Monday, 5 May 2014

1983 - vinyl villain

Back to some kind of normal.

For the years 1972 to 1979 music was the most important thing in the world to me. I started out like everybody else, glued to Tuesday lunchtime chart countdowns, but soon moved on - what was in the charts and on Top of the Pops was less interesting than other stuff I was finding.  It started with an exploration of early rock 'n' roll, fuelled by the the soundtrack album for That'll be the Day.  Like the David Essex character in the film I was swept away by the combination of Del Shannon and fairground lights.  The sequel, Stardust, was a similar gateway to 60s music. 
 


There was also a memorable fortnightly magazine (and accompanying Radio 1 programme) called Story of Pop.  One week this had a list of 100 singles you should own, then a list of fifty albums.  Sounds like a challenge!  I accepted that challenge.  Later it was the NME Book of Rock which suffered my updates, corrections and opinionated comments. I was always on the look-out for something new.  I was very open -  I would listen to anything. 



I started going to see bands. At first, for obvious reasons, I only went to see bands I liked. Then, when I was 14 I won some tickets in a Radio City competition to see Supertramp, Joan Armatrading and the Movies.  This was a very significant event in my life.  I didn't like Supertramp.  I was going to see a band that I didn't like.  It opened the floodgates.  After that I would go and see anyone.  This did mean I saw some awful bands - I'm just gonna say Wishbone Ash and Barclay James Harvest and let you draw your own conclusions.  But I started to see some great bands too.

And of course I bought NME every week.  Every week between the one with a free Monty Python flexi disc (May 1974 apparently) and sometime in the early 1980s. NME and the John Peel show were my guides.  Liverpool Empire, Mountford Hall and Eric's Club in Mathew Street became home from home to me. 

But in the early 1980s I fell out of love with pop music.  I had more important things to do - a job, a house, an everlovin' wife.  She, poor thing, was traumatised by a Bunnymen gig in Poole in 1982 - as far as I was concerned these were a bunch of lads who used to drink at the next table in Eric's; my everlovin' wife thought they (and the whole long macced audience) were from another planet.  Music faded into the background, bit by bit.  It wasn't just domesticity that made me give up music. One significant moment was a newspaper ad for a gig, possibly Eric Clapton, maybe Phil Collins, in New York.  According to the ad you could fly out on Concord, stay in a top NY hotel, see the gig and then fly back.  They were selling the whole package.  I remember thinking this ain't rock 'n' roll. Through the '80s I gave up buying records and going to gigs. I did sell a kayak to Simon le Bon.

Which brings me to this:  the second guest posting from Mr Vinyl Villain who is apparently golfing it up somewhere.  Mr VV probably never sold a kayak to Simon le Bon, neither did he fall out of love with pop music in the early 80s.  We've already heard something about his love of Postcard Records recording artists; here's his thoughts on some other sounds of 1983.

Over to the Vinyl Villain

When asked to make a guest contribution or two to this very fine series my first reaction was to go with 1979 but instead I've turned to 1983.
Back in those days, every new year began with all of the music papers highlighting 'the ones to watch' in the coming 12 months. I don't recall any of NME, Melody Maker, Sounds or Record Mirror telling us to watch out for an up-and-coming combo from Manchester. But then again, why should they when The Smiths had only thus far played one gig. History records that the meteoric rise of The Smiths caught almost everyone on the hop.
It was a friend of one of my flatmates who cottoned on first, certainly here in Glasgow. (His name, by sheer coincidence, was Steven). While others may make the claim, I know he bought the debut single, if not on the day of its release, then certainly the first day it reached shops in Glasgow - the two dates may not have been the same thanks to the incompetent way that Rough Trade arranged distributions in those days.
 

 
Steven had the advantage of a friend from Manchester who was constantly going on about The Smiths having seen them twice within a few weeks at The Hacienda and at Rafters. So when he bounced into the flat saying that this was a single that just had to be heard to be believed, we sat up and took notice. He put it on the turntable and as he did, the three of us who shared the flat looked at the sleeve in what has to be said was a fair degree of discomfort. Pictures of naked men can be conversation killers…..
 
The music however, was very quick to win all of us over. Even the b-side was a belting bit of indie-rock that was apparently a live recording with no overdubs which was unheard of for a band so inexperienced. It was a real 'WOW' moment in my life and indeed the lives of my flatmates. Steven played his ace card by handing all of us a cassette copies he had made of both sides of the single such was his confidence we would adore it. But other than that single (a copy of which we all bought - a rarity when most of the time we just swapped things with one another) all we had to keep us going over the ensuing summer months were precious tape recordings two Radio 1 sessions - one recorded for John Peel and the other for David 'Kid' Jensen. The wait for the official follow-up single was long and difficult.
 

By October 1983, which was five full months we now had a third session on cassette to tide us over. There were four new songs recorded for the John Peel show, three of which we collectively agreed were outstanding but the other was maybe the weakest sounding song so far.
 

So you can imagine our surprise when it was announced that the weak song was to be the next single. We really thought the band and the record label were making a serious error. The fact is, of course, the single version of 'This Charming Man' was miles removed from the Peel Session version. Within days, The Smiths were no longer an underground secret….and music for millions was never the same again.
 
 
Part 2
Channel 4 started broadcasting on Tuesday 2 November 1982 providing an 33% increase in the choice of channels available to UK viewers. Actually, that's not completely true as C4 didn't reach all transmitters for a good few months.

The first week of programmes included, on Friday 5 November, a show called The Tube.

In an an era when music on telly was chart-fodder on Top of The Pops or the odd appearance by an indie band on The Old Grey Whistle Test, this new C4 programme really felt as if it had been sent down on high from the gods. It had presenters who looked and sounded like the sort of folk who went to student unions, it had comedians whose sense of humour made young folk laugh out loud and old folk (ie the over 30s) grunt and stare in disbelief; but most of all it aired loads of great music either performed live in the Newcastle studio or via specially commissioned films and documentaries.
It was in 1983 that the programme really took off and helped launch the careers of many an act - not least Frankie Goes To Hollywood

The first appearance in the above clip I didn't see at the time of broadcast. But the second live studio clip I distinctly remember. The young lady in the black underwear at just before 6pm on a Friday night must have put an awful lot of young males off their tea….
 
Again, not from another planet, just the next booth at Eric's. 
Thanks VV.
Dangerous Minds recently had a Frankie flahsback.  Read more here. 
 

Sunday, 4 May 2014

Tales from Tickleford Gully

Scene: the public bar of The Corn Poppy, Tickleford Gully, earlier this evening.
 

A:  Evening.

B:  Quiet in here tonight.


A:  Aye.  That's the way I like it.  You should have been here last night. Bedlam!  Full of city folks and arty farty types.  It was like that time when Madonna moved into Tickleford Gully.

B:  Madonna? That was before my time.

A:  Aye, a year or two back.  She moved in to the Big House on the hill, Weston Towers. 

B:  Right

A:  Then she booked the church for a blessing for her parrot or something.  Brought all her friends and cronies in from that London and from Hollywood.  Bert and Gary had to come and help behind the bar - they were like kids with the keys to the toy shop - and we had to send out out to Lidl's for extra Ready Meals.  Made a killing that weekend.
 
B:  I'll bet.  So what happened yesterday?

A:  Well, it all started on Friday.  Some of us went out on one of Bert's magical mystery tours in his charabanc.  He just uses it as an excuse to take his wife shopping.  He dumped us in the middle of Brummagen, said "pick you up at five" and buggered off.   We wandered around for a while looking for bulls in the bullring but there weren't none.


I got lost in the market and eventually found myself at a custard factory.  Well, it said it was the Custard Factory but I couldn't see any evidence of it.  I kept on walking away from the hassle, found myself on an industrial estate.  Then I saw this notice:



It said NOTICE and then in smaller print Bill Drummond - The 25 Painitngs. 

 
Always been a fan of Drummond so in I went.  Funny old place, you'd think they would have tidied up a bit.  There's three big piles of books on the floor, a circle of chairs with some wool and knitting needles, a couple of timber bed frames, one with barrels under it, a desk with a couple of chairs, books, maps, shoe shine stuff.


On the walls there are maps, notices and paintings with odd words on.  Without an awareness of context they don't make much sense.  And then there's a real big deck of cards made out of 25 paintings (actually I can only count 23).



I'm looking at the walls, reading some of the notices when in comes The Artist.  "Hello Bill" I say.  There's a subtext here that says "I've followed your career since Big in Japan, got a complete set of Zoo singles, bought you a drink in 1979 after a Teardrop Explodes gig at the Nashville Rooms when none of you had any spending cash, read all your books, collected Scores, explored Penkiln Burn, monitored the ramblings of the Jamms, the KLF, the K Foundation and the rest.  45, the17, $20,000 are all on the shelf". 

Of course Bill doesn't know this and just says "Hi" politely and goes about his business, adding that he's just popping out..

I carry on looking around and see that rather than just popping out he's preparing for some painting.  So, I say, not just nipping out for lunch then.  Gamely he says I can come along.  He tells the gallery staff that he's "just going outside, I may be some time".  His quoting my namesake makes me feel quite proud.  Out we go, Bill carrying a roller and a paint pot, me carrying another pot.  Finds a site, does a spot of painting, adding to the greyness of Brum.  Some people pass by, admiring the art. A passing rasta takes some pictures on his phone, taps away, and already the work is being shared. Discussion has started. Job done, art made, conversation initiated, we return. 


When we get back Bill makes tea and coffee for everyone and says he wants to interview me.  I say yes but only if it is limited to four questions that I haven't been asked before. This is a new venture.  Interview 40 people, each for 40 minutes.  I'm (one of) the first.  Part of the concept is that the interview is a self contained event, which the interviewee can use as they want but Bill won't be using it, recording it or making a sculpture out of it.  We sit down at the desk in the gallery and start the interview.  Bill asks questions. He also puts forward his views, occasionally stopping himself to say this is your interview. Pretty soon we're talking about topics we have a shared interest in: Elvis, Dylan and the Beatles.  His favourite Dylan album is Nashville Skyline, mine is Blood on the Tracks.  He's a good bloke. 
 

B:  What does this have to do with how busy the Corn Poppy got last night?

A:  Well, I told a couple of people about it and showed them a picture.  They shared it; some of the people they shared it with shared it again, then some of them did too.  Some of them, tho' not all, credited the source of the picture and this site.  So there were nearly 1000 people in here last night.  Some of them were still here this morning, sleeping on the sofa.

B:  All gone now?

A:  There's just a few left.  It'll soon be back to normal.  Just you, me and the usual suspects.

B:  Thank goodness for that.  Make mine a double.  Have one for yourself.

A:  Don't mind if I do.

Saturday, 3 May 2014

I will not sing a hateful song

 The 25 Paintings by Bill Drummond
slightly blocked by Man Made Bed by Bill Drummond
and Raft by Bill Drummond

Since he walked out of Art School in the early 1970s (disillusioned by the lack of ambition of final year students) and turned his back on Art Bill Drummond has dedicated his life to . . . Art.  He may have given up the idea of being Rembrandt but his actions, from the brutality, religion and a dancebeat of Big in Japan, through Lori & the Chameleons and the KLF to No Music Day and the17; from pre-Millennial graffiti to The 25 Paintings, from Soup Line to Curfew Tower everything is Art.  With a capital A. 

Much of Drummond's work is intense, earnest (nominative determinism in action, William Ernest Drummond) but with enough humour, childlike innocence and chutzpah to pull it off.  Drummond claims his work has no political or moral message but it does: everything I do, you do, he does has a moral or political dimension, even if it is only question everything.

Drummond is a painter, a musician and a sculptor  (Everything I do is a sculpture Bill Drummond; Everything I do is a prayer Spoonface Steinberg).  More than that he is a merry prankster and a conceptual artist.

The concept is crucial.  A canvas painted blue and yellow with the words BAKE CAKE is only a part of a much bigger concept: the size of the canvas (the width an inch less than Big Bill Drummond's height; the height in proportion with the Golden Rule), the colours - black, white and the primaries, no mixing (Mondrian would be proud), the font, nothing is left to chance. And then (quoting Bill Drummond):
"One of the paintings just has the two words BAKE CAKE on it, no further explanation. But what I will be doing is baking 40 cakes at Eastside Projects (Victoria sponge or chocolate). I will then draw a large circle on a map of Birmingham that is pinned to the gallery wall. The centre of the circle is the gallery where I have baked the cakes. Then I will drive out to the edge of the circle with a cake, knock on a random front door. If anyone answers I will say, ‘I have baked you a cake, here it is.’"


 5 of The 25 Paintings by Bill Drummond

Pieces of art are announced, with detailed devilment, like this one describing the process of defacing a dozen billboards over a period of a dozen years.



Nothing is left to chance, not even the type of paint or the nature of the vandalism.

I suppose there is one aspect which is left to chance
          The choice of the billboard
          is governed by Drummond's irrational anger
          generated by the billboard


So it was a gift that this was posted a couple of 100 yards away from the gallery where Drummond has started his world tour in Digbeth, Birmingham.  I'm not really happy about sharing the poster here. I wouldn't want one person to see it and think it was ok to vote for them.  But this is about the art.

Someone (The Lone Billboard Defacer?!) has been at work on this Ukip billboard! Photos by

photo by thecornnpoppy
So maybe a little bit political.

If Bill gets to read this can I say:
The Leaving of Liverpool
So fare thee well, my own true love,
And when I return, united we will be.
It's not the leavin' of Liverpool that grieves me,
But, my darling, when I think of thee
Traditional
Boots of Spanish Leather
So it's fare-thee-well, my own true love,
We'll meet an-other day, an-other time;
It's not the leavin' that's a-grievin' me,
But my darlin' who's bound to stay behind
Bob Dylan
Visions of Johanna
The ghost of electricity howls in the bones of her face
 Bob Dylan
Dark End of the Street
written by Dan Penn and Chips Moman
single by James Carr
recorded Royal Studios, Memphis
released on Goldwax Records, 1967
Any Day Now
b-side of In the Ghetto by Elvis Presley
recorded 20 February 1969 at American Sound Studios, Memphis, Tennessee
producer Chips Moman


in the interest of balance here's a comment from Streets Ahead on the Bristol Post website

UKIP claim 75% legislation comes from the EU but according to a House of commons research paper only 7% primary & 14% secondary legislation comes from the EU.
http://tinyurl.com/nnsgnb6
UKIP would have us believe EU migrants are sinking the UK but according to the University College London's research unit:
"People from European Economic Area countries have been the most likely to make a positive contribution, paying about 34% more in taxes than they received in benefits over the 10 years from 2001 to 2011, according to the findings from University College London's migration research unit. Other immigrants paid about 2% more than they received.
Recent immigrants were 45% less likely to receive state benefits or tax credits than people native to the UK and 3% less likely to live in social housing, says the report written by Professor Christian Dustmann and Dr Tommaso Frattini."
UKIP MEPs are looking after the UK's interests in Europe but vote against everything on principle, be it good or bad.
Ukip has been accused of "defending the indefensible" after it emerged the party's MEPs - including Nigel Farage - voted against a resolution designed to combat the illegal ivory trade in Europe.
Only 14 of the 671 politicians who voted opposed the resolution, and six of them were Ukip.
They included Farage, along with the party's deputy leader Paul Nuttall, Derek Clark, Gerard Batten, John Agnew and William Dartmouth.
UKIP claim we'd be better off outside the EU but the Confederation of British industry seem to hold a different view. Which research are UKIP's views based on?
http://tinyurl.com/psz6ysq

Read more: http://www.bristolpost.co.uk/Reader-s-letter-Disturbing-UKIP-posters-defaced/story-21039591-detail/story.html#comments#ixzz30dZvxMhw

Friday, 2 May 2014

Into the Gully

Deep in the heart of nowhere lies Tickleford Gully. The River Tickell rises in the north of the county, on the chalk downs, winding its way to the sea.  It isn't spectacular but has moments of extreme picturesqueness.  The fishing is good, the fields are irrigated and there are only a few sections where serious flooding occurs.  And then only very occasionally.

The village grew up on at a bend in the River Tickle where, when conditions were right, the river could be forded.  The Romans crossed here, the Saxons too.  There's evidence of a Viking presence in nearby placenames (the village of  Nearby for example) and the Normans built a castle in nearby Castleton.

You could walk from one end of the village to the other in five or ten minutes, although it will likely take longer because someone is sure to stop and talk to you.  There's a church, a pub (The Corn Poppy), woodlands, a manor house, cottages - some old, some newer, a village green with cricket in the summer. And  a bunch of farms.  The pub does better business than the church.

 The village pub, The Corn Poppy

The River Tickell 

Tickleford High Street

Pulling out of Beeching Halt, Tickleford

Farmhouse, Tickleford Gully

The Hills of Zimmerman

Tickleford Gully locals

Farm, Tickleford Gully

Bridge over the River Tickell

The Gully

Another dog, Charley dog

Sunset over Tickleford

Tickleford Moor

Looking out from Zimmerman Hill

Looking towards The City

The Lake

The High Street

Chocolate Box Cottage

Thursday, 1 May 2014

a place for dreaming

 
a place for dreaming and for people to open up to one another
Claire Kito

 
"Le mur des je t'aime" by Frédéric Baron and Claire Kito at Montmarte features the phrase "I love you" written on it 300 different languages. 


Author, musician and composer Baron collected a thousand  "I love you"s because he found it difficult to say Je t'aime.   His songs include "Je t'aime to Destruction", "Dare to Say Je t'aime".

 
Calligrapher Claire Kito is responsible for the visual interpretaion of Baron's obsessive collection.  A labour of love.  You can find more here and buy a postcard too.


Space Invaders can be seen all over Paris, there may be a thousand of them according to Invader's website.  As a retro-futuristic website www.space-invaders.com is hard to beat.


 Every time I look down on this timeless town
Whether blue or gray be her skies
Whether loud be her cheers or whether soft be her tears
More and more do I realize
 
That I love Paris in the spring time
I love Paris in the fall
I love Paris in the winter when it drizzles
I love Paris in the summer when it sizzles



I love Paris every moment
Every moment of the year
I love Paris, why oh, why do I love Paris?
Because my love is near

walls are not the only place for graffiti

 
 
graffiti isn't the only form of street art
here is Marcel Ayme, the author of The Man Who Walked Through Walls (see what they did there!).  Worth reading if you finished the one about the Rhinocerous.

 
And here is the Montmartre we all know and love.  Who amongst us hasn't got a Montmartre caricature/silhouette/sketch of a loved one around somewhere?
 
All photos by Mme Akriche