – the crowd are chanting –
I’m clapping – they are clapping – we are all clapping and there really was a
roar when Euros returned to the stage – he’s a well liked man – they are a well
liked band in these parts.
But I’m out the door on Sunday -
no time to wait in queues for CDs and signatures – but it doesn’t matter as I’m
seeing Euros in Nunhead the next night – closer to home. Nunhead is a different affair – all knitting
clubs and real ale. The venue is a community run public house and venue – it's
a nice place – with gold lame curtains on a foot and half high stage – sort of
ballroom blitzed. Tonight there are two
other turns before the main event – Garden Centre a fella and basically a
neurosis belting out childlike squalls and screams about things I have little
time to care about.And then The Gentle
Good who's worked with another Mynci - all intricate picking and lilting songs of moths, birds, love and open
water, the rightside of folk for me – not overly jumpers and roll ups.
Tonight the entrance is to the
Monty Python Theme (actually called Liberty Bell – pop pickers). Now just so
you know two nights of Euros really isn’t that excessive in my book – but I had
been asked why I was going again considering I’d seen the band last night. I
don’t think I need to explain it really – I’ve said it here before – being in a
room with Euros makes you feel good. And I could see some familiar faces in the
crowd – we’ve been standing in rooms with Euros for sometime.
We will continue to stand in rooms with Euros.
We like it that way. And I was
only coming from down the road – I spoke to a Japanese woman – Fujiko (I think
that’s her name) who I have seen at many of these nights – she had come from
Tokyo. So let’s get it in perspective.
I like Euros Childs. Lots of us
like Euros Childs. She really likes Euros Childs.
Tonight was just as brilliant. A
set peppered with the same songs from the previous evening but mixed up a
little. The sound was dense – and didn’t pack the clarity of the Sebright Arms
( ‘More drums’) – if I’m being critical
-but there was still the beauty in the
room.‘Turning Strange’ sounds
magnificent on both airings over the weekend – in theory its 80s sounding
chords shouldn’t work – but Euros weaves that simplicity and feeling through
it. It has a Brian Wilson nod – like it could have been co produced by Dr
Eugene Landy and ended up on Wilson’s first solo album.
It’s mesmerising. Full of harmony and warmth.
It’s on the new album – you
should buy it.
You probably have.
And then with a final flourish they finish with Godmalding (pronounced – God -Mal -Ding to help with the scansion – as it
didn’t know it was going to end up in a Euros song) the night was over.
I hope that Euros is not placed
under House Arrest for another two years.
He's been missed.
But just so you know he will always have a welcome
roof in this part of town.
You can buy the album from the man himself from here You can also get all the other albums too - and you know they are all worth a listen.
The House Arrest continues right up till mid December - see him before he returns home and gets locked back in again.
Here are some videos from Nunhead The Ivy House - I can't find any from the Sebright Arms ( credit to the people who filmed them - thanks)
I have been
meaning to get this down for some time – in fact it’s nearly four weeks ago –
and many things have happened in between – but so it goes. I don't write for the NME - I write for me. Anyway - sometime back I
ventured to Camden Dublin Castle to see The Stella Grundy Band.You remember Stella don’t cha?
Stella is a
legend. Simple as that really.
Previously and
still part of the Manchester ‘scene’ - heady
on the music scene. She was part of Intastella. That sudden burst of ‘new pop
and soul’ that Manchester is wont to do when it suits. You know just be that
little bit ahead. There’s always something going on those cobbled streets.
Now I was a fan
of Intastella and The Twist. If you ever had the inclination to read half of my
writing on here – you’d know about me and Tony O. You know how that story goes.
But I don’t think I’ve written about Intastella – I probably first heard them
through a recommendation from my brother Paul – it normally starts there – but
it could also have been through those Goldsmiths’ student union days ( daze)
all mixed up mates and swapped music. I think there was a lad in the year below
– he was in Ariel – they were from Manchester – some of them went off to be The
Chemical Brothers – it may have been through conversations – I can’t quite
recall – but what I can recall is being struck by the psychedelic shuffles and
squelches and this floating honey sound – this sort of lilting voice - all soft
yet- well I couldn’t quite put my
finger on it. But they looked great – Stella was a force to be reckoned with –
I remember listening in to a BBC Radio One live show and back then technology
could or most likely would let you down – Stella was having none of it – and
let the BBC sound engineers know what she thought. It was great listening for
the anarchist in me – not so great for the BBC.Stella’s still got that steel.
She’s open and
honest. Yet you wouldn’t want to get on the wrong side of her. I imagine it’s
fairly difficult to make it in the ‘business’ as a woman.
As a star.
As a Northern
Star.
And now here she
was again. Full on and ready to take on a crowd who didn’t quite know what to
expect. A mixture of beards and bomber jackets – hipsters and those who might
need hips replacing in a few years. We were a good crowd. A crowd willing to be
entertained. Stella was taking the stage
before the ‘headline’ act – Unknown Pleasures – a Joy Division tribute band –
we are clearly living in post-modern times maaaaaan.
Saying that
Stella’s already re–represented the pop star via her stage production of The
Rise and Fall of a Northern Star. It’s quite difficult to disentangle Stella/
Tracy at times as the room bursts with sound collages from Tracy – snatched
quotes and lines- who’s up there on the
stage?Nonetheless what this show does –
and it is a show – a show a strength – of resolution – of good times – of groovy times – is allow Stella to play to her
strengths – her skills as a performer.
She’s has this magnetism- she begins to command the room – to make
them pay attention.
We are treated
to selections from Stella’s wonderful album ‘The Rise ad Fall of a Northern
Star’, tales of excess and longing – of being in a band – existing. They are
delivered with fury and humour – Stella’s vocals mixing wonderfully with
electronic grooves and bubbles and bass. Absolutely solid gone. There’s a
direct dub lineage in all of this performance – the sound is wonderful –
aggressive and loose. Throbbing and delightful.Guitars screech and delay whilst electronics boil then simmer in this
(insta)stella mix – and everything is held down by expert drumming – blending
triggered samples and machine beats to the real – this band are incredibly
tight – uptight – out of sight. I hadn’t
quite expected it to be this way – there’s pop floating through it all – but
you can see the dark side – the excess within – taking the whole thing up a
notch.This is not nostalgia but it
looks back at theride Stella’s been on.
It’s not always been an easy one – sometimes she’s had to carry a heavy heavy
weight.They don’t play Heavyweight
tonight – Stella said that it’s because they are working on a new version – I
hope it harks back to the early incarnations of the tune – it’s a belter – and
I’m definitely coming back to see it played live when Stella and her clan return.
Finally we have an old Intastella tune in the mix ( for their No.1 fan) –
Skyscraper – a towering dnb floor shaking fest as Stella and the band bring the
crowd ever higher – write to the top of the tower block.
They only play
for 30 minutes
Stella and her
mighty,mighty,mighty band could have played for longer.The crowd were in the palm of her hand and
there for the taking. But you know the adage – keep them wanting more. They do
want more. And I am certain Stella will continue to deliver. In some ways the whole night was an odd one –
here we had new exciting sounds taking hold – a new Manchester excursion –
demonstrating its roots –and growing new branches – whilst the final ‘turn’ of
the night was a Joy Division covers band – they could probably get a slot on
the ferries – it was old Manchester – well at least a vision of it – and don’t
get me wrong they were alright – and I’m sure there’s a fan base – but it’s not
Ian. It isn’t any of them. That happened in 1979. And then it came to an end. I
listened to Joy Division in my bedroom – I was 11.It paved the way
for this. For connecting with new sounds.
Stella is making
new sounds not treading old ground.
She’s not just a
Northern Star you know.
She’s simply a
star.
You can buy her album here And you can listen to this right now.