Showing posts with label #berlin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #berlin. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 July 2015

what I would have painted on the Berlin Wall


In 1945 Allied tanks rolled into Berlin and the war in Europe was over.  My Uncle was there and did his bit for international relations by liberating a local girl.  And another.  My cousin was the result of the first liaison but Uncle had moved on, settling in what became the Russian quarter with his new wife.  



One day, sixteen years after the war ended, West Berliners woke up to find a wall around their city.  Creating an island, not an idyllic desert surrounded by ocean, but a capitalist city surrounded by communism.  Uncle was on one side, Cousin on the other.  Uncle never crossed the border, never returned to the UK - although he did stay in touch - Nan used to save me the stamps from the letters he wrote. They were great stamps.


As a newly minted teenager in the mid 70s I spent a summer in Berlin.  I flew in to Templehof.   My first sight of Berlin was coal bunkers.  Seemed like miles and miles of coal - in case the East cut off supplies. I stayed with my Cousin and made myself at home.  It was the best summer.


For the West (read USA) Berlin was a marketing opportunity, a shop window to be viewed from over the wall.  Money was pumped in to make it the most dynamic, exciting, shiny, city in the world, certainly when compared with the greyness of the East.  West Berlin shouted from the rooftops: We've got Coke! And cars, watches and dapper suits.  Over the wall it was pretty obvious they had nothing.


I stayed in an apartment in an ancient block in Pezzalozzistrasse. My Aunt lived in another apartment in what had undoubtedly once been a very fashionable part of the city.  There was a doorman and a bell boy in the lift.  The furniture was heavy, black, ornate, overpowering.  So was her cooking, which I hated.  The ghosts of Cabaret stalked the halls. Delightfully decadent.


There were wayside shrines close to to the wall, memorialising people who had tried to cross over, East to West.  And had ended up shot.  I met a man who had been a soldier between 1939 and 1945.  He had a finger missing and still hated the British.

 Thierry Noir, Upfest Bristol, 2015

In 1984 Thierry Noir started the process which brought down the wall.  The wall was a potent symbol, a constant presence.  Thierry felt it needed taking down a peg or two. It needed demystifying. So he painted on it.  Which sounds easy but wasn't.  Both sides of the wall were technically in the East and it was an offence to deface the wall. But he carried on - and what happened?


First of all paint fumes travelled over the wall confusing the populace, it was the smell of freedom, the smell of rebellion.  They started to crumble.  And the paint started doing its work on the wall - tiny particulates worked their way into the stone and concrete starting the process which would lead to the wall literally tumbling down. Cold War is Over (if you want it).


A quarter of a century later the German Department of the University of Bristol has been working with a group of local secondary schools, the arts organisation Routes into Language South West and Upfest to commemorate the Fall of the Wall.  This series of murals were created with the theme What I would have painted on the Berlin Wall.


nice work kids



















and then all of a sudden it was over
the wall came down 
and became the stuff of snow globes
and packaged bits of original Berlin Wall.  


Wednesday, 27 May 2015

Berlin, Paris, Netley

Fresh Ink
Welcome to my life, tattoo
We've a long time together me and you

 Berlin wall, today

he sounds a little hoarse

Berlin Wall
Loses something in translation


Villebon, Paris
Wu Tang Clan  

 Villebon, Paris
Devil in the detail 

Villebon, Paris
What's your name?

 Pinacotheque, Paris

No, what's your real name

 Pinacotheque, Paris
So long ago I don't remember

Klimt Exhibition, Pinacotheque, Paris
Grand Passion

Telegraph online


 Corn Poppy, Berlin

“If you are a troublemaker... it’s our job to politically destroy you... Everybody knows that in my bag I have a hatchet, and a very sharp one. You take me on, I take my hatchet, we meet in the cul-de-sac.”
Lee Kuan Yew
 Corn Poppy, Weston

“We have to lock up people, without trial, whether they are communists, whether they are language chauvinists, whether they are religious extremists. If you don’t do that, the country would be in ruins.”
Lee Kuan Yew

Corn Poppy, Netley
Remember
most of the blunders of history were made this way

thanks to our Berlin Correspondents and thanks to our Paris Correspondent
Danke Dan & Abi
Merci  Mme Akriche

Friday, 28 November 2014

1974, Berlin; another time, another place


in Berlin by the wall
I was 5' 2" tall
it was very nice

In January I started a thread here which I originally intended to be an unbroken series of posts covering the years 1961 to 2014 detailing a musical education and in the process explaining to younger viewers how the past fifty odd years worked.  Things got off to a reasonably good start and we rattled through the sixties quite quickly.  

However, once we got to the 70s things went off the rails due to things that were going on out in the Real World.  April and May turned into a couple of months having a close look at the National Health Service.  (My verdict:  it's a Good Thing.  It needs investment, it needs our support, it's worth fighting for.  I can not for one moment understand why every country in the world doesn't aspire to have a National Health Service like Britain's).  

And with the end of May came an event which made everything else seem unimportant, especially a blog about my musical tastes.  The Corn Poppy took a break and the series went on the back burner.  But after a period of grace the Corn Poppy came out fighting and we were off again.  I was keen to carry on with this series because it had been fun and I was just getting up to the golden years.  

So, in September I did a bit of cheating and reposted all the year by year musical posts day be day. Then I got as far as adding one new entry before we were back checking out the services of the NHS. But we're free from hospital visiting now and  I'm going to have another go. Maybe just to the end of the 70s.  We'll see.

In the 1973 post I rabbited on about how easy it was to move from pop to rock, from Slade and the Sweet to Bowie and Roxy Music and from there on to Lou Reed and King Crimson.  Exploring is in the blood, wanting to find new frontiers and claim them for my own. I wanted to hear everything.  In 1974 I had the chance to explore someone else's map.  Cousin Norbert.


Due to a quirk of history I had a German cousin, some years older than me.  Born in 1946, a Scouse father and ein Berliner mother.  In 1974 I spent the summer in Berlin staying with Norbert. When Cousin Norbert went off to work I either wandered the streets exploring that amazing city or explored his record collection.  

There's a lot I could say about Berlin and how it influenced my world view and political understanding. After all this time the thing I remember most is the difference in colour on each side of the wall.  It was like the difference between Kansas and Oz.  West Berlin was bright and shiny, illuminated by poppy red coke signs and adverts for cameras, cars and music centres.  East Berlin was grey and drab.   There were wayside shrines on the western side of the wall marking the spot where people had tried to cross.  And been shot.

On the eastern side there were some big black limos parked where they could be seen from the West but Norbert said they were just show cars and everybody drove these funny little things called Trabants.  There was a Trabant in the Checkpoint Charlie museum with a petrol tank that had been adapted to hide someone in.

But let's talk about the music.  At that time there were people I'd read about but never had the opportunity to hear.  One was the Moody Blues. Norbert had a whole collection of Moody Blues albums.  I listened to them all once and decided I never needed to listen to them again.  

Then there was the Rolling Stones.  Of course I'd heard the Stones, Satisfaction and other pop hits but I'd never had the chance to listen to Sticky Fingers or Exile on Main Street.  Now I did.  I played them through, again and again.  Then I decided I never needed to hear them again.  

Next: Leonard Cohen.  Andy Warhol said something about Love (or maybe it was sex) being wasted on young people.  He suggested that it be kept a secret until people were 40 then sprung on them at that age when they could truly appreciate it.  I felt this way about Cohen.  I knew it was good but I knew it was beyond my 13 years.  So I made a mental note and filed Leonard Cohen until I was 40.  It was a wise decision.

What else?  Neu, Faust and Can.  I totally rejected the Rolling Stones and Moody Blues and totally embraced Neu, Faust and Can.  And Cluster and Amon Duul II.  Bloody mindedness? Probably.  This was music with its own rule book. You could tell they had listened to Chuck Berry and the Beatles somewhere along the line but that was only a launch pad from which German rock took off.  And left everything else torn in its wake.  Some of it was a bit boring.  Depended how much attention you were paying.  Or possibly how stoned you were.  I was 13.  I wasn't stoned at all.



What else did he have?  Beatles and solo Beatles albums.  One I kept going back to was George Harrison's Concert for Bangladesh, particularly Dylan's contribution.  There was a pile of Dylan albums too.  I quite liked these.  

Apart from listening to Cousin Norbert's record collection I used to listen to AFN, American Forces Network.  They would play contemporary pop and also 60s American music to remind the troops what they were defending - music from garage punk to surf.  A typical segue would be Rock your Baby, then  Shimmy, Shimmy Co Co Bop followed by Good Vibrations.  

This was also the summer that I started drinking  coffee and President Nixon resigned. Nixon was on the news all summer, Another Oz like revelation - the mask had been stripped from a world leader and he was revealed as a petty, petty man only interested in self preservation. The whole thing was a charade.


This gave the whole West is Best vibe that permeated Berlin a sour taste.  The West Berlin experience was based on show, on showing the neighbours that we earn more than you, we've got a newer car, we've got a bigger tv,  The whole thing was a charade.

Well, no it wasn't.  The West really did have more than the East, by a long chalk.  But money was being pumped into West Berlin just so that those behind the Iron Curtain could see how Great Things Are - if only you renounce Communism and join us.  I loved West Berlin, I was fascinated by East Berlin.  It kinda made you think.  Would you go for Capitalism (an ideology where Man is exploited by his fellow Man) or Communism (an ideology where Man is exploited by his fellow Man)?

When the wall went up in 1961 Cousin Norbert was on one side and Uncle Charlie was on the other.  They didn't see each other again for decades.  Can you imagine that?


Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Ziggy Pop

Bowie in Berlin, Mme Akriche

Berlin - I remember Iggy, and of course Bowie. Someone told me the name of the street where David lived, so I spent the day walking up and down (it was a very long street) looking at all the name plates but never found his name ...

Lifted from an email from my sister.  Can you just imagine a 17 year old Scouse girl in 1977, exploring Berlin, looking for Bowie?  Expecting to find a name plate reading "Bowie, D."  Sis, for your information the address was Hauptstraße 155. And now you can do a Bowie Berlin street tour.

 
Berlin's Kreuzberg neighborhood in the 1970s

Every now and again I think to myself . . . I wonder what are the top five gigs I've been to. Near the top of the list is the Thin White Duke's 70's buddy Iggy Pop.   Over the years I've been to a lot of gigs. Some of them great, some of them average, some of them dire. Forget most, remember some (but don't take none away).  And after all this time I've forgotten a lot of the good ones. I really have forgotten more than these whippersnappers'll ever know.  I was listening to Mink deVille the other day and thought oh, yeah, I saw them in 1978. I'm sure it was good but I don't remember it at all.

My advancing years don't mean I've forgotten all of them - here's a few . . . Peter Gabriel's Genesis (Lamb Lies Down in Liverpool), Tangerine Dream in a cathedral, Five Live Stiffs, early Teardrop and the Bunnymen, the Clash at an ice rink, the Specials at a riot; with twelve people at a Cabaret Voltaire gig and 80,000 for The Who at Wembley Stadium.  Pere Ubu, Suicide, Red Crayola.

From the early '80s there was a long break when I wasn't really interested anymore - with just a few old warhorses (Elvis Costello and David Byrne) dragging me into concert halls.  From 2000 onwards there was a resurgence but these were a different sort of gig, usually some itinerant troubadour, who would travel around the country, by car or train, with a guitar, a bag of songs and a weary countenance.  And some of those have been Best Gig Ever.  For example, Kelly Joe Phelps on Southsea Pier. Jackie Leven and David Thomas at the Grey's. Jason Ringenberg sliding along the bar at the RMA. 

young punks at Eric's 1979, Italian tv
 
Back to the 70s though for Iggy.  Two gigs on the same night.  Iggy Pop at Eric's matinee show and then a few hours later at an evening show.  Eric's had this policy of having shows for under 18s in the afternoon.  The Clash would be playing a regular evening gig - but they'd also do one at 5:00 for da kidz.  Here's a gig that makes me glad I was alive that glorious day: 

Saturday 12th August 1978: The Rezillos and the Gang of Four under 18s matinee 5:00 - 7:30 £1.

But back to Iggy.  Iggy Pop.  Yoof of today know him as a weird longhair advertising car insurance.  Yoof of 1969 in Detroit knew him as the king (or clown) of some form of shock rock. Here's a thing:  you tell me about the most obscure, most hip, most out there performer on the planet today and with the aid of google and youtube I'll be watching him/her in a couple of minutes.  What was hot at SXSW? Seen it already.  But in the 1970s it was a different story.  Legends were truly legendary: their exploits passed down by word of mouth.  I knew someone who saw Jimi Hendrix at the Isle of Wight, someone else who saw the Doors at the Roundhouse - in a different age.  Iggy Pop was a legend.  A legend gone bad (all part of the legend), drink, drugs, loose cars and fast women.  And then, courtesy of David Bowie, there was a comeback.  Bowie even played keyboards for Iggy on some gigs.  These were the days of The Idiot and Lust for Life. Iggy at the top of his game.  And in April 1979 Iggy toured the UK  and played these two gigs at Eric's.  It was a week after my 18th birthday.

New Values, Iggy Pop

I went to both sets.  With a different group of friends each time.  Unfortunately for them they went the wrong way round.  For the afternoon gig I was with a younger group of punks who knew the legend and wanted to see him bleed all over the stage.  He didn't.  He had an incredibly tight band (with real live Ex Pistol, Glen Matlock on bass), played an absolute blinder of a set.  The young punks were disappointed.  I loved it. 

Later on that evening I was back with some college mates who liked proper music.  Not to worry, I thought, Iggy has the tightest band.  He'll play a blinder.  However, at some point between the two sets Iggy and band had partaken of something to help them relax.  After all it was his 32nd birthday.  Possibly just alcohol, possibly not.  They were no longer the tight little band.  They were way out there.  Iggy was bleeding all over the stage (this is Eric's stage, 18 inches high, two foot away from where we're standing).  It was manic, it was crazy, it was all over the shop.  It was that (godbless) bomb going off on stage right there in front of us.  My muso friends weren't impressed.  I loved it.

To get to and from the stage at Eric's performers had to walk from the dressing room through the mob before stepping up onto the stage. Can you imagine how that went?  Everyone was there. Everyone that was in a band in Liverpool in 1979, yer Teardrops, Bunnymen, Pink Military, Naughty Lumps, Wylie, Pete Burns, 051. Quite a lot of people suffered from that aloofness that plagued the Liverpool scene at that time. From some (the Zoo circle) there was a collective air of "whatever". Their loss. Iggy was incredible. 

I touched Iggy Pop's jacket. 

Iggy Pop's Jacket, Those Naughty Lumps
 
Iggy Pop on Australian tv 1979

21-04-1979 Liverpool, Eric's (matinee)
1 Intro
2 Kill City
3 Sister Midnight
4 I`m Bored
5 Happy Birthday To Iggy
6 Fortune Teller
7 Loose
8 Five Foot One
9 Little Doll
10 Endless Sea
11 Cock In My Pocket
12 Shake Appeal
13 New Values
14 Girls
15 Dirt
16 Don't Look Down
17 I Wanna Be Your Dog
21-04-1979 Liverpool, Eric's (evening set)
1 Intro
2 60 Seconds To What
3 Kill City
4 Sister Midnight
5 I`m Bored
6 Fortune Teller
7 Loose
8 Five Foot One
9 Little Doll
10 Endless Sea
11 Cock In My Pocket
12 Shake Appeal
13 New Values
14 Girls
15 Dirt
16 Don't Look Down
17 I Wanna Be Your Dog


Iggy Pop: Vocals
Scott Thurston: Keyboard
Glen Matlock: Bass
Jackie Clark: Guitar
Klaus Kruger: Drums