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Issue 3 / August 2010

In Issue 3, August 2010 of Bido Lito! With cover artists THE CORAL, and features on SHELLSUIT, HOT CLUB DE PARIS, NEVILLE SKELLY, SOUND OF GUNS, SEAN FRANCIS BUTLER, CAPAC and much more.

In Issue 3, August 2010 of Bido Lito! With cover artists THE CORAL, and features on SHELLSUIT, HOT CLUB DE PARIS, NEVILLE SKELLY, SOUND OF GUNS, SEAN FRANCIS BUTLER, CAPAC and much more.

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<strong>Issue</strong> 3<br />

<strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

The Coral<br />

Hot Club De Paris<br />

Neville Skelly<br />

Sound Of Guns<br />

Sean Francis<br />

Butler<br />

Capac<br />

The Coral<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk<br />

FREE


Editorial<br />

So, its over. A month of fun-filled-football-fodder comes to a close, 31 teams come home with pangs of<br />

disappointment - some with pangs more pangy than others - and one set of players arrive home aboard a raft of<br />

superlatives and with a pretty handsome pension packet to look forward to; creating history is always kind on the<br />

bank balance. But what of our band of lions, our ‘Golden Generation’ - that moniker makes my blood boil, a Fleet<br />

Street hack’s moment of epiphany - upon reflection, what did we take from all that? Pretty sodding awful wasn’t it...<br />

granted. But, the most infuriating aspect of it was listening to the Chelsea and Arsenal fans who’d made the trek<br />

to the other end of the earth to watch their national warriors<br />

whinge and whine, in their curdling drawl, ‘They get paid<br />

120 graaaaaand a week and they’re raaaabbish. We should<br />

Illustration: Michael Cottage<br />

all get aaar maaaaney back...’ I don’t know about you, but<br />

I find it hard to have much sympathy with a bloke who can<br />

afford to take a month off work and jet to the other side of<br />

the planet to watch a football tournament. Especially, when<br />

its his soddin football club playing a part in bloating English<br />

Football with dirty money and foreign stars thats leaves the<br />

national team in the state its in. Deep breath, I’m starting to<br />

sound like a really give much of a monkey’s here...roll on 7th<br />

<strong>August</strong> and Tranmere v Oldham. Romantic, abject suffering,<br />

thats what football is all about.<br />

Which of you lucky lot where at Glasto? You swines.<br />

Glastonbury is officially the worst weekend of the year...when<br />

you haven’t got a ticket. Glorious sunshine, probably the best<br />

line-up for years, an impromptu performance from Johnny<br />

and Thom...it was depressingly good. When I go next year<br />

Bono will have recovered, it’ll piss down and I’ll get trench<br />

foot. For everybody’s sake, you want to wish Bido Lito! fails<br />

miserably in our quest for press passes.<br />

We went to see The Coral last night at The Philharmonic.<br />

What an evening. Its fantastic to see them back, clearly enjoying what they’re doing and with a gorgeous new<br />

record to boot. There will be a review in next month’s magazine of the show and I hope you enjoy the feature in<br />

this month’s issue. Nick Power was a gent when we met up with him and extremely supportive of Bido Lito!. When<br />

we chatted about Liverpool’s independent media he said “Its as if Tin ‘ed still rules the airwaves, we’re stuck in a<br />

Brookie time warp man” and enthused about the need for an alternative voice. Well Nick, we’re here man and its<br />

great to have The Coral aboard the fun bus.<br />

Date for your diary listeners...over the weekend of 1st/2nd/3rd October we will be hosting ‘Inside Pages’ at<br />

Static Gallery, the official launch event of your favorite pink monthly. As well as being a feast of Merseyside music,<br />

featuring the cream of the bands from the early editions of these very pages, the event will include an exhibition<br />

of photography and illustrations from the magazine. There will also be an array of stalls and retailers, featuring a<br />

record shop stocking exclusively local acts - with all proceeds going to CALM - and loads more goings on. Full details<br />

will be in next months mag. Keep peeled. Peace out.<br />

Craig G Pennington<br />

Editor<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 3<br />

Bido Lito!<br />

Volume One – <strong>Issue</strong> Three<br />

bidolito.co.uk<br />

Bido Lito<br />

Static Gallery, 23 Roscoe Lane<br />

Liverpool, L1 9JD<br />

info@bidolito.co.uk<br />

Editor<br />

Craig G Pennington - info@bidolito.co.uk<br />

Reviews Editor<br />

Christopher Torpey -<br />

reviews@bidolito.co.uk<br />

Designer<br />

Luke Avery - info@earthstudios.net<br />

Words<br />

Craig G Pennington, Christopher Torpey,<br />

David Lynch, Bethany Garrett, Richard<br />

Lewis, Dan Wilson, Can Brannan, Floris<br />

Stoter, John Still, Andy Hill, Alan O’Hare,<br />

Nic Toupee, Leo Nikolaidis, Glass Pasty,<br />

Nik Glover, Lee Boyle, Katy Long, Pete<br />

Robinson, Sebastian Gahan, Sam Garlick,<br />

Jack Breslin, Hugh O’Connell<br />

Photographs<br />

Jennifer Pellegrini, John Johnson, Tom<br />

Roelefs, Simon Thelwell, Keith Ainsworth,<br />

Paul Paton, Ben Thapa, Rosie Selman,<br />

Luke Avery<br />

Illustrations<br />

John Biddle, Michael Cottage, Luke Avery<br />

To advertise in Bido Lito! please contact<br />

Another Media: bidolito@anothermedia.org<br />

0151 708 2841


Features<br />

5<br />

8<br />

10<br />

12<br />

14<br />

16<br />

20<br />

28<br />

29<br />

30<br />

31<br />

32<br />

SHELLSUIT.<br />

Meet the first victims of the new government’s austerity measures<br />

NEVILLE SKELLY.<br />

Neville Skelly is a shining example of the city’s broad musical shoulders and, fairly soon, he’ll be perched upon them<br />

HOT CLUB DE PARIS.<br />

I’m struck by a group for whom being in a band is a by-product of their love for music and making it<br />

SOUND OF GUNS.<br />

The locals are going to have to get used to it because these boys are going places<br />

...AND NOW FOR THE SHIPPING FORECAST.<br />

“There’s a lot of good local promoters in Liverpool at the minute. Breaking and supporting new bands is definitely important for us”<br />

THE CORAL.<br />

“Living in some big château, recording your album in the basement, taking your kids to school in an Aston Martin....I’d be up for that!”<br />

FIVE ALFA FOR THE JOURNEY.<br />

“We enjoyed a festive beer with two Easter Bunnies, sang a bizarre rendition of Rabbit Massacre classic Bright Eyes and fled Wageningen”<br />

NORTH BY NORTHWEST.<br />

So far NxNW has given airtime to diverse talents and there are few boundaries in place for what gets played<br />

SEAN FRANCIS BUTLER.<br />

A Scouse songwriter who looks beyond Seel Street and knows that great songs are the only currency that counts<br />

CAPAC.<br />

CAPAC are serious about their electronics and their love of the Warp back catalogue<br />

KENDAL CALLING.<br />

The most riveting thing to happen to the sleepy Lake District town of Kendal since the accidental invention of Kendal mint cake<br />

EAT YOUR GREENS.<br />

Eat Your Greens has steadily gained a following and has arguably contributed to the successful installation of a new scene in the city<br />

Regulars<br />

22 THE MIDDLE EIGHT 34 RANTS/COMMENT<br />

37 REVIEWS<br />

47<br />

SPORTS


www.bidolito.co.uk


6<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

Meet the first victims of the new<br />

Government’s austerity measures.<br />

Words: Christopher Torpey<br />

Photography: John Johnson<br />

All set for a slot on the BBC 6 Music stage at this year’s Glastonbury, SHELLSUIT were deprived of some much-warranted<br />

national exposure at the last minute by Camerclegg’s cutbacks. “We were invited to play there by Tom Robinson from 6<br />

Music, he’s been a real big help for us,” says singer Ed. “We were really looking forward to it, but then the cutbacks came<br />

in and funding was cut. I’m not that arsed really: we’ll just come back next year as headliners!” You heard it here first.<br />

While jumping from relative obscurity to major-leaguers may seem a bit pie in the sky at the moment, there is a definite<br />

sentiment rumbling about these former postmen that they are about to go massive in the very near future. With debut<br />

album Walton Prison Blues, they really have a gem of a record full of beguiling tunes that will have you hooked from<br />

the very first chords of opener Just Like Everybody Else. Moreover, they have a record that defies genre: “I’m happy to get<br />

pigeon-holed, people can put me in pigeon-holes all day,” declares Ed. “But whatever label you give us, it just sounds<br />

inadequate.” Scally-pop? City-beat-folk? What then Ed? “It’s soul music to me. Not like your Leona Lewis X Factor-warble: it’s<br />

all about experience and emotion.” And so it is. Shellsuit’s sound is big on heart and low on complication. Every song is<br />

engaging and heartfelt from the off, driven by the emotion that spawned it rather than being dressed up by fancy musical<br />

trickery. But that’s not to say that it’s not accomplished: there are plenty of pop hooks in there to keep you dancing for<br />

hours, and more than enough thoughtful lyrics to keep you wanting to come back time and again to delve in to the<br />

depths of meaning. This is not a grower of a record: if you don’t get it the first time round, please pass the album on to<br />

someone else who will, and get back to your Radiohead CDs.<br />

There is a lyric from the insanely catchy track Split Brain And The Whole Mind that jumps out straight away, and<br />

encapsulates Shellsuit perfectly: ‘typical and original at the same time.’ Lending lush and layered harmonies from The<br />

La’s, and achingly real working-class-street social commentaries from fellow Scouser-rock luminaries Shack, Shellsuit<br />

seem to be walking an oft-trodden path for bands from Liverpool: even their choice of name was designed to invite<br />

every stereotype possible. But their resultant style and sound is subtly different, and seeks to debunk those stereotypes<br />

at every turn. Based in Liverpool, lyricist Ed has always identified more with our city’s musicians, while Cheshire-based<br />

bandmates Lee and Nathan have always sided more with the Manchester scene, with a lot of alt.country influence as well.<br />

As multi-instrumentalist and music swot Lee is responsible for the mixing and production of the music, this is perhaps<br />

why the band doesn’t fall firmly in to the jangly, scouse bracket. As a result, their crafted songs stand alongside those<br />

of their influences, separate from them and unique, in a style all of their own fashioning. This is something that Ed is<br />

acutely aware of: “You wanna see something that sticks in your mind, don’t you? That’s why we try and do something a<br />

bit different, to make things interesting.”<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 7<br />

That is something that is evident even before you engage in the music. It is<br />

hard to find any information out about this lot, and in most of their press shots<br />

they are hidden behind an array of masks and wigs and false moustaches. While<br />

Ed maintains that it’s because “we’re not handsome enough to be interesting,” it<br />

sure does add an extra layer of mystery to the band that you wouldn’t recognise<br />

them if you walked past them in the street. Seeing them live is a whole other<br />

experience: the band often don high-visibility jackets for<br />

their shows, and have their friend Farquhar (“a man who<br />

lives behind a massive big hedge on a council estate”) read<br />

a poem out before they come on, to set the mood for the<br />

evening.<br />

All in the name of crowd entertainment? “You do it for<br />

yourself, you do it because you love it,” explains Ed. “If<br />

no-one listens to it, or you only sell 10 records, it doesn’t<br />

matter.” Surely you want to sell more than 10 though? “We<br />

had this idea when we started the band, which has become<br />

a bit of a catchphrase now, is that we were going to try and<br />

get 10 people in to it. That’s an achievable number, and if<br />

you can have 10 people’s lives affected by it, that’s a good<br />

touch. And some times, at the early gigs, people would<br />

say, ‘I’m one of the 10!’ And then, when things get bigger,<br />

everyone’s claiming to be one of the 10, and it becomes like<br />

a self-fulfilling prophecy: like Spartacus! That was then, 10<br />

was just a good number. I can think of at least 12 now!” It is<br />

this self-deprecating humour which, added to their natural<br />

playfulness, gives them a charm that renders everything<br />

they do in the name of their music genuine.<br />

There is at least one song on Walton Prison Blues that<br />

every person can relate to, from the careerist musings<br />

of Postman, to the post-holiday blues of Bali, Thailand,<br />

Sydney, America, and the prison cell lament of Decline Of<br />

Manufacturing: the album is a shining example of how<br />

songs can be whittled out of the quotidian experiences of<br />

real life, so long as there is genuine feeling at the heart of<br />

it. And one can’t fail to identify with the random encounters<br />

with the strange characters that pop up: the pep-talk from<br />

Tony the vagrant on the Tunnel Bus; the Iraqis In Shellsuits<br />

who ‘came over from seat of learning, with promises of the<br />

dough he’d be earning,’ - even the inspiration behind Split<br />

Brain And The Whole Mind has some wisdom to impart (‘my<br />

brain’s got a brain of its own’), even though his nocturnal<br />

flashing habit gained him some unflattering notoriety in his<br />

native Birkenhead. Real life is anything but straightforward:<br />

one person’s triviality may be another person’s hardships,<br />

and these virtues are recognised by Ed’s lyrics, which gives<br />

Shellsuit a wholesome edge that will keep you coming<br />

back to them when all other music has drained you of<br />

emotion.<br />

This is a band that you really can’t afford to miss. Get the album and get<br />

enriched by a genuinely heartfelt record. Go on the website and read the mission<br />

statement. Get to the live show and behold Farquhar and the high-vis jackets.<br />

Become one of The Ten and join in with something seismic. Get this band in your<br />

life, before you end up on the bonnet of a Royal Mail van.<br />

shellsuit.co.uk<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


8<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 9<br />

NEVILLE SKELLY is not like the rest of them. Craig G Pennington meets up with him to find out<br />

why...<br />

What was Liverpool before Merseybeat? For that matter, what was Britain before rock n roll? You’d<br />

be forgiven for thinking that pop music didn’t exist until Paul met John at the St Peter’s Rose Queen<br />

Celebrations and Garden Fete, that nobody had ever whistled a tune. But before that day,<br />

Britain was a land<br />

of balladeers, dance halls and big bands and though he is still in his mid-20s, it was this, pre-mop-top era that had a deep<br />

lasting impression on the young Neville Skelly, an impression that holds to this day.<br />

“As a teenager, I wasn’t really into the music scene. I listened to singers like Tony Bennett and Nina Simone. It was the<br />

period before rock n roll that I gravitated to.” Neville tells me, over a pint in the Cross Keys off Old Hall Street. Its roasting<br />

outside and the cool beer is welcome and required. So, where did this interest come from? “When I was growing up, me<br />

mum and dad listened to all those old records. My dad was always playing Dean Martin. I just immersed myself in that style<br />

and eventually found myself walking round all the old record shops digging those records out.”<br />

And, if you spend some time with Neville’s new EP, Child Of The Morning, you’ll see that the days he spent crate digging<br />

have been put to great use. The record is a beautifully constructed collection of ballads, in the vein of Mel Torme, with a twist<br />

of the blues, folk and country. But, how did he get here and what has Neville Skelly been up to before now?<br />

During the early part of this decade, Neville was touring extensively across the UK and playing on cruise ships, trawling<br />

across the world with his swing orchestra, releasing a collection of big band classics in 2004. “I was following a childhood<br />

dream, in the tradition of all those classic, great singers of having my own big band. And I did it. But it became quite<br />

nostalgic and i wanted to do something of my own, something more personal. I wanted to find that feeling with my own<br />

music that you get when you discover something that just blows your mind.”<br />

It was that drive to create his own future, that drove Neville to return to Liverpool and discover his own self, his own<br />

musical expression, something that had been daunting up until that point, “because I listened to all those songs as a kid, I<br />

felt inhibited in a way. The music I was listening to was some of the best ever written and I felt a pressure I suppose, it was<br />

like ‘fuckin’ hell man, whats the point!’. Gladly I’m over that now!”<br />

Gladly indeed. Neville’s songwriting was aided in the creation of Child Of The Morning by various members of Liverpool’s<br />

music community, the sessions became kind of a drop in, collaborative, expressive environment, over at Ape Studios on<br />

The Wirral, “We had the same rhythm section throughout, Scott Marmion played pedal steel and guitar, Ian Skelly played<br />

drums and Bob Picken was on double bass and harmonica. After that people would drop in and add parts to songs that they<br />

fancied. We did it on our own steam and there was no pressure, we just kicked back, had a few bevvies and took our time.”<br />

The record was largely produced by Ian Skelly and Will She Hold Another was co-written with James Skelly, both brothers<br />

of The Coral - its worth pointing out that Neville is not related to them, but just shares the same name - and the record most<br />

definitely benefits hugely from the band’s input. In much the same way as Richard Hawley - the closest modern reference<br />

point I can give to Neville - the band ensure that the songs arrangements are lush, diverse and creative. “I certainly don’t<br />

want to become formulaic” Neville asserts, “that can be the problem sometime with big bands. But working like this, we<br />

have our own nuances and a vibe thats our own. We’re definitely on more of a blues and folk tip also and there’s only four or<br />

five instruments throughout. Its down to really strong arrangements, which is something we do share with Richard Hawley.”<br />

Another aspect he also shares with Sheffield’s favorite son, is the ability to completely hold you entranced with his voice.<br />

Particularly on Child Of The Morning, the EP’s title track, his warm, baritone, caramel croon washes over you, reminiscent of<br />

Hawley on The Ocean, who Neville played with recently at The Jazz Cafe in London. “He’s from the same place man, a working<br />

class background and not obsessed with cool. He loved our music at the show and was really complimentary...a top guy.”<br />

Liverpool’s musical success, despite what is sold to tourists, has always been a result of the city’s diversity and the<br />

breadth of its musical pallet. Neville Skelly is a shining example of the city’s broad musical shoulders and, fairly soon, he’ll<br />

be perched upon them.<br />

nevilleskelly.com<br />

Neville Skelly launches Child Of The Morning EP at The Zanzibar on 31st July. He is currently on tour with The Coral<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


10<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

An<br />

Ironically<br />

Lengthily<br />

Titled<br />

Interview<br />

with<br />

Merseyside<br />

Band HOT<br />

CLUB DE<br />

PARIS<br />

Words: David Lynch<br />

“Sometimes it’s like ‘is that the only thing you’ve fucking<br />

noticed about the entire record?’ Have you just thought<br />

‘God, that’s a long title!’?” Finally, with the most enthusiastic<br />

of exhortations, it’s time to put to bed a frankly boring and<br />

overly used assertion about HOT CLUB DE PARIS. The band,<br />

whose long song titles you hear about so often, are worth<br />

so much more than that and perhaps it’s time everyone<br />

noticed.<br />

I met up with the lads just days after their return from<br />

a UK tour which drummer Alistair Smith describes as “long<br />

and sweaty” and thus I’m understandably keen for them to<br />

regale me with fresh tales of drunken debauchery. Perhaps<br />

surprisingly I’m informed by Matt, Alistair’s brother and the<br />

group’s guitarist/vocalist, that their tours are not just quiet<br />

but “super down the line.” Paul Rafferty, who contributes<br />

vocals and bass, admits that because there are only the<br />

three of them on tour (two of whom are designated drivers)<br />

they “tend to spin more out of control when at home.”<br />

Though this doesn’t prevent them knocking out a humorous (these are one of the most quick-witted<br />

bands around) tale about a 60 year old bus driver they met in Stirling who was originally from Old<br />

Swan as Paul enthuses; “he told us all these stories about meeting The Beatles and we sat there<br />

waiting for the punch line but they always just ended with him driving a bus.”<br />

The tour was undertaken on the back of their unusual decision to release two EPs in the first half<br />

of <strong>2010</strong>. The first of these, With Days Like This as Cheap as Chewing Gum, Why Would Anyone Want<br />

to Work?, which was released in February takes its name from a line by poet Matthew Welton. Paul<br />

explains that they opted to record EPs when the group realised they didn’t have enough money to<br />

go into the studio and thus recording duties fell to him. Working at the “digestible chunks” of 6 track<br />

records seemed a less daunting task and when he came across the line from Welton’s poem he<br />

thought it apt for the DIY nature of their newest work.<br />

It was followed by The Rise and Inevitable Fall of the High School Suicide Cluster Band in May<br />

(though the material was recorded quite a few months apart) another record which indicated that no<br />

sacrifice to the group’s sound had been made with the decision to forgo expensive studio time. The<br />

reason for this seamless transition becomes clear when Matt tells me “We’ve never been produced<br />

really. On our first album there are no overdubs and the second there was a lot of input from the<br />

producer Brian but the first thing he said was ‘I don’t want to fuck with the songs’.” It’s clear the liberty<br />

the band have been granted in recording their own material is something they hugely appreciate<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 11<br />

despite any previous assistance; “The freedom you get from recording yourself is exactly the same as<br />

when you make the step up to having your own practice room. When you get 4 hour slots in a praccy<br />

room you feel like you have to be creative. If you’re doing it every day you can say ‘this is shit, let’s<br />

just listen to some records’ or ‘let’s go for a walk and come back. We can just stop and discuss the<br />

pronunciation of words and the placement of things.”<br />

This is set to continue into the group’s return to the LP format for which they tell me sessions<br />

begin the day after our interview. Paul will again take the reins of recording and the lads inform me<br />

they have 4 songs pretty much nailed down and, ahem, “a dickload of other ideas on tape.” Also,<br />

if you didn’t catch the two EPs, they are set to be released in a bundled CD shortly having initially<br />

been released on limited edition vinyl and digital downloads only the first time round. Paul smiles<br />

as he tries to convince me that they sold out of the digital download but not the vinyl prints which,<br />

as anyone who has seen Hot Club de Paris live will acknowledge, is their typically oddball humour<br />

shining through yet again.<br />

This humour is one of their most endearing qualities which doesn’t just come through in their<br />

matter-of-fact lyrics but also marks them out as a genuinely down to earth bunch of people. They<br />

continue to tell me of their disdain for “haircut bellends” as Alistair, on the topic of those who frequent<br />

Liverpool’s bar scene, exclaims “what happened to jeans and a t-shirt being normal attire?” I’m struck<br />

by a group for whom being in a band is a by-product of their love for music and making it, meaning<br />

they’re disinterested in the bullshit that tends to attract<br />

charlatans to any ‘scene’. Matt, as laconic as ever, gives<br />

his thoughts; “this band’s not a machine to get your dick<br />

sucked” quickly adding “and if it was it’d be doing a shit job<br />

at that!” When we’ve stopped laughing, Paul tells me that<br />

he couldn’t show his Gran a copy of NME the week they<br />

topped the publication’s charts with ‘Fuck You, The Truth!’<br />

because of the expletive in its title and I’m not even slightly<br />

surprised. Hot Club de Paris are not too ‘rock and roll’ to be<br />

nice to their Nan and this is why I can now happily believe<br />

them when they say there’s no pretension in the length of<br />

their EP names. So, surely a group of such ingenuity and<br />

wit should now be appreciated for just those reasons and<br />

no longer pigeonholed for their verbosity? They’ve taught<br />

me to be a bit more inventive in my line of questioning if<br />

nothing else.<br />

hotclubdeparis.com<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


12<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

Bethany Garrett<br />

stares down the barrel of Liverpool’s<br />

pistol wielding anthemists and finds out that the people<br />

of Wakefield have a problem with scousers talking guns in<br />

their public houses... Photography by Jennifer Pellegrini<br />

“I don’t think there’s been a better time for the amount<br />

of bands coming out of Liverpool, like everyone you know<br />

is either in a band or knows someone in a band.” SOUND<br />

OF GUNS drummer Simon Finley affirms over half a pint<br />

in a dimly lit Shipping Forecast on a somewhat overcast<br />

July afternoon. He’s not wrong either; it’s how I got this<br />

interview. The band’s guitarist Nathan Crowley can only<br />

agree, “It’s great! It’s a good little scene like. As Si said,<br />

you sort of know everyone through someone else, there’s<br />

a nice little vibe.” Said vibe can be heard rampaging its<br />

way through their commendable debut album What Came<br />

From Fire which Simon and Nathan, with whom Bido Lito!<br />

caught up with, inform us has just debuted at number six<br />

on the independent albums chart. Not a bad start then.<br />

With vocalist Andy Metcalfe and Simon’s previous<br />

band Freemaker and Nathan’s band The Veras splitting<br />

up roughly around the same time, things came together<br />

when after a couple of months recuperation Simon and<br />

Andy, in need of a guitarist put out an advert to which<br />

Nathan responded, bringing along fellow guitarist Lee<br />

Glynn. Being a bassist short of a band, the lads played their<br />

first few gigs “with all the bass on a backing track.” That is,<br />

until John Coley turned up at a show. With his former outfit<br />

The Vagabonds wrapping things up themselves, Coley (as<br />

he’s affectionately known) immediately wanted to get<br />

involved and thus Sound Of Guns were able to cast aside<br />

their “bass-on-tape” method of performing in exchange for<br />

something much more authentic.<br />

Despite each member having their own influences,<br />

ranging from heavyweight rock legends AC/DC and Led<br />

Zeppelin, to psychedelic gentry The Doors and some<br />

good old-fashioned sweet soul music, the band willingly<br />

acknowledge that as a whole, they are dedicated admirers<br />

of anthemic rock. With songs like current single Architects<br />

which incorporates a cacophony of testosterone-fueled<br />

guitar sounds, rifle-like drum fills and vocals ripe with<br />

swagger, they certainly could follow in their heroes<br />

footsteps, going on to fill stadiums as Simon confesses,<br />

“That’s one thing we always get when we play gigs -<br />

people always say our sound it suited to playing bigger<br />

things.” They’re certainly on their way, last November they<br />

jetted off to Dubai Sound City (a sister festival of Liverpool’s<br />

very own) where they played the main stage, though they<br />

did feel a tad guilty afterwards as Nathan explains, “We<br />

got there and we had a look round the stage and there<br />

were all these ducks walking round so we were like ‘why<br />

are all these ducks here?’ Apparently they’d concreted in a<br />

full lake and built the stage there so these poor ducks had<br />

no lake. It’s terrible but to be honest it sums up Dubai in a<br />

nutshell.” The lads are soon being whisked off to Mallorca<br />

for Mallorca Rocks where hopefully, the stage they’ll be<br />

Heavy<br />

Artillery<br />

sharing with The Courteeners won’t have left a sord of mallards of no<br />

fixed abode.<br />

The band recently signed with Distiller Records, an independent<br />

label based in West London but due to their past stints in bands, the<br />

boys were cautious about who they signed with to put their album<br />

out for fear of “being swallowed by the big corporate machine.” Simon<br />

elaborating on the topic explains, “It got to a period when we just<br />

started getting loads of record companies coming up to see us and<br />

I think that happens with most bands but Distiller were one of the<br />

first ones who took a real, serious interest in the band, saw where we<br />

wanted to go and understood us.”<br />

Describing writing the album as a “painstaking process” as they<br />

were used to writing songs simply to play them live, Nathan jokingly<br />

admits “The amount of band discussions we had about the tracklist<br />

was ridiculous. Forget writing and recording the songs, picking the<br />

tracklist was definitely the hardest thing! I think that’s where Distiller<br />

really helped us out, they could take an opinion outside of the band<br />

and give us feedback otherwise it would’ve just been the five of us<br />

going ‘I want this, I want that.’” I make a feeble remark about Distiller<br />

acting as an uncle-like figure to the band to which Simon replies with<br />

his best archetypal scouser rendition of “Listen kids calm down! Calm<br />

down!” Talented and funny; these boys with the help of Distiller sure<br />

made the right choices when it came to the tracklist, for the album<br />

itself is a stunning debut full of earnest though never clichéd lyrics<br />

and riffs to rival their heroes’ with the introduction to standout track<br />

Collisions, epitomising the kind of perilous drumbeat that sticks in<br />

your head in a good way.<br />

Avoiding the fate of many musicians today who consciously try to fill<br />

a gap in the market falling into the “we dress like this, we write songs<br />

like this, the NME will love us and we’ll be on the front cover” category,<br />

Sound Of Guns prefer to treat their music self-indulgently, “It comes<br />

back to the music that we’re writing as a band. We all love that music<br />

and the success that’s coming from it, I’d say is a by-product.” Nathan<br />

expresses before Simon adds “You’ve gotta be doing it because you<br />

love what you’re doing and take it from there.” Hear, hear! With such a<br />

grounded mentality and cheery disposition it’s difficult to believe this<br />

band were once arrested in Wakefield after locals overheard a gang<br />

of scousers in a pub talking about guns and feared for an armed raid.<br />

After clearing up what could have become a calamity, the boys kindly<br />

put a couple of police officers on the guest list for their gig (Taggart +1,<br />

naturally) with tourmates Detroit Social Club summing it up perfectly;<br />

“Can’t take you scousers anywhere.” The locals are going to have to get<br />

used to it though, because these boys are going places.<br />

myspace.com/soundofguns<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 13<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 15<br />

…And Now The Shipping Forecast.<br />

Words: Richard Lewis<br />

Illustration: johnbiddle.co.uk<br />

Given the rude health Liverpool’s music scene is in at<br />

the present time and the explosion in new music in the<br />

city, it seems only right we should have some new venues<br />

to enjoy it in. Step forward then, The Kazimier, The Static<br />

Gallery, Mello Mello and the most recent addition, The<br />

Shipping Forecast. Opened in May this year, the ‘Forecast<br />

is the only music venue in the city that can claim to serve<br />

Sunday lunch as well as put on gigs. BIDO LITO dug the<br />

waterproofs out of the locker, spliced the mainbrace and<br />

set sail for number 15 Slater St to chat to co-manager<br />

and co-founder Lewis Boardman about what the club’s<br />

prospective patrons can expect.<br />

Created and managed by Lewis and Rich McGinnis, the<br />

duo behind the wildly successful Chibuku, the success the<br />

night has brought them over the past ten years inspired<br />

them to set up The Shipping Forecast. A radically different<br />

proposition, existing as a live music venue and club as<br />

opposed to an event, the club is part of the 580 network of<br />

venues across the UK.<br />

“The 580 have now got 12 bars that can host live music<br />

so DJs and bands playing at The Shipping Forecast can go<br />

on to play all of them” explains Lewis. New Young Pony<br />

Club are one of the acts who have recently done this. The<br />

circuit includes the splendidly named Spanky Van Dykes,<br />

the ultra-hip Camden Lock Tavern, Sheffield’s Bungalows<br />

and Bears, and the especially memorable A Nation of<br />

Shopkeepers (Napoleon’s description of the English race),<br />

in Leeds.<br />

On the subject of the club’s decidedly different names<br />

the origin of The Shipping Forecasts’ moniker is a matter<br />

of some dispute. “Er, I can’t remember who came up with<br />

the name actually”, states Lewis, looking momentarily<br />

perplexed, “I told my parents what it was and they’re<br />

reaction was ‘That’s so stupid’, and I thought ‘Yeah, but it’s<br />

so stupid it’ll work’.’’<br />

The name gave the Liverpool based arts collective Mercy,<br />

the creative talent behind the venture plenty of scope for<br />

the décor and overall theme of the venue. Given the ability<br />

to create a space that chimes in with the venues’ name<br />

you do wonder what the interior of Spanky Van Dykes<br />

could look like. The nautical feel of the club including the<br />

fixtures and fittings, even down to the menus and flyers<br />

give the venue a uniformed sea-faring look.<br />

Given the (hopefully temporary) loss of Korova, The<br />

Shipping Forecast has stepped into that venue’s shoes to<br />

some extent, albeit with a greater emphasis on live music.<br />

As Lewis says, “Hopefully we’re filling<br />

the gap where Korova was, breaking<br />

new bands and new DJs.” In addition to<br />

music, the venue also has affiliations<br />

with other organisations in the city.<br />

“In terms of art we’re working closely<br />

with Bluecoat Chambers, and we’re<br />

also working with FACT. We’re going to<br />

have artists come in once every three<br />

months to do installations that will<br />

constantly changing throughout the<br />

year.” In view of the artwork that is<br />

displayed in the venue, The Shipping<br />

Forecast is hoping to establish itself<br />

as a creative hub, promoting the talent<br />

the city has to offer.<br />

Lewis states regarding the interiors<br />

of the club, “The vibe of the venue<br />

was to keep it pretty raw, we’ve been<br />

working bars and clubs over the past<br />

ten years with Chibuku and Circus.” The<br />

design of the venue was partly drawn<br />

up by the same team who oversaw<br />

the re-design of the Magnet. The club’s<br />

opening night featured a DJ set by<br />

Gilles Peterson, a long-standing friend<br />

of Rich McGinnis who gave the club his<br />

seal of approval. On the live music side<br />

the club hosted a brace of gigs for this<br />

year’s Sound City, an event Lewis hopes<br />

will return to the venue next year.<br />

The focal point of the ‘Forecast is The<br />

Hold. A cool subterranean basement<br />

reminiscent of The Cavern (the original<br />

one that is). The stage lies level with the<br />

dancefloor, bringing the band and the<br />

patrons eyeball to eyeball. The room<br />

also harks back to the late 1980s and<br />

the era of warehouse parties when the<br />

likes of The Stone Roses began to play<br />

venues markedly different to theatres<br />

and Academies. Originally a “dirty,<br />

stinking cellar”, according to Lewis,<br />

the low ceilings and the Function One<br />

Sound System make the noise from the<br />

PA inescapable.<br />

This combined with<br />

sweat running down the walls, (‘the sign of a good club’<br />

reckons Lewis), makes The Hold a memorable location.<br />

In terms of a grass-roots aesthetic the club will welcome<br />

new and independent promoters to host events there. As<br />

Lewis states, “If we can agree on the direction of where<br />

they’re going, the music, the artwork, the clientele they’re<br />

going for, then we’re all for independent promoters in the<br />

venue.” He goes on, “There’s a lot of good local promoters<br />

in Liverpool at the minute. Breaking new bands, supporting<br />

new bands is definitely important for us, as well as DJs.”<br />

The combination of dancefloor and mosh pit within the<br />

same venue also physically demonstrates how the gulf<br />

between dance and rock, once seemingly insurmountable<br />

is now just a short hop. A journey that began in the mid<br />

1980s when a bunch of rock fans attended some club in<br />

Manchester called the Hacienda in search of cheap beer,<br />

the sight of bands performing DJ sets is now totally<br />

commonplace. Bands such as LCD Soundsystem on DFA,<br />

cited as a favourite by Lewis further prove how this synergy<br />

is alive and well.<br />

As for the clientele the venue is hoping to attract Lewis<br />

says, “The door policy’s pretty strict; we’re here for the arty<br />

kids, and the music kids, but it’s a place where everyone<br />

can feel comfortable.” Further to this he is at pains to<br />

emphasise the importance of the ‘back door’ entrance to<br />

the venue that opens out onto Fleet St, used of a weekend.<br />

:The key thing when we started this was to have a secret<br />

door.” Lewis nods, “Thursday through to Saturday, as soon<br />

as the sun goes down we close the whole front of the<br />

venue. The doors, the blinds the windows are all shut,<br />

from the outside you can’t even see in, it’s a total blackout.<br />

If you didn’t know you’d just walk past it, you wouldn’t<br />

even know what it was.”<br />

He continues, “The kids who are in the know come<br />

straight in, it’s like a New York loft, Speakeasy-type secret<br />

bar. The back door idea was a good touch, having the<br />

secret door on the same street as the FACT and round<br />

the corner from The Peacock, people’s perception of<br />

the place changes.” A feature that was included in the<br />

architects’ plans for the re-design of the club when they<br />

originally acquired the building, it ensures that everyone<br />

who attends the Shipping Forecast feels comfortable. The<br />

chances of a Hen Night staggering in through the door at<br />

1AM are highly unlikely!<br />

The Shipping Forecast...outlook: sunny.<br />

theshippingforecastliverpool.com<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


16<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

Words: Craig G Pennington<br />

When<br />

THE<br />

CORAL emerged in<br />

2002, British guitar music<br />

was awoken from a creative coma. They<br />

instigated, along with The Music, a rediscovery of ideas out<br />

of the prevailing post-Brit Pop banality. The early promise<br />

of Oasis’s first two LPs, The Verve, Suede, Blur, Pulp et al<br />

had been replaced by a succession of watered down<br />

imitators and stadium-sized reincarnations (Menswear and<br />

Stereophonics have much to answer for).<br />

The Coral spearheaded a sea change and a re-thinking of<br />

what it meant to create rock music in a new millennium and,<br />

along with bands such as Franz Ferdinand, The Libertines<br />

and latter day disciples The Arctic Monkeys (admittedly with<br />

a Big Apple shaped dollop of help from across the pond<br />

courtesy of The Strokes), they set about re-shaping rock n<br />

roll. As a Merseyside publication, it’d be easy to apply too<br />

heavy an<br />

emphasis on<br />

the group’s importance,<br />

to over bloat their impact, yet, The<br />

Coral are still loved far beyond these<br />

shores and remain the eternal muso’s<br />

band.<br />

But, it has been three years since<br />

Roots And Echoes, an age by The<br />

Coral’s standards, and during that time<br />

the group have experienced more


Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 17<br />

changes than<br />

at any other<br />

point during their<br />

(almost) ten year career.<br />

Bido Lito! caught up with The<br />

Coral’s Nick Power to talk about<br />

the band’s new LP Butterfly House -<br />

released this month on Deltasonic<br />

Records - and gain an insight into what<br />

it means to be a member of still, one<br />

of the UKs most forward thinking and<br />

artistically revered groups in <strong>2010</strong>.<br />

“This is a new chapter and we want<br />

to set the standard for the next passage<br />

of the band...its the drawing of a new<br />

map,” Nick Power tells me outside The<br />

Coral’s practice room on a blustery<br />

July afternoon. “The Singles Collection<br />

was the ending point<br />

of that first period of<br />

the band. So much had<br />

changed. We wanted to<br />

do something different<br />

and have a new start.”<br />

And if anything<br />

need stand as a<br />

glowing<br />

endorsement<br />

of that new start, the<br />

beginning of the new<br />

chapter, it is Butterfly<br />

House; a shimmering<br />

collection of West Coast<br />

Pop-Psychedelia, the record<br />

sees the band maneuver a<br />

change of tack more acute<br />

than at any point in their<br />

career, even eclipsing that of<br />

Nightfreak And The Son’s Of<br />

Becker’s arrival in 2004.<br />

The record was produced by<br />

John Leckie, the man who extracted<br />

one of the seminal works of rock<br />

history from The Stone Roses, as well<br />

as producing Radiohead’s ‘The Bends’,<br />

The Verve’s classic ‘Storm In Heaven’ and<br />

Spiritualized’s ‘Ladies And Gentlemen’. So,<br />

was Leckie an influential figure in the creation<br />

of the new record?<br />

“Yeah, he definitely helped. We did some demos<br />

with Ian Broudie first, who just helped us out and<br />

steadied the ship with all the changes that were going on.<br />

Both Ian and Deltasonic suggested working with John.”<br />

In terms of producers, John Leckie is heavyweight, having<br />

presided over some of the high watermarks in British music<br />

over three decades. So did he get the red carpet treatment<br />

over in Hoylake?<br />

“Originally he just came down and watched us praccy,<br />

said nothing and got bevied!” Laughs Nick, sort of hardly<br />

believing what he’s saying...the guy who recorded The<br />

Bends just sat, half-cut in your living room? “Ha! Yeah, it was<br />

a bit weird having John Leckie pissed in ours, just sat there<br />

with a case of Becks. But then he was the first to get into<br />

the studio in the morning and always the last to leave.”<br />

It is often a trait you come across with talented producers;<br />

they’re obsessive. In the same way as a painter slaves over<br />

their art, with a disregard for the outside world and a lack of<br />

interest in concepts such as day and night or the passage<br />

of time, an affected producer moulds their creations in a<br />

closed, idiosyncratic manner.<br />

“Thats how it was, he gave us like a schedule to work to.<br />

It was Monday to Friday, we’d be in at this time and out at<br />

that time. It was very structured and disciplined and it was<br />

really good for us. John used to be a tape op in Abbey Road<br />

and he just has this amazing work ethic. The man doesn’t stop.”<br />

And from that work ethic has been born The Coral’s<br />

most considered work to date. The intricacies of the<br />

arrangements on songs such as the title track Butterfly<br />

House and Roving Jewel and the blissful, baking sunset<br />

harmonies evident throughout the LP, but particularly on<br />

More Than A Lover,<br />

Walking In The Winter, and<br />

Falling All<br />

Around You move The Coral into a new place. In 1000<br />

Years, the band have crafted their most complete work yet;<br />

harmonies so warm your skin will blister, a drum sound to<br />

completely die for - especially evident when they first enter<br />

at the start of the piece - a reverb washing throughout,<br />

binding the music together sonically in a way that only<br />

Leckie knows how. The song has a melody that could have<br />

been taken straight from Brian Wilson’s scrapbook and,<br />

clocking in at two minutes and fifty one seconds, the song<br />

embodies perfect pop in a way that only The Coral know<br />

how, and so good, only The Coral can get away with.<br />

So, in <strong>2010</strong>, what changed with this record? “We played<br />

everything live, which was down to John as we’d been<br />

playing around with tracking various different parts,” says<br />

Nick. “He didn’t use Cubase or anything like that at all. There<br />

was a lot of attention to detail and we demo’d everything<br />

live a few times first, which we’ve not done before. It was<br />

all very deliberate.”<br />

With the band all being ten years older than when they<br />

made their debut album, 2002’s self titled and Mercury<br />

Prize nominated The Coral, has the passage of time and<br />

experience aided them in the creation of Butterfly House?<br />

Nick thinks so,<br />

“When you’re a bit older you can stop everything,<br />

slow down, relax and you can be a bit more patient. The<br />

change in producer helped massively, but it is also down<br />

to the attitude of the band, the standard of the writing and<br />

everybody’s individual playing. I think everybody raised<br />

their game on this record.”<br />

Nick mentioned the changes the band have been<br />

through since their last album; behind the scenes, the<br />

set up of the band’s relationship with their label and their<br />

relocation to a new rehearsal space all being amongst the<br />

shifts, but the main difference being that Butterfly House<br />

is The Coral’s first album without founder member and<br />

guitarist Bill Ryder-Jones. It is natural, therefore, that the<br />

spotlight will fall on the differences his absence makes<br />

to the record. It would be completely fruitless to try and<br />

assert if The Coral are ‘better or worse’ without Bill and it<br />

would do the band and the man an utter disservice. But,<br />

there certainly are differences.<br />

I’ve mentioned that this is the band’s most considered<br />

album to date, and it is in that where the distinction<br />

between the periods pre and post-Bill’s departure lie. If you<br />

listen to the guitar parts on Butterfly House and Sandhills<br />

- the later being the point on the new LP at which the ‘new’<br />

Coral really rear their head - there is a focus on the parts<br />

arrangement and sonic context which is unique to the<br />

group thus far. This is more Knopfler than Nightfreak, more<br />

Neil Young than Bill McCai and the way that the guitar lines<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


18<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

interweave with the arrangements - particularly on Falling<br />

All Around You, Sandhills, and Roving Jewel, the piano,<br />

organ, guitar and vocals sharing the lead motifs with a<br />

comfortable ease - gives credence to the assertion that<br />

this is The Coral’s most wholesome work to date.<br />

On Sandhills, James Skelly’s lead vocal is almost<br />

unrecognisable from that of the youthful, energetic snarl<br />

on Dreaming Of You. Here he plays the role of balladeer;<br />

this is a Scott Walker track without the orchestra, its strings<br />

being replaced by those ever present vocal harmonies.<br />

When Nick says that everybody raised their game on this<br />

record, we agree with him, completely.<br />

The world has changed so much since the turn of<br />

the new millennium. I’ve mentioned in previous article’s<br />

that The Coral’s first EP pre-dated the first ipod, at the time<br />

there was no myspace and bands still demo’d on Tascam<br />

tape machines. The Coral have witnessed the technological<br />

revolution and its effect on bands and the wider music<br />

industry from the coal face. “I didn’t have a mobile phone<br />

until we made the third album and computers were for<br />

those lads in school who didn’t play footy at lunch. We are<br />

living in the future now, its everything without the hover<br />

boards.” But, in terms of the way the band’s releases are<br />

structured, is todays climate much less restrictive? “When<br />

we started it was single - single - album - a collection of B<br />

sides for the singles. We came through from that change<br />

to the ‘anything goes’ kind of way it is today. Maybe we’re<br />

the last of the B side generation?...”<br />

One thing thats not changed for The Coral is where they<br />

base themselves and the obvious affinity they have with<br />

The Wirral. The group all still live in Hoylake - well three of<br />

them do, with one in West Kirby and another in Greasby, a<br />

subtle yet important distinction for those of you who know<br />

your Wirral geography, but for those of you who don’t, I<br />

wouldn’t lose any sleep over it - and their proximity to the<br />

sea remains a huge influence, “well yeah, we do live<br />

right next to it. Its hard to get away from something<br />

that big.”<br />

And the new LP is brewing with influence<br />

from the big blue and wider mother<br />

nature, with constant lyrical themes<br />

hung around the seasons and<br />

landscape. ‘I hear her talking<br />

with the leaves in the dark / The<br />

crooked branches hanging<br />

heavy in her heart,’ sings<br />

James in Green Is The<br />

Colour, a song which<br />

starts with the sound of<br />

the sea lapping at the<br />

shore. But The Coral<br />

have always been a<br />

band in tune with<br />

their geography,<br />

“Where we live,<br />

you walk down to<br />

the prom and if you<br />

look one way you can see Wales and the other way you can<br />

see Liverpool. When we recorded the first album the whole<br />

Welsh psych and low-fi scene was a big influence, we were<br />

well into Gorkys and Super Furry’s at the time. Mwng is my<br />

favorite Super Furry’s LP and we listened to that loads when<br />

we made the first album. You can hear those big haunted<br />

Welsh hills and feel the landscape. The scenery of the<br />

record, it all contributes. Just like you can tell a band from a<br />

city.” Like The Strokes just sound like NYC? “yeah man, and<br />

Lou Reed is the same.”<br />

The Coral’s combination of these Welsh, brooding<br />

atmospherics, an affinity with their Wirral locality and the<br />

influence of Liverpool’s age old trick of a melody, etched<br />

with the bands deep love of the Bunnymen and Teardrop<br />

all still hold strong on the new album. But then, it shouldn’t<br />

come as a surprise, with the band all still residing on<br />

these shores. When the early records kicked off, was it not<br />

tempting to ‘do an Alex Turner’, and flit off to New York?<br />

“Well I’d love to go and experience new places. When we<br />

started it was just complete chaos, those first three albums,<br />

I didn’t know what was going on. We were so young, maybe<br />

if we were a bit older we’d have moved away, but we’re<br />

skint now anyway! I saw that Stones in Exile film recently,<br />

now that’d be alright. Living in some big château in the<br />

south of France, recording your album in the basement,<br />

Jagger getting married, taking your kids to school in an<br />

Aston Martin....I’d be up for that!”<br />

I missed my bus on St John Street a couple of weeks back<br />

and to pass the time, stumbled into The Grapes for a pint,<br />

to escape from the rain. They were hosting their usual faire<br />

of middle aged pub singer with backing tracks, busting out<br />

the Rod Stewart and<br />

Bryan Adams<br />

numbers. After settling down with my<br />

IPA, the crooner went into a version of<br />

Pass It On. It got me thinking about<br />

where The Coral’s music is today and<br />

how far its filtered into the mainstream<br />

songbook. I wondered how that feels<br />

for the band? I once read a quote<br />

from Paul McCartney where he said<br />

that once you write a song, you give<br />

it away, you have to let it go, its not<br />

yours for keeping...<br />

“I like it man. You do give them away<br />

and what would you do with them<br />

if you kept them and were precious<br />

anyway? Music is for sharing, I’d just<br />

like people to do it justice. I walk<br />

past Coopers by Central Station and<br />

the karaoke is going, no matter what<br />

time of the day, people singing Billy<br />

Fury, Joe Meek ‘Johnny Remember Me’,<br />

these amazing songs. It just seems to<br />

be a natural thing in this city. People<br />

criticise it and say the city should<br />

change, its too sentimental, but its<br />

just part of the place.”...as are The<br />

Coral, they are of this place and part of<br />

this place and, after almost ten years,<br />

they are just as essential as ever.<br />

thecoral.com<br />

The Coral tour this summer and play<br />

Kendal Calling on 1st <strong>August</strong> - Butterfly<br />

House is out now


N o v e m b e r 2 0 1 0<br />

Venues throughout Wirral<br />

Martin Taylor . Steve Hackett<br />

James Burton . Tom Paxton<br />

Nick Harper . Wilko Johnson . Dr Feelgood<br />

Joe Brown . Bellowhead . BJ Cole<br />

Gary Murphy . Paul Balmer . Woody Mann . Catfish Keith<br />

John Goldie . TJ & Murphy . Peter Price . Campbell Duo<br />

www.bestguitarfest.com<br />

0151 666 0000


20<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

five alfa<br />

for the<br />

journey<br />

THE CUBICAL TOUR OF<br />

THE NETHERLANDS<br />

The Cubical’s frontman and Bido Lito! scribe, Dan<br />

Wilson, fills us in on his band’s recent tour of the land of<br />

the clog... Photography by Tom Roelofs<br />

Landed, queued, checked, bagged, the usual waiting,<br />

coffee, cigarettes, some dweeb needs another piss,<br />

another cigarette, find a train to Utrecht, a can each. Brings<br />

back memories... a toilet in Kensington. Soaked in the<br />

scenery, many an allotment as far as the eye can see, big<br />

arm burning and breathe.<br />

We meet the Tour Manager Pieter Kwant, 6ft 1ins of genuine goodness. Begin.<br />

Utrecht - Wednesday - Dead Mouse Walking<br />

A cool little cafe serving up vegan food, walls decked out in anti-fascism and anti-globalisation<br />

posters (never a bad thing) 50s flyers on each candle-lit table, a Monday night poetry night, Death<br />

Metal every second Tuesday and then he took her for a drink on Friday.<br />

More Alfa in the dressing room and met the lads from Dead Mouse Walking. Some of our lot<br />

buggered off to a dodgy dive next door.<br />

Both bands and sound engineers sat down to a bowl of Vegan gruel before sound check, blasted<br />

pasta that would give Linford a run for his luncheon. Wash it down with Alfa. Did the trick.<br />

Small midweek crowd, crazy sound but a decent gig from a dry run perspective. Dead Mouse,<br />

hailing from Amsterdam, where a kind of Queens of the Stone Age meets Brit Pop act, with some<br />

decent moments but still pretty much in their early stages. A guitarist who wanted to rock out amidst<br />

a more sedentary bunch. Lines must be drawn. It must also be said that they possess perhaps one of<br />

the most affable and quirky bassists in Christendom. We had a wonderful chat about time travel and<br />

post modernism and not one of us mentioned Marty Mcfly and his fucking Delorian. It can be done.<br />

We did what we do best, drank a little and caused minor offence. I particularly stuck in the craw of a<br />

vehemently patriotic barfly smack head who kept insisting to me that “this wasn’t England” “it wasn’t<br />

Germany... USA.., Russia...” “Turkey?” I chimed in, he wasn’t best pleased. A good game nonetheless<br />

though readers. Try it yourselves. “This is not Just 17” This is not Newsweek” “Watchtower?”<br />

We stayed at Ubika a famous squat within the anarchist movement, parts of the building dated back<br />

to the fourteenth century and it had been squatted for the last eighteen years, although apparently<br />

changes in squatters rights are being pushed through in a matter of months, so dark times ahead. For<br />

anyone<br />

who remembers<br />

The Kif fondly then this place<br />

was for them.<br />

Wageningen - Thursday - Automatic Sam<br />

Al’s birthday. After dawdling away hours in Utrecht<br />

we arrive in the unpronounceable Wageningen, begin<br />

again. As we wait for common sense to dictate I chat to<br />

an elderly Irish couple here visiting their son studying<br />

in the middle of nowhere at the centre of life sciences,<br />

I inquire about the town, “terrible, fuck all to do” proffers<br />

the husband, “they’re a civilised people the Dutch” says<br />

wife. We head on, cross over and then are flanked by<br />

two budding academics on bicycles who kindly and<br />

with certain exuberance lead us to the venue, our own<br />

bespectacled motorcade. The Cubical at Hogwarts.<br />

We arrive, a cool American style joint with free pool and<br />

icy cold beer, also free. We soon become acquainted with<br />

Holland’s best bar man and the softest drink available<br />

“Jils.” Hospitality was at its optimum.<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 21<br />

Automatic Sam (full throttle rock n roll foursome named<br />

after a Beefheart song) opened with a Hendrix drenched<br />

big riff orientated sound that showcased the talents of an<br />

exceptional lead guitarist and a breath taking drummer.<br />

We got to know this wonderful four-piece throughout<br />

the tour and fine musicians and good fellows they are.<br />

Good songs and a strong foundation in real musicality,<br />

interesting time signatures and great stage presence.<br />

Check em, myspace.com/automaticsam.<br />

Our gig went incredibly well and included a dance with<br />

a girl on crutches, an audience rendition of happy birthday<br />

for Al, with the award of a ceremonial Jils, then ended with<br />

a huge gay disco in a theatre.<br />

For the back of beyond these people sure knew how<br />

to let loose. Into the early hours when things tend to get<br />

messy, a discussion regarding bizarre pock marked pop<br />

sensation Seal took place and seemed to go on for hours.<br />

And breathe.<br />

Nijmegen - Friday - My Boot Heels<br />

We enjoyed a festive beer with two Easter Bunnies,<br />

sang a bizarre rendition of Rabbit Massacre classic Bright<br />

Eyes and fled Wageningen to begin again in Nijmegen,<br />

again. Accommodated beautifully at Pieter Holkenburg’s<br />

flat (Automatic Sam frontman) we relaxed for a few hours<br />

with too cool for school drummer Bob, then headed out<br />

and ate a decent meal with Tour Manager Pieter Kwant<br />

Kwant Kwant, discussed the fate of the Liverpool Music<br />

Scene, the ongoing troubles at Vitesse Arnhem and made<br />

merry.<br />

My Boot Heels supported and played Dylan covers,<br />

some old, some new and although it is never nice seeing<br />

covers I did enjoy it this time especially the later Dylan<br />

tracks from Modern Times and Time Out of Mind. I held<br />

onto my super size Grolsch with infamous bottle top and<br />

swayed along, not a sign of Brothers Goss anywhere. “I<br />

was thinking bout Alicia Keys ...”<br />

The rivets, canals, cobbles and back-alleys of<br />

drunkenness were travailed with usual aplomb and the<br />

audience joined us on stage for general knee shaking and<br />

in the end wouldn’t let us off, so good work all round. I<br />

recovered for a good twenty minutes like a human traffic<br />

cone propped up by the coats whilst the rest of the band<br />

enjoyed a little liquid libation.<br />

We returned to Holkenburg’s gaff and stayed up real<br />

late drinking and listening to records with Bob and Pieter<br />

“The Human Being” Kwant. I vaguely recall an alternative<br />

version of Dr John’s Gris Gris with testicle related lyrics<br />

ushering us into the morning.<br />

pleasant.<br />

Me, John and Craig, had a stroll through Nijmegen in the drizzle then headed for an Irish Bar and<br />

watched Utd lose, always nice even if it’s at £4.50 a pint.<br />

Came back and watched a Johnny Cash DVD with The Automatic Sam boys, who at this point had<br />

really started showing us just what great fellas they were - “I got my picks, I got my pills, I’m Johnny<br />

Cash.”<br />

Arrived in Helmond in the Kwantwagon and split up into various factions based on differing levels<br />

of fatigue, at this point too much muchness had taken root. I dined alone in a little Arabic place and<br />

watched Messi tear some poor sod a new arsehole.<br />

Automatic Sam played admirably amidst the smoke machines and cloth-eared sound men and<br />

getting a second chance to see them live really hammered home their excellent musicianship and<br />

great potential. A shit hot drum solo finished off a superb gig.<br />

We on the other hand operated at a lower level today and were pretty much dead on our feet,<br />

energy ebbing, I for one was exhausted, however the audience seemed to enjoy it and we went<br />

down really well. An encore was demanded but not tonight. I lay down for a good while, vomited<br />

and then felt a little better.<br />

A great conversation regarding Dutch rock legend Hermann Brood commenced and I learned of his<br />

remarkable career and tragic suicidal end, jumping off the Amsterdam Hilton, this pill popping singer<br />

and painter was a real one off. Check him.<br />

Back in Nijmegen at Pieter’s fine abode - across from a famous park with a song attached, the<br />

scene set by a balladeer out to change the ways of a drug addled prostitute. Where there’s a Wilson<br />

there’s a way out. Bed, a two seat couch, a neck like a car crash, not to mention the headache but I<br />

deserve that for past accumulative ills. Night.<br />

Paaspop Festival - Sunday - Automatic Sam, DeWolff<br />

Me and Percy drive out east with wonderful music photographer Tom Roelfes and then backstage<br />

at hospitality central, apples, water, salami, cheese and good coffee. We stroll between the two<br />

stages, two and half thousand making merry with music, a real good atmosphere and a wicker man<br />

style bonfire up on the hill.<br />

Automatic Sam play a stormer and the crowd go crazy, we watch on and I remember that famous<br />

old adage “nerves and a build of mucus is an artist’s best friend.”<br />

They join us on stage for Great White Lie and then we get the place moving, new personal bests in<br />

perspiration are in the offing and the general populace of pop pickers don’t pass up the popportunity.<br />

But hey that’s Paaspop.<br />

Next on are a great band called DeWoolf, a three piece in their late teens that mix the organ led<br />

groove of The Doors with the riff tastic show stopping energy of Deep Purple, there’s also a prog<br />

element too. They can’t half play, they look great and the crowd lap it up. The Netherlands’ next big<br />

export? they could well be. myspace.com/dewolff<br />

We head backstage and enjoy hugs, kisses, beers and long goodbyes with all the great people that<br />

made the tour happen, Pieter “the milk of human kindness” Kwant, and all the Automatic Sam crew,<br />

Pieter, Harm, Rense Slings and Bob.<br />

It ends at 5am in Utrecht with tired eyes, then the long climb home to an almighty hangover and<br />

a few left over Easter Eggs.<br />

myspace.com/thecubicalthecubical<br />

Helmond - Saturday - Automatic Sam<br />

“You took a good thing and you made it bad”<br />

I awoke with the sound of Marlowe in my brain and felt<br />

like a used cotton bud. The cramped sleeping position, the<br />

orchestra of snores and nightly groans and the general<br />

unwellness of a half a dozen men filled the room. Not<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


22<br />

Ragz<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

Middle Eight<br />

It is hard to find anyone with a bad word to say about RAGZ<br />

NORDSET, the Norwegian songstress with a captivating<br />

voice who is causing jaws to drop at an alarming rate. With<br />

her show-stopping vocals and her beautifully intimate<br />

songs, this little lady is winning hearts and minds at every<br />

juncture, and she shows no signs of stopping yet. As a<br />

female singer-songwriter with an acoustic guitar in tow,<br />

‘folk’ has been the obvious tag for Ragz’ music, with Joni<br />

Mitchell the even more obvious reference point. This is not<br />

a label that Miss Nordset herself agrees with, preferring<br />

the term ‘acoustic pop/rock’, while I think ‘mesmeric vocal<br />

magic’ is perhaps more apt.<br />

Art Nouveau<br />

Like their name suggests, ART NOUVEAU is more than just<br />

music. Experimenting with song, sound and a love for fairytales,<br />

a strong visual consciousness characterises this five piece<br />

born in the classrooms of LIPA. Aimed to translate their selfwritten<br />

fairytales into musical stories, their gigs have been a<br />

fantastical artistic happening, with songs continuing as long as<br />

fifteen minutes and brass, violin and piano solo’s colouring the<br />

different parts of the story.<br />

So far Art Nouveau have only been in the spotlight of the<br />

Liverpool scene a couple of times; their debut at the Zanzibar<br />

Sensorites<br />

Bido Lito! was first faced with SENSORITES a couple of months<br />

back when the group opened up for The Crookes on a pretty quiet<br />

mid-week night at Mojo. Two brothers - Natham and Gareth<br />

Kirkham - base themselves in ‘The Batcave’, their own studio in<br />

Liverpool where they recorded recently released debut single<br />

Spacemen. Coming bundled with a selection of remixes, this is<br />

the record that Richard Ashcroft was desperately trying to make<br />

when he dreamt up United Nations Of Sound. What Ashcroft’s<br />

latest project lacks in authenticity and soul, Spacemen has<br />

in buckets. Its a combination of acoustic guitar led, genuine<br />

songwriting, with electronic drum loops and bleeps which is<br />

The Trestles<br />

If you’re going to name your band after a lyric from a<br />

Springsteen song, you’d better follow it up with the kind of music<br />

that The Boss would be proud of: thankfully, THE TRESTLES do just<br />

that. Purveyors of heart-on-your-sleeve pop-rock that seems to<br />

come right out of the area of Liverpool called New New Jersey, this<br />

3-piece specialise in bar-stool micro anthems that paint a sweatsoaked<br />

picture of the glamour of the 9-5 slog. With Irish-catholic<br />

roots and working-class, socialist influences, it is no surprise that<br />

The Trestles are mining the same rich stream of creativity that has<br />

so benefited the career of America’s premier blue-collar rocker.<br />

This is not the kind of band to spend all of their out-of-work<br />

Based in Liverpool now after moving here to study music at<br />

university, Ragz has so far released two EPs, Little Stings and<br />

Love You Still, that have sent the bloggers in to a frenzy. Love<br />

You Still’s title track manages to grab you somewhere round<br />

the navel and won’t let you go, and Run takes you tiptoeing<br />

through an enchanted wood in a Hans Christian Andersen<br />

fairy tale. If you fail to be moved by the haunting More and<br />

Breathe, then I’m afraid you have no heart.<br />

Laura Marling, Wild Beasts and Mumford & Sons have<br />

all called upon her charms as tour support recently, and<br />

witnessing the Ragz phenomenon live and in full-flow, it is<br />

easy to see why: with a voice that can silence a crowd and<br />

hold them under her spell, this Nordic princess is rightly<br />

gaining the recognition she deserves.<br />

myspace.com/ragzmusic<br />

earlier this year was phenomenal and more recent gigs at the Academy<br />

have been equally rich in quality. Even though Speech Debelle, who<br />

they were due to support during Sound City, cancelled her Academy<br />

gig, taking her audiences with her, the band decided to perform<br />

and managed to seduce the remaining audience nonetheless.<br />

Although their debut EP has yet to be finished, what has been<br />

confirmed is that it’s a conceptual album, based on a story about<br />

a child who was saved by a forest nymph to become nature’s<br />

daughter. Recordings started earlier this year and it is expected<br />

that I Left My Daughter In The Forest To Die will see the light of<br />

day between October and November.<br />

myspace.com/art_nouveau<br />

particularly hard to get right. The project displays a real breadth of<br />

ideas and creativity. The record is beautifully packed in recycled pulp<br />

sleeves, with the CD version pressed up as a mini-vinyl, complete<br />

with wax grooves. Lovely. The remixes - Two Ragged Soldiers,<br />

Instrumental and A Cappella - all work in their own right and<br />

come across as considered and complementary - if I’m honest, i<br />

think I prefer the Two Ragged Soldiers Mix to the lead version -<br />

Sensorites clearly lost themselves in the ideal of their batcave<br />

on this; it sounds like the lamenting accompaniment to the<br />

riddler as the ploughs across Gotham City committing his<br />

heinous sins. The band’s next single is due out in September<br />

with an extended EP in November. Get onto them now...<br />

sensorites.com<br />

hours kicking round in bars and sipping bourbon, hell no. With the<br />

melodious Hard Faced Town EP already in their back pockets, The<br />

Trestles have just released a single on iTunes (Sing On) in preparation<br />

for their debut album, examples of which can be sampled on their<br />

myspace page now. Drink Of Water and The Civilised maintain the pop<br />

hooks of their predecessors, but also point to a move towards more<br />

conventional rock sounds, sometimes even threatening to break<br />

out in a folky, Irish jig. If you fancy shedding yourself of the daily<br />

stresses and strains after a hard week at work then I suggest you<br />

catch these ragged trousered philanthropists at work: the launch<br />

for the single Sing On at the Zanzibar Club on <strong>August</strong> 30th might<br />

be a great place to start.<br />

myspace.com/thetrestles<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk<br />

Words - Ragz: Christopher Torpey // Art Nouveau: Floris Stoter // Sensorites: Can Brannan // The Trestles: Christopher Torpey


FOLD ME<br />

PULL ME OUT<br />

FOLD ME<br />

Above The Beaten Track is a festival celebrating<br />

the creative grass roots scene of Liverpool, featuring<br />

live music and DJs, performance art, poetry and<br />

audio-visual spectaculars - shedding a bit of light<br />

on Liverpool’s cultural underground, all in a relaxed<br />

festival-like atmosphere.<br />

Moving to a new home at the Bluecoat for our third<br />

annual event, Above The Beaten Track’s heart and<br />

soul are beating stronger than ever.<br />

Our philosophy is all about inclusion, not only<br />

giving a platform for the oft-maligned marginal grass<br />

roots musicians of our fair city; but letting our<br />

friends and partners have a hand in running the festival<br />

– take a look inside to see what they’ve got going<br />

on at this year’s event, in addition to our own Above<br />

The Beaten Track offerings...<br />

FREE ENTRY•2pm -10pm<br />

this design is artyficial: artyficial-images@hotmail.co.uk


OUTDOOR STAGE<br />

DJs: Richie Vegas, Jonnie O’Hare, Bugsy, Monkey, Ian Knowlson<br />

14.00 - 17.00 - Culturepool’s 4 th Birthday Party<br />

While you enjoy the music why not join us as we BBQ under the Sun with a selection of locally sourced great BBQ food?<br />

Under the shade of a tree or in the heat of the Sun, the Bluecoat BBQ will set you up for a day of great entertainment.<br />

14.00 – Claire Mooney<br />

Claire Mooney has been described as a ‘radical chanteuse’. Her<br />

performances consist of self-penned political, passionate and playful<br />

songs. She’s a regular contributor to BBC radio.<br />

14.30 – Tom George<br />

Tom George brings a range of pop and punky influences to his acousticbased<br />

music. Performing solo, his energy and instinctive melodies<br />

usually entice audiences into massed singing...or whistling.<br />

15.00 – Patrick Dineen<br />

Patrick Dineen has written scores for many TV and theatre<br />

productions; ran a nightclub; toured with his own band and written<br />

a show that was staged at the Royal Opera House.<br />

15.30 – Paula Simms & Andy Frizell<br />

Paula Simms and Andy Frizell have been working and playing<br />

together for many years and are now joining forces to play a classic<br />

set of their favourite blues with special guests.<br />

16.00 - Dan Wilson (The Cubical)<br />

Lead singer of local legendary pysch-blues monsters The Cubical, Dan Wilson’s<br />

solo material ranges from lyrically led dark acoustic ballads to stripped down<br />

americana infused blues in the classic Cohen/Cash songwriting mould.<br />

16.30 – John “The Man with the Silver Spoons” McGuirk<br />

John is a legend on the Liverpool music scene. Whether playing in the pubs<br />

of his home town or with the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, John shares<br />

his infectious passion for life and music through his singing and spoon playing.<br />

Back by popular and vociferous demand! Feat. DJ Jonnie O’Hare.<br />

17.00 - 22.00 - Mellowtone & Beaten Tracks presents<br />

17.00 - Andy Steele<br />

Having utilised the cream of Liverpool’s folk players – and more from<br />

beyond on his latest album, Andy Steele offers intricate folk of the<br />

highest pedigree.<br />

17.25 - Dave Owen<br />

Dave Owen never fails to impress, his accomplished guitar playing<br />

complements his mix of original pop songs with folk and traditional<br />

standards.<br />

17.50 - Eva Petersen<br />

Elegant soulful 60’s styled pop from the former Little Flame...<br />

Eva Petersen hardly needs an introduction from us though, does she?<br />

GALLERY STAGE<br />

Liverpool Acoustic<br />

14.00 - Matt Swift<br />

(Feat guest vocalist Barry Briercliffe)<br />

Lancashire troubadour Matt Swift writes about his<br />

experiences of life, love, and loss. Matt performs<br />

regularly in Liverpool, and has a plethora of heart<br />

wrenching, thought- provoking, bitter-sweet songs.<br />

14.25 - Avant Gardner<br />

Avant Gardner was born out of numerous bands<br />

over a period of 12 years, he now performs solo<br />

acoustic gigs around the city offering an alternative<br />

take on his recordings.<br />

14.50 - Paul Donnelly (Strawhouses)<br />

With his softer, acoustic oriented solo offerings,<br />

Donnelly still provides the same emotional intensity<br />

you expect from his band Strawhouses.<br />

15.15 - Stuart Todd<br />

Since plying his wares with Triad, as a double act<br />

with virtuoso Neil Campbell, and releasing a solo<br />

album, Stuart has gone on to release the first long<br />

player with his new band, ‘The Freebies’.<br />

15.40 - Joe Keelan<br />

Commander in chief of local folk heroes The<br />

18.15 - Jeff Jepson<br />

Jeff Jepson is returning to Above The Beaten Track, armed with<br />

acoustic guitar and an Americana-infused song book.<br />

18.40 - Ragz<br />

Ragz possesses a sweet, soaring voice known to captivate and move<br />

her audiences. She weaves intricate melodies with her emotive vocal;<br />

at times unconventional, yet rooted in the traditions of classic song-writing.<br />

19.10 - Misery Guts<br />

Having recently released their ‘More Human Than Human’ EP,<br />

Misery Guts are a band hitting their stride built on a core of intricate<br />

guitar and vocal melody.<br />

16.00 - 17.00 - Lazy Genius Hour<br />

16.00 - We Walk In Straight Lines<br />

An awkward, world-weary head-fuck of excess<br />

baggage, mood swings and paranoia, their sound<br />

is a furious smorgasbord of hollow vindication that<br />

takes in echoes of the Walkmen, the National and<br />

Husker Du.<br />

16.30 - The Grande<br />

The Grande are a Liverpool band of real calibre,<br />

renowned for their expert musicianship, electric<br />

live shows and riotus ‘hoedowns.’ British<br />

influenced Americana Folk Rock, their songs speak<br />

for themselves.<br />

17.00 - 18.00 - BAGISM<br />

hosted by Tom George<br />

(see partners’ page for more details)<br />

followed by a performance by<br />

Loved Ones feat. Nik Glover<br />

Seal Cub Clubbing Club frontman and wordy git<br />

Nik Glover takes a break from second album sessions<br />

to present ‘Loved Ones’, with a little help from<br />

some friends... expect lots of singing and droning<br />

on, wordplay and a smattering of live electronica...<br />

Liverpool Acoustic & Guests<br />

18.00 - Rob Clarke<br />

Channelling the spirit of his musical heroes, Rob<br />

Clarke delivers understated, heartfelt and direct<br />

acoustic introspectiveness.<br />

18.20 - Laura James<br />

‘Soaring vocals and songs as soft as lullabies’. Laura<br />

is a captivating and passionate performer with ‘the<br />

voice of an angel and a deft stroke on her guitar<br />

which brings the listener into her soul.’<br />

18.40 - Jez Wing<br />

After working with numerous high profile names up,<br />

down and out of the country, pianist Jez is returning<br />

to Above The Beaten Track with a selection of his<br />

solo offerings.<br />

19.05 - Tony Kehoe<br />

Usually prefers to stand up whilst performing but<br />

is seriously considering sitting down for this one.<br />

19.30 - The 10p Mixes<br />

The only band in England that fits entirely into<br />

a paper bag. Sometimes silly, never wacky. Can<br />

be serious, but know it isn’t compulsory. Recently<br />

adopted a pair of mice.<br />

19.35 - 15 Storeys<br />

Jam packed full of luscious harmonies and hook-laden melodies, 15 Storeys are<br />

exponents of classic scouse pop.<br />

20.10 - Emily & the Faves<br />

Emily & The Faves brand of pop skilfully treads the balance between ethereal<br />

psychedelia and the short sharp shock of direct post punk poppiness.<br />

20.40 - The Wicked Whispers<br />

The sound of the coming together of 5 psychedelic infused country, folk and<br />

beat obsessed minds. Dark, beguiling, at times abstract, but always special.<br />

21.15 - Atlantic Massey<br />

Beat, stomp and song – live, Atlantic Massey is a sight to behold, an energetic<br />

ball of Irish filtered folk-rock. Dust in the face of a chief of a beast at dawn.<br />

19.55 - Stuart Anthony<br />

Acoustic Magazine “It’s about time the world woke<br />

up to this man’s talents..” Rock N Reel R2 Magazine<br />

“Can’t ignore, and that’s rare these days...” Stuart<br />

Anthony’s original songwriting.<br />

20.20 - Carrie Hayden<br />

With comparisons to the likes of Joni Mitchell, Carole<br />

King, and Tracy Chapman, Carrie treads complex<br />

emotional ground with a light-hearted step.<br />

20.40 - SJ Downes<br />

SJ Downes is a travelling bluesman who has laid his<br />

roots in Liverpool, resplendent in untamed beard,<br />

workman shirt and heavy boots, he’s a purveyor of<br />

all things blues.<br />

21.00 - TJ & Murphy<br />

The combination of intricate finger picked guitars,<br />

solid song writing and sincere delivery are the<br />

hallmark of acoustic folk duo TJ & Murphy.<br />

21.25 - Daniela Bove and The Belongings<br />

(Feat. Nicole Collarbone)<br />

Enter the ethereal world of Daniela Bove and her<br />

belongings ... and get lost in the paradox of dark


Random Family, Joe is treating us with a rare solo<br />

show – expect sweeping folk and roots.<br />

and light.<br />

BEATEN TRACKS BAR AREA<br />

An installation, a journey, an exploration into the history of black music, curated by the Beaten Tracks DJs. Featuring documentaries, film footage and visuals created by DJs and artists, plus selected photographs from<br />

Terry Cryer ‘the dean of UK jazz and blues photographers’ (MOJO magazine), accompanied by a sonic journey from the Delta to Detroit, starting with blues and jazz and moving through reggae, dub, soul and funk and more...<br />

Jonnie O’Hare: 14.00 - 15.00 • In Dangerous Rhythm: 15.00 - 16.30 • Mike Stout: 16.30 - 18.00 • Lord Borthbury: 18.00 - 19.00 • Toxeth Rebel Alliance 19.30 - 20.00 • K Marley 20.00 - 21.00<br />

DJs<br />

Richie Vegas (Beaten Tracks/ Mellowtone)<br />

Rich cut his DJing teeth at an early age playing<br />

hip hop and breaks, before plundering his family’s<br />

record collections and forging a sound built on soul,<br />

funk, jazz and reggae.<br />

Jonnie O’Hare (Beaten Tracks/ Mellowtone)<br />

The roots of funk run deep through his selections<br />

of dusty grooves, basement jazz and world beats.<br />

This aficionado fuses the sounds of blues and soul<br />

though to latin & Afro-beat - expect an education.<br />

K Marley<br />

(Magnet Liverpool; Krasnapolksy Copenhagen)<br />

Expect dubbed up funk with plenty of bass.<br />

Lord Borthbury<br />

Taking a historical approach to the art of the DJ,<br />

Lord Borthbury takes listeners on journey from ska<br />

and rocksteady to the modern dancehall sounds<br />

of Jamaica.<br />

In Dangerous Rhythm<br />

Colin Dilnot brings the music featured on his blog<br />

In Dangerous Rhythm out of the ether and onto<br />

the decks. One set of Memphis blues and a second<br />

featuring a down home set of sides from the Deep<br />

South of the United States.<br />

Toxteth Rebel Alliance<br />

One of Liverpool’s best loved dub/reggae<br />

soundsystems. As well as offering a range of quality<br />

free gigs across the city, these boys have been<br />

active in campaigning against racism and facism<br />

in Liverpool.<br />

Mike Stout<br />

Former musician (Wedding Present, Sonic Boom/<br />

Spectrum) and one-time procurer of psychedelicised<br />

tunes for the wigged-out youth of Leeds<br />

(Kaleidoscope Pop), this will be a vinyl-only set<br />

of Blues & Jazz from the Stout Collection.<br />

Take Over<br />

TakeOver juggle melodic and militant in a rub-a-dub<br />

style: expect crisp lyrics, vocal harmonies, sweet<br />

horns and the deepest riddims.<br />

Ian Knowlson<br />

A soulful underground sound blending the old with<br />

the new, taking inspiration from hip-hop, jazz, rare<br />

groove, soul and funk.<br />

Clutterfunk<br />

(C)-FuNKk in their own words DJ noisy righteous<br />

beats deep, emotive, cut-up, jungle, dub, industrial,<br />

funky, noisy beats, sounds and samples.<br />

Paul McGuire<br />

Paul McGuire is a wordsmith turned deck-smith.<br />

His sets are fuelled by a passion for music,<br />

encompassing soul, drum n bass, hip hop, jazz,<br />

classic funk sounds and anything else that makes<br />

people shake their thang.<br />

Monkey<br />

Mellowtone’s own compere without compare is also<br />

a belting DJ in his own right. Expect dub, reggae,<br />

heavy bass and a smattering of hip-hop.<br />

Chris McBride<br />

(Fat City/ 45 Kings/ B-Music)<br />

A long time collector and compiler of seriously<br />

fat and funky soul, expect a journey through the<br />

rarest of grooves.<br />

Jonas (Eat Your Greens)<br />

One third of reggae/dub/breakbeat/techno collective<br />

and clubnight Eat Your Greens, Jonas brings his<br />

mixed bag of dancefloor oriented grooves.<br />

Captain Beatstart (Wowie Mowie)<br />

Diggin’ and spinnin’ dusty funk 45s, psychedelic<br />

jazz, tropical disco and Soundsystem wobblers<br />

HUB / FOYER<br />

DJs: Clutterfunk, Paul Maguire<br />

& Eat Your Greens and a host of other DJs<br />

14.00 - 22.00 Draw the Line<br />

(see partners’ page for more details)<br />

Stan Ambrose<br />

A veteran of the local folk scene, Stan has played with<br />

countless musicians over the years with his Celtic Harp,<br />

as well as presenting the longest running folk show on British<br />

radio – 37 years and going strong.<br />

SHOPS<br />

Bob Porter is a specialist traditional hand-engraver and silversmith who<br />

can engrave on glass and metal with precision calligraphy and intricate imagery.<br />

Purlesque is a button, wool and yarn boutique, fit to burst with colourful<br />

creative ideas and beautiful accessories and gifts.<br />

Landbaby offer a wide range of handmade jewellery, accessories and<br />

home wares, all with a unique craft-based influence.<br />

The Display Centre at the Bluecoat is a non-profit distributing<br />

organisation promoting the finest contemporary craftwork by leading<br />

designer/makers.<br />

New to School Lane, the legendary Probe Records are set to bring music<br />

to the Bluecoat; specialising in vinyl and small labels. They won’t quite<br />

be open for Above The Beaten Track, but look out for them at the Bluecoat soon.<br />

CRAFTFAIR in association with LOACA ARTS<br />

Laura Kate Draws is a freelance illustrator who<br />

Angela & John Hinchcliffe work together<br />

on designing and making vibrant and unusual pieces<br />

of jewellery. Many of their designs incorporate the<br />

ancient art of chain maille weaving with modern<br />

materials and designs.<br />

Freida McKitrick is a fine artist and print maker<br />

who works from a studio in a renovated flour mill<br />

in the heart of Liverpool city centre. She draws her<br />

inspiration from the eclectic mix of architecture,<br />

people, and culture that radiates from Liverpool and<br />

other cities that she has visited.<br />

Mellor Ware is a range of china designed<br />

by Lianne Mellor, featuring quirky illustrations<br />

of forest animals and British wildlife. The range<br />

includes cake stands, teapots and sugar bowls.<br />

prefers felt tips to computers, preferring hand<br />

drawn techniques to create elaborate patterns,<br />

peculiar characters and original products for all<br />

to delight in.<br />

Brenda Sharp’s work is predominately<br />

documentary photography with a strong interest<br />

in capturing the beauty in the old, unloved, decaying<br />

and decomposing.<br />

Graeme Currie: The Merseyrail diagram with<br />

a twist! Sportsmen, musicians, actors and many<br />

more replace the stations. Gerrard at Huyton, Dixie<br />

at Birkenhead, Tiger at Hoylake.<br />

Baltic Arts: Jewellery with an edge! Unique pieces<br />

of handmade jewellery – inspired by Victoriana and<br />

steampunk.<br />

Jane Adams is an artist and printmaker who<br />

creates unique interpretations of local architecture,<br />

particularly those which are disappearing or are<br />

significant to the lives of ordinary people.<br />

The Chocolate Cellar creates unique handmade<br />

truffles, chocolates and cakes using real chocolate<br />

and clean ingredients. The chocolates are all hand<br />

crafted in Hanover Street in Liverpool City Centre.<br />

Sarah Jerath adds recycled glass, brick and stone<br />

that she collects on her doorstep into her ceramic<br />

pieces. It’s an organic process, with work that<br />

includes pinched bowls and silver jewellery with<br />

ceramic pebbles.<br />

Pascall-Willis Photography: Eli is a professional<br />

Landscape Photographer based in the North West,<br />

supplying landscape imagery to various clients.<br />

Dark Horse Jewellery: Dark Horse Origami<br />

is handmade jewellery and other items using the<br />

ancient Japanese technique of paper folding –<br />

Origami. Every hand folded piece has been varnished<br />

twice, becoming lasting and water resistant.<br />

Jane Coyle Glass produces unique, elegant objects<br />

for the modern interior. Handmade pieces include<br />

a selection of tableware, wall art and jewellery.<br />

Commissions welcome.<br />

Ella McIntosh creates contemporary Pewter<br />

homeware such as vases, candlesticks and napkin<br />

rings. Ella also compliments this work with a rangeof<br />

elegant Pewter jewellery which uses the same<br />

techniques.<br />

plus Above The Beaten Track stall selling CDs and<br />

merchandise of various performers from the day.


MELLOWTONE<br />

PARTNERS<br />

Mellowtone is a collective of like-minded souls putting<br />

on regular nights of music focusing on delivering the<br />

very best acts from the city’s thriving music scene<br />

to their faithful followers, in addition to bringing<br />

performers from around the world for your listening<br />

pleasure.<br />

Their spiritual home is Mathew Street’s View Two<br />

Gallery, but they’re nomadic by nature - with some<br />

of the most intimate venues across and around<br />

Liverpool playing host to their particular brand of party<br />

in the past.<br />

It’s a laid back affair, and though predominantly<br />

acoustic in outlook, they’re also quite partial to plugging<br />

Beaten Tracks is a Liverpool-based collective of DJs<br />

and artists who champion the rare, the dusty and the<br />

forgotten areas of music. Expect funk, soul, reggae,<br />

afro-beat, Latin, blues and jazz nuggets, a mellow<br />

vibe and soulful enlightenment.<br />

With some of the most sought after vinyl on Merseyside<br />

in tow, Beaten Tracks look to set the scene for<br />

things in now and again. Mellowtone’s focus<br />

is on showcasing the best music from a genrespanning<br />

selection in their own unique and intimate<br />

style - you can find rootsy country blues on the<br />

same bill as intricate and delicate folk and chilled<br />

out reggae, all sandwiched together by the resident<br />

DJs Richie Vegas and Jonnie O’Hare, spinning a laid<br />

back selection of grooves taking in funk, soul, blues,<br />

jazz, hiphop, reggae, afrobeat and anything else that<br />

takes their fancy.<br />

They have been quietly creating a stir for a while<br />

now, but remain as fresh and inventive as ever -<br />

an acoustic cornerstone of Liverpool’s music scene.<br />

Above The Beaten Track in the way they know<br />

best. Sound tracking some of the most laid back<br />

nights to be found across Liverpool, including<br />

a residency at Mellowtone, the Beaten Tracks<br />

DJs are becoming renowned for framing some<br />

of the most interesting and diverse live acts from<br />

the city and beyond.<br />

mellowtone.info lazy-genius.co.uk<br />

Lazy Genius is an all encompassing beast ...comprising<br />

of a club night, promotions company, and artist<br />

representation, coupled with a relentless work ethic<br />

and ‘man about town’ attitude to life and work.<br />

Rooted in a love of live music, Lazy Genius’ primary<br />

Liverpool Acoustic is a central resource for Liverpool’s<br />

vibrant and exciting acoustic music scene - the<br />

only one of its kind in the UK. The website hosts<br />

an extensive diary of acoustic events, from festivals,<br />

theatre concerts and folk clubs to showcases and<br />

open mic nights. The News and Reviews page<br />

carries information about upcoming events, reviews<br />

of CDs and gigs, interviews with local musicians, and<br />

BAGISM<br />

The Liverpool Bag Consortium aim to promote<br />

artistic experimentation, free speech and communal<br />

love - in bags! Inspired by John and Yoko’s original<br />

concept circa 1969, the performance will comprise<br />

improvised music, poetry/dialogue and visuals.<br />

focus is the promotion and facilitation of the<br />

best new music in Liverpool and beyond.<br />

Running regular club nights and band<br />

showcases as well as collaborating with friends<br />

old and new on lots of different projects.<br />

liverpoolacoustic.co.uk<br />

a monthly newsletter on the first of each month.<br />

Liverpool Acoustic Live is a monthly acoustic<br />

music showcase. Each night features three or four<br />

of the best acoustic performers, singer-songwriters,<br />

bands and musicians on the local scene<br />

today performing alongside highly-talented<br />

performers from across the UK and overseas.<br />

Inside a bag, the performer’s age, race, gender,<br />

disability and ‘coolness’ are all irrelevant. Come<br />

and take part - bring your own bag! (A duvet<br />

cover will do).<br />

Culturepool, Liverpool’s largest (and free!) independent<br />

art and culture network, is celebrating its 4th birthday.<br />

Over the last four years culturepool has dipped into<br />

the unique melting pot of creative originality that<br />

is Liverpool: musically, artistically and culturally.<br />

By creating a relaxed and informal environment<br />

culturepool provides a space for people to discover<br />

culturepool.org.uk<br />

new and existing art and cultural events with<br />

a chance to meet artists and performers, often<br />

with free or discounted tickets.<br />

Celebrate with culturepool and a host of local<br />

musical talent, and find out more about their new<br />

project, ‘Building on What We’ve Got’, as part<br />

of <strong>2010</strong> Year of Health and Wellbeing.<br />

We’re pleased to welcome back TV Lux to this<br />

year’s Above The Beaten Track. Utilising a heady<br />

blend of light graffiti images (light drawings<br />

and sculptures with homemade LED wands and<br />

brushes), the immediacy of mobile phone video-art<br />

myspace.com/tvlux<br />

and improvised live VJing; accompanied<br />

by examples of photography and live art multimedia<br />

performances with a host of short<br />

film makers.<br />

And now a word about our charity partner ... The<br />

Campaign Against Living Miserably, is something<br />

we’ve long supported. Tasking themselves with<br />

battling the devastatingly high rates of suicide<br />

Contemporary craft & art fairs in the courtyard at the<br />

Bluecoat, providing a unique opportunity to see, buy<br />

and commission work from selected local artists and<br />

Draw the Line is a growing Liverpool art social event<br />

aimed at the professional artist and everyman alike<br />

to unite under one roof and enjoy a casual doodle<br />

together. The aim is to provide a free event where<br />

thecalmzone.net<br />

in young men, C.A.L.M. do great work across<br />

Merseyside and nationally in raising awareness<br />

and engaging with young men to remind<br />

them that being silent isn’t being strong.<br />

loacaart.co.uk<br />

makers, including the best of the region’s up and<br />

coming creative talent.<br />

drawtheonline.com<br />

people of the city could gather and indulge in some<br />

collective creativity, part social networking,<br />

a bit of artistic therapy and all about a love<br />

of doodles ... drop in and leave your mark!<br />

Situated in the oldest building in Liverpool’s<br />

city centre, the Bluecoat hosts a contemporary<br />

programme of exhibitions and events showcasing<br />

talent across all creative disciplines including visual<br />

art, music, literature, dance and live art. As well<br />

as presenting work by internationally acclaimed<br />

artists, the Bluecoat is a hub for new talent, providing<br />

studio spaces for artists within a unique creative<br />

community.<br />

The poster display at the Bluecoat (on the historic<br />

staircase which dates back nearly 300 years) reflects<br />

some of the history of the building as an arts centre.<br />

It was selected from their archive, which is by no<br />

means complete, though posters and other print<br />

from all exhibitions and many live events from the<br />

late 1970s onwards are preserved.<br />

“The posters reflect a history of music at the Bluecoat<br />

over many years. Several artist/musicians are<br />

represented: Yoko Ono (1967), Stuart Sutcliffe, John<br />

Hyatt (the Three Johns) and Captain Beefheart,<br />

thebluecoat.org.uk<br />

whose poster for his first ever painting exhibition<br />

(1972) was hand drawn when in town for a gig<br />

at the Stadium. The music we presented is pretty<br />

eclectic: John Zorn’s Naked City, Carla Bley,<br />

Michael Nyman, David Murray, the Last Poets,<br />

Nitin Sawhney, Jeremy Deller’s Acid Brass (brass<br />

band versions of acid house anthems), Whirled<br />

Music – so dangerous the audience sat behind<br />

a safety net and the performers wore wicker<br />

masks. And ‘world’ music of another kind from<br />

Ali Farka Toure. The posters recall memorable<br />

gigs: Jazz Jamaica, Linton Kwesi Johnson’s dub<br />

poetry, or Pop Mechanica’s early Perestroika<br />

outing in the West when the anarchic Leningrad<br />

ensemble jammed with Liverpool’s finest indie<br />

guitarists at St George’s Hall and pelted the<br />

audience with raw sausages.“<br />

Bryan Biggs, Artistic Director, the Bluecoat.


Middle Eight<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 27<br />

GWYL GARDD GOLL - Y Faenol, 25th July<br />

The beautiful parks of Y Faenol, North Wales, are the<br />

setting for GWYL GARDD GOLL <strong>2010</strong>. The award winning<br />

event, translated as ‘The Lost Garden Festival’, is now in its<br />

fourth year, and is set to once again offer people of all ages<br />

a chance to enjoy contemporary Welsh music in the unique<br />

open-air atmosphere of natural surroundings.<br />

I have long been a fan of the Welsh underground music<br />

scene. Historically Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci and Super Furry<br />

Animals flew the flag, which is now being carried by groups<br />

such as Yucatan, We Are Animal, Race Horses and Euros Childs.<br />

After winning BBC Radio Cymru C2’s Best Festival in Wales<br />

award, almost a thousand people attended last year’s event. The<br />

Rebellion - Blackpool, 5th-8th <strong>August</strong><br />

Festival season is well and truly upon us, with the<br />

usual suspects rolling out a familiar mixture of worldconquering<br />

acts and zeitgeist chasing flavours-of-themonth.<br />

If however, you should fancy something a little<br />

off the well worn festival track, then a summer visit to<br />

Blackpool could be just the ticket. Being renowned as the<br />

home of the Big Dipper and stag-do town par excellence,<br />

Blackpool’s’ reputation is founded more on Rock than, well,<br />

rock. But from 5th-8th <strong>August</strong>, the town will play host to some<br />

of the biggest names in punk at the REBELLION FESTIVAL. Set<br />

Kitty Daisy & Lewis - The Zanzibar, 5th <strong>August</strong><br />

When Bido Lito! up with The Company Store promoter<br />

Danny Roberts a couple of months back, we asked him<br />

which bands he’d really love to put on in the future and<br />

amongst the names he rattled off was a blues combo from<br />

London way, called KITTY DAISY AND LEWIS. Well, it seems<br />

the cat has got the cream, because on 5th <strong>August</strong>, with a<br />

helping hand from their friends at The Songbook Sessions,<br />

The Company Store play host to the very band that Danny<br />

pined for.<br />

Kitty Daisy And Lewis is a family affair, three siblings - backed<br />

up by the their dad on guitar on mum on stand-up bass - who<br />

Creamfields - Daresbury, 28th & 29th <strong>August</strong><br />

As we enter the festival season, one name features<br />

heavier on the lips of the Merseyside public than any other...<br />

CREAMFIELDS. After launching back in 1999, it has grown to<br />

became the unofficial landlord of the <strong>August</strong> bank holiday<br />

weekend by providing some of the biggest and best line ups in<br />

the British festival calendar. Despite predominantly being a dance<br />

music festival, in recent years headliners have included Kasabian,<br />

Dizzee Rascal and Gnarls Barkley. However, in <strong>2010</strong> Creamfields<br />

returns to its dance music roots with Superstar DJs Tiesto and David<br />

Guetta headlining. Other DJs on the bill include Deadmau5, Rusko,<br />

Switch and Calvin Harris, with twelve different arenas hosted by such<br />

festival is hoping to inspire people to come back this year<br />

with its exciting new line-up and its stunning new setting.<br />

This year’s line-up includes Derwyddon Dr Gonzo, Yr<br />

Ods, Cowbois Rhos Botwnnog, Meic Stevens, Alun Gaffey<br />

and many more. Labelled by many as the ‘highlight of<br />

their summer’, Gwyl Gardd Goll delivers a shining array of<br />

the best Welsh language music around. Organiser Dilwyn<br />

Llwyd said this year’s festival will impress with something<br />

very special, “Audiences will be treated to an affordable,<br />

alternative afternoon experience where they can revel in<br />

the music while immersing themselves in the atmosphere<br />

of the park.” For fans of Finders Keepers’ Welsh Rare Beat<br />

Compilations, this is a must.<br />

gwylgarddgoll.com<br />

in venues around the city, including the majestic Empress<br />

Ballroom, Rebellion will be the biggest indoor punk festival<br />

in the UK and has put together a rather dazzling array of<br />

acts. Playing this year will be recent breakthrough acts such<br />

as Gallows and Fucked Up lining up alongside seasoned<br />

punk legends New York Dolls, UK Subs, The Dwarves, Stiff<br />

Little Fingers and the illusive Bad Religion. As well as<br />

the big names there will be a raft of lesser-known talent<br />

including Streetlight Manifesto and Big D and the Kids Table<br />

representing Household Name Records, ensuring a treat for<br />

punk fans young and old alike.<br />

rebellionfestivals.com<br />

trade in RnB, country, boogie woogie, doo wop and blues,<br />

with a proficiency way, way beyond their tender years.<br />

Their debut record, A - Z of Kitty, Daisy & Lewis - The Roots<br />

Of Rock n Roll was given a straight 5/5 and named one of<br />

the Guardian’s records of the year in 2007. They sound like<br />

they’re from Alabama and its 1955...in reality its Kentish<br />

Town and its <strong>2010</strong>.<br />

Bands such a Frankie And The Heartstrings and The<br />

Crookes have been successful recently extracting elements<br />

of the same aesthetic that KDL subscribe to, whilst mixing<br />

it with a Dexys and New Romantic kitsch - to great effect -<br />

whilst KDL, to their complete credit, remain purist and true.<br />

myspace.com/kittydaisyandlewis<br />

luminaries as Ape, Chibuku and GoodGreef. On the Sunday, just<br />

before headliner Paul Van Dyk takes to the stage, Welsh legend<br />

Sasha will be playing. Bido Lito! recently bumped into Sasha and<br />

asked what can we expect from his set at Creamfields this year?<br />

“I have no idea yet! It’s a bit of a homecoming for me as all<br />

my family are from up there and I’ve got such a long relationship<br />

with Liverpool playing there and at the Cream events before<br />

then. I still remember many nights at Quadrant Park, so coming<br />

back to Liverpool and especially seeing everyone from Cream<br />

is always special. I’m looking forward to it! It’s my last gig of<br />

the Summer as well and a few days before my birthday so I’ll<br />

definitely be ‘expressing’ myself on the Sunday!”<br />

creamfields.com<br />

Words - Gwyl Gardd Goll: Can Brannan // Rebellion: John Still // Kitty Daisy & Lewis: Can Brannan // Creamfields: Andy Hill<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


28<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

Words: John Still<br />

Illustration: Michael Cottage<br />

It’s likely that over the past couple of<br />

years that you will have come across the<br />

word Podcast. In a culture which increasingly<br />

demands convenience, they have become the ideal way<br />

to enjoy radio shows, from mainstream BBC broadcasts<br />

to smaller, niche market productions. In Liverpool in particular, the<br />

NORTH BY NORTHWEST, or NxNW podcast has caught the attention. Run<br />

principally by Deke Hardman and Emma Pollock, the show deals in unsigned<br />

music from the north-west, providing a source of publicity for new bands. Deke<br />

explains how it got started,<br />

“We met on the Ariel Trust course, through which we learned how to use the<br />

equipment, and I’ve had a long standing interest in Podcasts, so we decided<br />

that we would give it a go. Podcasts are a great medium to work in. I love the<br />

freedom they allow. We both had a pretty keen interest in the local music scene,<br />

so it seemed natural to try to create a new resource for local unsigned bands. I<br />

think that the fact that BBC 6music has been saved from closure highlights the<br />

thirst that there is for new music across the board, as well as the continuing<br />

popularity of radio. Hopefully we can tap into that spirit and do something for<br />

the local music community.”<br />

With the rise of digital culture, websites such as Myspace make it far easier than<br />

ever before for new bands to grab attention. NxNW have used this new media<br />

to their advantage, starting out by contacting bands through social networking<br />

sites to ask permission to play their music on the show. But now heading<br />

into their seventh edition, Emma tells us that the bands have now started to<br />

approach them, “We’ve found recently that more and more bands have emailed<br />

us regarding getting on the show, which hopefully means that there are some<br />

listeners anyway! We’re basically here to provide publicity for the bands, so we’re<br />

thrilled when people getting in touch. There’s such a diverse and really interesting<br />

local scene at<br />

the moment,<br />

it’s great to be<br />

a part of it.”<br />

NxNW is free of charge, a strictly notfor-profit<br />

concern which taps into the spirit<br />

of independence that seems to be becoming<br />

more prevalent in Liverpool at the moment. Given the<br />

independent nature of the show, copyright issues mean<br />

that it is only unsigned bands that can be played, but that has been<br />

turned into the major strength of the show, serving to highlight the<br />

breadth of talent that the region has to offer currently. Emma tells us, “We<br />

were actually quite taken aback by the quality of the music we’ve come across,<br />

there’s some fantastic stuff.” Deke agrees, “A lot of the pleasure is finding the<br />

stuff, and getting excited about new music again. I’m a lifelong fan of John<br />

Peel, I used to listen to all his shows, and it’s nice to get the same excitement<br />

listening to some of the tracks we get sent as I did then.”<br />

The show is currently published fortnightly, though given the swell of interest<br />

from artists, and good reactions from listeners, NxNW may soon be a weekly<br />

fixture, “We do have plans to do a weekly show, which would give us the scope<br />

to be a bit more topical, a little fresher and to include more bands. We’re also<br />

considering taking it to community radio, which would hopefully take us to a<br />

bigger audience. I think we’ve still got the opportunity to expand our range a<br />

little further, scouring more of the north-west for music!”<br />

So far NxNW has given airtime to diverse talents such as Fly with Vampires,<br />

Richard O’Flynn, Chrik and The Loud, and there are few boundaries in place for<br />

what gets played. Deke continues, “We both have varied tastes in music, and<br />

we don’t want to rule out any genres. It’s wide open to all comers.”<br />

Shows 1-6 are available now through iTunes and Pod-o-Matic, and the group<br />

can be found on Facebook.<br />

myspace.com/nxnwshow<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Sean<br />

Francis<br />

Butler<br />

Words: Alan O’Hare<br />

Photography: Simon Thelwell<br />

SEAN FRANCIS BUTLER is a rare breed.<br />

A Scouse songwriter who looks beyond Seel Street and knows that great<br />

songs are the only currency that counts. Not your sound or your look. But your craft.<br />

“Good songs man, that’s what I’m about. I’m more of a songwriter than a<br />

musician… I dissect me songs and make sure no bad ones get out. You’ve gotta’<br />

spend lots of time writing, practicing and getting your act together. It has to be<br />

enjoyable too - a freedom of expression, deffo’, but don’t abuse it.”<br />

Wise words. And refreshing ones too. Especially when you know Butler’s<br />

history and how he’s been there and done it. His previous band The Sonic<br />

Hearts were signed to EMI UK, released a couple of singles, toured like demons<br />

and recorded a great pop album… only for it to be shelved before release.<br />

“That was demoralising. It cost around £120,000 all that - our A&R man<br />

taking it over to New York to have it mastered by the same fella’ who does<br />

Springsteen’s records and where did it get us? The game has changed and we<br />

toured too much and gave away too much control. Don’t get me wrong, we had<br />

fun, but I wouldn’t do it the same way now.”<br />

Butler may have made mistakes with The Sonic Hearts - although the band’s<br />

supporters within EMI being sacked didn’t help either - but he’s got his mojo<br />

back now and the songs are flowing.<br />

With his band, The Stoonards - Kevin Ellison (drums) Ryan Wyatt (bass) John<br />

Dalglish (guitar/mandolin) - his recent Sound City gig was a triumph and he’s<br />

demo’d a new record all by himself: “I’ve been working at a mate’s studio in<br />

Anfield… going in and playing everything myself. I’ve put some of them up on<br />

MySpace and the response at gigs has been good. We haven’t done loads of<br />

gigs - but the ones we have played, have been special.”<br />

And the songs? “They’re well different live and it’s been great. The gigs and<br />

the band’s playing have given me the idea to re-record the new songs with<br />

more of a live sound and see where that takes us. The lads in the band make<br />

me happy. They’re musical mad dogs and live the life… they’re all in abar’ ten<br />

bands like Sparkwood & 21 and Dead Cities.”<br />

Got the chops then? “Deffo’. With their playing, the tunes are rougher than<br />

the demos people have heard and I’m loving it now… ideally, I’d like to get<br />

them out soon.”<br />

Listening to songs like Mona and Catherine Street, you sense that Butler has<br />

turned a corner since the disappointing end of The Sonic Hearts and something<br />

is stirring.<br />

“I’ve got complete freedom now and I’m not too precious about it. I’ve got a<br />

life outside of music too and that suits me and the songs are all the better for it.<br />

With The Sonic Hearts, I’d try to accommodate and please all kinds of people…<br />

now I’m making myself happy. I want to enjoy music again.”<br />

Sean Francis Butler & The Stoonards will be playing The Company Store @<br />

The Zanzibar very soon.<br />

myspace.com/seanfrancisbutlermusic<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


30<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

CAPAC are serious about their electronics and their love of the Warp back<br />

catalogue, as Nic Toupee finds out when meeting Joshua, Gaz and Stu to find<br />

out about their upcoming EP release Pastels, out on 23rd <strong>August</strong> on Off The<br />

Shelf records.<br />

This band are not only well trained musicians, but they are intensely<br />

determined to ensure their music is perfectly executed. They cite Radiohead<br />

with reverence, Aphex Twin and Burial as key influences to their ideas about<br />

electronics, if not directly to their sound: these boys are not going the cheesy<br />

presets, glowsticks and quick cash route to electronic success.<br />

Exhibiting an unusual panoply of instruments for an electronic act, Capac<br />

achieve their complex and understated sound through the careful layering of<br />

affected guitar, added to the usual virtual and outboard synths. Stu, tech geek<br />

for the band, explains:<br />

“A lot of the things that sound like synths are actually guitars that Josh or<br />

Gaz have played that we’ve recorded in and affected in some way. We want<br />

them to sound less like a guitar and more like a sound we’ve got in our head.<br />

CAPAC<br />

Each of those sounds becomes its own unique sound, because it has gone<br />

through that process: the guitar normally comes from an acoustic so just that<br />

pure sound, and the kind of processes we’ll put it through differs from tune<br />

to tune, depending on what sound we’re going for. It gives them a bit more<br />

meaning than just tweaking together some parameters on a synth.”<br />

Josh, classical guitarist, Howard Moon style Jazz enthusiast, composer and<br />

chief philosopher for the group, gives a more technical view (we warned you this<br />

was slightly eggheaded): “You can look at it slightly philosophically. You can<br />

get your analogue synthesiser and spend a lot of time combining waveforms<br />

in such a way to get something that equates to an acoustic sound, and end<br />

up with an organic sound. We’re taking it from the reverse, taking an already<br />

acoustic sound which in its nature is very complicated because its’ built around<br />

the acoustic qualities of that instrument.”<br />

“Most of the sounds we use, particularly around the mid-range in our tunes<br />

come from a guitar. Not usually the bass and drum sounds which are usually soft<br />

synths and samples” further elucidates Gaz, jazz guitarist and knob twiddler.<br />

It’s an elaborate and laborious approach, not entirely<br />

different from that which their heroes Aphex Twin and<br />

Burial would consider appropriate. But in these days of<br />

soft synths, modular units, effects and such gimcrackery,<br />

why bother with the blood sweat and tears and make it<br />

easier on yourself?<br />

“It’s for a pure sound, that real organic feel” Gaz explains,<br />

before Josh reveals his pedantic streak:<br />

“I’m very anal about this” he states emphatically, and not<br />

for the last time in this interview. “I think that you should<br />

bear a personal and emotional connection to where your<br />

music comes from. You can approach music in so many<br />

different ways: pleasing an audience or the other polar<br />

opposite is writing music purely for yourself. We consider<br />

the listener in what we do but not exclusively. We really<br />

value the sound we want to make for our own musical<br />

expression - without wanting to sound too pretentious<br />

about it.”<br />

“We haven’t achieved it yet” Gaz intones, “we’re still<br />

developing the sound. I’d like to think we can listen to<br />

the EP we’ve just finished and in 3 years time and think<br />

it’s good, but that we’d also have progressed. All the new<br />

ideas we’ve had are from the processes we’ve been using.<br />

Not deliberately, but it just happened through trying to<br />

change a guitar sound and make it sound interesting.<br />

Experimenting and finding little sounds within that<br />

expression.”<br />

Despite the deep thought that goes into their tracks, Capac aren’t just inviting chinstrokers to spot<br />

their techniques: they’re hoping that when you see their live show, you’re going to be able to parallel<br />

process the dual arts of dancing and thinking.<br />

“We try to make music that you can dance to in sections, but also there’s definitely stuff to listen<br />

to” Stu asserts. “There are sections of our songs that a good DJ could drop and keep people happy<br />

at a proper big club night, and then there are completely ambient sections. We want people to get<br />

moving but we wouldn’t market ourselves to play at Chibuku because we wouldn’t give that crowd<br />

exactly what they want. We wouldn’t take out an ambient section for fear that people weren’t going<br />

to dance to it.”<br />

“One of the problems I find with music is that if people are not satisfied in the first five seconds<br />

of a tune then they’re not going to listen to it” Josh contributes. “That’s the opposite of my attitude<br />

towards music. Those songs which you just start liking the fourth time you’ve heard them end up<br />

being the best tunes. That influences the way we write: it’s got to do with an approach to listening.<br />

And that’s why we’ve got Post-Rock links: you need to give a tune a go knowing you’ll have to<br />

dedicate six or seven minutes not forty seconds to a post-rock track. We’ve got that in common.”<br />

capacmusic.co.uk<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 31<br />

Words: Bethany Garrett<br />

Collage: Luke Avery<br />

Undeniably the most riveting thing to happen to the<br />

sleepy Lake District town of Kendal since the accidental<br />

invention of Kendal mint cake (when a lackadaisical<br />

confectioner diverted his eyes from the cooking pan),<br />

KENDAL CALLING, though certainly not an accident like<br />

the local speciality, has unintentionally developed into a<br />

phenomena; “a mini Glastonbury in the Lake District” as<br />

Liverpudlian DJ Craig Charles charmingly puts it. The annual<br />

event organised by two of the country’s youngest festival<br />

organisers, Andy Smith and Ben Robinson is now in its fifth<br />

year and is fully thriving; this year bringing headliners Calvin<br />

Harris, Doves and The Coral to the lakes for a three day<br />

celebratory love-in (though the latter two being natives to<br />

the North West needn’t worry about the travel expenses).<br />

Established in 2006 when Pendulum brought raucous<br />

drum and bass to the unwitting residents of the Lake<br />

District and three quarters local outfit British Sea Power<br />

(lead guitarist Noble was born in Bury, Greater Manchester,<br />

the others in Kendal) headlined the second and final day<br />

of the one thousand capacity event at Abbott Hall Park, the<br />

festival’s trajectory over five years has seen it host local<br />

and national artists alike. 2009 saw the festival upgrade to<br />

larger settlement, Lowther Deer Park, extending its capacity<br />

to six thousand and this year Kendal Calling will again be<br />

hosted at the deer park though this time an audience of<br />

eight thousand punters will be present, ready to lap up the<br />

altruistic atmosphere.<br />

For all our efforts in showcasing new artists, we can be<br />

slightly parochial here at Bido Lito!, intent on retaining a<br />

Merseyside-based focus which is why when reading the<br />

Kendal Calling lineup tears of boundless pride well up and<br />

I’m forced to hurriedly blink them away. The reason for<br />

this surge of emotions? Simple, the sheer abundance of<br />

Merseyside born and bred artists playing the festival. THE<br />

CORAL will be headlining the main stage on the closing<br />

day of the festival, the five piece are expected to showcase<br />

songs from their latest album Butterfly House and a back<br />

catalogue of their greatest hits, displaying their blend of<br />

romantic yet pragmatic lyrics and whirling guitar sounds<br />

which will surely end the festival on a wonderful high. Bido<br />

Lito! favourites WAVE MACHINES will be playing the Riot<br />

Jazz Café on the opening day and THE SEAL CUB CLUBBING<br />

CLUB and SOUND OF GUNS will be sharing the Calling Out Stage on Saturday.<br />

Sound Of Guns billed second from top will be playing their usual rousing<br />

set, The Seal Cub Clubbing Club will baffle and delight festival goers in equal<br />

measure while Wave Machines will get those who venture to see them<br />

endlessly talking about the perfect pop that the quartet execute.<br />

One half of the organising duo, and co-founder of the festival Ben Robinson<br />

states that though the festival has expanded rapidly, it is still very much in<br />

touch with its roots, “We always built the festival around what we would<br />

like to see at an event, and as we all still go to a lot of festivals we are<br />

constantly coming up with new ideas for how we do things. It’s a very hard<br />

job to be an independent festival, it takes a huge amount of planning to<br />

get all the elements of an event to come together and there is a big risk<br />

too.” Forever gathering new ideas keeps the organisers on their toes and<br />

their efforts have payed off - the festival has been nominated for the Grass<br />

Roots Festival Award for the last two years and it would be a crime if their<br />

endeavour didn’t go on to win it someday. Staying independent when the Big<br />

Chill festival has recently been sold to Festival Republic and many festivals<br />

have unfortunately been forced to cancel this year may seem like a burden to<br />

others, but Robinson believes that their independence has enabled them to,<br />

“really put care and attention into all aspects of the festival and give it heart<br />

and soul that is missing at a lot of the corporate events.” It’s reassuring to see<br />

that Northern sense of pride and independence still roars in both the music<br />

and at the heart of the festival industry.<br />

kendalcalling.co.uk<br />

Kendal Calling takes place from 30th July - 1st <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> and is<br />

completely sold out.<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


32<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

Eat Your Greens<br />

Words: Leo Nikolaidis<br />

Illustration: Michael Cottage<br />

While flogging dubstep, reggae and jungle to students is<br />

hardly groundbreaking, you could be forgiven for thinking<br />

that something is going on in Liverpool’s dance music<br />

scene at the moment.<br />

Over the last few years, several new nights have sprouted<br />

up through the pavement, all to peddle their various Rastaflavoured<br />

beats. Some of the credit for that has to go to<br />

Dreadnought, where many locals and students had their<br />

first dubstep experiences a few years ago but the real fresh<br />

and ripe specimens at the moment are the boys from EAT<br />

YOUR GREENS.<br />

Since its conception in November 2007, Eat Your<br />

Greens has steadily gained a following and has arguably<br />

contributed to the successful installation of a new scene<br />

in the city. As with most nights, it started off as a slightly<br />

more professional version of a houseparty which relied on<br />

the organisers themselves making a calculated loss in the<br />

takings, as well as depending on all their friends turning up.<br />

“We just couldn’t have done it if our mates hadn’t all<br />

come and supported us for those first few,” reckons Joe<br />

Myhill, (RAVE MEARS). “What’s good now though is the<br />

way the night has built up. It’s a concentration of all these<br />

circles of friends, which really helps with the atmosphere.<br />

And now we’ve passed it on to a new generation.”<br />

It’s this special atmosphere which they see as key to<br />

the night’s reputation and it’s a vibe which all of the<br />

acts seem to pick up on. Adam Aulaqui (BARRY WEST)<br />

agrees, “Yeah, Remarc absolutely loved it. He said<br />

it was more fun than anything he does in London.<br />

Nucleus Roots too, they said it was one of the best<br />

gigs they’ve ever played.”<br />

One thing I’ve always picked up on is that when<br />

you watch the dub or reggae bands play at around 11<br />

o’clock, the crowd is already hyped up and climbing<br />

the walls, eager for the onslaught of the faster music<br />

to come later on. Whilst a lot of these guys are festival<br />

regulars, and no strangers to excited fans, I’ve always<br />

felt that the Eat Your Greens crowd can really spur them<br />

on to some memorable sets.<br />

The boys also have a certain ethos which they follow<br />

when booking acts and running events. They insist<br />

on having a variety of different tempos and styles<br />

to the evening, so that the music never feels stale.<br />

They also prefer to keep everyone together in the<br />

same room, rather than split up the audience. This<br />

careful planning and attention to detail has meant<br />

that the night and scene has steadily grown over<br />

the years, with other nights like Playdub and<br />

Takeover picking up the excess.<br />

But is there anything special about the dark<br />

and wobbly dubstep monster which can account for<br />

the scene’s surging popularity? “Not really,” thinks Sam<br />

‘JONAS’ Wright, “Most scenes are the<br />

same, I suppose. They swell up, then it<br />

settles down and then they just exist.<br />

Like drum and bass a few years ago. It’s<br />

just taken it a while to filter up here. It’s<br />

the local big producers who drive the<br />

scenes down in Bristol and Brighton,<br />

and we don’t really have any up here.”<br />

It’s probably this local indifference<br />

to reggae-inspired music which has<br />

made these new nights stand out so<br />

much and allowed them to flourish.<br />

Your average Scouse clubber is more<br />

than happy with house nights like<br />

Circus, but there is nowhere to go if<br />

you’re a Toxteth lad into your urban or<br />

Caribbean music.<br />

“It’s institutional prejudice on<br />

the part of the police. They don’t let lads walk around town<br />

freely so they don’t feel welcome at nights,” says Adam,<br />

“This is a major cause of the lack of Reggae until now.”<br />

Admittedly, some nights have had problems with violence<br />

in the past and some venues have felt justified in installing<br />

blanket bans on what they see as ‘rowdy’ music. But this<br />

doesn’t mean that all attempts to integrate the student<br />

and local populations are doomed to fail. Subdub in Leeds<br />

for example, is based in a West Indian community centre,<br />

and has built a reputation beyond the city of its birth.<br />

The situation is something which Eat Your Greens is<br />

seeking to remedy, by teaming up with the Toxteth Rebel<br />

Alliance, they promoted the Africa OYÉ Afterparty on<br />

Saturday 19th June at the Picket. Aba Shanti-i headlined<br />

and all the proceeds went to the British Red Cross<br />

myspace.com/<br />

eatyourgreensuk


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AVAILABLE TO BUY FROM PROBE REORDS,<br />

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Tickets available from<br />

Probe Records, Slater st, Liverpool<br />

and www.myspace.com/miserygutsmusic<br />

FRIDAY 23 RD Doors 7:30<br />

JULY<br />

Ô til 11pm


34<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

The Glass Pasty<br />

Notes from the Cultural Abyss<br />

Notes from the Cultural Abyss<br />

Sing Sing Africa!<br />

For the last month it seems everything that has transpired both physically<br />

and mentally in all echelons of society has had the Fifa logo stitched onto<br />

it with the words World Cup, Africa and Vuvuzela emblazoned for all to see.<br />

In fact the concept, meaning and phrase vuvuzela has been accepted with<br />

such warmth by Geoff Public that Anthony Gormley<br />

is already moments from<br />

unveiling 4000 five hundred metre high statues of the drone making trumpets<br />

to replace Manchester’s intricate tram and canal system as his next public art<br />

piece. It’s true to say gentle reader that the entire country has gone football<br />

crazy. Even the pasty’s own subconscious thought and night terrors have been<br />

accompanied by that rolling info bar from Sky Sports News. Dreams of both<br />

a sexual and violent nature have been interrupted with vox-pops and instant<br />

analysis by a handful of shirt wearing experts. If you awake with the gurning<br />

face of sports goblin Jim Rosenthal at the foot of your bed describing blow by<br />

blow accounts of a naked first day at school then don’t be alarmed citizen, it’s<br />

quite normal, healthy even.<br />

Yes it seems all areas of “the arts” have slid between the legs of this year<br />

finals and jumped on the World Cup bandwagon. Not missing a chance to earn<br />

shed loads of dough whilst simultaneously improving their profiles with added<br />

moral kudos, artists have done anything to somehow equate the needs of their<br />

bloated talentless egos with the systematic abuse and robbery of a continent<br />

spanning back hundreds of years. Shakira’s single “I’m down with malaria”<br />

featuring Sepp Blatter on scarf went straight in at number one, whilst JLS’<br />

collaboration with the IMF in association with MFI “furnishing debt” wowed<br />

fans at this years summer detestivals.<br />

However it has been “Wave a Flag” which has captured the Fifa sponsored<br />

imagination of earthlings and lit up the finals as a whole. A song which<br />

although pugnacious in every note and elongated syllable did a universe of<br />

good by preventing England’s official World Cup entry by urban cartoon rapper<br />

Dizzie Rascal and podgy comedi-can’t James Cordon from gaining any form of<br />

moronic credence.<br />

And thus we fix our binoculars of bilge on the “coverage” of the festival<br />

of football so far. From the cliché ridden tongue of Townsend to the sharp<br />

investigative journalistic skills of that sensi of subtlety himself :- Alan “bloody”<br />

Shearer. The latter asking in all monotone serious whether the apartheid<br />

had “created resentment” amongst people whilst the former so inarticulate<br />

and at a loss in key moments that he simply resorts to mime. But all and<br />

sundry were in on the act, no one could mention the French without using the<br />

words “revolution” and “guillotine” and the Germans were described as “cold<br />

and calculating” despite their swashbuckling and eye catching results. The<br />

Brazilians were “sexy and scintillating” despite being the most organised thing<br />

since the Kennedy assassination and any team from Africa were treated with<br />

such condescension and patronising affection that one couldn’t help rooting<br />

for the other team. Yes it seems with every four years the clichés become more<br />

entrenched and we revert to our lower brain and partake in our national sport<br />

of prejudice and inaccuracy.<br />

As for England despite complaints about the Jambalaya ball lacking flavour<br />

they were simply shocking, even after the team meeting in which Robert Green<br />

was hosed down with warm piss and Heskey’s deferential pet mouse Mr<br />

Bojangles was sexually texted to death by Ashley Cole they couldn’t improve<br />

and in the end when the vilification of Rooney and Terry wasn’t enough to<br />

conjure up any fight they surrendered like a team of wet farts and left a nasty<br />

stain in our imaginations.<br />

“And then God created Corden.”<br />

Misery heaped upon misery, perpetual laughter drought, if you didn’t switch<br />

off quick enough you’d be treated to the excruciating squealing and guffawing<br />

of a conveyer belt of celebrities all giving their “expert” advice in front of a<br />

perpetually clapping and whooping studio audience. Who needs actual comedic<br />

substance? Just shout, clap, bounce around the studio high fiving anything with<br />

a pulse and in between adverts shove a fifty pence piece in Gordon Banks’ glass<br />

eye and get him to regurgitate the score of England’s first group game in 66.<br />

Just awful.<br />

More news from the world of shite entertainment, it seems a new star is on<br />

the rise, yes brace yourself for the comedic genius of Lee Mason the only man<br />

in Britain it seems (along with The BBC Programming Commissioner) that didn’t<br />

realise that Ali G happened too long ago and wasn’t really worth revisiting.<br />

Mason’s half hour show consists of absolutely no original material and not a<br />

single creative idea or joke, it is as funny as genetically modified murder and<br />

represents another major success for the beeb, and there was me thinking all<br />

our license fee was paying for Gary Lineker’s revolving studio.<br />

Put on your ball gowns and tighten those tuxedos readers, it’s time to hand<br />

out the gongs at this years <strong>2010</strong> Pasty Awards.<br />

There has been some fine method acting on display this summer, Danny<br />

Dyer continued to thrill in his role as “Danny Dyer in Britain’s Hardest Twats”<br />

and Steven Segal delighted in “Lawman with Steven Segal” but it was Ray<br />

Winstone’s portrayal of “Ray Winstone in Bet 365” that rightfully took all the<br />

plaudits and it is he that scoops the major honours. How Winstone managed<br />

to portray the pathos, conceit and east end skull-duggery of loveable hardman<br />

Ray Winstone whilst simultaneously offering us up to date odds on all the<br />

World Cup matches was simply unfathomable. Hats of RW the glass encrusted<br />

pasty is yours.<br />

**Worst word of the month: - newby, denoting an unfamiliar person or entity,<br />

there is no way of saying this without appearing like a twat, think on!<br />

Join me again next month for more bad pennies from heaven!<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 35<br />

Nik Glover<br />

And so, at the grand old age of 25,<br />

I finally came to comic books.<br />

After years of trying to read every ‘great’ book ever<br />

written with the intention of coming to some broad<br />

understanding of the key elements, themes and structural<br />

changes of world literature, I only seemed to be unearthing<br />

more essential reading at every turn.<br />

Skimming genres, reading histories (Bernal Diaz’s<br />

‘History of the Conquest of New Spain’) only opened up new<br />

avenues (what about South America? How did the Spanish<br />

conquest differ there?) and consequently drained more<br />

money and more time. Touring through complex<br />

subjects, I fell prey to the mistake of persuading<br />

myself that nothing was as good as the first fifty<br />

or so books that really impressed me. I could write<br />

a list of my favorite novels, and they would mostly<br />

be made up of things I read before I was 21.<br />

It may have been the search for an entirely new<br />

genre to explore that set the idea in my head to<br />

look at comic book history; alternatively, it may have<br />

been the glut of comic-book movies that Marvel<br />

and DC have begun to pump out at an alarming<br />

rate (still to come; Thor, the Spiderman reboot, an<br />

Avengers movie, Deadpool, Green Lantern, Captain<br />

America and many, many more).<br />

The success of The Dark Knight was undoubtedly a<br />

key factor. The film was an extraordinary translation<br />

of one genre to another, presenting characters that<br />

I thought I knew in a way that actually made me<br />

care how they had become the way they were.<br />

Instead of just offering a human who could fly, or<br />

fight, or stretch in impossible ways, it is the only<br />

truly ‘grown-up’ superhero movie I have seen.<br />

So, to the comics. I began with the Punisher,<br />

which may have been a mistake. Pun isn’t the<br />

kind of character who offers himself up to deep<br />

psychological study, or for whom a Dark Knightstyle<br />

movie will ever work. Three Punisher movies<br />

have already been made, with laughable results.<br />

The problem, in this case, lies mostly with<br />

the material. Punisher is a character whose sole<br />

interest is firing miscellaneous automatic and<br />

semi-automatic weapons at drug-runners, pushers<br />

and religious fanatics in a revenge-fantasy story<br />

arc that shifts him from failed state to gangland<br />

empire, amassing impressively unaffecting body<br />

counts in an insane quest for vengeance against<br />

the thugs who killed his family. As a typical comic<br />

book character he is two-dimensional and very fun<br />

to read.<br />

There are other comics though. Comics where<br />

(whisper it) the main characters don’t wear skintight<br />

costumes or seek world domination. In some<br />

comics, like in real life, very little happens at all.<br />

There are comics devoted to plagues of monkeys<br />

in fictional Central American towns, comics that<br />

describe the only slightly odd goings-on in<br />

American suburbia, alongside the big-house genre<br />

spin-offs (Marvel Zombies is a particular favorite of<br />

mine). Comics, like prose fiction, do not have to be<br />

high-concept.<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


36<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

Sound and Vision<br />

Nic Toupee<br />

Nic Toupee<br />

In order to really pick the lint from<br />

the celestial pockets where visual art, performance and<br />

sound meet, it is essential to look first at the signposts:<br />

to stand at the crossroads and survey how the landscape<br />

shifts where media meets.<br />

It is no surprise to us, that<br />

visual art and sound have a peculiarly symbiotic and fertile<br />

relationship. After all, we need look no further than the<br />

two essential accompaniments of any musical artefact’s<br />

release: the CD artwork and the filmclip.<br />

A twentieth century invention, with the first ‘album<br />

covers’ being released for scratchy phonograph plates<br />

way back when the Nutcracker was top twenty material,<br />

many numerous and wondrous tomes have been released<br />

documenting cover art.<br />

Arguably, the first attention<br />

grabbing album covers, melding ideas current in visual art<br />

with what is, ostensibly, a very creative form of advertising/<br />

product display, came from the fifties, principally from<br />

record labels fundamental to the Jazz movement, Blue<br />

Notes Mondrianesque colour fields and typographic<br />

adventurousness, designed by Reid Miles, representing<br />

powerfully the intellectual and sonic adventures and rulebreaking<br />

involved in this daring movement, pioneered by a<br />

largely African American stable of poster boys and girls - at<br />

the time a far more radical idea than it should have been<br />

in a perfect world. All in all, it was the daring of the Jazz<br />

visionaries that led to the spectacular acid-fuelled album<br />

cover renaissance of the sixties.<br />

Of course, Liverpool’s own Trump card, The Beatles and<br />

their art director Robert Fraser (and photographer Michael<br />

Cooper), are credited with one of the greatest ever artistic<br />

works accompanying a slab of wax in Sgt Peppers: a<br />

phenomenal exercise in collage and allegory, metaphor<br />

and melody. Perhaps it was the acid taking experiences<br />

of these times and their synaesthetic phenomena that<br />

convinced the psychedelic generation of the importance<br />

of visuals to sound – not just the importance but some<br />

fundamental, intrinsic harmony that those of us who<br />

refused the spiked punch may struggle to truly appreciate.<br />

Whilst we may not appreciate the synaptic backflips<br />

of notes licking our eyeballs, we can thank the Byrds,<br />

Beatles and Floyds of this world for putting the film clip<br />

front and centre as a tool for provoking reaction to sound.<br />

The previous standard clip comprising a bunch of skivvied<br />

eggheads attempting the jive, or some coordinated girls<br />

having a smiling competition were old hat compared with kaleidoscopic effects<br />

and absurd visual tales to accompany music with lyrics finally venturing far<br />

beyond the three chord tale of heartbreak or lovemake previously accepted as<br />

pop’s main game. Thank you acid. Thank you mushrooms. Thank you hippies for<br />

your face paint and performance experiments. They may have been complete<br />

crap in most cases but you certainly opened the portcullis to the fair castle<br />

where sound and vision may marry and make fine iterations.<br />

Of course, it wasn’t all the hippies and the lysergic at the helm of art’s<br />

infiltration into the low-culture world of pop. Let’s also give a nod to Warhol<br />

and his Factory: in his commercialisation of the notions of ‘fine art’, he kicked<br />

against innumerable stuffed shirts, bruised some ideals and perhaps did more<br />

for the bastard child of art and commerce that is Marketing than any other<br />

creative figure until Peter Saville’s Eighties coup. Although his contribution is<br />

so very recent and is in fact ongoing to this day, there is no getting around Peter<br />

Saville as one of the finest nexus points we’ve ever been graced in facilitating<br />

the ongoing conversation between sound and vision. It can possibly be argued<br />

that through the DIY ethic of punk, the neon largesse of Disco and the pomp<br />

of space rock, cover art had taken a significant dive in aesthetic quality during<br />

the seventies (of course with some exceptions). While album covers like ‘Dark<br />

Side Of The Moon’ and “Hawkwind’ were elaborate and suited the quality of<br />

fantasy that was the hallmark of Progressive concept rock, it was sorely in need<br />

of a taste reboot.<br />

The Futurist mentality of the early eighties came thankfully to its’ rescue,<br />

replacing the noble wizard and fearful troll with abstract ideas, bringing back<br />

the idea of elegance in typography, design and bringing a welcome breathing<br />

space for photography, new digital media and a re-rub of classical sculpture and<br />

painting. Peter Saville and yet another Factory were centrally, boldly, defiantly<br />

exercising their muscularly different aesthetic like a heavy weight boxer in the<br />

ring with fifty featherweights.<br />

And last but not least in admiring the nexus-directing signposts to our<br />

contemporary comfort in mixing media, let us stop at the Eighties ‘concept<br />

video’, in which the visual narrative was just as strong as the song it promoted<br />

– sometimes more so. Throwing the epic clip to Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller’ and<br />

Duran Duran’s ‘Wild Boys’ into the ring, and of course Prince’s ‘Purple Rain’ as<br />

extended video clip meets film, let’s focus on those who added something a<br />

little grander to the idea – in particular avant-garde film maker Derek Jarman for<br />

his iconic clips for The Smiths, including ‘The Queen Is Dead’, ‘Ask’ and ‘Panic’,<br />

in addition to Throbbing Gristle’s groundbreaking ‘TG Psychic Rally In Heaven’<br />

and teaming up with ‘Suede’ to produce mesmerising backing visuals for their<br />

early concerts. What Jarman brought to the already quite crowded table was<br />

a, like Saville, embrace of the non linear, of the anti-commercial, in his case a<br />

diy jungian body politic, encased in dreamlike non sequence. His vision was<br />

abundantly fruitful, seeding ideas of video collage, political metaphor and the<br />

waking dream.<br />

Of course we’ve jogged past many a moment of enlightenment, a swathe<br />

of technological advancement and realms of Serious Ideas. But nowhere<br />

are sound and vision more closely aligned than in presentation of our body<br />

of popular music itself. If any particular omission enrages you, write to your<br />

editor! Plant your metaphoric flag on our supersonic highway!<br />

And now for homework: Christian Marclay, Coldcut and Alva Noto.<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


MARINA & THE<br />

DIAMONDS<br />

Spark<br />

The Masque<br />

One of the most successful of the<br />

rock/pop groups to have emerged in<br />

the past year, MARINA & THE DIAMONDS<br />

emanate exactly the aura you’d expect<br />

when the limelight is upon them – a<br />

mixture of bolshy confidence that their<br />

star has risen so far, and the remainder<br />

of a slightly desperate desire to cater<br />

to the masses and ensure that their<br />

star stays high up there and won’t fade<br />

quickly into oblivion. The combination<br />

isn’t a bad one; Marina’s show at the<br />

Masque is pumped with a glamorous<br />

energy from start to finish.<br />

Opening for the band is a group<br />

called SPARK, an electro-pop outfit<br />

with a bubbly lead singer whose<br />

voice is reminiscent of The Cranberries’<br />

Dolores O’Riordan. The music is<br />

dancefloor-friendly keyboard produce<br />

with a forgettable likeability. Before<br />

she departs the stage, after half-adozen<br />

or so numbers, the singer chirps<br />

in her Cockney tones that “Liverpool is<br />

my home, really!” The audience seems<br />

unswayed, but gives a polite cheer.<br />

There is a more convincingly<br />

deafening cheer as the Diamonds<br />

finally take to the stage. Marina<br />

appears last, launching herself under<br />

the neon lights wrapped in a Bambipatterned<br />

kaftan, and with nary an<br />

introduction she immediately rips into<br />

Girls, tearing a chunk out of society’s<br />

sexist outlook: “Girls are not meant to<br />

fight dirty/Never look a day past thirty/<br />

Not gonna bend over and curtsey for<br />

you,” she bellows repeatedly in the<br />

bridge.<br />

Ms Diamandis’ presence onstage<br />

is a fascinating one: her powerfully<br />

haunting vocals and her swaying,<br />

hypnotic, almost Kate Bush-esque<br />

dance moves (‘mania in slow motion’<br />

is the phrase that springs to mind),<br />

combined with the manner in which<br />

the wind-effect fans her long dark<br />

hair and the flowing silk sheath<br />

she is wearing, transform her into a<br />

bewitching figure, a sorceress as well<br />

as a songstress.<br />

“How are you, my diamonds?”<br />

the Welsh warbler booms at the<br />

enraptured audience after Girls comes<br />

to an end. “Tonight is down to you.”<br />

At this, Marina discards the kaftan and<br />

spends the remainder of the set in a<br />

Topshop T-shirt-and-shorts combo. The<br />

stage lighting becomes blacklight,<br />

bathing the group in blue, from which<br />

Marina’s pink UV lipstick stands out.<br />

She picks up two matching pink<br />

UV hearts as the opening piano<br />

notes of one of the band’s two hit<br />

singles, I Am Not A Robot!, play. She<br />

reverts to a breathy, innocent warble<br />

for this number, accompanied by<br />

robotic dancing, jerkily bending and<br />

waving her UV hearts around. The<br />

track, a jaunty up-tempo number,<br />

is recognised straightaway by the<br />

assembled crowd and is met with an<br />

enthusiastic response from the crowd,<br />

which becomes a reverent hush to<br />

accommodate the simplistic quiet of<br />

the opening verse, before it explodes<br />

into the electronic chorus.<br />

Marina continues in this vein for<br />

two further songs, before sitting<br />

alone at a keyboard for a few lowertempo<br />

numbers. Like a child eager<br />

to impress, she appears shier now<br />

that the spotlight is focused directly<br />

on her. “All of these songs are from<br />

my album, The Family Jewels,” she<br />

half-whispers into her mic, her smile<br />

discernible under the stage lights, as<br />

though slightly embarrassed to be<br />

promoting herself so.<br />

The band saves the best showstopper<br />

till last: the boys reappear<br />

onstage and Diamandis leaps to hear<br />

feet, grabs her mic and falls back<br />

into what comes more naturally to<br />

her: dancing and shouting out loud,<br />

specifically, to the band’s hit single,<br />

Hollywood. Marina belts out the beatheavy<br />

number while twirling around<br />

to the breathy hooks; the audience<br />

joins in the upbeat chorus of how<br />

she’s “obsessed with the mess that’s<br />

America!”<br />

The singer’s vocals are pitch-perfect:<br />

they have an elasticity that is similar<br />

to the lead singers of the 80s pop era,<br />

such as Kim Wilde and Debbie Harry.<br />

She can snap from low, musing and<br />

cynical to high-pitched and girly as<br />

quickly as the drumbeats cease to<br />

Reviews Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 37<br />

Marina & The Diamonds (Jennifer Pellegrini)<br />

THE SUZUKIS<br />

The Loud – The Real Kicks<br />

The Masque<br />

allow for the piano notes to take over.<br />

The band is in a comfortable position,<br />

Sometimes, there’s nothing more<br />

being contemporary enough in style<br />

enjoyable than sitting back in a bar,<br />

to ease into the mainstream, but<br />

drink in hand, listening to the latest<br />

peppered with enough uniqueness<br />

group of modest, innocent children<br />

to allow them to shine out amongst<br />

play their brand new songs, hoping<br />

some of their blander fellows of the<br />

for applause and approval so they<br />

electro-pop variety. Marina is truly a<br />

feel justified in having long hair,<br />

Diamond in the rough.<br />

pointy shoes and skinny jeans. On<br />

Lee Boyle<br />

the same level, sometimes there is


38<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

Reviews<br />

nothing worse than being squashed<br />

on a couch without a drink, next to a<br />

drunken Scotsman and two drunken<br />

Mancunians, listening to some arrogant<br />

adults who like to pretend they’re all<br />

going to be in Oasis when they grow<br />

up. Unfortunately, THE REAL KICKS<br />

relate to the latter. Their influences are<br />

clear, mainly emulating Britpop bands,<br />

such as Ocean Colour Scene, Oasis<br />

and Cast – however the emulation<br />

maybe goes a bit too far. Technically,<br />

The Real Kicks are an excellent band<br />

– the vocalist has complete control<br />

over his voice, singing in a typical<br />

Oasis style, complete with accent and<br />

distortion, without straining at all.<br />

The guitarist and bass player provide<br />

clean, crisp sounds with obvious<br />

melodies and riffs rather than relying<br />

on a plethora of effects to make the<br />

song interesting, while the drummer<br />

is fluent and light, keeping the band<br />

in perfect time. Sadly though, their<br />

performance is hard to pay attention<br />

to, just because it feels like it’s all<br />

been done before. And it has – in the<br />

90s. I’m partial to Britpop, I really am,<br />

but even I can’t bring myself to find<br />

anything new about The Real Kicks<br />

that makes them stand out as a band,<br />

or to justify making them the complete<br />

focal point in a bar for half an hour. As<br />

background music, yes, top marks, but<br />

if I heard them as background music,<br />

I’d put money on the song being a<br />

forgotten Oasis B side. This emulation<br />

though would actually be tolerable<br />

if it stayed within the music, but on<br />

stage The Real Kicks have that same<br />

arrogance and pomposity as their<br />

heroes, and until they can control<br />

this they’re limiting themselves, and<br />

alienating potential fans.<br />

The drunken men I mentioned<br />

earlier do their best to distract me<br />

during THE LOUD’S performance, but<br />

living up to their name, The Loud<br />

drown out almost every word. (The<br />

words they didn’t drown out aren’t<br />

worth repeating.) The Loud have<br />

structure, consistency and the useful<br />

ability to completely hold their<br />

audience. The vocalist especially is<br />

striking, filling the air with warm, rich<br />

vocals that dominate the performance.<br />

Your interest is held, you can’t help but<br />

listen, but you find yourself listening<br />

to the sound rather than the lyrics,<br />

as parts of the song just pass you by.<br />

The guitar is catchy, thick and almost<br />

lethargic – in some songs it seems to<br />

take a while to arrive, but it matches<br />

the vocals perfectly. The drum beats<br />

seem tuneful as well as rhythmical,<br />

adding a certain brightness to the<br />

otherwise heavy sounding songs.<br />

Like The Real Kicks, The Loud’s style<br />

is nothing new, taking influence from<br />

Nirvana and Slade and numerous<br />

garage bands – but they manage to<br />

add their own unique slant to the<br />

music. The sound in the Masque does<br />

them no favors though, the crispness<br />

and clarity needed to fully appreciate<br />

them is lost to the amps. There is no<br />

denying though, The Loud completely<br />

overshadow The Real Kicks, and they<br />

are without a doubt a band to see<br />

before you get too old to deal with<br />

your ears ringing for a few days after.<br />

As the evening draws to a close,<br />

THE SUZUKIS arrive on stage. As casual<br />

as The Real Kicks were arrogant, they<br />

seem to treat the stage as they would<br />

a practice room or sound check, while<br />

maintaining a level of maturity that<br />

proves they aren’t taking this as a<br />

joke. Even within the first few minutes,<br />

it is easy to see The Suzukis are no<br />

ordinary northern band, producing a<br />

range of sounds, styles and screams<br />

within one song, without being over<br />

the top. The vocal styles vary greatly<br />

throughout the performance too,<br />

sometimes being calm and fluent,<br />

sometimes they are nothing more<br />

than screams - desperate, pleading<br />

screams that are almost chilling to<br />

listen to. Whichever style is used, the<br />

quality of the vocals is outstanding,<br />

retaining the clarity of a studio<br />

recording, while still having the same<br />

rich warmth of live music. Some of the<br />

songs rely heavily on effects, more so<br />

than the other bands, sometimes just<br />

creeping past the border into overuse,<br />

but beneath the haze of effects, the<br />

melody is still clear, holding the songs<br />

together at times when the vocal<br />

levels drop.<br />

Following suit, The Suzukis’<br />

influences are clear – at any time in<br />

the set they can turn into Echo and<br />

the Bunnymen without the audience<br />

batting an eyelid, but like The Loud,<br />

their own ability and quirkiness<br />

make them stand apart from their<br />

influences. The phrase ‘save the best<br />

‘til last’ is overused, but is apt, and as<br />

The Suzukis leave the stage and the<br />

audience begin to disperse, it feels as<br />

if the evening has finished just when<br />

it should have been starting. If fate is<br />

ever kind enough to pair The Loud and<br />

The Suzukis together again, take the<br />

opportunity to see them. I promise<br />

you, you’ll regret it if you don’t.<br />

STEVE MASON<br />

Static Gallery<br />

Katy Long<br />

Back to Bido HQ for a potential gem<br />

of a night: STEVE MASON, the driving<br />

force behind the Beta Band and surely<br />

one the most distinguished and<br />

accomplished songwriters Static has<br />

ever opened its doors to. Entering the<br />

stage to an appreciative crowd, Mason<br />

kicked off the show with sparseness<br />

and understatement, breaking the<br />

momentary silence afforded to him<br />

with the bareness of his voice alone.<br />

In fact, for the entirety of the first two<br />

songs this really was a solo effort, no<br />

band in sight, just Mason, the stage<br />

and the audience. The effect of this<br />

ploy soon became clear however,<br />

as by gradually integrating the band<br />

into proceedings, Mason was able to<br />

showcase the layering of his song<br />

craft and emphasise the attention<br />

to detail that has made his brand of<br />

Steve Mason (John Johnson)<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Reviews<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 39<br />

Electro-soul distinctive. Throughout<br />

his song writing career, Mason has in<br />

actuality been at his most poignant<br />

and meaningful when this attention<br />

to detail has been at its most acute.<br />

Perhaps never one for sweeping epics<br />

or contagious riffs, the beauty of the<br />

Beta Band was also the nuance.<br />

Early on he brought out the quite<br />

brilliant (and one time Trigger Happy<br />

TV mainstay) Dr Baker, a song still<br />

sounding fresh and innovative over a<br />

decade on - beautiful. Much of the rest<br />

of the set though was comprised of his<br />

newest material taken from spring’s<br />

Boys Outside, an album steeped in<br />

lyrical melancholy, stemming from<br />

the turbulence in Mason’s own life<br />

over the last couple of years. The<br />

fact that pain and misery are never<br />

entirely detached from inspiration and<br />

creativity is evident here. Offerings<br />

such as Understand My Heart are<br />

not only close to the bone in terms<br />

of their significance to their maker’s<br />

personal life but also represent what<br />

is without doubt some Mason’s finest<br />

solo work. Title track Boys Outside<br />

has the melodic piano and funky<br />

beats of Beta Band numbers, offset by<br />

hauntingly inward-looking lyrics, but it<br />

works to great affect. Whilst there is a<br />

decidedly dark theme to this album, it<br />

still remains the closest he has come<br />

to revisiting earlier work, but is also<br />

something of a return to form after the<br />

Black Affair project.<br />

However, whilst this may not be<br />

a huge departure in sound from the<br />

Beta Band, Mason’s ability to pen<br />

meaningful and innovative pop music<br />

still remains; at the same time, there<br />

is an inescapable feeling that the<br />

formula hasn’t evolved enough, and<br />

subsequently the music has lost a<br />

little of the edge and forward-looking<br />

perspective it once carried. Therefore<br />

Mason’s difficulty may lie in attracting<br />

new listeners to his music, without<br />

them first being initiated into the Beta<br />

Band back catalogue. For those that<br />

have been with him all the way, seeing<br />

Steve Mason back in Liverpool was<br />

a more than welcome sight. Despite<br />

bemoaning Static’s lack of lights, the<br />

man himself actually reserved praise<br />

for the ‘Do-It-Yourself’ local music<br />

scene. Highlight of the night? Mason<br />

going to town on an unsuspecting<br />

cowbell.<br />

Pete Robinson<br />

ELVIS COSTELLO<br />

Philharmonic Hall<br />

We’re two songs in and ELVIS<br />

COSTELLO is singing about<br />

“Government burglars.”<br />

That Blame It On Cain - a song from<br />

My Aim Is True, his thirty-year-old debut<br />

record - is now drenched in fiddle,<br />

accordion and lap steel guitar is the<br />

only real difference to when he first<br />

performed the song at Eric’s back in<br />

the day, is a testament to Costello the<br />

musician. And the fact that, just like a<br />

fine wine, he gets better with age.<br />

With not an Attraction or an<br />

Imposter in sight, Costello held the<br />

sold-out crowd’s attention all night.<br />

New songs, old songs and covers<br />

(who predicted the Stones’ Keef-led<br />

Happy being a big highlight?) were<br />

all delivered with a battering-ram like<br />

quality from the six-strong Sugarcanes<br />

- the group who provide the righteous<br />

Americana on his latest record, Secret,<br />

Profane and Sugarcane.<br />

But this was no promotional<br />

trip. The classics were reworked<br />

too: Brilliant Mistake, Alison, New<br />

Amsterdam (with a coda of You’ve Got<br />

To Hide Your Love Away waltzing the<br />

tune from New York to Liverpool and<br />

back) and (The Angels Wanna’ Wear<br />

My) Red Shoes were all rapturously<br />

received by the crowd, revelling in<br />

the singer’s obvious delight at how<br />

great his voice was sounding in this<br />

musical old venue. The big lights also<br />

got an airing, with Shipbuilding and a<br />

slowed-down (What’s So Funny ‘Bout)<br />

Peace, Love And Understanding still<br />

capturing the spirit of the times, all<br />

these years after they were written.<br />

Song of the night honours went to a<br />

heart-stopping recreation of Everyday<br />

I Write The Book, though; the MTV<br />

hit from 1983, delivered as a tearstained<br />

lament, Ron Sexsmith-style.<br />

Beautiful.<br />

Do me a favour: the next time<br />

someone tells you rock ‘n roll is a<br />

young person’s game, give ‘em a<br />

smack, and a copy of Costello’s latest<br />

work. It’s not, and thank God, because<br />

Liverpool lives for concerts like this.<br />

Complaints? I’m trying. A misfiring<br />

Mystery Dance reminded us all that<br />

we want him back with The Imposters<br />

and his Fender Jazz shortly - but that’s<br />

our problem, not his. Long live The King...<br />

Alan O’Hare<br />

AFRICA OYÉ <strong>2010</strong><br />

Sefton Park<br />

Under skies fit for an African voyage,<br />

<strong>2010</strong>’s AFRICA OYE festival felt like<br />

a fairy tale, far removed from any<br />

experience usually possible in the<br />

leafy surrounds of Sefton Park. Yes, the<br />

crystal clear blue skies and almost too<br />

good to be true weather conditions<br />

helped make an always entertaining<br />

June weekend festival one of the<br />

highlights of the Summer. It really<br />

was a shame that the oft-used epithet<br />

Africa Oyé (Keith Ainsworth)<br />

about good things coming to an end<br />

had to come into play.<br />

These two beautiful days were<br />

pregnant with possibility and so much<br />

was happening from the sublime<br />

to the ridiculous to the genuinely<br />

worrying – witness the tall slide with<br />

a gigantic Jesus Christ at the bottom<br />

– it was almost impossible to stop<br />

and rest. At one point our suitably<br />

energetic host commented that the<br />

view from the stage was one of the<br />

most diverse he had seen thus far at<br />

Africa Oyé, something that met with<br />

wild cheers from the audience, and<br />

quite rightly: many events needlessly<br />

boast of a multinational clientele, but<br />

Africa Oyé had no need of such boasts<br />

as it really did feel like a worldwide<br />

gathering of music loving people.<br />

There was no sign of any mud,<br />

traditional downpours of rain, or even<br />

the toilets that make you curse the<br />

human condition, but do we really<br />

want that of anything, festival or not?<br />

Personally, I found the sun coming<br />

out to play for the whole festival was<br />

the perfect touch to a pretty good<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


40<br />

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weekend. Purely because it was plain<br />

as the eye can see that a lot of people<br />

were having fun, and doing things<br />

they probably don’t do that often, with<br />

a wonderful liberty. If no mud means<br />

that the people can sit down, lie down,<br />

roll around and generally look pretty<br />

happy on the grass then that’s the way<br />

I want it! But sunbathing on the grass<br />

was not the only temptation available<br />

on this weekend of weekends. No,<br />

plenty of things were happening to<br />

occupy even the most restless soul.<br />

Events such as the Health, Learning<br />

and Participation Tent, where the<br />

boundlessly energetic people of<br />

Movema were getting the crowd<br />

moving with their dance workshops,<br />

from African Dance to Caribbean and<br />

beyond, were just the beginning. The<br />

crowd weren’t shy to join in and if we<br />

all had the enthusiasm of the Movema<br />

team the world would be a better<br />

place without doubt. Surrounding the<br />

dance workshops was the opportunity<br />

to make one of those essential ‘hey,<br />

it’s a festival’ purchases in the Oyé<br />

Village of various traditional stalls and<br />

food and drink. Overall, there was a<br />

good selection of items on offer and<br />

the food was almost universally well<br />

worth the festival prices charged. The<br />

traditional African food particularly hit<br />

the spot with this intrepid reviewer,<br />

who has now become aware of the<br />

fact that you can have too much<br />

spice in your life. But chief among the<br />

offerings of Africa Oyé is the sound<br />

that was echoing around the park<br />

constantly and defiantly, warning you<br />

to ignore it at your peril. That’s right,<br />

the live stage!<br />

Africa Oyé has a rich history of great<br />

music throughout its nearly twenty<br />

year history, and <strong>2010</strong> was not the<br />

year to be an exception. There was<br />

a definite variety and flavour to this<br />

year’s line up that was effortlessly<br />

exotic, evocative and genuinely<br />

different from your usual festival<br />

vibe. The atmosphere was heated<br />

at all times in the best possible way<br />

and wherever you were in the crowd,<br />

you could definitely feel it. You really<br />

begin to notice how passionate artists<br />

such as CARLOU D or TO’MEZCLAO<br />

are when you see the things they<br />

make an audience do. World music is<br />

often music of the heart, and it was<br />

evident from the audience reaction<br />

throughout, including a stage invader<br />

during Carlou D’s set that played a bit<br />

on the Djembe before being dragged<br />

off screaming and kicking!<br />

Impressive performances came<br />

from the aforementioned To’Mezclao,<br />

the only band to play both days, who<br />

impressed with hip-hop and Latin<br />

beats and some frankly great dancing,<br />

and MODOU TOURE and Carlou D, both<br />

from Senegal, who were inspired<br />

performers and fascinating to watch<br />

as the various traditional instruments<br />

came into play. And with a stage<br />

view so impressive who wouldn’t be<br />

compelled to entertain and educate<br />

the audience as much as all the<br />

artists did this year? As I took my<br />

place to get the all important pictures<br />

it became clear what Africa Oyé is all<br />

about: enjoying music, soaking up<br />

the atmosphere and generally being<br />

a shiny happy person, as the festival<br />

has always been about, really.<br />

I’ll be there next year. Will you?<br />

Sebastian Gahan.<br />

LAST WITNESS<br />

Almost Home – GWC<br />

Amateur Video - Jamesxmay<br />

Bar Samui<br />

Another Liverpool hardcore gig<br />

producing another under-populated<br />

turnout, such is the nature of a scene<br />

dedicated solely to its music, with<br />

no interest of profit over legitimacy.<br />

Despite there being only a smatter<br />

of gig dwelling hardcore fanatics, this<br />

did not herald the disaster it could so<br />

easily have turned out to be. Stepping<br />

up to the challenge first is Liverpoolbased<br />

JAMESXMAY. These guys should<br />

be the perfect catalyst to get this<br />

contingent of fans truly involved, with<br />

their adrenaline burst songs and offthe-wall<br />

mannerisms; however, they<br />

tackle a slightly resilient crowd who<br />

fail to truly show their aggression. But<br />

this matters not, as the singer seems to<br />

be content with doing all the venting<br />

himself, throwing his body around the<br />

crowd and screaming at the top of his<br />

lungs in true punk fashion.<br />

Next up is another locally brewed<br />

band, AMATEUR VIDEO. Closer to the<br />

punk spectrum of hardcore than its<br />

metallic counterpart, it wouldn’t be<br />

abnormal to compare them to the<br />

likes of Canada’s Fucked Up or Cursed.<br />

This is one of the few contemporary<br />

hardcore bands who certainly put<br />

substance head and shoulders above<br />

style, with the guitarist playing a<br />

Telecaster and not one oversized ear<br />

tunnel in sight. They hardly achieve a<br />

life-defining reaction from the crowd,<br />

but the purity of their music along<br />

with the honesty of their performance<br />

is enough to move the heart of this<br />

venue, if not the body.<br />

GWC are the next act on the bill,<br />

their quasi-grind brand of hardcore<br />

finally managing to crack the stiffbodied<br />

audience into a hardcoredancing<br />

frenzy, one that wouldn’t<br />

be out of place in a martial arts film.<br />

Albeit only consisting of a handful<br />

of participators, but considering the<br />

unforgiving attitude of the audiences<br />

towards the previous acts, this is a<br />

milestone in the gig.<br />

The conundrum most hardcore<br />

Last Witness (Paul Paton)<br />

bands face with having two guitarists<br />

is not knowing how to adequately<br />

utilise this added resource, often<br />

resulting in a musical pallet of very<br />

few colours. However, the next act,<br />

ALMOST HOME, appears to not only<br />

have solved this problem, but has<br />

also implicated it into their music to<br />

create a fresh and impressive sound.<br />

Combining the power chord breaks<br />

of Madball with the contrasting posthardcore<br />

atmospherics of Sights<br />

& Sounds, songs such as Closure<br />

perfectly represent this hybrid<br />

between contemporary and classic<br />

hardcore. Their set doesn’t provoke the<br />

response it deserves, but the singer is<br />

so in the moment, singing with such<br />

conviction, that it doesn’t detract from<br />

this fantastic performance at all.<br />

‘Thinking outside the box is what<br />

hardcore is really about’ exclaims<br />

headline act LAST WITNESS’ singer<br />

Theo Kindynis. This is certainly true in<br />

terms of this band’s lyrics, however<br />

musically, Last Witness are far from<br />

pushing the envelope. It is apparent<br />

that they are seasoned live musicians,<br />

as their production and stage presence<br />

is more than enough to channel the<br />

audience’s collective participation.<br />

Unfortunately, their talent is<br />

squandered by an insistence to closely<br />

abide by pre-established metallichardcore<br />

conventions, stemming from<br />

so many bands before them, such as<br />

the likes of Bury Your Dead. And so,<br />

the material on show may be one that<br />

edges towards genericism, but the<br />

confidence and belief of Last Witness’<br />

live show is a shining example of why<br />

hardcore has to be experienced and<br />

not just witnessed.<br />

Sam Garlick<br />

THE OTHERS<br />

SBTRKT - MELE<br />

AbandonSilence @ The Magnet<br />

After negotiating the rather<br />

intimidating bouncers and rickety<br />

staircase, I found myself waiting in<br />

line to enter the downstairs capsule<br />

of times-gone-by that is The Magnet’s<br />

club room. With peeling walls, broken<br />

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Reviews Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 41<br />

floor tiles and a dampened ceiling,<br />

the location appeared more likely to<br />

be playing host to dungeon tortures<br />

than a dubstep night, but the 200-plus<br />

visitors packed in to Magnet’s<br />

underbelly were here for thrills of a<br />

different kind: Abandon Silence all ye<br />

who enter…<br />

To say that the opening night of<br />

the AbandonSilence project had three<br />

potential headliners in its festivallike<br />

eight act line up is something<br />

that must be respected: recently<br />

featured in these hallowed pages, 18<br />

year old MELE will be painting more<br />

salubrious venues than this with<br />

his genre-spanning brush over the<br />

months to come, and his crossover<br />

set of house, grime and dubstep<br />

marked an excellent starting point<br />

of this fledgling event. The brainchild<br />

of JMU student and blogger Andrew<br />

Hill, AbandonSilence could not have<br />

started with more of a bang, with the<br />

promoter’s energy and enthusiasm<br />

reflected by the crowd’s reaction to<br />

Mele, bouncing along almost as much<br />

as the man himself.<br />

At the end of Mele’s set, a mystery<br />

man stepped to into the DJ booth. A<br />

short duck beneath the DJ booth later,<br />

he was concealed behind an African<br />

tribal mask. Despite SBTRKT not<br />

being the headline name on the bill,<br />

it is probably for the best that most<br />

people’s enduring memories of the<br />

night will be of the 6ft tribesman; his<br />

distinctive percussive style came to<br />

the fore as he mixed tracks with ease,<br />

giving the listener the impression that<br />

we were witnessing one continuous<br />

track. The highlight of his set was most<br />

certainly the exclusive airing of his<br />

fantastic remix of MIA’s forthcoming<br />

single, XXXO. This remix, as well as his<br />

other adaptations of records by Goldie,<br />

Gorillaz and Mark Ronson, show an<br />

adept skill for the reimagining of<br />

seemingly any genre.<br />

Headliners THE OTHERS came the<br />

stage at around 2.30 am, though it<br />

appeared that most of the crowd were<br />

unaware that the headline set was<br />

about to be played; most had headed<br />

home by the time the Dub Police<br />

veterans came to the decks. Their<br />

set was a step up on anything heard<br />

previously, with latest single Gravity<br />

and their timeless remix of Breakage<br />

and Newham Generals’ Hard getting<br />

particular cheers from the horde of<br />

swaying dubsteppers.<br />

With Liverpool’s electronic music<br />

scene sliding towards a monotonous<br />

Chibuku/Circus monopoly, it is<br />

refreshing to see some young<br />

promoters attempting to compete<br />

with the big boys. Despite PlayDub’s<br />

disastrous attempt to go head to head<br />

with Chibuku last April, with some<br />

key line-up choices and just sheer<br />

luck, we could yet see a multitude of<br />

great nights once again in Liverpool.<br />

Despite these uncertain times, it can<br />

easily be ascertained from this launch<br />

that AbandonSilence will be with us<br />

for some time longer.<br />

JAMIE T & THE<br />

PACEMAKERS<br />

Eagulls<br />

O2 Academy<br />

Jack Breslin<br />

“Jamie T is on next you know,”<br />

support act EAGULLS’ frontman,<br />

nonchalant as anything, reminds the<br />

Abandon Scielence (Ben Thapa)<br />

crowd between songs . Oh, as if we<br />

don’t know it. Eagulls, hailing from<br />

Leeds, have all the stage presence and<br />

the floppy hair a band could hope for,<br />

though a couple of songs into their<br />

set they make the dreaded mistake<br />

of telling the already brimming crowd<br />

that the previous night’s attendees<br />

in Lincoln were a better audience. Oh<br />

dear. Frontman Lesbian Eagull soon<br />

rectifies this, putting on his best Shane<br />

MacGowan-esque swagger (only more<br />

sober and with a prettier face) which<br />

gets the audience good and going.<br />

Spewing out lyrics to Council Flat<br />

Blues as if each heavy breath were his<br />

last, the four instrumentalists behind<br />

him build up momentum furiously in<br />

a sea of frenzied cymbal crashes and<br />

clamorous guitars.<br />

If you’re wondering about the<br />

name, the five-piece explained in a<br />

recent interview that “it came from an<br />

ongoing joke we had between us but<br />

apparently there is some band from<br />

America called Eagles that did alright<br />

for themselves in the ‘70s, but we’d<br />

never heard them. We decided to spell<br />

ours differently incase the American<br />

Eagles decided to take us to court to<br />

cash in on our success.” It’s reassuring<br />

to see that if the band doesn’t work<br />

out for them, they can always venture<br />

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into the world of stand-up comedy.<br />

Certainly no laughing stock playing<br />

live, the band overcame the faux pas<br />

of insulting a Liverpudlian crowd early<br />

on in their set, leaving the audience<br />

thoroughly warmed up for the<br />

illustrious headline act.<br />

“You’re that punk that I’ve been<br />

waiting for. You’re it.” Here’s what<br />

we’ve all been waiting for; the prodigal<br />

son of, ahem, broken Britain strolls<br />

on to the darkened stage during<br />

the intriguing sample to set opener<br />

The Man’s Machine. JAMIE T & THE<br />

PACEMAKERS burst into song while<br />

the ecstatic crowd simultaneously<br />

does likewise. Tearing through a<br />

fifteen song strong set, incorporating<br />

a greatest hits setlist, old favourites<br />

Back In The Game and If You Got The<br />

Money have the crowd singing along<br />

word for word while newer material<br />

such as Earth, Wind & Fire sees the<br />

Wimbledon-born Jamie Treays literally<br />

bounce around the stage, covering<br />

ground with such exuberance it’s a<br />

wonder his skinny, laddish frame (now<br />

sporting a rather fetching ‘tache) didn’t<br />

topple over. His band The Pacemakers<br />

put on an equally impressive show;<br />

guitarist Luis Felber is on the floor<br />

playing with his pearly whites while<br />

bassist James Dunston is possibly the<br />

coolest person I have ever seen in my<br />

life, simply plucking away at his bass<br />

without a care in the world.<br />

Between songs Jamie T gives<br />

Liverpool a special shout out, crediting<br />

our local music scene, mentioning<br />

artists like Hot Club de Paris and<br />

Sound of Guns, encouraging his<br />

audience to “get involved because<br />

there are some fucking good bands<br />

about.” A man after our own hearts.<br />

Ending with British Intelligence, a<br />

boisterous affair which with snarling,<br />

topical lyric “taxed by a man that I’m<br />

yet to meet” gets a rowdy reception,<br />

his observational wordsmithery being<br />

entirely relevant to recent budget<br />

revelations. The band then walk off<br />

stage, soon to return for their highly<br />

anticipated four-song encore starting<br />

with Spider’s Web. As lone guitarist<br />

Felber sits in the far corner of the<br />

stage, ukulele in tow, he prompts<br />

the audience to sing the backing<br />

vocals until Jamie T and the rest of<br />

his Pacemakers make an appearance.<br />

Before concluding for good with the<br />

coveted Sticks ‘n’ Stones, Jamie T gives<br />

a heartrending speech, “I’d just like to<br />

say there are a lot of mean people out<br />

there, remember that so we all gotta<br />

be nice to each other ... We gotta look<br />

after each other and not be fucking<br />

arseholes to each other.” There are<br />

some things that only troubadour<br />

Jamie T can say and still sound so<br />

poignant and charming: that was one<br />

of them.<br />

Bethany Garrett<br />

RODRIGO Y GABRIELA<br />

Wallis Bird<br />

O2 Academy<br />

WALLIS BIRD, an Irish soundalike<br />

of KT Tunstall, is onstage bashing<br />

the life out of an acoustic guitar. As<br />

Pete Townshend learned early on in<br />

his career, the harder you smash the<br />

guitar the more audiences seem to<br />

appreciate it, and so it goes here. The<br />

majority of her set sees her dealing out<br />

a guitar-mangling worthy of Thurston<br />

Moore. After so many worthy singersongwriters<br />

gently plucking acoustic<br />

guitars it is refreshing to encounter<br />

one who plays with so much<br />

conviction that the set could possibly<br />

have gone ahead minus amplification.<br />

With songs ‘mostly about riding<br />

somebody’ as she self-deprecatingly<br />

puts it, the majority most of the lyrics<br />

bear this out, including one track with<br />

the key line, ‘I would do time for just<br />

one more kiss’. After half an hour’s<br />

worth of frantic guitar scrubbing she<br />

exits the stage, presumably for a lie<br />

down.<br />

RODRIGO Y GABRIELA take to the<br />

stage at the relatively early hour of<br />

9pm following a deluge of vintage<br />

metal played over the PA.<br />

A pair<br />

of dyed-in-the-wool metallers who<br />

relocated to Dublin, the duo busked<br />

Metallica and Slayer songs on the<br />

street where passers-by mistook their<br />

material for flamenco. The presence<br />

of so many metal T-shirts is slightly<br />

incongruous to begin with, yet<br />

begins to makes sense as the kinship<br />

between the duo’s material and tracks<br />

like Metallica’s One are clear.<br />

The bulk of the set is drawn from<br />

new LP 11:11, the first to be selfcomposed<br />

by the twosome. The only<br />

gig I’ve attended where the playing of<br />

acoustic guitars leads to an outbreak<br />

of pogoing and people throwing devil<br />

signs, Gabriela effectively provides<br />

the rhythm section, her thumps<br />

to her nylon strung guitar as loud<br />

as any bass drum. While Gabriela<br />

effectively lays the foundation of<br />

the tracks, Rodrigo builds on this<br />

with the melody lines that fit over<br />

the top of it. As songwriters, the pair<br />

don’t quite match the virtuoso skill<br />

they display as musicians, preferring<br />

rhythm, tone and texture to anthemic<br />

choruses. When the playing is as good<br />

as this however, such reservations are<br />

academic. Taking turns at short solo<br />

spots, even on their own each guitarist<br />

is mesmerising. Gabriela’s frantic<br />

chord vamping supplemented with<br />

percussive slaps to the guitar makes<br />

you wonder how so much sound can<br />

come from one instrument. With the<br />

addition of a few more FX pedals, and<br />

Lars Ulrich behind the drumkit, much<br />

of tonight’s set could pass for vintage<br />

Metallica.<br />

The string shredding solos the<br />

duo mete out are the equal of Matt<br />

Bellamy’s work in Muse, arguably<br />

even more impressive, having to rely<br />

on the actual guitar itself to provide<br />

the effects, not FX units or synapse<br />

twisting amplification. Indeed, some<br />

of the quieter moments of the set<br />

are so tranquil the thrum of the air<br />

conditioning unit can be heard above<br />

it. When they do utilise stomp boxes<br />

however, as on the Hendrix-aping<br />

Buster Voodoo, the effect is stunning.<br />

One of their keynote tracks, the song<br />

is played following a brief diversion<br />

Rodrigo Y Gabriela (John Johnson)<br />

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Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 43<br />

into an audience pleasing rendition of<br />

Radiohead’s High and Dry.<br />

The Academy isn’t especially well<br />

suited for a gig such as this, as when<br />

either of the performers sit down the<br />

majority of the audience start standing<br />

on their toes, craning their necks to<br />

see where they’ve gone. That doesn’t<br />

appear to affect the mood of the crowd<br />

however, as the duo leave the stage<br />

to rapturous applause after ninety<br />

minutes of dazzling musicianship.<br />

Richard Lewis<br />

DIAMOND RINGS<br />

Picture Book – Organ Freeman<br />

Mello Mello<br />

Calling your band ORGAN FREEMAN<br />

does denote a certain sense of fun<br />

and perhaps a light-hearted outlook<br />

on the world of music. Unless of<br />

course this is pure coincidence and<br />

these boys haven’t even heard of Andy<br />

Dufresne and his pal ‘Red’, never mind<br />

watched a mid-nineties crime-thriller<br />

starring Brad Pitt. But no, it seems the<br />

former is more accurate as the band<br />

spend the ten minutes immediately<br />

preceding the show blowing up loads<br />

of those balloons with lights inside<br />

them, before dispersing them into<br />

the crowd. The all-male group then<br />

marched on, sans-instruments, to<br />

form an inward-facing triangle in front<br />

of the stage. An honourable mention<br />

should also go at this stage to the fact<br />

that they were kitted-out in 80s Gary<br />

Lineker/Alan Partridge shorts, white<br />

sports socks and what can only be<br />

described as crop-tops. So as far as<br />

fun goes, they were setting the bar<br />

pretty high and what’s remarkable<br />

is that this energy and exuberance<br />

actually carried over into the songs.<br />

And what’s even more remarkable is<br />

that nobody got hurt. A novelty act<br />

they may be but what are live music<br />

shows all about if not to entertain?<br />

Entertain they certainly did.<br />

Entering the stage next were<br />

PICTURE BOOK, a three-piece of<br />

unusual geographical origin, hailing<br />

from Liverpool, New York and in the<br />

case of lead singer Greta Svabo Bech,<br />

The Faroe Islands. Seeming a touch<br />

nervous to begin with, the band soon<br />

found themselves and moved through<br />

the gears of their homemade electropop<br />

repertoire. Like Organ Freeman<br />

before them, they were also about the<br />

visuals and almost managed to be as<br />

busy to look at. Their brand of synth<br />

groove is fairly sedate in essence<br />

however, certainly containing more<br />

of the ‘morning after’ than the ‘night<br />

before’. The likes of Love Lane and All<br />

The Way have a lot to offer by way of<br />

chill-out, sunshine pop and through<br />

some strong basslines combined with<br />

Bech’s soothing vocals, they have<br />

found themselves a musical identity.<br />

Where they do come unstuck though<br />

is when it comes to a ‘plan B’. There<br />

is a feeling of the songs bleeding<br />

into each other, particularly with the<br />

penultimate and final songs Sunshine<br />

and Explosions, and this does leave<br />

the performance feeling a little flat.<br />

Talented musicians they undoubtedly<br />

are though and it may simply be that<br />

they are in need of direction, torn as<br />

they seem at the moment between<br />

their individual, varied musical loves.<br />

Finally, and with much secret<br />

special guest-bated breath, it was the<br />

turn of Toronto’s DIAMOND RINGS<br />

to take to the stage. This is one man<br />

with a lot of energy and some very<br />

tight clothes. Describing his own<br />

music as ‘melodramatic popular<br />

song’, you can add ‘self-aware’ to<br />

this list of descriptors. With a musical<br />

education sitting slap bang in the<br />

1980s, Diamond Rings offers bouncy<br />

and often joyous-sounding pop with a<br />

slightly darker undertone. Interestingly<br />

though, a couple of the tracks in the<br />

middle of the set brought to mind<br />

Room On Fire-era Strokes, both<br />

vocally and in the lo-fi beats of John<br />

O’s synthesiser. What Diamond Rings<br />

does lack though is the strong vocals<br />

to really carry the limited support<br />

said synthesiser offers. On top of this<br />

though, when there was melodrama it<br />

came in the form of throwaway, often<br />

flimsy choruses. If this sounds like it<br />

was made in a bedroom at three in<br />

the morning, that’s probably because<br />

it was. John O has ambition, charisma<br />

and some degree of talent, but he is<br />

sadly lacking in musical scope.<br />

Pete Robinson<br />

JESSE MALIN<br />

O2 Academy 2<br />

JESSE MALIN has been playing<br />

in Liverpool for years. But he’s still<br />

confused.<br />

His tour manager told him he’s<br />

playing in the Academy ... “Great,”<br />

he says to himself. “We’ve done<br />

that before, that’s the building Joe<br />

(Strummer) played his last gig in.” Only<br />

he arrives at the venue and doesn’t<br />

recognise it. Cue the confusion.<br />

We arrive and inform him that<br />

Stanley Theatre is the building he<br />

remembers and this is a different<br />

venue. He looks crestfallen. And it was<br />

nearly that sort of night ...<br />

Nearly. With less than 100 people<br />

downstairs at the O2 and David<br />

Gray boring couples over 30 to tears<br />

upstairs (and complaining about the<br />

noise coming from below), this could<br />

have been just another maudlin<br />

Monday. That it wasn’t says everything<br />

about Malin and his total belief in the<br />

redemptive qualities of rock ‘n’ roll. He<br />

tells us this - mid-song, from atop the<br />

PA stack, as high as the ceiling - during<br />

the powerful Solitaire.<br />

Shaggy-dog,<br />

Springsteen-esque<br />

storytelling go hand-in-hand at Malin<br />

concerts and he always captures<br />

the crowd off-guard. Tonight was no<br />

different. True, the biggest cheers came<br />

for the best songs from his debut solo<br />

album, The Fine Art of Self Destruction,<br />

but the New Yorker is no nostalgia act.<br />

Far from it. And when the songwriting<br />

is this good, the singing this original<br />

and the performances still vital, who’s<br />

looking back?<br />

Jesse Malin (Jennifer Pellegrini)<br />

Joe Strummer would have been proud.<br />

Alan O’Hare<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


44<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

Reviews<br />

THE BUFFALO RIOT<br />

The Staves - Homestead<br />

The Masque<br />

Although you came for the alternative<br />

country offerings of THE BUFFALO RIOT,<br />

you left having been enchanted by<br />

the spell-binding harmonies of THE<br />

STAVES. With the most gorgeous,<br />

angelic voices, perfect harmonies and<br />

a-not-to-be-underestimated<br />

finger<br />

clicking technique, sisters Emily, Jess<br />

and Camilla Staveley-Taylor leave the<br />

audience at The Masque thoroughly<br />

bewitched.<br />

They are preceded by HOMESTEAD,<br />

who are based in the North West but<br />

hail from Norway. Their male-female<br />

harmonies go down well in tight, welldrilled<br />

songs that benefit from a light<br />

injection of bass and drums at certain<br />

points. Homestead open to a sparse<br />

crowd, but as it grows in numbers, so<br />

too does their confidence: there are<br />

songs about “bad men”, spliced with<br />

a rather obscure reference to ‘Great<br />

Balls of Fire’. Their opening song, a<br />

chilled and alluring number called My<br />

Darling Suzy, I Like You gives you an<br />

idea of what this lot are about. This is<br />

charming, chilled, acoustic-y, folk stuff<br />

that is worth a listen if you are in that<br />

lazy sort of mood.<br />

Nothing, however, really prepares<br />

you for the arrival of The Staves. They<br />

take a while to get their act together,<br />

between sound checking and mic<br />

arranging, but you are caught instantly<br />

in a trance by their beauty and their<br />

beautiful music which captivates the<br />

swelling audience numbers. At one<br />

point they appeal to the audience for<br />

a pleck for one of their mandolins;<br />

needless to say, the men in the<br />

crowd are practically tripping over<br />

themselves to oblige. They probably<br />

bought the EP they were pawning<br />

afterwards as well.<br />

One lyric refers to someone whose<br />

“voice is like silver”, but these ladies’<br />

voices are like silk - soft and lustrous,<br />

delivering delicately crafted folk songs<br />

in gorgeous harmonies you’ll struggle<br />

to find anywhere else. Hailing from<br />

Watford, The Staves amuse us and<br />

themselves by singing about escaping<br />

to far off lands in Mexico. There’s even<br />

a song called Thursday which, given<br />

it’s a Friday night, draws some cringey<br />

laughter from the audience, but that’s<br />

probably because we’re all stuck in<br />

the daze that these three lovely ladies<br />

had us in from the very moment they<br />

stepped on stage. Top stuff.<br />

The Buffalo Riot arrive on stage<br />

and bring us all back to reality as<br />

they unleash their no holds barred,<br />

alternative country rock. By now<br />

there’s a sizeable audience, made up<br />

of the young groupies who came for<br />

the earlier acts and the more mature<br />

members of society who clearly enjoy<br />

a bit of what The Riot has to offer.<br />

With no less than three guitars, and<br />

a pedal steel to boot, there’s plenty<br />

of noise but there’s some wonderful<br />

harmonies too with strong, gravelly<br />

voices no doubt aided by the bottle<br />

of Jack Daniels that rests on one<br />

of the amps. You could be forgiven<br />

for thinking you were in Nashville,<br />

Tennessee whilst listening to this<br />

band: there’s long hair, chequered<br />

shirts, and leather jackets on show,<br />

giving a feel of pure Americana magic.<br />

Think Steve Earle, maybe even Bob<br />

Dylan. Well, maybe we’re getting<br />

ahead of ourselves here, but even<br />

so, there are plenty in the audience<br />

singing along, evidence of the band’s<br />

growing popularity in Liverpool.<br />

Whilst we expected good things<br />

from The Buffalo Riot there were few<br />

who expected great things from The<br />

Staves, whose sumptuous voices are<br />

not to be missed.<br />

Hugh O’Connell<br />

BEAT HERDER<br />

FESTIVAL<br />

Ribble Valley, Lancashire<br />

We’re stood, under canvas, in a<br />

mocked up working mens club. Ken<br />

Dodd, Les Dennis & Bruce Forsyth<br />

stare down from the walls, floral<br />

dresses and bouffant wigs proliferate,<br />

tweed jacketed men sip pints of the<br />

aptly named ‘Bleat Gurdler’, florescent<br />

eyeshadow is the order of the<br />

day and by the amount of bunting<br />

about you’d think we were celebrating<br />

a royal wedding. Behind the bar at The<br />

Beat-Herder & District Working Men’s<br />

Social Club sits a sign proclaiming<br />

that ‘We’re going to party like its 1975.’<br />

Too right we are...welcome to BEAT<br />

HERDER <strong>2010</strong>.<br />

Into this slightly mind bending<br />

time warp step HULAFRAU, a threepiece,<br />

comprising stand-up electric<br />

drum pads, synths, bass and...an<br />

electric cricket bat. Specialising in a<br />

interesting and unique (to put it kindly),<br />

shambolic and confusing (to put it<br />

mildly) blend of folk/polka, Hulafrau<br />

have today<br />

found their hacienda.<br />

With a subject pallet focussed on the<br />

weekly shop in ASDA this band of mid<br />

30s farmhands are clearly not in the<br />

business of taking themselves at all<br />

seriously. Thats definitely for the best.<br />

The main Beat Herder Stage plays<br />

host to the most high profile acts of<br />

the weekend. The first of which we<br />

catch is BLASTED MECHANISM. Ill<br />

share with you what I’ve written in my<br />

note book...’Blasted Mechanism, WTF,<br />

Asian Dub Foundation & Stereo MCs<br />

on a Hawaiian holiday with predator.’<br />

After pondering it for a while, I can’t<br />

really better that. This European,<br />

and I quote from the festival’s press<br />

bumph, ‘collective of artists, thinkers,<br />

scientists and inventors’ come from the<br />

same sci-fi fancy dress box that gave<br />

us Lordi. If you spend your Saturday<br />

afternoons in Games Workshop, you’ll<br />

love ‘em.<br />

The Buffalo Riot (Rosie Selman)<br />

DOES IT OFFEND YOU, YEAH? Well,<br />

to be completely honest, it does really<br />

(that was too easy). In all seriousness<br />

DIOY,Y pull out all the stops for this<br />

headline performance, with fantastic<br />

production and a stunning light show.<br />

But, their continued lack of weight<br />

and any real songwriting craft beyond<br />

that of the cheap thrill is present and<br />

correct, especially within the crop of<br />

new songs they premier tonight. They<br />

seem as surprised as Bido Lito as to<br />

their heightened billing this weekend,<br />

and musically don’t live up to the<br />

pomp of the production. Rabbits in<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Reviews Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 45<br />

the headlights, Yeah?<br />

So, underwhelmed by Reading’s<br />

finest, we set off into the Beat Herder<br />

night in search of musical morsels.<br />

And, this is where this festival comes<br />

into its own. We pop back into The Beat-<br />

Herder & District Working Men’s Social<br />

Club - I’m resisting the urge to use<br />

the rather ugly acronym TBHDWMSC<br />

- to catch proto-punk group FIFTEEN<br />

STORIES,<br />

who seem slightly less<br />

comfortable in their surroundings<br />

than the cricket bat wielders<br />

earlier, but impress nonetheless. We<br />

take a jiggle to the dubstep wobble in<br />

the Stumblefunk Soundsystem tent,<br />

before landing in The Recovery Room,<br />

which is tonight hosted by CHEEKY<br />

BUDDHAS DJs, taking a day trip over<br />

from their regular monthly club in<br />

Blackpool. From Afrobeat to Greek<br />

uummmpahhhhh - anyone who’s<br />

been to Christakis Greek Restaurant<br />

in town will know what I’m on about<br />

- they provide the most eclectic and<br />

interesting DJ set of the weekend.<br />

Worth a trip to the lights.<br />

Saturday morning and we’re greeted<br />

by a priest and a butcher outside the<br />

tent, apparently today is fancy dress at<br />

Beat Herder. nice of them to tell us. I<br />

feel like a real miserable swine now...I<br />

could have dug my Ali G costume<br />

out of the bottom of the wardrobe...<br />

or maybe not. We rise and shine to<br />

catch opening group BLOWJANGLES,<br />

a community music group playing<br />

drawn out, happy-times-jazz-pop on<br />

the main stage. The matching bright<br />

and florescent costumes are a sight<br />

for sore eyes this morning, literally,<br />

so we dive up to Smokey Tentacles -<br />

a shisha and coffee hang out - in the<br />

Lazy Meadow. This is more like it..<br />

shisha, rugs, herbal tea and THE HANG<br />

PROJECT - if you’ve not caught these<br />

guys, check them out. Based around<br />

the hang - an odd, flying saucer<br />

shaped, kind of inside out steel pan<br />

shaped instrument from Scandinavia<br />

- they combine the instrument’s<br />

hypnotic tones to great effect with<br />

percussion, bass and guitar. Perfect<br />

festival fodder. They are also joined by<br />

MURMURS OF TENSION and later on<br />

MISERY GUTS take to the stage. A real<br />

northwestern love in...great stuff!<br />

GIDEON CONN. Not to be confused<br />

with the BBC 6Music DJ of a similar<br />

name, this fun-time-Frankie and his<br />

band of merry men are as wet as a<br />

Takeshi’s Castle contestant. In part<br />

Finley Quaye meets Liam Lynch -<br />

United States Of Whatever anybody??<br />

- before a tongue in cheek a cappella<br />

poem about electricity takes over, this<br />

is Pee Wee Herman for the Mumford<br />

And Sons generation...Wheatus,<br />

rocking the suburbs with Ben Folds,<br />

you get the picture...<br />

I fear IKEA/I won’t go there again/I<br />

don’t want a bookcase called Billy/or<br />

a table called Sven - Without sausages<br />

and burgers I’m all forlorn/whats she<br />

got me into?...hardcore Quorn - Kissed<br />

me girl outside PC World/dropped<br />

me crisps outside WH Smiths/in this<br />

Lancashire town...THE LANCASHIRE<br />

HOTPOTS say pretty much all that<br />

needs to be said in their own words.<br />

Add in matching burgundy waistcoats,<br />

white bow ties and a tune about<br />

selling your ex-wife’s Patrick Swayze<br />

DVDs on Ebay and again, it writes itself.<br />

Really, who buys their records?? (T?x)<br />

Beat Herder Crowdo (Luke Avery)<br />

The fancy dress get up really comes<br />

into its own today when the selection<br />

of delinquents plucked from the<br />

crowd to back todays ‘special guest’<br />

- non other than the original, leotard<br />

clad, pest of daytime keep fit freak,<br />

MR MOTIVATOR - include a tomato, a<br />

soldier, a hooker and a banana. Poetry<br />

on a stage....to left now y’all, slide to<br />

the right...<br />

Distressed, we stumble upon a<br />

comedy set hosted by FAT CHRIS, and<br />

featuring SILKY and DAN NIGHTINGALE.<br />

Two rather unfortunate characters<br />

have a publicly humiliating dance<br />

off, with not many clothes on. Bido<br />

Lito! giggles away inconspicuously<br />

at the back. The comedy was so good<br />

we almost missed DJANGO DJANGO,<br />

who’s track Storm I fell in love with<br />

after it was featured on Rough Trade’s<br />

89 Bold Street, Liverpool, L1 4HF<br />

Telephone: 0151 707 0760<br />

boldstreetcoffee.co.uk


46<br />

Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

Reviews<br />

Counter Culture 09 compilation. The<br />

best band of the weekend...hands down.<br />

DAN LE SAC V SCROOBIUS PIP. I’ll be<br />

honest, there’s something about white,<br />

bearded, indie-crossover rappers that<br />

just pisses me off. Probably because<br />

they are, on the whole, shit. This was<br />

god awful, we’ll leave it there.<br />

At the center of the Beat Herder site<br />

stands a large thicket of trees, within<br />

which the Toiltrees Soundsystem<br />

is set. This feels part Blair Witch, part<br />

illegal early 90s rave, and plays host to<br />

some of the finest DJ talent the UK has<br />

to offer. Saturday night is headlined<br />

by electro/indie crossover protagonist<br />

EROL ALKAN, and he’s fantastic...it<br />

completely goes off. Erol remains one<br />

of the few men who can pull off some<br />

quite progressive house in parts of<br />

his set and whip out Michael Jackson<br />

in others, without it sounding like a<br />

custard sandwich. Admirable stuff.<br />

We ease into Sunday morning with<br />

a sandwich and a coffee in the aptly<br />

named Recovery Room. Ambient<br />

vibes compliment my reading of the<br />

Observer, which is a cosy, welcome<br />

distraction from the driving rain<br />

outside. All very vegi-class. Tranquil<br />

and chilled, until BLOWJANGLES turn<br />

up and hurt my head again. Those<br />

guys are too sodding happy. Into the<br />

rain people....<br />

“Sunday is swingers day” screams<br />

the DJ in TBHDWMSC (gave in...) as a<br />

justification for his lack of trousers. He<br />

plays The Flies ‘I’m Not Your Stepping<br />

Stone’...so we’ll let him off.<br />

SON OF DAVE is an erratic genius.<br />

After seeing the security at the side of<br />

the stage let somebody through with<br />

a pass, he throws a wobbler, citing<br />

that “I want my friends onstage,” at<br />

which point he fishes three waifs from<br />

the crowd, sits them down to graze<br />

on his rider at the side of the stage,<br />

gives them rattles and tells them to<br />

dance. Love it. He wears a black and<br />

white jump suit, red velvet smoking<br />

jacket, Wayfarers and a trilby. His mix<br />

of harmonica looped blues is perfectly<br />

accompanied by a parting of the<br />

clouds and the day’s first stream of<br />

sunshine. Even the lord is on his side.<br />

Essential for anybody on a quest for a<br />

non-guilty pleasure.<br />

THE TRAVELLING BAND do what they<br />

do extremely well. This is modern<br />

folk inspired by the recent raft of US<br />

imports, yet comparisons to Fleet<br />

Foxes air on the side of simplistic<br />

and a little lazy. Closer to ‘What We<br />

Did On Our Holidays’ era Fairport, The<br />

Travelling Band do need to ensure<br />

they maintain an individuality in an<br />

area of music currently in vogue and<br />

en masse. Very enjoyable though.<br />

I’ll be honest, I was really looking<br />

forward to EASY STAR ALL-STARS, their<br />

recorded takes on Dark Side Of The<br />

Moon - Dub Side Of The Moon - and<br />

more recently Sgt Peppers - Easy Stars<br />

Lonely Hearts Dub Band - have cracked<br />

a huge smile across my face on early<br />

listens. Anticipating an inspired reworking<br />

of modern classics, their new<br />

context breathing fresh life into the<br />

works, what I witnessed was a music<br />

college student’s wet dream; session<br />

Erol Alkan (Luke Avery)<br />

players running seminal records<br />

through a mangle in the name of a<br />

good time. A jumped up, bouncing,<br />

jazz-hands re-work of ‘She’s Leaving<br />

Home’ was not only misjudged but<br />

distasteful. It was the lack of ideas with<br />

arrangements and the standardised,<br />

plastic session player delivery that<br />

angered me. This was entertainment<br />

by numbers, but when there’s 3,000<br />

ketamined up dubsteppers - with<br />

48 hours of chemistry inside them -<br />

begging for it, they can do no wrong.<br />

Jay Z’s ‘Black Album’ took a modern<br />

classic, combined and remodeled it<br />

into a piece of work that had relevance<br />

and presence in its own right and was<br />

a shining success of a classic record/<br />

cross genre collaboration. Easy Star<br />

All-Stars confirmed to me that session<br />

reggae remains the last salvation<br />

of<br />

the disillusioned music college<br />

graduate.<br />

But, let this not distract from the<br />

fact that Beat Herder is a wonderful<br />

festival, set in a stunning location,<br />

put on for all the right reasons. With<br />

the lack of a big name beer sponsor,<br />

the prevalence of locally brewed ales<br />

Son of Dave (Luke Avery)<br />

(you could also buy two cans of lager<br />

for £3.50), the wealth of independent<br />

food outlets, including the point<br />

affirming Pizza Slut tent (we also<br />

sampled Tibetan, Tai and local farmers<br />

sausages), this is an event with the<br />

old festival traditions of peace, love<br />

and tranquility at its center, and with<br />

independent and alternative culture at<br />

its heart. Because of its strength in all<br />

these areas, Beat Herder is a success. In<br />

this, its fifth year, the festival sold out.<br />

For an event of its size, and with much<br />

more established festivals struggling,<br />

this is a fine achievement. For me, the<br />

line-up would have benefitted from<br />

a greater abundance of bands of real<br />

quality - I could certainly have done<br />

with more of a rock n roll fix - though<br />

on reflection that would probably<br />

have missed the point of what the<br />

festival is all about. The festival sold<br />

out, everyone had a great time, and<br />

no doubt Beat Herder will be back for<br />

more next year. Hopefully they’ll just<br />

remember to book some bands, to<br />

keep me happy at least....<br />

Craig G Pennington<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk


Bido Lito! <strong>August</strong> <strong>2010</strong> 47<br />

DAWN<br />

IN THE<br />

GARDEN<br />

A light gilded in orange glow<br />

Warm knives on heavy lids<br />

Stirring in silence ‘cept the odd sparrow<br />

A golden glimpse through net curtains<br />

Unruffled ‘neath my cluttered glare<br />

Bathed, blessed but woken<br />

Idling the hours between shifts<br />

Twirling for no leering gaze<br />

Freely aware of the oncoming rift<br />

Twittering voices chime in again<br />

Recharged and ready for battle<br />

Surrendering sweetly more luscious terrain<br />

Richer, grateful but soiled<br />

A victim the morning has caught<br />

Bears witness where the angels have toiled.<br />

Dan Wilson<br />

Illustration: johnbiddle.co.uk<br />

www.bidolito.co.uk

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