LE BEAT BESPOKE 8
Easter Weekend 2012
Thursday
The
weekend starts here.
The
eighth Le Beat Bespoke Weekend – once a mod stronghold – kicks off in rocker
mode. Well, kinda.
Entering
The 229 Venue quiffs, leather and tattoos mingle with a swathe of older music
fans and a few '60s and mod types, but in reality the full room felt like
"a gig" rather than a club. No one really stood out or looked out of
place. LBB has grown magnificently from a '60s/mod gathering to a fully-fledged
music London festival centring itself around all manner of "vintage"
culture.
Having
been a life long Hypnotics fan it was with great anticipation that I entered
the hall to see singer Jim Jones' latest and biggest venture: The Jim Jones Revue. After interviewing
the enigmatic frontman for Shindig!
the one thing that I was aware of was how professional he was. This is a man
dedicated to his craft. You want success, you work for it. And he has.
After
receiving accolades for their records, having been voted New Band Of The Year
by Mojo in 2011, touring the World
and appearing on both The Late Show and
Later With Jools Holland, the Revue
really are the hardest working band in show biz... And they have earned their
stripes.
Witnessing
their 2012 incarnation – with wonder kid spiv pianist Henri Herbert – one is
struck by their democratic stage presence: all musicians are mighty forces,
filling their space, jumping with guitars in hands or pummelling the Joanna
with hair in face. Surrounded by his powerful outlaws Jim Jones testifies, clenched
fist to chest, eyes upward. Jerry Lee, Mick, Little Richard, Mick, Iggy and
now, a slight dose of Robert Mitchum in Night
Of The Hunter all inhabit the on stage persona of Jones. This isn't a man
it's a rock 'n' roll creation. And perfect at that.
Playing
material from their two/three albums with a new song about the London riots
thrown in, they don't let up for over an hour. Okay, so not that much has
changed since Thee Hypnotics embraced us; that evident influence of the high
octane ramalama of The MC5 is still central, but the greaser looks marked by
Orton's Paul Simonon-esque swagger take
things further back and their fuzzed up 12 bar rock is comparable to everyone
from The Sonics to The New York Dolls and Gun Club. Yet, like both The Ramones
and Motörhead The Jim Jones Revue are the keepers of the key. This hybridised
homage to rock 'n' roll culture is all theirs and no one else's. It's as if the
music of 1956, 1969, 1983 and 2012 all inhabit the same space.
What
is especially apparent with an event like LBB is that in an era where multi
channel TV, the Internet and iPhones feed our every whim the more honest and
timeless forms of music and fashion have a bigger place in our hearts than ever
before. Rather than hydrogenated space age food we want pies like grandma used
to make and The Jim Jones Revue are the biggest, unhealthiest and most
satisfying meat pie you'll ever eat.
Jon ‘Mojo’ Mills
Friday
LBB’s weekend of festivities continues on Friday evening, and The 229 Venue
is full to bursting with collected mods, longhairs, hipsters and freaks, all
letting their proverbial “freak flags fly”, and getting down to the mother lode
of ’60s sounds (heavy on the pop, psych and freakbeat). Friday night boasts
three bands, all performing live versions of their most celebrated albums.
Tonight July is preceded by a
Moomin witchdoctor with oversized embroidered tongue, stamping a witchy voodoo
staff in counter to hypnotic psychedelic sounds. The crowd is “up for it” – one
reveller has a nifty Tourettes moment, screaming "psychedelia" at the
top of his lungs as July graced the stage. Tonight July includes original
members Tom Newman and Peter Cook (a guitarist who still has the chops, no
nonsense searing fuzz), augmented by a trio of young upstarts, featuring the
dynamic Alasdair Mitchell (late of Bangtwister and now of Hidden Masters) on
bass overdrive. Al is a natural choice – he lives and breathes July,
providing a faithful and energetic delivery. July plough through the album in
its running order with the addition of ‘Dandelion Seeds’ to close the set, and
50 odd minutes later I'm reeling, a firm believer that July is the
epitome of UK psych, with tracks as ‘A Bird Lived’ and ‘Friendly Man’, who can
argue?
The Crazy World Of Arthur Brown gave the crowd a
flamboyant display of circus craft, wizardry, and pyrotechnics – all to the
beat of an astonishing, and oft overlooked ’68 album. CWAB's take is looser and
neatly fits the live setting, stretching out and adding "theatre" to
the proceedings (there's even a levitated keyboard at one point). Mr Brown
continues to command an audience, with the sturdiest pair of lungs and an
unfaltering performing energy. Although they’re young and hot, Mr Brown is
non-reliant on his current Crazy World, unlike others on the “classic album”
treadmill. I had to laugh though, as I can’t remember the last time I saw Rob
Bailey so aghast with childlike exhilaration from witnessing all that freaky
shit going down onstage. Waiter, may I have a "Spontaneous Apple Creation"
with my coffee?
Louis Wiggett
Phil
May, who once proudly claimed to be longest haired man in the UK, is no longer the
recipient of that title. Actually, he probably hasn't been for several
decades: several styles of music have
developed in the wake of the trail blazed by The Pretty Things, including assorted types of metal, and it isn't
in that much evidence at the front
either. Why any such trivia should matter, when after 50 years he's still fronting a band this good, is inexplicable –
but such is the nature of the fact-collecting, stat-quoting anorak fandom that
the best psychedelic and progressive rock seems to bring out in people.
And
tonight, being just that little bit more than
just another Pretties gig, is the one event of the entire LBB weekender
guaranteed to do this: in the last 15
years I've seen them do the entire SF
Sorrow album several times, play
entire R&B sets specifically devoted to the first two albums, and even threaten to grace us with Parachute in its entirety (that's still
in the pipeline, by the way, folks) and dip into all manner of obscurities, but
never before have they devoted almost an entire set to material from the
several albums' worth of soundtrack music composed and recorded for the De Wolfe
library under the name of Electric Banana.
The
name, plundered quite possibly from the lyrics of Donovan's ‘Mellow Yellow’ and
later namechecked as an imaginary Greenwich Village rock club by Rob Reiner's
alter ego Marty De Bergi in the intro to This
Is Spinal Tap, drips with pure myth: Reiner's East Coast beat haven never
existed and nor, technically, did the
band, except for contractual reasons. Thus, by default, the Banana are the legendary, imaginary
psych-prog band your older stoner mates talked in reverential tones of
searching for albums by, the one about whom much apocrypha is told, the one
whose florid name both The Dukes Of Stratosphear and Porcupine Tree
subconsciously parodied in their nascent efforts two decades later, and the one
you never thought you'd see. Except, of course, you had probably seen them
several times already under their real monicker, performing the tunes they
were best known for, in venues ranging
in size from The Boston Arms to The Royal Festival Hall. You just didn't know
it. Or if you did, maybe you forgot.
But
that, my dears, is only half the story – because it was these songs, knocked
out hastily in London basements over a period of four to five years, that
soundtracked over a dozen British
horror, exploitation, sex and psychedelic caper films now beloved of collectors
and Shindig! readers from Aberdeen to
Alperton. To these eyes and ears (which have revelled in such delights since I
was knee-high to my old man's nadge) the
prospect of such a gig was a dream come true.
So,
did they live up to such high expectations? Pretty much (uurgh, bad play on
words there), but only given the caveat that you go into these things fully
prepared for the fact that it'll never quite sound the same as it did “back
then” Without Wally Allen, it couldn't do anyway,
but those of us who follow the band regularly have got used to that fact by now.
And, as I commented on another website some time ago, the introduction of a younger
rhythm section, even though the drums occasionally still bear the unwelcome
reverb of “big rock” (that might just be the PA though) has repositioned
the Pretties as close to their classic
sound as they are ever likely to be again.
The
people who come to LBB every year (even though there were a fair few older
“heads” in the audience who departed as soon as the last live note had been
played) want it raw, garage, freakbeaty and jagged, and for the most part this
is exactly what the band dish out:
Dick Taylor may look like Are You Being
Served's Young Mr Grace, but name meone
other guitarist from the ’60s still working today (with the possible exceptionof
Tony McPhee) who can still wring riffs, licks, melodies, solos and sheer overdriven
fuzz of such intensity from his instrument, and I'll buy you a round of the
most expensive beer available (which, in this venue, it has to be said, could be
almost anything on offer). Similarly May's vocals retain the sniding,
sneering power of yore, from opener
'Alexander' through lysergic delights like 'Grey Skies' – veteran of several
Britsploitation titles including the ultra-sleazy Take An Easy Ride – and 'Walking Through My Dreams' (even if the
rest of the band seem to have forgotten
how the vocal arrangement to the coda of the latter goes) to the one-two R&B
thrashes of 'Midnight To Six Man' and 'Get The Picture': a veritable mountain of
uniquely British vocal energy that personifies that strangely beautiful 1965-75
era better than anyone else with the possible exception of Rog D himself.
New
bassist George Perez and percussionist Mark St John take lead vocals on the
rarely-aired ‘Love Dance And Sing’, while rhythm guitarist Frank Holland,(the
third longest serving member after the two originals) steps up to the mike to
trade verses with May on a pulverising, pummeling ‘I See You’, maybe the only
true psychedelic power ballad – and I mean
that in the most powerful, overwhelming way possible. Smitten by
memories of its usage
in Haunted House Of Horror, I can
feel Proustian chills of joy crawling up my spine:
‘It'll Never Be Me’, once grooved to by Clare Sutcliffe in the window of a
Berkshire
record emporium during the evocative ‘I Start Counting’, is, even though I fully
expected to hear it, almost aural and cerebral orgasm enough to make me cream
my linen flares.
Conversely,
the title song from What's Good For The
Goose, introduced by May as "a song we really didn't wanna do in the
film and I can't believe we're doing it tonight" is playful, cheery and as
daft as you would imagine any song from a film pitting Norman Wisdom against
the swinging boho set to be. In the corner, a small gang of us, including
lifelong mods/ psych-heads, DJs and at least one (De?) Wolf Person (flanked by
Diagonal types on the right), also dance unshamedly like they did in the
pictures back then, and like you did in '68 not just to the DJ, but the band:
the oldest of us were probably still only in nappies when the Pretties cut
these original tracks, but if anything that is proof of their cross-generational
transendence and timelessness.
That
said, LBB is definitely an event for those of us who like to party like it's
1969 (and dress accordingly) and hearing any of the above songs, the
melancholic ‘Walk Away’ or for that matter the Motowny uptown strutting ‘Danger
Signs’ played here, in front of an audience who look like they've walked out of one of those films, by the band that either did play
in or soundtrack them, is, and should be, a pivotal moment in the career of any
informed journalist or unashamed fan of
both film and music. Not only that, but THIS, nfriends, defines in one fell
swoop true "UK psych", true "Swinging London", and encapsulates more than any other gig seen in
the last two years the very reasons why I left Glasgow and came back home. This
truly is the very essence of the Britsploitation experience in excelsis, even
if the Pretties themselves haven't seen half the films their songs so
illuminated. OK, nobody invited me ghost-hunting in a disused mansion in
Middlesex afterwards, but that also meant nobody stabbed me in the bollocks ala
Frankie Avalon either. A case of swings and roundabouts... ‘Mr
Evasion’, followed by a breakneck thrash-out which sees the band flanked for the
second time by raven-haired exotic dancers ("where's the girls? May was
won't to
quote at several intervals) bring the main set to a close: the R&B explosion follows
soon after, before the final hammer-blow of ‘LSD’, seguing perfectly into the
proto-metal stroke of genius that is and always was ‘Old Man Going’ smashes our jaws
to the floor in wonderment at what we've just seen. In the aftermath, it's almost
inconceivable that we wondered if they were going to pull this off, or that we
still question how long they can keep it up.
Two
men pushing 70, another two in their 50s and their brace of young cohorts in
perfect collusion conclusively prove, yet again, tonight that age is merely a
state of mind. The only downside is that there isn't enough time to do all of
this stuff: I knew I wasn't going to get The
Monster Club but I thought ‘Walking Down The Street’ from the
recently-released-
on-DVD
Some Like It Sexy might have got an
airing. Still, there's time. The Pretties, for a band who've survived what
they've survived already – including playing with Jasper Carrott on Top Of The Pops –are by now surely
immortal, the ephemeral and elusive Electric Banana even more so. Now, could
somebody please start making films in
that style again so they can show the lesser mortals what they're still capable
of? Aspiring Jenny Agutters, Mark Wynters, Christopher Matthews's and assorted
nameless Scandinavian hopefuls, kindly form a queue by the door.
Darius Drewe Shimon
Saturday Afternoon
I
was initially a little taken aback to be stung for £7 entry despite having
bought Saturday and Sunday night tickets, but three bands and a record fair at
midday has to be worth that, so in I went, just in time to catch the first act
of the afternoon's “Dirty Water Showcase” spot, Thee Vicars. These are a great young band, delivering an excellent
set compromising elements of garage, Merseybeat and good old fashioned rawk ’n'
roll, I enjoyed ’em a lot – heard the records, first time in the flesh though!
Next up were Spanish three piece The
Hollywood Sinners, who snarled their way thru a spikey set, well received
by a fan club I think they'd brought along for the ride! But to round off the
afternoon was the highly anticipated The
Sorrows, yeeeaah!
|
Matt Clarke |
I
was actually surprised that a band with their stature was playing at this time,
and in essentially a splinter event for the weekender, but with them being
managed by the guy who organised the event, I wasn't going to dwell on his
rota. Waiting for them to hit the stage, I was speaking to a few round me and
it seemed most had travelled to London with this band highest on their radar,
from places as far afield as Birmingham, Leicester, Edinburgh, Sheffield and
San Francisco – no pressure on the Coventry boys then! As the band took the
stage, I was immediately struck by the size of legendary vocalist Don Fardon –
he's huuuge! I have to say he did look pretty nervous, the room although not
the biggest was very full, much more so than for the other acts, but as they
launched into their first song it was immediately apparent that his rich
baritone sounded great! And a well thought out set, of Sorrows classics, a few
inevitable covers and entertaining banter was soon underway, nailed by a tight
unit of Don, fellow ’60s journeymen and a great 17-year-old guitarist;
standouts for this punter being ‘No No No No’, ‘Cara-Lin’, ‘You've Got What I
Want,’ ‘Pink Purple Yellow And Red’, and of course the band's “Magnum Opus”
‘Take A Heart’. No forced encore, they blistered through the lot, intersplicing
and entertaining between songs with tales of their heyday exploits, Don kept
referring to his bandmates as “this current line-up”, which did make me wonder
how permanent an arrangement it actually is! But his lead hench, and vocalist
on a couple of numbers was full of banter with the big fella, and aptly filled
in with a second blast of ‘No No No No’, when the big fella was strangely AWOL
when the very appreciative audience wouldn't let the band leave stage, he
eventually reappeared looking dumbstruck at the reception to give us a couple
more!
|
Matt Clarke |
I
inevitably feel a slight tinge of disappointment when I see most vintage
artists these days, unoriginal band members, rusty sets, aging vocals, etc... No
complaints here, okay they didn't exactly look sharp in a '”uniform” of logo
tee shirts and black slacks, but with tags over the years as “British garage
pioneers'” and “foremost exponents of Freakbeat” The Sorrows certainly didn't disappoint
at all; I think they'll be around quite a bit over the next year or two, and
I'll be joining the far-flung travellers if they don't come to my doorstep.
Really
glad I got to see ’em, then. I won't forget The Sorrows... nope, certainly not!
Matthew Clarke
Saturday Night
After a brief respite for some much needed
sustenance and a spruce up, it was back to 229 for the evening's (er - and
morning's) festivities.
|
Matt Clarke |
As we walked in, The Screamin' Vendettas were just taking stage, a band that I'd
heard a lot of hype about, but if I'm honest they really didn't move me. The
song choice was fine, some sterling British rock ’n’ roll, a smattering of
rR&B and a fair few garage classics, but something was missing in the
execution, and their gimmick of bizarre masks disguising the identity of the
members soon wore thin, although judging on this performance it's not a bad
idea to stay anonymous.
After a circuit of the music rooms, which
always confuses in the labyrinth this venue is, (the R&B room was
surprisingly quiet, the psych room buzzing as ever) we settled back into the
busy main room for a good atmosphere and a cracking rockabilly, tittyshaker and
garage set until the weekend's headliners arrived, The Trashmen. We were warmed up by a gushing, but unnecessarily
overlong film of tributes to the band made at a Spanish weekender, which had it
been just a couple of minutes long would've been entertaining, but as it was I
could literally feel myself getting old watching it. And, they duly arrived. I
was wondering how, despite an unquestionable pedigree and a lot of rekindled
interest after an online campaign for a Christmas chart topper came close to
success, what is essentially a “one-hit wonder” band over here would justify
top billing. But I soon got my answer. They were loud, fast, energetic, and I
enjoyed every minute. Their takes on Ventures, Surfaris and Dick Dale classics
were great versions, Trashmen style; a short Link Wray tribute faultless, and
they linked with stories of the numbers they were nailing – unbelievable to
hear they first played together nearly 55 years ago!
|
Matt Clarke |
Soon enough a pair of stunning go-go dancers
arrived on stage to signal their finale, ‘Surfin' Bird’. The girls shook, the
crowd shook, the ground shook and that was it. Tight, talented and entertaining
– Trashtastic!
This was amazingly
their first British appearance; “We'll be back” they said. You'll be
welcome...
Matthew Clarke
Sunday
|
Matt Clarke |
And
so to Sunday, and what could be a better way to nuke those cobwebs and get us
in the mood for shaking our tired butts than some out and out Raunch ’n’ Paunch
Garage Revival Revival courtesy of Austria’s Wild Evel & The Trashbones. Taking to the stage like a perverse
hybrid of Fuzztone Rudi Protrudi and Max Wall, Mr Evel sounds like he has some
scores to settle as he gets busy with his young cohorts for a heads-down
snarl-athon about cavemen, untrustworthy girlfriends, revenge, global warming
(okay, maybe not) and any other subject on the checklist of Garage Grievances,
all interspersed with some spirited Mummies-style farfisa wobbling. Admittedly
the bones and bowlcuts cartoon schtick does start to pummel the senses after a
while so it is with some relief that the Go-Go dancers come on board, if only
to briefly divert our attention from Mr Evel’s Everton Mint stripey leggings. They
do what it says on the tin, they play trash, they wear bones, they are The
Trashbones and there’s very little danger of their next LP sounding like
Bauhaus. As they leave us all grinning from ear to ear and ready to face the
night ahead, we can only thank them profusely for that.
|
Matt Clarke |
Next
up are the recently reformed The Poets
from Glasgow, who, as any freakbeat/psych fan worth his/her salt knows recorded
some of the most immediately identifiable and haunting singles of the
’60s. Consisting of core members George
Gallacher on vocals and Frazer Watson on guitar, The Poets are more than ably
assisted by members of Scotland’s other beat legends, The Thanes. Gallacher
initially appears to have a slight sense of unease about what we are all going
to make of it, even admitting that he’s not sure if he’s so keen on some of the
material himself. However, such butterfly-induced self-deprecation is
short-lived and it becomes immediately apparent with opener ‘Now We’re Thru’
that this is a man who is totally at home with performing and who has not lost
any of his chops as a vocalist. ‘Some
Things I Can’t Forget’, ‘Baby Please Don’t Do It’, ‘I Love Her Still’, ‘Here
Are Some’ and ‘I’ll Cry To The Moon’ are all delivered confidently to an
open-mouthed, spine-tingled audience. The Thanes, as Poets devotees, give a
performance that’s respectful of the original recordings but not to the point
where they are merely trying to recreate the records. As seasoned performers
themselves, they understand the live dynamic and so help bring a new energy to
the music of The Poets without losing the spirit which makes Poets material so
unique in the first place. No mean feat indeed.
Unfortunately
supposed time constraints denied us the remaining two songs on the setlist –
‘Wooden Spoon’ and ‘In Your Tower’ – and there was a palpable sense of disappointment
that they weren’t allowed to continue. “That wasnae bad” a beaming Gallacher
pronounced at the end in his distinctive Glaswegian accent. George, we couldn’t agree more
Ian O’Sullivan