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Issue 106 / Dec 2019/Jan 2020

December 2019/January 2020 double issue of Bido Lito! magazine. Featuring: BEIJA FLO, ASOK, LO FIVE, SIMON HUGHES, CONVENIENCE GALLERY, BEAK>, STUDIO ELECTROPHONIQUE, ALEX TELEKO, SHE DREW THE GUN, IMTIAZ DHARKER and much more.

December 2019/January 2020 double issue of Bido Lito! magazine. Featuring: BEIJA FLO, ASOK, LO FIVE, SIMON HUGHES, CONVENIENCE GALLERY, BEAK>, STUDIO ELECTROPHONIQUE, ALEX TELEKO, SHE DREW THE GUN, IMTIAZ DHARKER and much more.

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ISSUE <strong>106</strong> / DEC <strong>2019</strong>/JAN <strong>2020</strong><br />

NEW MUSIC + CREATIVE CULTURE<br />

LIVERPOOL<br />

BEIJA FLO / LO FIVE<br />

ASOK / SIMON HUGHES


Sat 23rd Nov<br />

Life At The Arcade<br />

Sat 23rd Nov<br />

Mountford Hall,<br />

Liverpool Guild of Students<br />

Sam Fender<br />

Sat 23rd Nov<br />

The Steve Hillage<br />

Band<br />

+ Gong<br />

Sun 24th Nov<br />

Primal Scream<br />

Thur 28th Nov • 6.30pm<br />

Mountford Hall,<br />

Liverpool Guild of Students<br />

Mac DeMarco<br />

+ Los Bitchos<br />

+ Phoebe Green<br />

Fri 29th Nov<br />

The Doors Alive<br />

Sat 30th Nov • 6pm<br />

The Wonder Stuff<br />

performing ‘The<br />

Eight Legged Groove<br />

Machine’ & ‘HUP’<br />

+ Jim Bob from Carter USM<br />

Sat 30th Nov<br />

Pearl Jam UK<br />

Thur 5th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Shed Seven<br />

+ The Twang<br />

Fri 6th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Mountford Hall,<br />

Liverpool Guild of Students<br />

Happy Mondays<br />

+ Jon Dasilva<br />

Fri 6th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

SPINN<br />

Fri 6th <strong>Dec</strong> • 7.30pm<br />

Conleth McGeary<br />

Sat 7th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Prince Tribute -<br />

Endorphinmachine<br />

Tue 10th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Mountford Hall,<br />

Liverpool Guild of Students<br />

Razorlight<br />

Wed 11th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

D Block Europe<br />

Thur 12th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Mountford Hall,<br />

Liverpool Guild of Students<br />

Daniel Sloss: X<br />

Fri 13th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Mountford Hall,<br />

Liverpool Guild of Students<br />

Dermot Kennedy<br />

Fri 13th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

The Lancashire<br />

Hotpots<br />

Fri 13th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Scouting for Girls<br />

Sat 14th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

The Smyths<br />

… The Smiths 35<br />

Sat 14th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Ian Prowse &<br />

Amsterdam<br />

+ The Supernaturals<br />

+ Steve Pilgrim<br />

Wed 18th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

The Darkness<br />

+ Rews<br />

Thur 19th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Cast...<br />

All Change Album<br />

Fri 20th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Cast...<br />

Mother Nature Calls<br />

Album<br />

Fri 20th <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Christmas<br />

at the Academy<br />

Sat 21st <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Cast...<br />

Magic Hour Album<br />

Sat 21st <strong>Dec</strong><br />

Limehouse Lizzy:<br />

The Greatest Hits of<br />

Phil Lynott & Thin Lizzy<br />

Tue 31st <strong>Dec</strong> • 10pm<br />

Twisted Circus NYE<br />

Sat 11th <strong>Jan</strong> <strong>2020</strong><br />

Elvana:<br />

Elvis Fronted Nirvana<br />

Sat 18th <strong>Jan</strong> <strong>2020</strong><br />

Mountford Hall,<br />

Liverpool Guild of Students<br />

Stereophonics<br />

Wed 29th <strong>Jan</strong> <strong>2020</strong><br />

The Interrupters<br />

+ Buster Shuffle<br />

Sat 1st Feb <strong>2020</strong> • 6.30pm<br />

Liverpool<br />

Rocks Heat 4<br />

Mon 3rd Feb <strong>2020</strong><br />

Kano<br />

Tue 4th Feb <strong>2020</strong><br />

Mabel<br />

Wed 12th Feb <strong>2020</strong><br />

Inhaler<br />

facebook.com/o2academyliverpool<br />

twitter.com/o2academylpool<br />

instagram.com/o2academyliverpool<br />

youtube.com/o2academytv<br />

Sat 22nd Feb <strong>2020</strong><br />

The Fillers (The Killers<br />

Official Tribute Band)<br />

Tue 25th Feb <strong>2020</strong><br />

The Murder Capital<br />

Thur 27th Feb <strong>2020</strong><br />

Kiefer Sutherland<br />

Fri 28th Feb <strong>2020</strong><br />

The Big Moon<br />

Sat 29th Feb <strong>2020</strong><br />

Bulsara and His<br />

Queenies<br />

Thur 5th Mar <strong>2020</strong><br />

Gabrielle Aplin<br />

Thur 12th Mar <strong>2020</strong><br />

Mountford Hall,<br />

Liverpool Guild of Students<br />

The Blindboy Podcast<br />

- Live<br />

Thur 12th Mar <strong>2020</strong><br />

Tragedy: All Metal<br />

Tribute to the Bee<br />

Gees & Beyond<br />

+ Attic Theory<br />

Sat 28th Mar <strong>2020</strong><br />

AC/DC UK & Dizzy<br />

Lizzy<br />

Sat 28th Mar <strong>2020</strong><br />

Becky Hill<br />

Sun 29th Mar <strong>2020</strong><br />

Cigarettes After Sex<br />

Sat 4th Apr <strong>2020</strong><br />

Mountford Hall,<br />

Liverpool Guild of Students<br />

Circa Waves<br />

Sat 4th Apr <strong>2020</strong><br />

808 State Live<br />

Tue 21st Apr <strong>2020</strong><br />

Darwin Deez - 10Yearz<br />

Sat 2nd May <strong>2020</strong><br />

The Southmartins<br />

(Tribute To The Beautiful<br />

South & The Housemartins)<br />

Sat 9th May <strong>2020</strong><br />

Fell Out Boy<br />

& The Black Charade<br />

+ We Aren’t Paramore<br />

Sat 16th May <strong>2020</strong><br />

Nirvana UK (Tribute)<br />

Sat 23rd May <strong>2020</strong><br />

The Bon Jovi<br />

Experience<br />

Fri 11th <strong>Dec</strong> <strong>2020</strong><br />

Heaven 17<br />

FRI 22ND NOV 7PM<br />

BLOOD RED SHOES<br />

+ QUEEN KWONG<br />

+ GEN & THE DEGENERATES<br />

FRI 22ND NOV 7PM<br />

SLADE<br />

SAT 23RD NOV 10.30PM<br />

BRING IT ALL BACK<br />

- ONE DIRECTION PARTY<br />

FRI 29TH NOV 7PM<br />

SPORTS TEAM<br />

SAT 30TH NOV 6.30PM<br />

SKINNY LISTER<br />

SAT 30TH NOV 7PM<br />

HERMITAGE GREEN<br />

WED 4TH DEC 7PM<br />

ALDOUS HARDING<br />

THUR 5TH DEC 7PM<br />

BEAK><br />

FRI 6TH DEC 7PM<br />

WILD FRONT<br />

& POLAR STATES<br />

SAT 7TH DEC 7PM<br />

IAN MCNABB &<br />

COLD SHOULDER<br />

TUE 10TH DEC 7PM<br />

THE PAPER KITES<br />

+ AXEL FLOVENT<br />

WED 11TH DEC 7PM<br />

ECHOBELLY<br />

“STRIPPED BACK”<br />

THUR 12TH DEC 7PM<br />

BEABADOOBEE<br />

+ NO ROME + OSCAR LANG<br />

SAT 14TH DEC 7PM<br />

NATALIE MCCOOL<br />

+ DENIO + GALLIA<br />

+ ALEX TELEKO<br />

WED 18TH DEC 7PM<br />

ALI HORN<br />

THUR 26TH DEC 10PM<br />

D.O.D & FRIENDS<br />

FRI 24TH JAN <strong>2020</strong> 6.30PM<br />

LIVERPOOL ROCKS HEAT 1<br />

SAT 25TH JAN <strong>2020</strong> 6.30PM<br />

LIVERPOOL ROCKS HEAT 2<br />

MON 27TH JAN <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

SLEEP TOKEN<br />

FRI 31ST JAN <strong>2020</strong> 6.30PM<br />

LIVERPOOL ROCKS HEAT 3<br />

FRI 7TH FEB <strong>2020</strong> 7.30PM SOLD OUT<br />

THE LATHUMS<br />

SAT 8TH FEB <strong>2020</strong> 7.PM<br />

BILLY LOCKETT<br />

THUR 13TH FEB <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

HMLTD<br />

FRI 21ST FEB <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

JAMIE WEBSTER<br />

SAT 22ND FEB <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

THE MYSTERINES<br />

SUN 23RD FEB <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

JULIAN COPE<br />

THUR 5TH MAR <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

ORLANDO WEEKS<br />

SAT 7TH MAR <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

PINS<br />

THU 12TH MAR <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

HAYSEED DIXIE<br />

+ 8 BALL AITKEN<br />

SAT 14TH MAR <strong>2020</strong> 7.30PM<br />

THE K’S<br />

MON 16TH MAR <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

JOANNE SHAW TAYLOR<br />

WED 25TH MAR <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

PALACE<br />

WED 25TH MAR <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

DARCY OAKE<br />

FRI 27TH MAR <strong>2020</strong> 6.30PM<br />

LIVERPOOL ROCKS SEMI<br />

FINAL 1<br />

SUN 29TH MAR <strong>2020</strong> 7PM<br />

WILLIAM DUVALL<br />

(OF ALICE IN CHAINS)<br />

FRI 3RD APR <strong>2020</strong> 6.30PM<br />

LIVERPOOL ROCKS SEMI<br />

FINAL 2<br />

SAT 18TH APR <strong>2020</strong> 6PM<br />

THE ACADEMIC<br />

SAT 25TH APR <strong>2020</strong> 6.30PM<br />

LIVERPOOL ROCKS FINAL<br />

TICKETS FOR ALL SHOWS ARE AVAILABLE FROM<br />

TICKETMASTER.CO.UK<br />

90<br />

SEEL STREET, LIVERPOOL, L1 4BH<br />

ticketmaster.co.uk<br />

11-13 Hotham Street, Liverpool L3 5UF<br />

Doors 7pm unless stated<br />

Venue box office opening hours:<br />

Mon - Sat 10.30am - 5.30pm<br />

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1 NOV <strong>2019</strong> - 23 FEB <strong>2020</strong><br />

FREE ENTRY<br />

you feel<br />

me_<br />

REBECCA ALLEN<br />

MEGAN BROADMEADOW<br />

ANNA BUNTING-BRANCH<br />

PHOEBE COLLINGS-JAMES<br />

BRANDON COVINGTON SAM-SUMANA<br />

ALIYAH HUSSAIN<br />

SALMA NOOR<br />

FACT / 88 WOOD STREET / L1 4DQ<br />

fact.co.uk<br />

Anna Bunting-Branch and Aliyah Hussain, Warm Worlds and Otherwise (2018-19) and META (2018) commissioned as part of Worlds Among Us, a<br />

collaboration between FACT, The Mechatronic Library, QUAD and Wysing Arts Centre. Installation view at FACT. Image by Rob Battersby.


CHRISTMAS<br />

at Liverpool<br />

Philharmonic<br />

Elf Spirit of Christmas Awake, Arise – A Christmas Show For Our Times It’s a Wonderful Life<br />

Connie Lush


An Audience With<br />

Connie Lush<br />

Plus support Satin Beige Chousmer<br />

Friday 6 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 8pm<br />

Music Room<br />

Connie Lush<br />

Plus special guest Thomas Lang<br />

Saturday 7 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 8pm<br />

Music Room<br />

Film<br />

Elf (cert PG)<br />

Tuesday 10 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 7.30pm<br />

Christmas Tour<br />

FARA<br />

Tuesday 10 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 8pm<br />

Music Room<br />

Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra<br />

Clare Teal with<br />

Guy Barker – In the<br />

Christmas Mood<br />

Wednesday 11 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 7.30pm<br />

Family Concert<br />

Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra<br />

Sing-along with Santa<br />

Saturday 14 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 11.30am & 2.30pm<br />

Sunday 15 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 11.30am & 2.30pm<br />

Awake, Arise –<br />

A Christmas Show<br />

For Our Times<br />

Featuring Lady Maisery, Jimmy Aldridge<br />

and Sid Goldsmith<br />

Monday 16 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 8pm<br />

Music Room<br />

Baked A La Ska:<br />

Ska of Wonder<br />

Monday 23 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 8pm<br />

Music Room<br />

Film<br />

It’s a Wonderful Life (cert U)<br />

Tuesday 24 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 11am & 2pm<br />

Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra<br />

Ghostbusters: Film with<br />

Live Orchestra (cert PG)<br />

Saturday 28 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 7.30pm<br />

Sunday 29 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 7.30pm<br />

Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra<br />

Messiah<br />

Saturday 4 <strong>Jan</strong>uary 7pm<br />

Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra<br />

Spirit of Christmas<br />

Saturday 14 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 7.30pm<br />

Tuesday 17 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 7.30pm<br />

Wednesday 18 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 7.30pm<br />

Friday 20 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 7.30pm<br />

Saturday 21 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 7.30pm<br />

Sunday 22 <strong>Dec</strong>ember 2.30pm<br />

Box Office<br />

0151 709 3789<br />

liverpoolphil.com<br />

LiverpoolPhilharmonic<br />

liverpoolphil<br />

liverpool_philharmonic


BIG DRAG PAGEANT<br />

CHRISTMAS SPIEGELTENT 29 NOV <strong>2019</strong><br />

NEW YEAR’S EVE <strong>2019</strong> PROHIBITION PARTY<br />

TUSK BALTIC 31 DEC <strong>2019</strong><br />

THE WEAVE XMAS SPECIAL<br />

THE JACARANDA CLUB 3 DEC <strong>2019</strong><br />

NEW YEAR’S EVE WITH CRAZY P<br />

CONSTELLATIONS 31 DEC <strong>2019</strong><br />

TOMORROWLAND PRESENTS DIMITRI VEGAS & LIKE MIKE,<br />

GARDEN OF MADNESS CENTRAL DOCKS 7 DEC <strong>2019</strong><br />

THE MUSIC OF PRINCE<br />

THE AUDITORIUM AT M&S BANK ARENA 1 FEB <strong>2020</strong><br />

JOHN COLPITTS MAN FOREVER<br />

KAZIMIER STOCKROOM 8 DEC <strong>2019</strong><br />

THE 1975<br />

M&S BANK ARENA LIVERPOOL 26 FEB <strong>2020</strong><br />

BEANS ON TOAST<br />

PHASE ONE 20 DEC <strong>2019</strong><br />

SOUND CITY <strong>2020</strong><br />

BALTIC TRIANGLE 2 - 3 MAY <strong>2020</strong><br />

THE FLYING LUTTENBACHERS<br />

KAZIMIER STOCKROOM 20 DEC <strong>2019</strong><br />

CREAMFIELDS <strong>2020</strong><br />

WARRINGTON 27 - 30 AUGUST <strong>2020</strong>


TATE LIVERPOOL<br />

13 DEC <strong>2019</strong> – 3 MAY <strong>2020</strong><br />

THEASTER GATES<br />

AMALGAM<br />

FREE FOR TATE MEMBERS<br />

Supported by<br />

Media Partner<br />

Theaster Gates still from the film Dance of Malaga <strong>2019</strong><br />

© Theaster Gates and courtesy of the artist.<br />

Photo © Chris Strong<br />

With additional support from the Theaster Gates<br />

Exhibition Supporters Group and Tate Members


Be part of it<br />

Become Be a member<br />

part of it<br />

Become a member<br />

Sign up online at<br />

liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/membership<br />

Sign up online at<br />

liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/membership<br />

or at one of our venues<br />

or at one of<br />

#NML<strong>2020</strong><br />

our venues<br />

#NML<strong>2020</strong>


5 – 19 Oct <strong>2019</strong><br />

8 Feb – 14 Mar <strong>2020</strong><br />

14 Feb – 15 Mar <strong>2020</strong><br />

20 Feb – 13 Mar <strong>2020</strong><br />

8 May – 13 Jun <strong>2020</strong><br />

22 May – 13 Jun <strong>2020</strong><br />

Book now at<br />

storyhouse.com


WHAT DAY IS IT?<br />

26TH - 31ST DECEMBER <strong>2019</strong><br />

ANTI SOCIAL JAZZ CLUB BEST OF <strong>2019</strong> - JOE GODDARD (HOT CHIP)<br />

LOST ART SOUNDSYSTEM - PUB TROPICANA : ULTIMATE 80S PARTY<br />

NEW YEEZY EVE - WAVERTREE WORLDWIDE TAKEOVER<br />

40 SLATER STREET, LIVERPOOL. L1 4BX THEMERCHANTLIVERPOOL.CO.UK


MEMBERSHIP<br />

BECOME A BIDO LITO! MEMBER!<br />

Through our team of community writers, photographers, illustrators and creative minds, Bido Lito!<br />

has chartered our city’s vibrant, do-it-together ethos for over 100 issues. You can join this dedicated<br />

community by becoming a Bido Lito! Community Member.<br />

As well as receiving the latest edition of the magazine in the post before anyone else each month,<br />

Community Members get a plethora of sweet rewards. Upon signing up you’ll receive a Bido Lito! Tote<br />

Bag with your first magazine, at the end of the year you’ll get the premium Bido Lito! Journal and you’ll<br />

get free admission to the Bido Lito! Social and a playlist of the best new music which informs the pink<br />

pages every month.<br />

As well as this, you’ll help shape the content of the magazine itself each month. Whether it be<br />

recommending subjects for features, providing insight into live events, curating recommender playlists or<br />

suggesting your favourite new artists, our members are at the centre of everything we do.<br />

!<br />

HAVE YOUR SAY<br />

Bido Lito! members get opportunities to have direct input into the<br />

editorial direction of the magazine.<br />

! SOCIALISE<br />

Bido Lito! members get free admission to the Bido Lito! Social.<br />

The best artists at the best independent venues.<br />

!<br />

SPECIAL DELIVERY<br />

As well as the monthly magazine, the Bido Lito! TOTE BAG will be<br />

sent as your joining gift and you’ll receive the end of year BIDO LITO!<br />

JOURNAL each <strong>Dec</strong>ember.<br />

Join the community media revolution and sign up today at bidolito.co.uk/membership


New Music + Creative Culture<br />

Liverpool<br />

<strong>Issue</strong> <strong>106</strong> / <strong>Dec</strong> <strong>2019</strong>/<strong>Jan</strong> <strong>2020</strong><br />

bidolito.co.uk<br />

Second Floor<br />

The Merchant<br />

40-42 Slater Street<br />

Liverpool L1 4BX<br />

Founding Editor<br />

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

Publisher<br />

Christopher Torpey - chris@bidolito.co.uk<br />

Editor<br />

Elliot Ryder - elliot@bidolito.co.uk<br />

Digital Media Manager<br />

Brit Williams – brit@bidolito.co.uk<br />

Design<br />

Mark McKellier - mark@andmark.co.uk<br />

Branding<br />

Thom Isom - hello@thomisom.com<br />

Proofreader<br />

Nathaniel Cramp<br />

Cover Photography<br />

Robin Clewley<br />

Words<br />

Elliot Ryder, Cath Holland, Christopher Torpey, Julia<br />

Johnson, Neil Grant, Simon Hughes, Sam Turner,<br />

Paul Fitzgerald, Bethany Garrett, Laura Brown, Chris<br />

Brown, Damon Fairclough, Rhys Buchanan, Matthew<br />

Hogarth, Anouska Liat, Joel Durksen, Sophie Shields,<br />

Daniel Ponzini, Georgia Turnbull, Rhys Thomas, Jennie<br />

Macaulay, Glyn Akroyd, David Weir, Nina Franklin,<br />

James Zaremba, Matthew Thomas Smith, Imtiaz<br />

Dharker.<br />

Photography, Illustration and Layout<br />

Mark McKellier, Robin Clewley, Keith Ainsworth,<br />

Antony Mo, Lo Five, Mr Marbles, Daniel Patlán, Ryan<br />

Lee Turton, Luke Parry, Lucia Matušíková, Lauren Avery,<br />

Lucy Roberts, Jemma Timberlake, Niloo Sharifi, Tomas<br />

Adam, Stuart Moulding, Mook Loxley, Glyn Akroyd,<br />

Brian Sayle, John Johnson, Nicholas Daly.<br />

EDITORIAL<br />

The end of the decade doesn’t feel too different to when<br />

it began. Protest. Helplessness. Reality.<br />

Of all the changes brought about by David<br />

Cameron and Nick Clegg in five bitter years, raising<br />

tuition fees is probably the least<br />

devastating when you weigh the receipts<br />

up against the body count. But, for me,<br />

it was the first moment in my life where<br />

I’d been directly affected by a democracy<br />

I wasn’t old enough to influence. A<br />

democracy where I’d eventually be<br />

granted four votes on a national scale<br />

before the decade was out. Three of<br />

which I’d be on the losing side. The fourth<br />

is still in the phase of protest. It’ll switch<br />

to helplessness on the evening of 12th<br />

<strong>Dec</strong>ember. The early hours that follow<br />

deliver the reality.<br />

Being told that I would be the first<br />

cohort to pay tripled tuition fees was the<br />

most forcible lesson I’d had of ‘getting<br />

what you’re given’. It was a mantra that<br />

typified much of those first five years of<br />

the decade. Tuition fees were just the first<br />

incision, the entry point before many vital organs of society were<br />

removed. So many more were to get what they were given, not<br />

what they deserved. All with much more severe consequences<br />

than carrying inflated university debt. Many protested. We<br />

looked on helpless. Then we saw the reality. Austerity bred the<br />

chaos that unravelled in the five years that followed. When you<br />

push a community to breaking point it will start to point fingers<br />

within. Then the irreparable damage is done.<br />

FEATURES<br />

“Bravery will always<br />

have a home in<br />

Bido Lito! for the<br />

decade to come”<br />

Bravery is the key. It’s the source of power the assumes<br />

control without reason. For 10 years, Bido Lito! has been a<br />

chronicle of bravery, platforming/celebrating/holding up those<br />

who choose to assert themselves through music and art. Those<br />

who’ve taken control of their situation,<br />

those who’ve completely lost themselves<br />

in it. It takes an unrivalled bravery to<br />

formulate a public facing expression of<br />

protest, of helplessness, of reality, of<br />

escape.<br />

This issue, like the 105 that have<br />

run through the decade, is packed full of<br />

bravery. Bravery is Beija Flo’s expression<br />

of physicality and the world that exists<br />

beyond the limitation of form. Bravery<br />

is ASOK following emotive intuition;<br />

equally for Lo Five in the spiritual sense.<br />

As noted by Simon Hughes, bravery<br />

is taking ownership of addiction and<br />

seeing that circumstances can be<br />

reversed. This in particular is something<br />

to take note of when feeling the strains<br />

of the political climate, the world beyond<br />

the socialist bubble of Liverpool.<br />

Bravery is taking back control of language, of image, of<br />

expression. Taking it away from those who’ve weaponised its<br />

use. Bravery will always have a home in Bido Lito! for the decade<br />

to come. This won’t change. But, on 12th <strong>Dec</strong>ember? Let’s hope<br />

it’s a time for real change. !<br />

Editor<br />

Elliot Ryder / @elliot_ryder<br />

Photo by Robin Clewley<br />

Distribution<br />

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Bido Lito! is a living wage employer. All our staff are<br />

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All contributions to Bido Lito! come from our city’s<br />

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The views expressed in Bido Lito! are those of the<br />

respective contributors and do not necessarily<br />

reflect the opinions of the magazine, its staff or the<br />

publishers. All rights reserved.<br />

16 / BEIJA FLO<br />

Beija Flo’s experimental artistry is boldly laid bare in her new<br />

material; Cath Holland learns more about its subtle contours.<br />

20 / ASOK<br />

Breathless breakbeats and warped techno that drip with the<br />

energy of club walls; ASOK on the notion of making music in the<br />

moment.<br />

22 / ART AS CONVENIENCE<br />

Since opening at Birkenhead Market in June, Convenience Gallery<br />

has been working to rub away the divide between the everyday<br />

and the artist.<br />

26 / THERE SHE GOES AGAIN<br />

Social history writer and football journalist Simon Hughes looks<br />

back at Liverpool’s progression over the last 10 years.<br />

REGULARS<br />

14 / NEWS<br />

34 / SPOTLIGHT<br />

40 / PREVIEWS<br />

24 / GEOGRAPHY OF THE ABYSS<br />

Electronicist Lo Five navigates us through the terrain of his latest<br />

album, a world conjured from meditation and internal discovery.<br />

30 / A DECADE OF<br />

EXCLAMATION<br />

A selection of Bido Lito! writers pick out some of the most<br />

important cultural moments to have taken place in Liverpool over<br />

the past decade.<br />

37 / BEAK><br />

Constantly sharpening the edges of their three-sided setup,<br />

these masters of sonic immersion know how to keep it sounding<br />

fresh.<br />

39 / STUDIO ELECTROPHONIQUE<br />

“The intention for my music was to make it underthought:<br />

straight from my brain to the machine. I wanted to do it in the<br />

now”<br />

42 / REVIEWS<br />

52 / ARTISTIC LICENCE<br />

54 / THE FINAL SAY


NEWS<br />

The Stomach And The Port<br />

Rashid Johnson, The Crisis, <strong>2019</strong><br />

Liverpool Biennial returns for its 11th year in <strong>2020</strong>,<br />

taking place between 11th July and 25th October. The<br />

contemporary art festival will engage with Liverpool, its<br />

history and cultural landscape in even greater depth, guided<br />

by a theme of The Stomach and The Port. Liverpool’s<br />

dynamic as a historic international port city – a point of<br />

global contact and circulation – provides the perfect canvas<br />

on which to consider the analogy of the city as an entity<br />

similar to the body; a fluid organism that is continuously<br />

shaped by and shaping its environment. Public spaces,<br />

historic sites and the city’s leading art venues will ‘host’<br />

the various artworks that will comprise the Biennial, the<br />

UK’s largest festival of contemporary visual art. New<br />

director, Fatos Üstek, and curator, Manuela Moscoso, have<br />

constructed this modern vison for the festival, working with<br />

more than 50 international artists to interpret this theme in<br />

relation to Liverpool. biennial.com<br />

A Feast Of Fests 1<br />

Festival season never ends on Merseyside, and <strong>2020</strong> is already shaping<br />

up to be plentiful in that regard, with announcements coming thick and<br />

fast. SOUND CITY have come out of the blocks with all guns blazing<br />

for the festival in the Baltic Triangle (1st-3rd May), headlined by goth<br />

grunge stars PALE WAVES. THE BLINDERS, THE MYSTERINES and<br />

STEALING SHEEP are among those also joining the fray, with more<br />

expected announcements due early in the new year. Barely a week<br />

later (7th-9th May), FOCUS WALES gets up and running for <strong>2020</strong> in<br />

Wrexham 7th-9th May. The mercurial GRUFF RHYS headlines, with<br />

some brilliantly eclectic acts – such as FLAMINGODS and GEORGIA<br />

RUTH – spread across a line-up that has something for everyone.<br />

And, after a year off, Positive Vibration Festival Of Reggae returns to<br />

the Baltic Triangle, on 12th-13th June. HOLLIE COOK and GENERAL<br />

LEVY AND JOE ARIWA are the big-hitters leading the way, in what is a<br />

welcome return to the gigging calendar.<br />

Pale Waves<br />

A Feast Of Fests 2<br />

Cykada<br />

What, you want more festivals? OK – we can help you there, because our diary <strong>2020</strong> is already filling up with<br />

unmissable dates. LIVERPOOL INTERNATIONAL JAZZ FESTIVAL is one of the earlier starters, taking place at Hope<br />

University’s Capstone Theatre between 27th February and 1st March. London collective CYKADA bring the fire;<br />

Belgians TIN MEN AND THE TELEPHONE bring the raucous fury; and saxophonist TONY KOFI brings a quartet<br />

whose set will focus on Kofi’s work with Ornette Coleman. The 10th edition of THRESHOLD will also, sadly, be its<br />

last. The grassroots arts and music festival has championed many emerging artists during its tenure, but will be<br />

wrapping things up in the Baltic Triangle on 3rd and 4th April (artist announcements due in <strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2020</strong>). INDIKA<br />

has made some slight changes to its programme, moving its main festival to November (12th-22nd) across a number<br />

of city centre venues, including St George’s Hall, Leaf and the Philharmonic Music Room. A major Diwali celebration is<br />

also planned as part of the revamped programme, with year round taster events and showcases to keep us keen.<br />

Read The Dots<br />

Big Wows Treasure Hunt<br />

Two local art organisations, The Reader and dot-art, are joining forces to<br />

deliver a new range of activities and workshops for <strong>2020</strong>. Based in the<br />

recently refurbished Mansion House in Calderstones Park, The Reader is a<br />

national charity that champions the benefits of shared reading and literature.<br />

In teaming up with independent art gallery dot-art, The Reader will be<br />

incorporating a visual art programme alongside a number of art classes<br />

and community workshops within the Mansion House. dot-art has been<br />

running a successful series of art classes with The Bluecoat for a number<br />

of years, and their involvement with The Reader will open up exciting new<br />

possibilities; nature photography, walking drawing, textile arts and short<br />

story illustration courses will all take a lead from the glorious setting of<br />

Calderstones Park.<br />

If you haven’t yet managed to get your hands on the limited edition<br />

STEALING SHEEP Remix Wows cassette we teamed up to release<br />

earlier this year, you may just be in luck. A number of the special<br />

pink cassettes – featuring versions of the tracks from the Sheep’s<br />

third album Big Wows remixed by their friends – are dotted around<br />

the city (and even further afield) to be picked up for free. We’ve<br />

hidden 50 cassettes in locations specific to Stealing Sheep – places<br />

where they’ve played, worked, recorded music, filmed videos and<br />

created artwork. We’ve even left a number of cassettes at Liverpool<br />

landmarks for anyone to find. If you want one for your collection,<br />

follow the clues on our Twitter account (@BidoLito). Big wows!<br />

Independent Venue Week<br />

Sinead O’Brien<br />

Anna Calvi is the ambassador of INDEPENDENT VENUE WEEK <strong>2020</strong>, the nationwide<br />

festival that puts the spotlight on the indie music venues that are the lifeblood of the UK<br />

music scene. In Liverpool, a whole host of establishments are taking part between 27th<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary and 2nd February, bringing a slew of gigs at an otherwise downbeat time of<br />

year. District, Grand Central Hall, The Zanzibar, Jimmy’s and Parr Street Studio2 all have<br />

activity planned in, with many shows still to be announced at the time of going to press.<br />

The Jacaranda venues – Phase One, EBGBS and Jacaranda Club – throw themselves<br />

into the action once more, with BLACKWATERS’ headline show at EBGBS on 30th<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary one of their highlights. Craft Taproom and Handyman have their own weekend<br />

scheduled, featuring SILENT-K and MATT MCMANAMON (The Dead 60s) among others.<br />

And Birkenhead Library gets in on the act, with a joint headline show from SINEAD<br />

O’BRIEN and PUMA BLUE on 2nd February. Keep an eye out for more shows to be<br />

announced. independentvenueweek.com<br />

14


DANSETTE<br />

Glitch-pop wizard PODGE gives us<br />

an insight into the various layers and<br />

sounds that inspired the treasure<br />

trove of sonic delights that is his new<br />

EP, Eatmore Fruit.<br />

Walt Barr<br />

Free Spirit<br />

Muse Records<br />

Am I Not A Woman And A Sister<br />

Am I Not A Woman And A Sister is a brand new visual<br />

installation by Manchester-based artist ELIZABETH KWANT,<br />

co-curated with female survivors of modern day slavery in<br />

partnership with Liverpool charity City Hearts. Situated at<br />

the International Slavery Museum, the piece seeks to better<br />

understand the history of the transatlantic slave trade and its<br />

strong links with the North West region. The film on display<br />

reflects on colonial slavery and the legacy which is still felt on<br />

a social and tangible level here in Liverpool, Manchester and<br />

surrounding mill towns, with further assessment of modern<br />

day slavery and human trafficking that is rife in contemporary<br />

first-world societies. The moving image installation is open<br />

now, showing until 15th February <strong>2020</strong>.<br />

Steel A March<br />

A new initiative aimed at 16-25 year olds looking to exhibit and develop art<br />

works is set to host its first event this coming <strong>Jan</strong>uary. ANTISTEEL will be a<br />

pop-up project that moves around the city and seeks to platform a wide mix of<br />

creatives, offering access to those who do not have formal training or in higher<br />

education. The first pop-up show will take place at MAKE North Docks on 9th<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary, with an open call for submissions to be part of the group show running<br />

until 12th <strong>Dec</strong>ember. Works can cover everything from music, art, fashion<br />

and performance, with applications to be sent to livantisteel@gmail.com for<br />

consideration.<br />

Sweet Release(s)<br />

In case you were wondering: yes, we get lots of music sent our way each month<br />

and, yes, we listen to it all. If you’d like a taster of some of those morsels we’re<br />

lucky enough to hear, try some of these on for size. THE FLOORMEN take a step<br />

into Sketches Of Brunswick East territory with a brand new EP that’s full of woozy<br />

ditties and meanderings. The Easy Peelers “Don’t Panic, We’re In Cannich” is a<br />

collection of songs written and recorded by the quartet in a caravan in Scotland,<br />

complete with the patter of rainfall on the window. Multi-instrumentalist and<br />

former Wave Machine VIDAR NORHEIM makes a welcome return with a new EP<br />

of squelchy synths and immersive pop on X-Ray Eyes (check out The Pink Echo,<br />

too, for a Bido nod!). And, fresh from his track 4F3D63 Hex being included on<br />

the new Future Bubblers 3.0 release, WILROY has interpreted Dutch producer<br />

Stephen Emmer’s 2017 album as Home Ground (The Wilroy Remixes). A touch<br />

of progressive hip hop is added to the soulful originals, which feature Chaka Khan<br />

and Leon Ware. Keep the music coming!<br />

Elizabeth Kwant, <strong>2019</strong><br />

Why can’t we do this IRL?<br />

In November 2018, Shirrako, a YouTuber, shared a<br />

video of his modified Red Dead Redemption 2 avatar<br />

killing a suffragette, creating huge controversy due to<br />

its violence against a female character. This incident,<br />

which sparked the comment “why can’t we do this<br />

IRL?”, is the subject of artist Megan Browdmeadow’s<br />

piece within the you feel me_ exhibition at FACT,<br />

which centres on restorative justice. On 7th<br />

<strong>Dec</strong>ember, the second part of this immersive VR<br />

experience launches, which centres on a virtual trial<br />

of the accused video game character. Delving into the<br />

ethical questions behind gaming, this piece engaged<br />

with FACT’s Dungeons And Dragons gaming<br />

community to discuss the social, ethical and moral<br />

implications of such behaviour in a virtual space.<br />

It’s Quizmaaaaaassssss!<br />

Bido Lito! and Liquidation’s joint Christmas Christmas Christmas<br />

trivia extravaganza returns on 10th <strong>Dec</strong>ember, with Constellations<br />

once again hosting proceedings. The event looks to cap off a great<br />

year in Liverpool music with fans, friends and colleagues pitting their<br />

wits and arcane bits of music knowledge against one another for a<br />

selection of fantastic prizes in Punk Rock Bingo (not Bongo). Once<br />

again, all proceeds from the night will go to chosen charities The<br />

Whitechapel Centre and MIND, and there will be festive live music<br />

from some special guests. Head to ticketquarter.co.uk to get your<br />

tickets before we’re all booked up – and email chris@bidolito.co.uk to<br />

reserve your table.<br />

The Floormen<br />

I originally found this song<br />

when Madlib sampled it on<br />

Freddie Gibbs’ Crime Pays.<br />

This song and Crime Pays<br />

were constantly being played<br />

when I was hanging out with all my friends during this past<br />

summer. The electric piano chords and soft vocals really<br />

bring the whole relaxed vibe together and getting to hear<br />

Freddie Gibbs rap about “Choppin’ up this change with<br />

cocaine in my microwave” over the top of it totally switches<br />

up the whole mood of the song.<br />

Bruno Pernadas<br />

Valley In The<br />

Ocean<br />

Pataca Discos<br />

This lovely song from<br />

Portuguese jazz musician<br />

BRUNO PERNADAS was<br />

one of those songs that I had on repeat this summer.<br />

I love the contrast of male and female vocals and the<br />

chord progressions keep me on my feet, never being too<br />

predictable. The descending middle eight is one of my<br />

favourites of all time, with the simple guitar and the rich<br />

vocal harmonies bringing it to the next level.<br />

Mac DeMarco<br />

Nobody<br />

Mac’s Record Label<br />

The newest MAC DEMARCO<br />

album came to be my new<br />

favourite of his over this<br />

last summer. It’s really<br />

helped me appreciate super<br />

minimal arrangement and<br />

instrumentation. Nobody in particular made me realise that<br />

one tiny element can bring so much feeling to a song. The<br />

warbling synth in this song changes it from a chill guitar<br />

tune to a warm, slimy, relaxing load of goop.<br />

Hinobu Tanaka<br />

& Kazumi Totaka<br />

Professor E. Gadd<br />

Luigi’s Mansion<br />

Soundtrack<br />

I straight up named one of the<br />

songs on Eatmore Fruit after this. Me and my friends found<br />

this by accident while going through the Luigi’s Mansion<br />

soundtrack and it’s stuck ever since. This song shows you<br />

the true power of a really good groove. I tried to capture<br />

that feeling in my track Prof. E Gadd, but it came out pretty<br />

different in the end.<br />

soundcloud.com/pooodge<br />

Podge’s new EP, Eatmore Fruit, is out now.<br />

NEWS 15


BEIJA FLO<br />

Physicality and form have been at the forefront of Beija<br />

Flo’s experimental artistry, boldly laid bare in her fervent<br />

songwriting and zealous live showcases. Cath Holland<br />

learns more about the subtle contours of her being.<br />

16


30 minutes into interviewing BEIJA FLO, I know more intimacies<br />

about her than women I’ve known all my adult life. We’re in a<br />

slightly different scenario than a naturally developing friendship<br />

gradually built; every word and pause is recorded, as we talk in<br />

a Liverpool city centre bar in late afternoon. But my point still stands: Beija<br />

likes to share.<br />

I first heard of Beija via a review of one of her shows. The writer wrote<br />

at length about the singer, poet and artist’s medical history, namely her<br />

diagnosis of MRKH syndrome – more of that later. In the accompanying<br />

photographs she looked witchy, wild and sexy, in fishnets and leotard with<br />

everywhere hair and much drama. Seeing her perform myself, I witnessed<br />

a minimalist yet theatrical performance – she and a laptop, but on a stage<br />

decorated like a burlesque club in Berlin. Most of all, she was a woman<br />

comfortable in her own skin. Weeks later, a nervous daytime show at<br />

Birkenhead Library away from her usual crowd showed the vulnerability of<br />

a fledgling artist.<br />

I’ve since learnt a lot more about Beija Flo the artist: she’s a life model,<br />

standing and reclining naked in front of complete strangers for a living. On<br />

one hand we have Beija the bold siren, with a microphone and great one<br />

line put-downs. And on the other, a young woman still trying to find her<br />

place.<br />

Beija’s MRKH syndrome means she has no womb or sexual organs.<br />

She talks frankly about that and her poor health at her gigs and in<br />

interviews, via social media, wherever she can. I sure as hell didn’t know<br />

what it was the first time, so I Googled madly for information on the<br />

subject. It’d be rude not to.<br />

“I’m an enigma to the NHS,” she tells me of it, and her seven-year<br />

experience with the cyclical vomiting syndrome which leads to constant<br />

nausea and daily bouts of being sick. “The amount of time I’ve been in<br />

[hospital], it’s like, ‘Do you mind just talking to a team of junior doctors,<br />

because you know way more than we do’.”<br />

So yes, we think we know all about Beija Flo. How wrong we can be?<br />

We’re to learn a heck of a lot more, revealed in a forthcoming exhibition<br />

at Output Gallery incorporating her different creative strands. Somewhat<br />

tellingly, the collection of drawings, poems – she cites eccentric oddballs<br />

like Viv Stanshall and Ivor Cutler as influences – and photographic selfportraits,<br />

is called Nudes, along with the recent single of the same name.<br />

This is the sharing of her most secret self and experiences yet, an insight<br />

into an 18-month period some time ago when she suffered a series of<br />

scarring events. “I gave trust to the wrong people and received scars in<br />

return,” says the press release.<br />

“Over this period I was with a very abusive partner emotionally and<br />

slightly physically,” she explains quickly. “Sort of had a lot of sex when I<br />

didn’t really want to.”<br />

Er, having sex you don’t want is much more than ‘slight’ abuse. It’s the<br />

real deal. Abuse is abuse.<br />

“Yes. No, not slightly, really.” She smiles, sadly…<br />

In the song Nudes, with its bleak narrative and static electronic musical<br />

bed, she sings of the relationship: “I’ve been the fool…” But any blame<br />

needs to be firmly on the abuser’s shoulders.<br />

“Yes. Yeh… I was with someone who wasn’t very good for me. And left<br />

me feeling very small and very angry. But also very un-listened to and very<br />

insignificant.”<br />

Abusive relationships have emotional and physical effects and this<br />

exhibition is about your relationship with your body. I’m guessing this<br />

experience had an effect on your body, and how you viewed it?<br />

“After that, sex really wasn’t fun anymore for a while, quite a while.<br />

And it affected me with later partners. Maybe half a year after being with<br />

him, I met this really wonderful girl and I know that I was very challenging<br />

to be in a relationship with. It was more to do with what I’d been left with.<br />

[I] didn’t want to be hurt or revisit emotions.”<br />

The issue of body confidence is part of the exhibition as well, I take it?<br />

“The exhibition is an insight into the journey I’ve been on with my own<br />

body; the good bits and the bad bits. I still have days where I’m, like, ‘I hate<br />

this’. Sometimes if I eat a really big meal I get a bit bloated and I hate that<br />

because my biggest, biggest nightmare is, and I know it’s silly, but, erm, I<br />

get very insecure someone might think that I’m pregnant. Because I can<br />

never ever be pregnant.”<br />

And that upsets you?<br />

“It’s a really, really big concern. My weight has always been up and<br />

down I have some days where I put on a bit of weight and I feel really<br />

good about where all of that weight is.”<br />

As long as it’s evenly distributed?<br />

“Yeh! It’s not like I’ve ever stood naked in front of anyone and they’ve<br />

gone, ‘Oh, no, you’ve had too much ice cream, put your T-shirt back on’.<br />

No one’s ever said that and I think I almost have a few little tricks I use on<br />

myself to make myself feel good about my body.”<br />

The photos in the exhibition were taken during her ‘lost weekend’<br />

that lasted four or five months after the bad relationship ended. She won’t<br />

reveal when this took place “because people can’t figure out how old Beija<br />

is. All I can tell you it happened in a window on Bold Street”.<br />

And which window is that? I ask.<br />

“Can’t tell you.”<br />

But she can tell me it was warm, so when<br />

indoors she was naked much of the time,<br />

purposely isolating herself.<br />

“I remember having a lot of fun but also<br />

feeling very lonely. But almost being grateful for<br />

the loneliness, ’cos it meant I really discovered<br />

my body. I took lots of walks and did lots of<br />

drawing and wrote lots and spent a lot of time<br />

with myself.<br />

“That man I was with, the horrible one, was<br />

quite abusive. Abusive,” she corrects herself. “I<br />

lost a lot of myself in that experience and I’m<br />

still gaining that back. Or maybe I will never<br />

quite get her back.”<br />

The eventual need to be with people led her<br />

to go on a series of dates, but again with men<br />

who took advantage of her vulnerable state.<br />

“I don’t fully remember all of it. It was a<br />

very dark period of time where I look back and I<br />

think, ‘Who was that woman in my body?’ I did not like her.”<br />

She thinks it happened because she feels more ‘normal’ when she’s<br />

in a relationship with “someone not totally emotionally understanding or<br />

won’t just hear ‘I don’t have a vagina’ and… [will] let you explain how you<br />

can have a normal… a great sex life.<br />

“That’s when I feel the most confident in my body and my issues<br />

because, even though I’m very confident about my MRKH syndrome, and<br />

know that if any future partner would have an issue with the syndrome<br />

that they’re in the wrong, not me.<br />

“I’m intrigued by sex and how people do it,” she continues. “I’ve<br />

always, always been interested in what other people are doing in sex and<br />

I remember being in the earlier stage in my life when sex was a lot more<br />

blurry and I didn’t really know what it was. When I first started discovering<br />

my body I was ahead of the other girls, really. I was with the boys in terms<br />

of experimenting with masturbation.”<br />

It’s not that teenage girls don’t masturbate, I don’t think. It’s more that<br />

it’s taboo. They don’t talk about it.<br />

She nods. “I remember asking boys how it felt and how do you do it<br />

and I was very intrigued. It wasn’t in a sense of let me see it or anything, I<br />

was very interested in how other people saw their bodies.”<br />

Beija and I meet again a couple of weeks later, in the same place on<br />

the same sofa, but this time I ask her to bring some of the photos from<br />

“I have always aimed<br />

to never lose the<br />

confidence and the<br />

innocence and the<br />

freedom of being a child”<br />

FEATURE<br />

17


her Nude months. A fan of the late American photographer<br />

Francesca Woodman, who specialised in experimental photos<br />

of herself and other women, Beija’s images are true to her<br />

inspiration. There are lots, all of Beija at this mysterious place<br />

on Bold Street. Taken at different times of the day and night, in<br />

some she’s naked, others wearing underwear. Her mood varies,<br />

too: she’s in distress in one picture, the next peaceful and happy.<br />

Some are natural and stark, others posed and a little contrived.<br />

In one she’s in a bath dyed red with food dye and bath bombs.<br />

A few show her body only, no face. She knew from the get-go,<br />

she says, which images out of the incredible 500 taken were to<br />

be used for the exhibition. From different times of the day, when<br />

newly woken or late at night, and in earlier images she has no<br />

body hair. In ones taken later, armpit and pubic hair is growing<br />

back as her confidence and sense of self makes a return.<br />

She flicks through them and recalls each one with surprising<br />

clarity. It’s not like looking at photos on your phone of a night out<br />

with friends, holiday snaps or shots photographers take of her<br />

at gigs. So what did she think of her body laid out in such a way<br />

when she saw them for the first time? A camera taking a still of<br />

you like this and alone, no audience to pander to or entertain,<br />

how did she feel? It’s difficult to get an answer out of Beija on<br />

this one – I ask her three times. “They’re sad in places and hard to<br />

look at,” she concedes eventually. “I captured how I was feeling.<br />

It was more, ‘This is what we’ve got’. It wasn’t a negative or a<br />

positive.”<br />

She points out one of her laying down with a peaceful<br />

expression on her face, her upper body at ease and content.<br />

There are visible love bites on her neck. “This one is after quite a<br />

nice one night stand. I quite liked him and never heard from him<br />

again.”<br />

You look very girlish there: pink skin, slightly flushed.<br />

“Yeh, it’s partly the lighting. After you’ve had a nice time with<br />

somebody you feel… it looks a little bit like I’m glowing.”<br />

In a remarkably beautiful photograph, Beija somehow<br />

resembles a pre-Raphaelite painting, her hair cascading around her<br />

shoulders in waves. She’s often booked for life modelling precisely<br />

due to that look. Hylas And The Nymphs, the 1896 oil painting by<br />

John William Waterhouse, springs to mind, removed temporarily<br />

and controversially from public view from Manchester Art Gallery<br />

last year, leading to accusations of censorship. The irony being,<br />

if you wish to take the subversive view, it features females<br />

surrounding and luring a young man into the water for their own<br />

pleasures. The nymphs are calling the shots.<br />

Beija’s hair changes in the images as we go through them, in<br />

itself reflecting her state of mind, she reckons. In some she’s cut it,<br />

obviously and dramatically.<br />

“I don’t really get my hair cut often. It’s almost as if I have to cut<br />

something off myself, [so] I’ll cut off my hair. It’s quite cleansing.”<br />

On the plus side, it grows back.<br />

“It grows back newer and stronger, which I like.”<br />

Beija points out exhibition photos she calls “the sunburnt<br />

drunk ones”. “It was on a really hot day,” she says of them,<br />

“and I’d been out with lots of my male friends and I sat there<br />

frustrated, [thinking] ‘Why aren’t I allowed to take my top off and<br />

sit here? Why is it I was allowed to do that when I was six, but<br />

not now I’m a woman. How come boys are allowed to become<br />

men and lots of rules don’t change, especially with how they<br />

present their body?’”<br />

It’s the women should exist in private space only and men<br />

alone own the public arena scenario, as old as time itself. “Being a<br />

woman is challenging.”<br />

Beija goes on to share stories, of being told by men and boys<br />

when she’s not wearing a bra and the male inability to pass a<br />

woman in a crowded space without placing his hands on her<br />

hips, shoulders or back.<br />

“There are people out there who don’t understand personal<br />

space,” she laughs at the ridiculousness of the last example.<br />

Going back to the subject of the<br />

exhibition, I can’t help but wonder if<br />

revisiting such a strange period in her<br />

life is an entirely positive experience?<br />

Most people don’t enjoy dredging up<br />

bad stuff.<br />

“It’s been emotional. It’s like,” she<br />

pauses to take a breath. “Do you ever<br />

feel sorry for your younger self?”<br />

All the bloody time, my dear.<br />

“If only you knew then what you<br />

know now? I felt so horrible for that<br />

period of time and I look back and I’m<br />

so proud of myself for getting to where<br />

I am now. Although I’ve still bloody<br />

miles to go, the universe loves playing<br />

games with me. I get lots of shit<br />

thrown in my garden.”<br />

Do you think woman relate to you,<br />

because of the openness around your vulnerabilities? Women<br />

are restricted by our biology and physical weakness compared<br />

to men. Your limits may be different from most women but the<br />

common bonds remain.<br />

“[With] the openness and honesty of it,” she speculates. “I<br />

don’t think I particularly dress up or glamourise my struggles. I<br />

think a lot of women don’t realise that we all have something to<br />

say. We’ve all had bad experiences and some people think, ‘Oh,<br />

I’m a woman and that’s just the way unfortunately society is’, and<br />

I’m like, ‘Sod that for a bunch of bananas’.<br />

“Some women at first hate me ‘cos they think I’m being really<br />

cocky: ‘Look at this girl, she knows she’s really thin’ and whatever.<br />

Then they watch the show and find out all of these things and I<br />

haven’t had the easiest time. A large amount of the time the way<br />

women dress is for other women. I feel for women that dress for<br />

other women and are so self-conscious that they maybe don’t<br />

wear something they like and feel comfortable in.”<br />

Being part of a group is a human need, though. Everyone<br />

feels that, even outsiders.<br />

“What I mean is, a lot of women feel really under pressure to<br />

act a certain way and look a certain way. When people see what<br />

I do and the confidence and the fact I feel sexy onstage… still<br />

people ask me why I wear leotards, where I get the confidence<br />

running around in the nip. Essentially I have always aimed to<br />

never lose the confidence and the innocence and the freedom of<br />

“Being told that<br />

there was so much<br />

my body can’t do, I<br />

asked myself, ‘What<br />

can my body do?’”<br />

being a four-year-old running around in your knickers around a<br />

paddling pool in the middle of the town park.”<br />

This exhibition explores the relationship between you and<br />

your body, yet you must ultimately feel let down by yours?<br />

“You know, men can shout all they want at me. I don’t have a<br />

vagina. You can’t have sex with me even if you tried. It’d hurt you<br />

a lot more than it would hurt me because it’s essentially shoving<br />

your dick into a brick wall. That’s not going to feel good. I feel in<br />

particular with that side of things, me being told that there was<br />

so much my body can’t do, I’m like, ‘OK, what can my body do?’<br />

You can look but you can’t touch because of my situation.”<br />

Incels – men who think they are entitled to sex and resent<br />

women when they can’t get it – get<br />

very angry. You as a woman can be<br />

hurt in other ways by them.<br />

“Yes,” she nods. “Yes. Been there.”<br />

So you’re aware of your<br />

vulnerabilities?<br />

“Yes, I am. When I’m not at a venue<br />

and travelling to or from I’ve had men<br />

think I’m a prostitute just because<br />

I’m in knee-high boots and a leotard.<br />

That’s a very strange position to be<br />

in but, also, unless we go for it in the<br />

places that are safe then it will never<br />

get to the point where we want it be.”<br />

When planning the photo<br />

session to go with this article, the<br />

first thing she asked herself and the<br />

photographer, Robin Clewley, was,<br />

‘What am I allowed to do?’ Speaking<br />

shortly after the session, she confesses to being “a bit nervous”<br />

on the run up to the day.<br />

But I want to know, how different did it feel, being<br />

photographed by someone else?<br />

“It was obviously different to posing for myself.”<br />

Many photos for the Nudes exhibition were taken by<br />

candlelight, a contrast with the professional lighting draped<br />

across the shoot.<br />

“Because I’m a life model subject so often, I trust people<br />

to get me to position my body in a way that works from their<br />

angle. The paintings and drawings I see of myself are always so<br />

beautiful. That’s how I felt after this shoot.<br />

“Robin made me look like a Renaissance painting. Everyone<br />

should feel like a Renaissance painting.” !<br />

Words: Cath Holland / @cathholland01<br />

Photography: Robin Clewley / robinclewley.co.uk<br />

@iambeijaflo<br />

Inside The Walls: Nudes, Anxieties And Other Content runs at<br />

Output Gallery from 17th <strong>Jan</strong>uary to 2nd February <strong>2020</strong>. The<br />

single Nudes is out now via Eggy Records.<br />

18


FEATURE<br />

19


20


ASOK<br />

Breathless breakbeats and warped techno that drip with the energy of club walls; ASOK sets new<br />

parameters for making music in the moment.<br />

“It all changed for me in 2013.” Stuart Robinson,<br />

producer and DJ, AKA ASOK, isn’t recalling his<br />

breakthrough moment in music here. By this point,<br />

he’d been DJing for over 15 years. And by the moment<br />

he’s about to recollect, he’d been touring the world as Cosmic<br />

Boogie, a project set up with Merseyside’s premier loop digger<br />

Greg Wilson. At the height of its success his lightbulb moment in<br />

music was about to flash before his eyes.<br />

“I was playing at a party in Montenegro on a beach, a private<br />

party,” he begins, essentially<br />

alluding to the first steps towards<br />

this conversation we’re now having<br />

today in his home studio, one<br />

centred on his jagged breakbeat,<br />

“You’ve got to<br />

connect with the<br />

music the way you’d<br />

want others to”<br />

warped techno and jungle-infused<br />

productions. “There was probably<br />

around 2,000 people there. About<br />

1,500 were probably the most<br />

beautiful women I’ve seen in my<br />

life.” In the world of the jet-setting<br />

DJ, the picture he’s painting doesn’t<br />

seem like the crux for change, but he<br />

continues. “There was DJ Robinson,<br />

sweating behind the decks in 40<br />

degree heat. People doing lines of<br />

coke from the decks. It was wild. It<br />

was going off.”<br />

Starting out as a DJ in the mid 1990s, picking up a pair of<br />

Vestax PDX-2000s in exchange for designing a website for<br />

Manchester record purveyors Eastern Bloc, Robinson came up<br />

through raves in Manchester and Liverpool. He cites escaping<br />

to musical scenes thriving beyond post coal mining Newton-le-<br />

Willows as the gateway to dance music. “The best way to go<br />

somewhere new was to get absolutely twatted and go to dance<br />

music clubs,” he colourfully illustrates. Attending his first rave<br />

at 14, his first forays as a DJ came later in the world of drum<br />

and bass, jungle and hardcore. Though, he says, there was little<br />

change in approach whether in front of the decks of behind;<br />

always unadulterated release.<br />

By 2003, he’d moved away from breaks and studiously<br />

delved into learning about dance music and its history. “I just<br />

started reading books and learning a lot. I met Greg Wilson, and<br />

we started the Cosmic Boogie project, playing disco all over the<br />

world for about five or six years.” Robinson was an in-demand<br />

DJ and label owner, doing his thing at headlining shows across<br />

the world with a slick mix of house, funk, boogie and disco. Then<br />

came that day on the beach Montenegro. The turning point, as<br />

2,000 dancers waited for the cues of his next selection.<br />

“I looked up and I just thought, ‘I’m not enjoying this. I’m<br />

playing the same set everywhere I go. I’m painting by numbers.<br />

I’m not learning anything’. I came home that night and ended<br />

Cosmic Boogie. One million plays on SoundCloud, 15,000<br />

Facebook followers – I just wiped it out that night. Finished.”<br />

The very next day ASOK was ushered into life. Initially a<br />

name adopted in his drum and bass days, the moniker served as<br />

internal resurrection. The restrictions of disco were forcibly pulled<br />

from the record bag, erasing a world of beach parties, four-figure<br />

attendances and indulgent hedonism. Robinson was to stop<br />

playing for everyone else. From 2013, the focus became creating<br />

something of his own. “I felt free. And as soon as that freedom<br />

came, I told myself to buy some equipment and make a tune. I<br />

bought a Juno 6 and Roland 707, opened up Ableton for the first<br />

time and realised I had no idea what to do.”<br />

The baby steps into production quickly turned to strides after<br />

perseverance. The incessant reading and research soon developed<br />

into a knack for songcraft, energised by a sweat drenched<br />

empirical understanding of the dancefloor garnered in his youth.<br />

Six years down the line, Robinson now has an enviable<br />

release discography. A slew of EPs and singles on revered labels<br />

Lobster Theremin and Mistress have arrived since that day in<br />

Montengro. Releases that meld acerbic acid house, twitchy jungle<br />

breaks, hissed atmosphere, blissful piano and pounding kicks.<br />

It is music written from the heart. Quite literally. It feels its way<br />

through like a heart rate rapidly powering the necessary bodily<br />

movement the track demands; rising, hurtling and, in moments,<br />

resting in the euphoria – if given the chance.<br />

“For me, producing has been about recreating the feelings<br />

I had on the dancefloor, as a dancer, as a fan. It’s all about<br />

capturing that raw emotion in the moment.” The commitment to<br />

recreating the momentary euphoria is reflected in his producing<br />

style. Rather than piece together his tracks in arrangement view,<br />

everything is mixed live. The visual accompaniment is forgotten<br />

about, essentially. It’s as though Robinson could shut his eyes<br />

and completely let go of the walls that surround him once the<br />

music begins to rumble from his<br />

studio monitors. It becomes personal.<br />

Attached to the now, the moment,<br />

the happening. The mix has to be led<br />

by intuitive feeling, rather than the<br />

precision that can come to rule when<br />

gradually knitting small pockets of<br />

music together.<br />

He further underscores the<br />

dancefloor DNA in his production when<br />

asked about the motives to produce<br />

in such a way. “I make a track as<br />

though I’m dancing to it in the club,”<br />

he says with an energetic animation.<br />

“I’ll be playing certain tracks through,<br />

feeling when parts get repetitive, when<br />

aspects need to breathe, when more<br />

urgency is needed. I’m always thinking of the rhythm of a room,<br />

feeling as if I was a dancer and wanting the break to drop out at<br />

that moment – when the body expects it.”<br />

The process is like buying a set of paints, preparing them in<br />

front of an easel and allowing emotive drive to take its course.<br />

There’s no set plan. Rather than follow the paint-by-numbers<br />

DJing of Cosmic Boogie, his own music allows the heart to pluck<br />

random numbers form the sky a fill the space with energetic reds<br />

and yellows, all washed with a bright white flash of energy. It’s all<br />

about catching the spark, making the most of that high you know<br />

can’t last forever. “You can sit there and sift through so many hihat<br />

samples. By the time you get one, that raw feeling you had is<br />

gone and you’re no longer feeling it. You can over engineer it. You<br />

lose the part that made you excited about the track. You’ve got to<br />

connect with the music the way you’d want others to.”<br />

He loads up Ableton and plays a track formed from in a<br />

recent rush of energy. The process seems even more urgent<br />

when he informs me that most of his tracks have been made in<br />

less than an hour. He continues to explain as he presses play. A<br />

breakbeat immediately serrates through the room. This is one<br />

he’s aiming to release on Lobster Theremin. He starts to talk me<br />

through its foundations, but shouting has become necessary,<br />

such is the decibel level. “I get a load of channels up. Hit record,<br />

then start to bring everything in.” The shouted conversation<br />

tapers off as the syncopated drum patters take hold of his<br />

attention. The music has already caught him in just over one bar.<br />

As he later informs, music has to be cautiously rationed to avoid<br />

it stealing the abundance of his days. “I become totally lost,” he<br />

informs me, once the stop button is found. “If I put some dance<br />

music on when trying to work at home, I can’t do it. I’m in it, part<br />

of it, thinking over the incidental notes, any parts I’d change. It<br />

grabs me so much. My brain is triggered by dance music.”<br />

Robinson has severe ADHD. It’s something which he has<br />

lived with all his life, yet remarkably has only been recently<br />

diagnosed. It’s highly evident as we talk; conversation regularly<br />

trails off into new topics. His voice is breathless at times, taking<br />

draws on a cigarette in the moments he pauses. His mercurial<br />

nature embodies the title of his 2016 album, A Mind Forever<br />

Voyaging. “You can see where the name comes from just<br />

watching me. It never stops,” he says with shades of humour.<br />

Above his monitors and computer sits a sign reading<br />

the words ‘Don’t Make Techno’. It’s a mantra subtly rooted in<br />

his ADHD. Something which, in a musical sense, he’s taken<br />

ownership of, using the condition as a vessel to journey through<br />

worlds that require more than a 4/4 stride. It’s a jovial swipe<br />

in reality, knowing he does incorporate the genre into his<br />

productions. However, it speaks more of his unwillingness, or<br />

inability, to remain in one place. To endlessly look beyond the<br />

steady pace; running, sprinting pausing and quickly changing<br />

direction. “When playing, I have to change direction every three<br />

tracks. I get bored,” he attests. “The sign is just a little reminder<br />

to try and make something that’s not continually the same.<br />

Ultimately, I’m always voyaging, always drifting around.” !<br />

Words: Elliot Ryder / @elliot_ryder<br />

Photography: Keith Ainsworth / arkimages.co.uk<br />

soundcloud.com/asok-four-triangles<br />

Mistress 14 by ASOK is available via Mistress Recordings in<br />

<strong>Jan</strong>uary <strong>2020</strong>.<br />

FEATURE<br />

21


ART AT YOUR<br />

CONVENIENCE<br />

Since opening in Birkenhead Market in June, Convenience Gallery has been working to rub away the divide<br />

between the everyday and the artist. Julia Johnson meets its curators to learn more about their programme<br />

of exhibitions, tutorials and workshops.<br />

22


Is it perhaps easy, especially in a city perceived to be as creative as Liverpool is, to take the<br />

flourishing of the arts scene for granted. But having a city filled with people driving to create<br />

work is only half the story: the conditions must also exist for these talents to mature. This is<br />

why spaces are crucial; places where artists can develop ideas by putting them into practice,<br />

and where they can find audiences receptive to their talents.<br />

Enter CONVENIENCE GALLERY. Based in Birkenhead Market since June <strong>2019</strong>, the project –<br />

led by artists Ryan Gauge and Andrew Shaw – is a space for artists to grow through practice and<br />

exhibition. Affiliated with the socially engaged Small Steps Events, Convenience developed as its<br />

own project from the desire to put art and artists in the spotlight as a main event in their own right.<br />

Acting as facilitators rather than selective curators, Convenience’s format is optimistic and trusting.<br />

They believe in the fundamental talent of individuals and its ability to blossom with the right<br />

community.<br />

As artists, Ryan and Andy know that having confidence in the strength of your own work can<br />

sometimes be a challenge in itself. “One of the barriers is that you just sit in your own head for<br />

hours,” explains Ryan. “The point with Convenience was to be able to get a load of artists to sit and<br />

to say, ‘What do you want to do? No barriers – what would be beneficial?’ And a lot of it was just<br />

people getting to have conversations about their work, because they don’t get to do that.”<br />

From these conversations, several strands of programming and interaction have emerged.<br />

Exhibiting is one, of course: giving artists a space in which visitors can view their work. It’s another<br />

question which maybe isn’t addressed enough in public conversation: where are the spaces for<br />

artists to emerge for an audience? And the location and layout of<br />

Convenience make it a unique venue.<br />

Located on both sides of an aisle in the centre of Birkenhead<br />

Market, their units open out directly into the path. There are no<br />

physical or psychological boundaries that an audience needs to cross<br />

in order to engage with what’s being shown. Ryan and Andy have<br />

understood the importance of tapping into the potential of this setup<br />

to spark curiosity since the first exhibition. “It was a lot of wall-based<br />

work, so it was immediately relatable, even if you were just walking<br />

through,” says Andy.<br />

This has had a significant effect, not just on how people<br />

are accessing the work, but what happens in the subsequent<br />

interactions. Convenience’s approach, once again, is openness:<br />

they’re aware of their place as a point of connection between the arts<br />

scene and the everyday, and want to be as open to all as they can be.<br />

There’s plenty of space to sit and chat in their units, and many visitors<br />

do, including those who are less art conscious than your regular<br />

gallery frequenter. “The big question we get asked is, ‘What’s actually going on?’” says Andy.<br />

“People are excited about the ‘weirdness’ that we’re situated here. We find there’s a lot of people<br />

here getting a watch fixed, who say ‘I do art!’ and they get their phone out and start showing us all<br />

the work that they do.” It is in these moments the gallery reveals itself as not only a proving ground<br />

for young, new artists, but a bridge to those who’ve casually practised away from the four walls<br />

of local and national institutions. It subtly brings the two together thanks to its irregular home in a<br />

once bustling heart of Birkenhead commerce.<br />

Importantly, these passing conversations are increasingly able to continue beyond a brief visit,<br />

by attending the workshops Convenience facilitate. Our conversation returns time and again to the<br />

gallery’s programme, which is growing in collaboration with the artists they work with – indeed, at<br />

their request. Ryan says how, at those early meetings, “there was quite a lot of artists saying ‘I’d<br />

quite like to teach a class about what I’m doing’. It’s a chance to sit down for two hours with people,<br />

it’s more interactive than just viewing art”. “And it becomes a regular social thing,” adds Andy. “We<br />

do a lot of them that are more affordable, because we don’t want people to feel like they’re priced<br />

out of something.”<br />

“Convenience’s ideal<br />

is to have a space<br />

with no boundary<br />

between the viewer<br />

and the art or artist”<br />

As well as evenings focusing on particular skills, Convenience are also collaborating with LJMU<br />

and Bloom Building to bring the Thinking Out Loud lecture series to Birkenhead. Open to anyone,<br />

the evenings are comprised of an accessible lecture, followed by an artist-led workshop inspired<br />

by the subject. As a way of introducing audiences to new creative concepts and activities, it’s an<br />

interactive and engaging format.<br />

As for the question of ‘why Birkenhead?’, the answer is less about establishing space<br />

specifically for Wirral as it is about broadening opportunity in a way which happens to be<br />

geographical as well as philosophical. Convenience very clearly see themselves as part of the<br />

Merseyside arts scene. They were participants in October’s Studio Shuffle, when studios and<br />

groups – including Dorothy, Antisteel, Arena, Road and The Royal Standard – opened up in the<br />

Baltic Triangle to exhibit what their artists have been working on. Talk is already of one taking place<br />

in Birkenhead. They’ve also hosted an exhibition of work by this year’s LJMU graduates, BURST Our<br />

Bubble. But they’re again keen to point out that this isn’t just overflow from across the water – it’s<br />

an expanding of the conversation. “If you live over here and you’re an artist, you can’t always get<br />

into Liverpool. There’s always been the question of ‘how do you get people to come over?’ Well,<br />

there are people who live here as well! So you’ve gotta be for them, too.”<br />

Until 21st <strong>Dec</strong>ember, Convenience are working with the international LOOK Photo Biennial to<br />

exhibit work by Hong Kong-born artist Dinu Li. The Anatomy Of Place takes over all three of their<br />

units and explores the ideologies and rituals that bind people and places together. Rather than<br />

this being a project forced into its venue, the exhibition was established through a mutual feeling<br />

that the space was right for the work. Andy explains how this came<br />

about. “Dinu was really into the market. It’s a big part of the work,<br />

where he grew up was a big market place. So he liked the space, and<br />

so we started chatting to him about his work. I think we just had a<br />

really good conversation about it. It grew very quickly from one piece<br />

to this collection, spread across all of the units. All the work in this<br />

show has entwined narratives which he’d never been able to show all<br />

together, and he was really excited to be able to do that.”<br />

A major international programme LOOK may be, but this story<br />

centres on the same qualities as have been found in every aspect of<br />

Convenience’s work: relationship with the community and support<br />

for the artist to realise their vision. It’s an ethos that spreads across<br />

collaborations with international artists such as Dinu, or those who<br />

stumble upon the space when looking for a watch repair. Ultimately,<br />

it’s a space that looks to mix institutionally taught art with experience<br />

of the real world, all blended together through exhibitions and wide<br />

array of tutorials and workshops.<br />

Our changing shopping habits, and the need for the purpose of traditionally commercial spaces<br />

to change with them to survive, has seen projects akin to Convenience emerge up around the<br />

country. The example of Convenience shows how such spaces can become symbols of the kind<br />

of society we want to exist. The team describe their ideal as having a space with “no boundary<br />

between the viewer and the art or artist”. After just a few months they’re well on their way to<br />

making this an interactive reality. !<br />

Words: Julia Johnson / @messylines_<br />

Photography: Antony Mo / @antonymo<br />

facebook.com/conveniencesse<br />

Convenience Gallery can be found on Brassey Aisle within Birkenhead Market. The Anatomy Of<br />

Place, part of LOOK Photo Biennial, continues at Convenience until 21st <strong>Dec</strong>ember.<br />

FEATURE<br />

23


GEOGRAPHY O<br />

Electronic artist Lo Five<br />

navigates us through the<br />

terrain of his latest album<br />

Geography Of The Abyss – a<br />

world conjured from meditative<br />

states and internal discovery.<br />

Illustrated through adjoining<br />

artwork made specifically<br />

for the record, the Wirralbased<br />

producer touches<br />

on the hurtling potential<br />

to travel even when in the<br />

most static of states.<br />

Geography Of The Abyss travels across the terrain<br />

of the inner self. It’s a continuation of a theme I’ve<br />

explored and tried to make sense of through pretty<br />

much all of my music.<br />

I’m endlessly fascinated with the nature of consciousness<br />

and memory, how one colours and shapes the other. I’ve been<br />

practising meditation on and off for around 15 years now,<br />

and I guess that sort of inner journey of self-inquiry has been<br />

expressed in some form on this album. I see the record as a kind<br />

of a mirror image of my own experiences of meditation.<br />

The album is made up of a series of live jams rather than<br />

piecing it together on a computer; building these repetitive<br />

loops that I could get lost in late at night, just by focusing in on<br />

the music and tuning into feeling, or as close as possible. Taking<br />

this approach, the album and its production is pretty much the<br />

same as meditating; focusing your attention on an object that’s<br />

not your thoughts until your ‘self’ falls away. This happens<br />

naturally with any activity that requires long periods of simple<br />

concentration, like painting or knitting for example. It’s like a<br />

mini holiday from your mind. Therefore, the album has ended<br />

up a more contented and intuitive record, rather than something<br />

cerebral or wholly conceptual.<br />

For me, meditation is about suspending that inner judge<br />

we all have inside of us, the one that forms opinions of<br />

situations, others and ourselves. In theory, it’s the perfect<br />

vessel for severing the ties with contemporary capitalism<br />

and the continual drive towards individuality. But we live in a<br />

24


F THE ABYSS<br />

world of increasing levels of judgement and opinion. Just look<br />

at Twitter. Capturing attention is the name of the game and<br />

we’re increasingly giving our attention away to causes that<br />

don’t necessarily help our mental well-being. It comes at a<br />

price to ourselves. Binary opinions on social media have been<br />

effectively gamified, offering rewards to extreme views that<br />

stir up negative feelings, rather than rewarding open-minded<br />

attempts at understanding and compassion. This direction<br />

society has taken has real-world consequences which may<br />

appear harmless and trivial on the surface. In reality, they are<br />

quite subtle and insidious, especially when amped up by the<br />

people in charge. Narrow-minded judgement and opinions are<br />

obviously divisive and isolating, so it stands to reason that a<br />

practice that offers the dropping of this act of judgement could<br />

be something that offers some sort of exit strategy from the<br />

current state of affairs.<br />

In my view, there is a strong relationship between the<br />

tangible and the mental. They share a similar geography and<br />

are often bound by the same contours. What are we but the<br />

sum total of our experiences and memories, which are formed<br />

in real-world environments? There is a contrast with the<br />

familiar and the unknown within the album’s artwork [pictured],<br />

as there are nods to local landscapes, as well as places I’ve<br />

never been. I liked the idea of framing the album as a journey<br />

through the familiar/unfamiliar, both of which can be just as<br />

familiar to one another when the context of the self is removed.<br />

Beyond the glitchy silhouettes of places and spaces, and<br />

their abundant energy, the realities of their origin are quite<br />

lame, really. They’re merely screenshots from Google Earth,<br />

edited and manipulated to appear as though visual discoveries<br />

of my own internal Mars Rover. However, the source material<br />

shouldn’t stand in the way of the conceptual journey they<br />

represent. I like firing up Google Earth and picking random faraway<br />

places to wander around. Places I’ll probably never visit.<br />

They all come together to form a virtual exploration that the<br />

record encapsulates.<br />

As with the recurring theme of the record and my previous<br />

releases, making music is about discovery. That exciting<br />

eye-opening feeling of experiencing something new for the<br />

very first time. That’s absolutely the attraction for me. That’s<br />

where the record tries to position itself. I guess travelling holds<br />

the same attraction, not that I actually do much of that in the<br />

tangible form. Nonetheless, we’re all on a journey, and anything<br />

we make or do is a reflection of that journey. There’s always an<br />

element of escapism to the music and especially this record.<br />

Not just escaping my current environment and situation, but<br />

escaping myself. !<br />

Words and design: Lo Five / @EM0TI0NWAVE<br />

lofive-cis.bandcamp.com<br />

Geography Of The Abyss is out now via Castles In Space.<br />

“There is a strong<br />

relationship between<br />

the tangible and the<br />

mental. They share a<br />

similar geography”<br />

FEATURE<br />

25


THERE SHE<br />

GOES AGAIN<br />

Following the release of his latest book, There She Goes – Liverpool, A City On Its Own: The Long <strong>Dec</strong>ade:<br />

1979-1993, social history writer and football journalist Simon Hughes looks back at Liverpool’s progression<br />

through the last 10 years, and the challenges still to come in the decade before us.<br />

Three years out of 50. It’s a small figure, and one I can’t<br />

stop thinking about, especially when it’s essentially just<br />

one year – when you really think about it.<br />

In 1970, back when Liverpool was still a<br />

Conservative city, its political interests aligned with the rest of<br />

the country until 1972 – when Edward Heath reigned as Prime<br />

Minister, a role he would lose in 1974.<br />

Since then, there has just been one short period when<br />

Liverpool has not been a place in opposition. That was under<br />

Frank Prendergast from 1997 until 1998 when the city rejected<br />

New Labour and stood with the Liberal Democrats for the next<br />

12 years.<br />

It is said repeatedly now that Liverpool is an undisputed<br />

Labour stronghold but that wasn’t the case until 2010. It feels<br />

like much has changed since the start of the decade, though<br />

– not least in terms of feeling among the younger generation<br />

of Liverpudlians who seem more socially aware than ever and<br />

certainly more politically conscious than they were before.<br />

There are reasons for this change, starting with the 20th<br />

anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster in 2009 when those too<br />

young to remember or even understand what happened 20 years<br />

earlier started to ask questions after Andy Burnham’s public vow<br />

to help seek justice in front of a packed Anfield.<br />

There was a shift that day, a generation who had grown up<br />

with the consequences of the 1980s finally emboldened. In 2011,<br />

there was the lifting of the 30-year rule on government papers<br />

and what many had suspected for decades was as good as<br />

being confirmed as true – that Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative<br />

government in 1981 had at least discussed the possibility of<br />

allowing Liverpool to slide. Considering what happened to the<br />

city throughout the rest of the decade, you can only assume<br />

Geoffrey Howe’s memo about “managed decline” was put into<br />

practice.<br />

The Hillsborough Independent Panel’s findings came next,<br />

this amid the austerity of the latest Tory government. It has<br />

surprised many who were growing up in the 1980s the way the<br />

“Scouse not English” mantra of this era has accelerated because<br />

the sentiment didn’t exist with the same appetite when things<br />

were even worse than they are now. But are they better? Are<br />

they just as bad but in a different way?<br />

Liverpool is a more cosmopolitan city than ever. Its economy<br />

has boomed through tourism, which, whether we like it or not,<br />

serves to benefit the drugs barons whose finances are washed<br />

through the hotels and restaurants that so many visitors like<br />

to sleep and eat in. Liverpool looks smarter and, unlike other<br />

Northern cities, it is not made of glass. It feels like it is built to<br />

last. The development of the Baltic Triangle has been spectacular<br />

and I hope that extends into other parts of the city that require<br />

investment at its southern end, albeit without it endangering the<br />

identities of the communities that live there.<br />

Stray outside the centre, indeed, and the struggle is arguably<br />

greater than it has ever been in the boroughs that have long<br />

struggled anyway. Homelessness was not the scourge of the<br />

1980s like it is now. It may be a national issue but the figures<br />

prove it is worse in the cities where the government has no<br />

council control. Foodbank collections in Liverpool are a reflection<br />

of the spectacular generosity that exists here but it is also a<br />

reflection of how genuinely<br />

desperate so many people have<br />

become.<br />

Perhaps change will come.<br />

The Brexit vote in Liverpool<br />

was closer than many people<br />

in Liverpool expected. Yet it is<br />

worth remembering that while<br />

Liverpool suffered because of<br />

the increase in trade with the<br />

European Economic Community<br />

in place of the British Empire,<br />

when Liverpool was at its lowest<br />

in 1993, the European Union<br />

dedicated more money than any<br />

British government in history to<br />

help start some form of recovery.<br />

A fortnight after the murder of<br />

James Bulger – just at the point<br />

where it felt like Liverpool couldn’t<br />

slump any further – funding was allocated to Merseyside, along<br />

with parts of the old East Germany and the poorest regions of<br />

Southern Italy. If parts of Liverpool feel left behind, it is mainly<br />

because of the lack of care from successive governments which<br />

have run along too similar lines rather than necessarily the EU.<br />

In writing There She Goes, I was told coldly by Professor Patrick<br />

Minford, whose economic policies defined Thatcherism and<br />

impacted so gravely on Liverpool, despite the fact he worked<br />

in the city, that the EU repulsed him because it was “a socialist<br />

machine” in so many different ways.<br />

I wonder where Liverpool will be 10 years from now. It is a<br />

city which will always be in the news because of its association<br />

with music and the council will have to challenge the interests<br />

of property developers to ensure classic venues remain open<br />

even if the land they stand on is potentially profitable. It is a city<br />

“Liverpool is a city which<br />

will always be in the news<br />

because of its association<br />

with music, crime and<br />

football. But where will it<br />

be 10 years from now?”<br />

which will always be in the news because of its association with<br />

crime, and the threat of gangsterism largely goes unreported<br />

even though there is a cocaine epidemic which goes a long way<br />

towards explaining knife crime. It is also a city which will always<br />

be in the news because of its football, and changes are necessary<br />

if the grassroots game is to survive.<br />

Supporters of Liverpool FC should be proud of the way<br />

they mobilised themselves and pushed out greedy owners at<br />

the start of this decade, as well as the way they challenge the<br />

New England venture capitalists who are currently in charge. If<br />

Liverpool manage to win the league for the first time in 30 years,<br />

maybe the greatest challenge<br />

for fan culture will arrive. What<br />

tricks will Fenway Sports Group<br />

try then?<br />

The ecosystem at Anfield is a<br />

fragile one but when it feels like<br />

everyone is pulling in the same<br />

direction, the club can seem like<br />

it is unstoppable both on and off<br />

the pitch. So long as no decisions<br />

are made that jeopardise the<br />

interests of local supporters, then<br />

Liverpool have a better chance.<br />

Other than winning football<br />

matches, the club’s priority should<br />

be to find a way to get more<br />

young Liverpudlians inside the<br />

ground.<br />

An even more significant<br />

period feels like it is ahead for<br />

Everton whose move to Bramley-Moore Dock will potentially<br />

make Liverpool’s waterfront more stunning than it is. In theory, it<br />

will re-energise a part of north Liverpool which has never really<br />

recovered from the period which sets the scene for There She<br />

Goes in the years before 1979. Ultimately, I hope the book makes<br />

younger readers particularly understand better where the city has<br />

been and where it is now coming from. !<br />

Words: Simon Hughes / @Simon_Hughes__<br />

Illustration: Mr Marbles / @mrmarblesart<br />

There She Goes – Liverpool, A City On Its Own: The Long<br />

<strong>Dec</strong>ade: 1979-1993 is out now, published by deCoubertin Books.<br />

26


GOLDEN BROWN<br />

This extract, taken from There She Goes, looks at how the owner of one of Liverpool’s most recognisable<br />

shops was forged by the city’s 1980s heroin epidemic.<br />

When a Pakistani ship carrying heroin with<br />

a street value of £1million was seized in<br />

Ellesmere Port, customs officers admitted<br />

to reporters they were losing control. It was<br />

April 1983, roughly around the time Brendan Wyatt went<br />

back to a Birkenhead flat following a night out in Liverpool.<br />

He was accompanied by a friend and two girls. What<br />

happened next surprised him. One of the girls reached into<br />

her purse and brought out some foil. “Then the smack... it<br />

was dead casual, as if they were just smoking a spliff,” he<br />

remembered, through the fug. “Don’t worry, it’s just smack –<br />

you don’t get addicted to it…”<br />

Wyatt returned to his side of the Mersey without having<br />

tried ‘this new drug’ but within a few years, it had taken<br />

him – just as it had already gripped Birkenhead by that point,<br />

where nine per cent of 16- to 24 year-olds were users.<br />

Research in the 1980s found that if you lived on the Wirral<br />

estates, particularly in the Noctorum area – which, like those in<br />

Liverpool, were hastily built in the post-war years – you were<br />

16 times more likely than the average person to die.<br />

There was one theory that smack penetrated Birkenhead’s<br />

estates just before Liverpool’s, because Liverpool’s gangsters<br />

wanted to use it as a testing ground as nobody was quite sure<br />

of heroin’s capabilities. It had been around London’s bohemian<br />

community in Soho for almost a century, but researchers<br />

believed its availability only began to spread after 1979 when<br />

revolution in Iran led to a refugee crisis across Europe. In<br />

Liverpool, smugglers marketed it as a non-addictive, smokable<br />

high; but, uncut and 90 per cent pure, it would leave users<br />

like Brendan Wyatt “off your head for hours – rather than<br />

withdrawing quickly”. It would feed off boredom, alienation and<br />

desperation.<br />

Howard Parker, whose 1985 book, Living With Heroin,<br />

dealt with case studies from the Ford Estate, believed that what<br />

happened in Liverpool and Birkenhead was a part of a cycle<br />

that began in the US in the 1960s, explaining that epidemics<br />

like these have lifespans of 10 to 15 years before the demand<br />

retreats because the next generation “won’t go near it – they’ve<br />

seen the impact”. Smack, therefore, only became ‘dirty’ and the<br />

drug of ‘losers’ when the lower orders in big numbers were<br />

hooked.<br />

Wyatt was one of them. He had grown up amongst the<br />

terraced streets of Kirkdale, a fiercely strong-willed district<br />

and working class to its core. He had a vivid memory of his<br />

childhood and could envisage being in a classroom in 1979.<br />

“Thatcher was elected in May 1979 and I remember the<br />

morning after clearly: a 12-year-old devastated by politics –<br />

can you imagine?” He had learned about the realities of life<br />

early, after his mother died when he was just four. By the time<br />

Thatcher got in, his father had already been made redundant<br />

from his job on the docks because of containerisation. “You’re<br />

suddenly finding yourself on free school dinners, which was a<br />

label to carry. I’d rather not eat than have the stigma.”<br />

He left school in 1982 and went straight into one of the<br />

dreaded Youth Training Schemes, promoted by the Tories<br />

– earning just £23.50 a week as a painter and a plumber.<br />

There had been just 11 apprenticeships and more than 3,000<br />

applicants. “We were bread to be thrown on the scrap heap,”<br />

he believed. “I went to a secondary modern school and there<br />

was never any discussion whatsoever about university options.<br />

I thought university was what you saw on University Challenge.<br />

The expectation for decades before was you’d follow your dad<br />

into the docks but when that came to a stop, there was nothing<br />

else.”<br />

Wyatt’s father died in 1984 and it turned his life upside<br />

down. He started taking heroin because of the dulling effect<br />

of the hit and his naivety to the consequences. “There were<br />

no skeletons walking around or people sleeping in doorways<br />

because the long-term impact wasn’t visible. It was still early<br />

days with heroin. You’d see big, strong, well-dressed lads in pub<br />

corners smoking it. It’s hard to explain how it makes you feel.<br />

It’s not a high like charlie, it sends you the other way quickly.<br />

It separates you from the world’s problems and your own<br />

problems; it numbs any pain. Then comes the rebound where<br />

you feel worse than you did before you took it.”<br />

Wyatt did not really stand a chance. No mother, no<br />

father, entering adulthood living in a city overwhelmed by<br />

unemployment and a drug epidemic. He was exactly the wrong<br />

age at exactly the wrong time – or the right time if you were a<br />

drug dealer. He was not the only target in this market. He and<br />

an entire generation would grow up with an ingrained drug<br />

culture – a black economy that sustained the city more than any<br />

government initiative.<br />

“For a while, the routine is great: you’re chasing the dragon<br />

and riding a wave. You’ve got all the jewellery, you’ve got a car<br />

and a lovely looking girlfriend. Anyone looking at me would<br />

have thought I was smashing it. It takes eight or nine months<br />

for it to unravel. You wake up one day and you’re skint. You<br />

think you’ve got the flu and you haven’t. You need gear to make<br />

yourself feel normal. The jewellery starts getting pawned, the<br />

car goes – you can’t afford the MOT. The girlfriend goes and<br />

then your friends go. I lost all of my friends. Not because of<br />

anything I did but because you alienate yourself. You become<br />

very selfish and all you’re interested in is that next fix. There<br />

are weddings, christenings – there’s funerals to go to. You stop<br />

going. You pull away from society. It gets around then that<br />

you’re on the gear. I’d get people coming up to me saying how<br />

disgusted they were because before, I’d been a good lad. By<br />

1988, it was really noticeable. People started swerving me<br />

completely and rightly so. I’m a mad Liverpool fan and I’ve been<br />

to 35 countries to watch them. But I can’t remember Liverpool<br />

winning the league in 1990. I didn’t give a fuck about anything<br />

else by then. That’s how much it depletes your interest in<br />

anything. The FA Cup final after Hillsborough was my last game<br />

until 1996.”<br />

Wyatt returned from Sheffield after the Hillsborough<br />

disaster and headed to the State nightclub to try and find out<br />

information about what had happened.<br />

“Everyone was crying and hugging but I didn’t cry for three<br />

weeks,” he admitted. “The only solution for me was to selfmedicate.<br />

I went right on the rollercoaster. All sorts of drugs<br />

came into play. My only memories from the early 1990s was<br />

the Sunday mornings because it was harder to get gear then.<br />

The drug dealers had their day off – just like the dockers used<br />

to on a Sunday. I was out at nine o’clock trying to score with the<br />

street dealers. I’d look at fellas walking their dogs and I’d think,<br />

‘What I’d do just to be like him.’’’<br />

“Morality flies out of the window – when you’re hooked, you<br />

get whatever you can to feed the addiction,” admitted Wyatt,<br />

who served three prison sentences in foreign countries, two<br />

in Germany, another in Switzerland – each time for shoplifting,<br />

“to feed what I needed”, which also led to him getting nicked<br />

in Liverpool several times. On one occasion, he was eligible for<br />

bail but only if he paid a long-standing £18 parking fine. “When<br />

I told the copper I was skint, he said, ‘You must have someone<br />

who can pay it…’ But I didn’t have a person in the world who<br />

could pay that fine. So, I had to do two days in Walton. The<br />

copper was saying, ‘I’d pay it myself, but I can’t’. That’s how<br />

isolated I’d made myself. I’d outrun all of my favours.”<br />

Wyatt suffered a heart attack and needed chemotherapy<br />

to treat liver damage related to his addiction. 25 years clean,<br />

he told me his story quietly in the back of the shop he now<br />

owns in Liverpool’s city centre where he sells deadstock<br />

Adidas training shoes. The name, Transalpino, refers to the<br />

sleeper he took across France, Switzerland and Italy to the<br />

1984 European Cup final in Rome, just before heroin really<br />

came into his life. He took ‘absolute’ responsibility for all of his<br />

actions as a drug user but wondered whether it would have<br />

been different for him had conditions in Liverpool been better.<br />

Wyatt, known more commonly as ‘Jockey’, estimated that<br />

more than 100 friends had died because of smack – “if you<br />

became an adult in the 1980s and you were from workingclass<br />

Liverpool, I’d imagine you have at least one family<br />

member who is still addicted, in treatment or in recovery”.<br />

“I’m one of Maggie’s children,” he concluded. “Smack<br />

made a lot of fellas my age desensitised and it has impacted<br />

the generations after us. Kids were brought up in crack dens<br />

and because of that, there’s a lot of sociopaths knocking about<br />

today. Nobody has shown them any respect so why should<br />

they show respect back?”<br />

FEATURE<br />

27


Wow. It hardly feels like 10 years since we started<br />

on this journey – how time flies when you’re in<br />

the middle of great social and political upheaval,<br />

soundtracked by music that’s as angst-ridden as<br />

it is fearless. As is common when times are tough, music acts as<br />

a salve and spark; and we can perhaps look back at the 2010s<br />

with a little more affection knowing that its soundtrack is one<br />

for the ages.<br />

The first issue of Bido Lito! came out in May 2010, shortly<br />

after the general election which saw the beginning of a punitive<br />

decade of Tory rule. Softened as it was by the coalition with<br />

the Lib Dems (think: being punched repeated by a boxing glove<br />

rather than bare knuckle), things maybe didn’t seem quite so<br />

bleak back then. Little did we know what impact austerity would<br />

have on our society, wearing away at the cultural bonds that<br />

unite us all. We arrive, jaded, at the end of the second decade of<br />

the millennium, desperate for a fresh beginning.<br />

We’ll all have our own memories that stand out from the past<br />

10 years, moments that have affected us deeply or have proven<br />

to be turning points in our own lives. For our look back at the<br />

decade just gone, we’ve asked some of our core team of writers<br />

to pick out a selection of key cultural moments that they believe<br />

have had the greatest impact on our collective consciousness.<br />

We could quite easily have filled a book on dozens more<br />

memories – indeed, we’ve filled <strong>106</strong> magazines with them – so<br />

our selection is far from definitive, merely a snapshot. Therefore,<br />

if anything comes to mind, we’d like you to send us your own<br />

cultural moments from the past decade that you feel are worthy<br />

of mention.<br />

The collection of tribes and scenes that make up our music<br />

community is undoubtedly much changed: healthier and more<br />

diverse in many ways; but lacking greatly in others, not least in<br />

the infrastructure around the music venues that are the lifeblood<br />

of a community of inter-dependent independents. From Static to<br />

the Baltic Triangle, noise has been a constant issue, making us<br />

face up to what kind of place we want our city centre to be. The<br />

coming decade will see that battle continue, and it is up to us to<br />

work out how we create an environment that is equal parts music<br />

city, party city and destination city.<br />

We also need to encourage, or make space for, more<br />

collectives to add their voices to the hubbub, especially those<br />

from the worlds of jazz, grime/trap and hip hop. The underground<br />

dance, electronic and experimental purveyors that have coalesced<br />

around 24 Kitchen Street in the Baltic Triangle, for example,<br />

is surely one of the biggest, warmest successes of culture-led<br />

regeneration in the past decade – although there are fears it’s<br />

now in reverse. And we should look beyond the confines of the<br />

city centre – much like the seeds of growth around Smithdown<br />

Road – if we’re to find further fertile places for our noisy artists to<br />

flourish.<br />

I’ve enjoyed seeing some of these tribes develop in a musical<br />

context over the years, not least those underground scenes that<br />

gathered around Strange Collective’s and Eggy Records’ DIY<br />

events. Queen Zee provided a momentous moment for queer<br />

visibility when they headlined Pride in 2018, which has also<br />

been buoyed by the work of Sonic Yootha and Preach. Stealing<br />

Sheep gathered their whole scene around them for a brilliant<br />

representation of their varied world when they filmed a video<br />

with Jack Whiteley and Joe Wills in the Kazimier Garden; which<br />

was just as exciting to witness as was XamVolo’s entrance to the<br />

GIT Awards in 2015, when a new sense of possibility descended<br />

the stairs onto the Kazimier stage with him. The re-emergence of<br />

Mick Head has also been particularly warming to see, with long<br />

overdue recognition rightfully coming his way.<br />

It is a great tragedy that some people haven’t been able to<br />

see this all play out, not least Alan Wills and Tony Butler, two<br />

pillars of Liverpool music in the prior decade. The respect that<br />

both men commanded has been carried on by new torch-bearers,<br />

and their impact will still be felt as we embark on a new decade.<br />

We must also remember the memories of the talented young<br />

musicians from the groups Viola Beach and Her’s, who tragically<br />

passed away. The best way we can honour their memories is<br />

to make sure that the great work they started gets completed,<br />

and that their stories are remembered for future generations to<br />

discover.<br />

It’s easy to get side-tracked by the flashy, large-scale events<br />

that we’ve become used to and forget about the more basic,<br />

grassroots cultural institutions that we need to encourage. Yet,<br />

we also shouldn’t play down the impact of great communal<br />

moments – giants, parades, fireworks – in bringing the city<br />

together and restoring some much-needed collective pride.<br />

Whether you agree with the fence or not, LIMF is a massive<br />

upgrade on the Mathew Street festival, and is a far more<br />

progressive way of celebrating music for a city with a reputation<br />

on a global scale; and Sound City has re-discovered its heart,<br />

after a brief sojourn down on the docks. Watching together,<br />

dancing together, celebrating; that’s the very essence of culture.<br />

This was our culture – what was yours? !<br />

God Save The Florrie<br />

Community action in Liverpool is a powerful force. The<br />

changes that can be brought about by collaboration, by the<br />

bringing together of people from diverse backgrounds for the<br />

benefit of all, is something this city does well. By necessity<br />

more than desire, more often than not.<br />

A fine example of this is the Florence Institute, or The<br />

Florrie. A beautiful, Grade II late Victorian former boys’ club<br />

at the heart of Liverpool 8, The Florrie was in a perilous<br />

state of decay until a group of impassioned individuals with<br />

community ties to the building formed a trust to restore it to<br />

its former glory, and open it as a wholly inclusive community<br />

centre for all. Eight years and over £6 million later, The Florrie<br />

opened its doors to the community in 2012. Later, with the<br />

arrival of director Anne Lundon, The Florrie moved towards a<br />

programme of culture and creativity as a way of supporting<br />

the community and building cohesion.<br />

Today, The Florrie is both proactive and reactive in<br />

responding to the needs of the community and provides a<br />

wealth of activities, from belly dancing lessons to reading<br />

groups, art sessions to yoga and circus skills. Plus, of course,<br />

the now legendary guitar group run by the Tea Street Band’s<br />

A DECADE<br />

Placing one final exclamation mark at the<br />

end of the 2010s, a selection of Bido Lito!<br />

writers pick out some of the most important<br />

cultural moments to have taken place in<br />

Liverpool over the course of the past decade.<br />

Resurrecting The Everyman<br />

Demolishing a theatre is a dangerous thing. Once it’s gone, what<br />

happens to all the ghosts?<br />

When the elderly Everyman Theatre was knocked down in 2011,<br />

efforts were made to encourage its theatrical spirits to stick around. Its<br />

bricks were saved, its site was preserved, and when the regenerated<br />

Everyman finally opened on 2nd March 2014 – complete with its<br />

startling façade featuring 105 life-size Liverpudlians – it was a relief<br />

to find that the box-fresh new venue somehow felt as if it had always<br />

been there.<br />

Not all its ghosts came back. The reinvented Everyman Bistro never<br />

recaptured the magic that had made its previous incarnation into one<br />

of Liverpool’s most energised cultural hubs. But with its youth theatre<br />

space and its writers’ room, and its homely auditorium performing the<br />

trick of pretending it never went away, the Everyman remains a piece<br />

of Hope Street heaven – a resting place for old ghosts and for spectres<br />

yet to come.<br />

Damon Fairclough<br />

Timo Tierney. With happenings and exhibitions from notables<br />

such as Jamie Reid and Jimmy Cauty, The KLF, Michael<br />

Head, The La’s and Greg Wilson’s 14-hour Super Weird<br />

Happening in the mix, The Florrie has firmly established itself<br />

in the cultural beat of the city. By the community, for the<br />

community. #GodSaveTheFlorrie.<br />

Paul Fitzgerald<br />

Jemma Timberlake / jemmatimberlake.co.uk<br />

Words: Christopher Torpey / @CATorp<br />

30


OF<br />

EXCLAMATION<br />

Community Assemble<br />

It was 2006 when Laurence Westgaph said to me that FACT should have been<br />

built in Toxteth. Liverpool was in peak city centre regeneration at that point and<br />

there was still an assumption that to have good art it needs to be in the centre, and<br />

in a building.<br />

The night of the Turner Prize in 2015, Granby CLT hired out Liverpool Small<br />

Cinema. No one expected the Four Streets and Assemble to win the coveted arts<br />

prize. The pictures of when they win remind me of Liverpool in Istanbul in 2005. The<br />

underdogs become the obvious choice.<br />

Just a handful of years before, the residents of Granby were still convincing the<br />

council they deserved to keep their homes. After the win, they’re fielding calls from<br />

all over the world.<br />

Before then, community was a thing many arts organisations used to tick boxes.<br />

You’d get a few gems, but we’re talking top down, not bottom up.<br />

Post 2015, you can’t get away with pretending. Liverpool needed a kick up the<br />

arse. It needed art that was by its people if it wanted to be for its people. It needed<br />

reminding its art scene always works when it’s a bit punk; a bit less curated for a<br />

CV. It’s not there yet, but it’s a shift in power. Liverpool’s art scene needed a punk<br />

moment, and this was quite punk.<br />

Laura Brown<br />

Niloo Sharifi<br />

K Is For Kazimier<br />

A spaceship being hoisted over Wolstenholme Square, sparks flying off its<br />

base, following a symbolic battle between the evil Monotopia developers and<br />

Captain Kronos, astride a giant ostrich. You couldn’t have imagined a better sendoff<br />

for The Kazimier, the venue that was the creative, madcap, maverick focal point<br />

of artistic possibility in Liverpool.<br />

The night that the Kaz closed, New Year’s Eve 2015, was a momentous,<br />

ambitious celebration of all that the venue-cum-club had come to stand for. By the<br />

time the great burning K sign lit up the night sky, the writing had already long been<br />

daubed on the wall: Wolstenholme Square had already been shorn of MelloMello<br />

and Wolstenholme Creative Space – fellow outsider, independent spaces run by<br />

artists, for artists. Prior to their arrival, it was a part of town where people wouldn’t<br />

dare venture; since their departure, the square has succumbed to the endless<br />

sprawl of Liverpool ONE and premium city centre living apartments. Only the<br />

Kazimier Garden and Penelope light installation remain, towered over by flats and<br />

hemmed in by ‘vertical drinking establishments’ and ‘retail opportunities’.<br />

The escape to Planet Kronos ultimately only took the remaining Kazimier team<br />

as far as the Invisible Wind Factory in the North Docks – but the metaphorical<br />

flight of the city’s creative heart outside of the city centre still hasn’t materialised.<br />

The Baltic Triangle and Ten Streets projects aren’t quite the promised lands they<br />

first seemed, and a gaping, K-shaped hole still remains at the heart of Liverpool’s<br />

creative scene.<br />

Christopher Torpey<br />

Diggin’ Your Selections<br />

The vinyl boom hit Liverpool city centre after a lengthy period of<br />

slim pickings for those preferring the physical product in its traditional<br />

format, the omnipresent Probe aside. Dig Vinyl launching on Bold<br />

Street five years ago was a game changer, a second-hand record shop<br />

with knowledgeable staff well-armed with picky good tastes and<br />

attuned to customers’ wants.<br />

As a lifelong collector, Manchester was a common destination<br />

before Dig’s arrival, but the record-buying community here is now able<br />

to indulge in a wider tour of record shops on home turf thanks to the<br />

opening of Dig: Phase One/Jacaranda, 81 Renshaw and Pop Boutique.<br />

There’s a marked difference between a record shop and a space which<br />

simply has records for sale. Dig is securely in the former category – as<br />

is now the case with stores that followed – supporting new releases<br />

from new local artists and signposting rarities, but equally open to tips<br />

from those they sell to.<br />

Cath Holland<br />

FEATURE<br />

31


Robin Clewley / robinclewley.co.uk<br />

Lucy Roberts / lucyannerobertsillustration.co.uk<br />

Small Space For The Big Screen<br />

I’ll let you into a secret about Liverpool Small Cinema, which was open between 2015<br />

and 2017 in Liverpool city centre. If the audience were laughing, or recoiling in horror, the wall<br />

of the projection booth would bulge, reacting to the force of the reaction. I first noticed it at<br />

a screening of John Waters’ Female Trouble, which managed to get the 56-seat crowd to do<br />

both.<br />

The space, on Victoria Street, was willed into existence by Sam Meech, arts project Re-<br />

Dock and a gang of volunteers. The place was built entirely through donations and offcuts and<br />

screened a huge variety of films. From a 24-hour Groundhog Day marathon, to championing<br />

female directors, offering LBGTQ+ screenings and somewhere for local film-makers to screen,<br />

it offered a home to many unable to use spaces like Odeon.<br />

It was completely its own thing and open to all. Now it’s a hotel bar, as the developers<br />

moved in. But, for a couple of years, it was ours and it felt we could do anything in the city.<br />

Chris Brown<br />

Dividing Wall<br />

The repeated destruction of Banu Cennetoğlu’s posters along Great George Street,<br />

which acted as a collection of records about refugee and migrant deaths, was an unsettling<br />

moment.<br />

It dented the city’s sense of self-identity as giving welcome to all, where fascists and<br />

anyone who would exclude minorities is quickly sent packing. But it also forced us to<br />

answer to the previously-hypothetical question of how such an attack is responded to. And<br />

the final decision to leave the work in shreds felt, to many, unsatisfactory. This was already<br />

a work which had been criticised for “aestheticising” tragedy. To stop repairing it felt like a<br />

confirmation that The List was more focused on violence than on advocating for the rights<br />

of the most vulnerable.<br />

The List’s fate has left its scars, but its real legacy should be a deep questioning of<br />

culture’s role in visualising and platforming empathy.<br />

Julia Johnson<br />

No Festival Today<br />

If we’re honest, Liverpool’s music community can be quite a hostile place to outsiders. Outsiders bringing what seemed to be a festival<br />

themed around British colonialism with a line-up consisting solely of Britpop also-rans were duly met with scepticism in 2017. Hope<br />

And Glory Festival came from nowhere and no one seemed to know who was behind the garishly-branded shindig. That would change,<br />

however.<br />

Ticket sales went well. There was clearly an appetite to see Embrace rub shoulders with The Pigeon Detectives on the Amritsar<br />

Massacre stage before the lad from Keane presented a screening of Zulu in the main room at St George’s Hall. However, when the<br />

weekend came, like the empire it looked to celebrate, things started to fall apart.<br />

I happened to walk past the festival site shortly before midday on the opening day. As I peered through the Heras fencing, past the<br />

B&M Bargains plastic flamingo garden ornament, I thought it unusual that the build seemed only three-quarters finished so close to doors.<br />

The bulldog spirit would no doubt prevail though. Later that day social media was rife with discontent. Queues stretching up London<br />

Road, not enough bars or toilets and timings running so far behind schedule bands had to find alternative venues to play. And it got worse.<br />

The words ‘no festival today’ have rightly been etched into Liverpool music folklore. This is how the Hope And Glory communications<br />

team (or most likely, the man in charge) chose to break the news that the event, which had been promoted for over a year and had Ocean<br />

Colour Scene fans sleeplessly anticipating all summer, would not be going into its second day. And the drama did not finish there.<br />

Predictably there was a mixture of horror, mockery and anger on social media. The organiser, outed as Lee O’Hanlon, was digitally<br />

hung, drawn and quartered. O’Hanlon didn’t help his case by responding to many social media missives with flippancy and truculence.<br />

A more expansive (and bizarre) statement was released in the week after the festival, pointing the blame at a Liverpool City Council<br />

employee who briefly became a cult hero and talking at length about where they stored the sandwiches and milk.<br />

Hope And Glory was a trailblazer in glorious festival fuck-ups. Unfortunately, there is no slick Netflix documentary and fly-by-night<br />

events do keep happening, but what it did provide Liverpool with is a cautionary tale and some of the funniest moments of the past<br />

decade. Outsiders are very welcome. Just don’t bring jingoism, please. Or Razorlight.<br />

Sam Turner<br />

32


John Johnson / @John.johno<br />

Giant Steps?<br />

When the Giants found their way their way back to Liverpool in 2018, it was<br />

a moment of celebration, but one to reflect on.<br />

Liverpool changed in 2008. The year as European Capital of Culture<br />

established the city on the world stage as a destination. A place to be. The<br />

figures say that growth has increased by £1.6 billion year-on-year since the<br />

end of 2008. Perceptions outside the city have certainly changed. Liverpool is a<br />

modern, forward-facing city, not only proud of its contribution to the arts, culture<br />

and sport, but dependent, more than ever before, on that contribution for its<br />

future. Maybe the full legacy will only be known in years to come, when we have<br />

the true bigger picture.<br />

The city mandarins talk of growth, of investment. From street level,<br />

however, that growth looks to be more about the Blade Runner claustrophobia<br />

of Wolstenholme Square, or the sheer whatthefuckery of the Lime Street<br />

development, a prestigious entry point to the city with the grand opulence of<br />

William Brown Street to one side and a grim metal box showcasing a new<br />

branch of Lidl to the other. Maybe this is the legacy for some. Culture comes<br />

from people, though, and that means the grassroots. Art needs space. It needs<br />

support and nourishment. So, while it’s no doubt an achievement for the city<br />

council, in the face of central government cuts, to protect the Biennial, or Sound<br />

City, Africa Oyé and LightNight, there is still a glaring need for the council to<br />

better support grassroots culture. That should be the true legacy.<br />

Paul Fitzgerald<br />

Haring at Tate<br />

Keith Haring’s presence in Liverpool was palpable all summer and into the<br />

winter of <strong>2019</strong>. Emblazoned on buses and T-shirts and collectables, with DJs in<br />

every other venue paying homage.<br />

Tate Liverpool housing the first major UK exhibition of Haring’s work felt<br />

like the North Star in a widening sky of constellations that are reorientating the<br />

city’s pull as a cultural destination. Vibrant, urgent and playful, Haring’s output<br />

has a humanity to it that resonated with the city. What’s more joy-inducing than<br />

Shazam-ing the shit out of the tracks played in a curtained room where his Day<br />

Glo works sit under UV light? What’s more sobering than understanding that his<br />

work was made in the face of a wilfully ignorant Reagan administration during<br />

the AIDS crisis? The exhibition was attractive and important.<br />

It can be all too easy for the face of the city to rely on certain tropes while<br />

its underbelly swells with a cutting edge not necessarily seen by those outside<br />

of Liverpool. Haring didn’t put Liverpool on the map, but his work has helped to<br />

broaden our horizons, and others’ perception of the city as a cultural destination.<br />

Bethany Garrett<br />

Streets Ahead<br />

My first visit to 24 Kitchen Street saw dust tumbling<br />

from the ceiling, such was the size of the sound system<br />

drafted in to celebrate Less Effect hosting Objekt. Since<br />

then, the music policy of the club has followed a similar<br />

track. Although now it’s likely small-scale debris drifting<br />

down from the ceiling can be attributed to the army of drills<br />

burrowing in the foundations of luxury apartments next<br />

door.<br />

The rise of the Baltic Triangle was one of the most<br />

positive in the slew of recent city centre developments. The<br />

work of Baltic CIC set the foundations for a new chapter<br />

in Liverpool’s electronic music scene, giving rise to 24<br />

Kitchen Street, Constellations, Camp and Furnace, Haus,<br />

Baltic Weekender and microclimate tastemakers Melodic<br />

Distraction Radio. A pared back answer to Detroit and<br />

Berlin’s repurposing of defunct industrial spaces, these<br />

homes to artistic endeavour and escapism are now ever<br />

more surrounded by simply homes, short term rentals and<br />

aspirational studio flats with necessary balcony to take in<br />

your achievements. Such apartments stand ever taller over<br />

Kitchen Street; Constellations is to be swept aside; the<br />

remaining venues in the district do their best to rattle the<br />

double glazing of local professionals.<br />

For a moment Liverpool had a thriving creative district<br />

and night time scene that was its own, free from large scale<br />

residential intrusion. Crane your neck on Jamaica Street now<br />

and it’ll be hard to see how a sound system large enough to<br />

rattle a building to its core will ever be able to feature again.<br />

Elliot Ryder<br />

Robin Clewley / robinclewley.co.uk<br />

If you’d like a soundtrack to these cultural moments, head<br />

to bidolito.co.uk to listen to our <strong>Dec</strong>ade Dansette — a selection of<br />

tracks that stood out to us as memorable markers along the way.<br />

FEATURE<br />

33


SPOTLIGHT<br />

ALEX TELEKO<br />

“Songwriting can<br />

be so selfish at<br />

times, especially<br />

when you’re<br />

dealing with your<br />

own emotions”<br />

Leaping from synth wave to<br />

the digital age, ALEX TELEKO<br />

drinks in addictive 80s melody<br />

and convulses to the maddening<br />

beats and bleeps of the<br />

contemporary era.<br />

A by-product, birthed in the ceaseless surge of an intense<br />

digital labyrinth, 22-year-old ALEX TELEKO coolly steps onto the<br />

scene breathing words radiating a reluctant truth we flinch from.<br />

But it’s not entirely confrontational. His artistry also possesses a<br />

narcissistically relatable demur that we can’t help but concede to.<br />

Based in Liverpool, this modern innovator takes his selfdesigned<br />

concepts and manipulates them in a way that reveals<br />

his lust for digital emotion: “I’ve written music in many styles for<br />

a long time, but recently I’ve been trying to draw human emotion<br />

out of a computer instead.”<br />

A self-proclaimed crooner who produces “midi ballads in<br />

synthesis”, Teleko is not one to sugar-coat the reality we share. A<br />

realist who strives towards challenging the general perception of<br />

contemporary music, while also keeping his feet on the ground,<br />

he tells us that his creative intellect hasn’t always resided in<br />

music. “I much preferred the idea of becoming a train driver<br />

or a firefighter. However, some aspirations are unobtainable,<br />

so creating music seemed like a stable fallback plan.” Big<br />

aspirations steered his path, noting a wish to support the fondlyremembered<br />

Europop of Steps, because, “Why not?”<br />

As far as inspiration goes, he is his own muse. That is not to<br />

say further musical influence is obsolete. “My head has always<br />

been very scatterbrain, so I would absorb anything that had a<br />

strong melody or hook,” he explains. “That could be anything from<br />

police sirens echoing outside to chart-topping singles on the radio,<br />

so I don’t think I could pinpoint one piece of music, purely because<br />

everything with a musical nature acts as a form of inspiration.”<br />

Spurred on by an inwardly pleasing writing style, he goes on<br />

to explain how “songwriting can be so selfish at times, especially<br />

when you’re dealing with your own emotions and experiences,<br />

which I regularly interject into what I create”. It’s this strong sense<br />

of narcissism that some believe makes Teleko so delightfully<br />

appropriate for listeners nowadays: he accommodates them<br />

with a real human voice they can associate with, all the while still<br />

serving hard-hitting, bassy synths.<br />

That being said, Teleko admits to enjoying the more<br />

mischievous side of production: “I like to use my writing as a form<br />

of people watching, too, stalking the odd habits and tendencies of<br />

others, it provides some sense of entertainment.” Not just a theme<br />

in his writing, this also makes an appearance in performance: “I very<br />

much enjoy playing Call Me Digital. I like how, despite its upbeat<br />

exterior, there is a tormented and sick meaning at the centre of the<br />

song. It’s a good juxtaposition to me, to have something abrasive<br />

and visceral mixed with what is a seemingly pleasant surroundings.<br />

It probably says a lot about me subliminally.”<br />

Having performed mainly in Liverpool – with the exception<br />

of the odd anomaly – Moon Duo at the Invisible Wind Factory<br />

and Future Yard Festival have been notable highlights. Ultimately<br />

his favourite would be the former, despite the fact that it was<br />

“bordering on temperatures parallel with the Arctic Circle, but<br />

it’s an amazing space”. It’ll take more than temperature to halt<br />

Teleko’s infatuation with live performance, however, as he has a<br />

number of shows lined up to round off <strong>2019</strong>, beginning with the<br />

Merseyrail Sound Station showcase at Liverpool Central on 30th<br />

November.<br />

Which other artists does Teleko think others should be made<br />

aware of? “Die Orangen are one of the great acts coming out on<br />

Malka Tuti, an experimental label based across Europe with its<br />

roots in Tel Aviv. Khidja and Tapan are others on their roster that<br />

are worth checking out.”<br />

It’s safe to say that, with taste this eclectic, there are inspiring<br />

things to come from this young emerging artist. !<br />

Words: Anouska Liat<br />

Photography: Luke Parry<br />

@alexteleko<br />

Alex Teleko support Natalie McCool on 14th <strong>Dec</strong>ember at Arts<br />

Club, and appears at the Eggy Records NYE show at Sound.<br />

34


ABBY<br />

MEYSENBURG<br />

Arresting lyricism and delicate<br />

instrumentation are gently weaved<br />

together by this Seattle native<br />

quietly causing a stir.<br />

“Songwriting has<br />

proven to be the<br />

most cathartic<br />

communication of<br />

what I am feeling<br />

and thinking”<br />

If you had to describe your style in a sentence, what would you<br />

say?<br />

Lyrically driven indie-folkrockpop.<br />

Can you pinpoint a live gig or a piece of music that initially<br />

inspired you?<br />

When I was 14 I had the opportunity to see one of my favourite<br />

bands at the time (The Head And The Heart) play in an old<br />

theatre in Seattle, where I’m originally from. I had waited in the<br />

queue for three hours and ended up in the front row. It was<br />

the band’s first hometown show in a long time and I remember<br />

witnessing their collective energy, as well as their gratitude<br />

towards the crowd and the city, and immediately wanting nothing<br />

more than to be in a band.<br />

Do you have a favourite song or piece of music to perform?<br />

What does it say about you?<br />

I really enjoy performing unreleased songs. They’re often new<br />

and fresh to myself and the band and bringing them outside the<br />

practice room is a lot of fun.<br />

Do you have a favourite venue you’ve performed in? If so, what<br />

makes it special?<br />

A few days before I moved to the UK, I played a farewell/EP<br />

release show with my old band in the violinist’s backyard. We<br />

hung lights and made lanterns, our friends sat on lawn chairs and<br />

blankets, and my mom baked cookies. It was super wholesome.<br />

What do you think is the overriding influence on your<br />

songwriting: other art, emotions, current affairs – or a mixture<br />

of all of these?<br />

Definitely emotions and experiences. I tend to wear my heart on<br />

my sleeve, but songwriting/performing has proven to be the most<br />

cathartic communication of what I am feeling and thinking.<br />

Have you always wanted to create music?<br />

I’ve always loved performing, whether it be ‘talent shows’ at my<br />

family gatherings, school plays, or covering songs on YouTube<br />

with my friends. I attended an arts-oriented high school and it<br />

was there that I began to take songwriting more seriously.<br />

If you could support any artist in the future, who would it be?<br />

Phoebe Bridgers or Lucy Dacus, probably. Both of them have<br />

been big inspirations to my own music, although I get a pit in my<br />

stomach just imagining what I’d say in the green room.<br />

Why is music important to you?<br />

I think music is a great platform for individuals to communicate<br />

their complex thoughts, feelings and experiences. Often, I’ve<br />

found the words I’ve been looking for to explain myself in<br />

someone else’s lyrics. That makes me feel a whole lot less alone<br />

in the world.<br />

Can you recommend an artist, band or album that Bido Lito!<br />

readers might not have heard?<br />

There’s a whole lot more to the Seattle music scene than grunge<br />

and there are a lot of fantastic artists in that area right now.<br />

Cataldo and OK Sweetheart are a couple of my favourites.<br />

Photography: Lucia Matušíková<br />

facebook.com/ameysenburgmusic<br />

Abby Meysenburg plays the Merseyrail Sound Station showcase<br />

at Liverpool Central Station on Saturday 30th November.<br />

MINCEMEAT<br />

Building their sound around the dull<br />

fuzz of an unearthed £50 1960s Tiesco<br />

guitar, MINCEMEAT come out all guns<br />

blazing with pummelling, bone-shaking<br />

controlled chaos.<br />

“MINCEMEAT<br />

happened after<br />

coming across a<br />

terrible cheap guitar<br />

with a fantastically<br />

nasty sound”<br />

If you had to describe your music in a sentence, what would<br />

you say?<br />

Fast/slow garage punk rock clatter with a bit of motorik and some<br />

other oddities thrown in.<br />

Have you always wanted to create music? How did you get<br />

into it?<br />

We’ve all played in bands for a while, but MINCEMEAT happened<br />

after coming across a terrible cheap guitar with a fantastically<br />

nasty sound. It became an interesting project to try to write<br />

songs around its sound.<br />

Do you have a favourite song or piece of music to perform?<br />

What does it say about you?<br />

Probably one of the ones we’ve played least. Suck In from the<br />

new EP is a good, screamy glam guy which isn’t too exhausting<br />

to play, so possibly that one. What does that one say about us?<br />

That we get bored easily and we’re out of shape.<br />

Can you pinpoint a live gig or a piece of music that initially<br />

inspired you?<br />

Our first show was supporting Detroit garage gods The Gories.<br />

It was so much fun and really exciting to be playing on the same<br />

stage. Their stripped-down, ‘just smash through it’ approach to<br />

rock ’n’ roll informed the way we created songs. They’ve done<br />

loads of more ‘complex’ music in different outfits since their first<br />

recordings. We asked Danny the guitarist if it was hard to forget<br />

how to play the guitar for The Gories shows and he just acted like<br />

he had no idea what we were on about. It was kind of great that<br />

he didn’t understand how he was channelling all this primitivist<br />

noise.<br />

Do you have a favourite venue you’ve performed in? If so, what<br />

makes it special?<br />

Drop The Dumbulls Gallery. It’s got a great atmosphere and<br />

the shows are usually carnage. Plus, Jake and the staff are all<br />

sweethearts.<br />

If you could support any artist in the future, who would it be?<br />

Ohmns.<br />

What do you think is the overriding influence on your<br />

songwriting: other art, emotions, current affairs – or a mixture<br />

of all of these?<br />

Our lyrics tend to sound like blurred string of undiscernible barks,<br />

but there are actual words. They often materialise from a variety<br />

of different areas. Sometimes the visual arts, literature, cinema,<br />

experiences, mental health, politics and the general flotsam and<br />

jetsam of the human condition.<br />

Photography: Lauren Avery<br />

facebook.com/mincemeatmusic<br />

Mincemeat’s EP Aroma is out now.<br />

SPOTLIGHT<br />

35


Bristol electronic three-piece BEAK> have been a<br />

creative force for a decade now – and they continue<br />

to reach new heights on nothing but their own terms.<br />

Considering the immersive and compelling musical<br />

landscapes they’ve become known for, the concept behind the<br />

band is actually relatively simple: it’s about creating explorative<br />

music free from any bullshit or expectations.<br />

An outlet for the three to experiment and innovate away<br />

from their other musical endeavours, the band is in healthier<br />

shape than ever before (although you can be sure Geoff<br />

Barrow would have a self-deprecating joke to hand about that<br />

statement).<br />

Following another ambitious year on the road and in the<br />

studio, they’re hitting the Arts Club as part of their <strong>Dec</strong>ember<br />

UK tour. As Rhys Buchanan picked up the phone to bassist Billy<br />

Fuller to chat about their last 12 months, the ever-present sense<br />

of drive and community behind the band remains palpable.<br />

PREVIEWS<br />

So, two glorious releases in the last few years, how’s it all<br />

been in your world?<br />

It’s been super productive since we’ve done our third album<br />

[>>>] and the last EP [Life Goes On]. We’ve been going to new<br />

places as well which is always refreshing. This year Mexico has<br />

been really good for us – we never thought anything like that<br />

would ever happen, but we played a festival there and it seemed<br />

to just land, the crowd went crazy for it. So the organisers of the<br />

festival had us back for a show in Mexico City and Guadalajara<br />

a few weeks ago. Both shows sold out and they want us back<br />

again next year. When we first started to do Beak>, I never<br />

expected anything like that to happen. It’s crazy reaching such<br />

heavy heights. We’re just buzzing now and really excited for the<br />

upcoming UK tour.<br />

You’ve been a band for a long time now, do those moments<br />

keep you motivated?<br />

That’s always a massive motivation for us, getting to play all<br />

of these great places and seeing all of the happy faces. The<br />

other motivation is to make tunes that excite us away from the<br />

other bands that we’ve been in, which is the reason why we<br />

got together. It’s still a totally different experience; it’s the most<br />

interesting band that I’ve ever been in and long may it last. We<br />

wouldn’t do it if we weren’t having fun. It’s all about enjoying<br />

ourselves and making good music.<br />

Do you think that element of freedom is a massive part of<br />

Beak> for you guys?<br />

Yeh, sometimes it’s not even very serious. I don’t know if you’ve<br />

seen our live shows, but sometimes we just take the piss out<br />

of each other onstage. A friend of mine said the other day they<br />

heard someone saying we’re like a comedy act with songs inbetween.<br />

It’s mostly about when we get in the room together,<br />

we don’t discuss much, we just fire things around, some things<br />

land and some things don’t. We all come up with stuff, bring<br />

ideas in and other times we do it on the fly in the studio. There’s<br />

not much discussion about it, we’re just trying to push for<br />

something we haven’t done before. We don’t want to repeat<br />

ourselves from here on in.<br />

That seems true of your live schedule, as well: earlier in the<br />

year you played on a bridge in Bristol for Extinction Rebellion<br />

which felt quite spontaneous...<br />

That came about because I had to go into town for some<br />

shopping – I didn’t even know that was happening. I walked past<br />

Bristol Bridge and I was like, ‘Hang on a second what’s going<br />

on here?’ I was there for about an hour chatting to people and<br />

thought it would be cool if they were up for us doing it. We went<br />

to play some tunes there and played a different set to bring some<br />

attention to it all. It worked out really well, we did a couple of<br />

Gary Numan tunes like Cars because everyone was frustrated<br />

with the traffic, then we did a cover of Pigbag which went down<br />

great. I think there’s a good video of that online.<br />

This year you’ve got another Christmas charity event lined up<br />

helping the homeless in Bristol.<br />

Do you feel like it’s important to<br />

be engaged with the community<br />

as a band?<br />

You’ve always got to be active and<br />

look out for other people. We’ve<br />

always believed in that and will<br />

always do it. The ‘Give A Shit<br />

Christmas’ thing is something that<br />

we’ll do every <strong>Dec</strong>ember as long<br />

as we’re together. I don’t know<br />

what it’s like in Liverpool, but the<br />

scale of the homeless problem is<br />

the worst it’s ever been in Bristol.<br />

I don’t want to get too political,<br />

but I put a lot of blame on the Tory<br />

government and austerity for that.<br />

There should always be money available for a human being.<br />

Everybody is someone’s son or daughter out there and people<br />

are dying. It’s disgusting and we’re not up for it. That’s the<br />

reason why we do this event for local charities every year. Last<br />

year we raised £9,000 and, with a bigger venue, this year we’re<br />

hoping to get five times that.<br />

GIG<br />

BEAK><br />

EVOL @ Arts Club – 05/12<br />

“I don’t want to<br />

be responsible for<br />

boring anyone. I think<br />

it’s best to keep it<br />

interesting and keep<br />

the hooks coming”<br />

Constantly sharpening the edges of their three-sided setup, these<br />

masters of sonic immersion know better than most how to keep it<br />

sounding fresh.<br />

Speaking of that sense of community, to what extent does<br />

having Invada Studios at your disposal help the band’s fluidity?<br />

The fact that it’s there for us is invaluable to be honest. It’s like<br />

a miniature Motown. When you go in, it’s like the label. All the<br />

records are there ready for mailorder;<br />

the releases are everywhere,<br />

filed away. We rehearse in the<br />

same room that we record in.<br />

When it first started we could<br />

pick and choose when we went in.<br />

Now we have to book a lot further<br />

in advance. It’s great when we’re<br />

in because we have it and can do<br />

some serious damage. It’s deluxe,<br />

really. We’re spoilt.<br />

Your songs are quite sprawling<br />

and immersive. How disciplined<br />

do you need to be when it comes<br />

to playing live?<br />

As a live thing, we never do any jamming; there’s never any<br />

heads-down, doing a Hawkwind kind of thing. People are<br />

always surprised by that. Otherwise, if there was anything more<br />

to get out of it then we would do it on track. I’m not putting<br />

anyone down, but I find that when a band’s head goes down<br />

they just starting whacking on the wah-wah and the fuzz pedal<br />

and they’ve had one too many goes on the bong. It just bores<br />

me. I don’t want to be responsible for boring anyone. I think it’s<br />

best to keep it interesting and keep the hooks coming.<br />

They’ve been coming for some time now and it seems it will be<br />

that way long into the future?<br />

Yeh, it’s all a discipline because, ultimately, we go through a lot<br />

of pain to make an album. The first album was the easiest thing<br />

we’d ever done because we didn’t properly know each other back<br />

then. So, we went into the studio, had a cup of tea, set our gear<br />

up and just started playing. The first song on the first album is<br />

us playing for the very first time in the studio. That all came very<br />

quick and easy because it was so natural. Then you go on tour<br />

and find out who you are, then once you’re involved then you’re<br />

working within parameters from there on in. Album four, which<br />

we’re starting work on in the new year, will be another adventure/<br />

headache/brilliant experience. If we’re up, then hopefully we’ll<br />

carry on making good and interesting music. That’s where it lies<br />

really. It’s not that difficult to think about, if we’re happy then the<br />

music will come out the back of it. !<br />

Words: Rhys Buchanan / @Rhys_Buchanan<br />

Photography: Daniel Patlán-Desde<br />

@BeakBristol<br />

Beak> play Arts Club on Thursday 5th <strong>Dec</strong>ember. Life Goes On is<br />

available now via Invada Records.<br />

PREVIEWS<br />

37


STUDIO ELECTROPHONIQUE is the new project of<br />

former High Hazels frontman James Leesley. The<br />

first signing to Violette Records which isn’t a Micheal<br />

Head project, the debut Electrophonique EP Buxton<br />

Palace Hotel sees Leesley and his ‘imaginary band’ create a<br />

microcosm which lies somewhere between kitchen sink drama<br />

and The Velvet Underground. Balancing love and its inevitable<br />

pitfalls with a raw yet delicate sound, the Steel City balladeer’s<br />

first output has already captured the imaginations of the likes of<br />

Richard Hawley and Pete Paphides.<br />

On a cold Friday night, Matthew Hogarth caught him on the<br />

other end of the line shortly after a winter evening kick-a-bout.<br />

PREVIEWS<br />

Sonically, the songs sound a bit like The Velvet Underground<br />

if they’d recorded in the North of England. Who and what<br />

influenced you to start Studio Electrophonique?<br />

I’ve been listening to music all my life, a lot of different varied<br />

things. The Velvets kind of got me into music properly, but<br />

growing up I listened to Oasis and Coldplay on the radio. They<br />

were on the radio, but obviously you kind of get into the darker<br />

and more obscured side in your own time. I’ve been playing<br />

music for a long time with a band but that kind of ran its course,<br />

quite naturally, and I just had a lot of ideas in my head that<br />

weren’t complicated enough that they’d need a band. In a way<br />

they were almost on a four-track up there, in my head. I felt like<br />

my head only had enough space for the melodies and a bigger<br />

accompaniment in mind. I’ve always wanted a four-track. I’ve<br />

never been a technical wizard by any stretch of the imagination<br />

and always stayed away from the likes of Logic and all that. I’ve<br />

always focused on writing the songs and left the recording to<br />

someone who knew what they were doing.<br />

So what attracted you to recording on four-track?<br />

It was only after I stepped away from being in the band that I<br />

thought I could do with an easy bit of equipment to record on.<br />

A lot of my favourite bands have used both four-tracks and<br />

eight-tracks over the years, and some of them recordings I love.<br />

I thought it must be a good enough place to start. So I just got<br />

myself a knackered old Fostex X-15 just to play around with and<br />

work it out. I’ve never worked with cassette before, and I thought<br />

if I can get ’em down on tape it’ll feel quite nice, push me down a<br />

route that I may not have gone down if I’d gone into the studio.<br />

I recorded the tracks in the spare room in me house which made<br />

it naturally a lot more hushed and quiet, because I couldn’t be<br />

blaring the place down. So I got ’em down without having any<br />

intentions of anyone hearing them; I know that’s a cliché, but I<br />

genuinely just thought I’ve got to clear some space out. It were<br />

just a bit of fun that I’d go upstairs in mine after work and just<br />

get a few songs down. I’ve got a couple of little old Casio organs,<br />

80s ones with only one or two good sounds on ’em. I just used<br />

those and an old Philicorda organ which I picked up for about a<br />

hundred quid, which provided a table for everything. I wanted to<br />

limit myself to just that and record it to tape. Luckily, I got a few<br />

tunes down and it echoed the old 60s recordings and modern<br />

bands demos that I loved. It had a really nice warmth.<br />

Lyrically, Buxton Palace Hotel seems to be a pretty personal<br />

EP. Would you agree with this?<br />

I’ve never been someone to overthink how it’s going to be<br />

received. Through practising, over the years I’ve come upon a<br />

style whereby it’s more the thoughts that people are having<br />

that they would never say. It can be very exposing. It’s all about<br />

putting your thoughts out there. If you look at the approach of<br />

the likes of Morrissey, Stuart Murdoch of Belle And Sebastian<br />

and Lou Reed, the thing they’ve all got is a really sensitive side.<br />

I wanted it to feel like it was just one person listening to it. I<br />

wanted it to feel very real. The fact that I was in a collaborative<br />

band meant that occasionally I would maybe doctor a few lyrics<br />

to make it more acceptable. There’s no reason for a filter, which<br />

makes everything a lot easier.<br />

When you’re on your own, there’s no one to stop it. The speed<br />

I could work at was so much<br />

quicker. It’s the first time I’ve used<br />

characters in my work; a lot of the<br />

stuff is personal but I’ve managed<br />

to put it into characters and the<br />

lyrics could be about anyone.<br />

The atmosphere of some of the<br />

tracks often feels quite isolated,<br />

lyrically blending romance with<br />

darker tones. Would you agree?<br />

Subconsciously, I was always<br />

trying to keep the balance between<br />

the two. I was basically trying to<br />

take you to a place for a moment,<br />

however long that may be. If I’m in<br />

the mood for a band I can create a<br />

little world which I can just access. I wanted to take people away<br />

for a little while.<br />

The intention was to make it underthought. I wanted to get it<br />

straight from my brain to the machine. I wanted to do it in the<br />

now. It is quite warm sounding but when it gets quite bleak, I try<br />

to bring it back. I wanted it to be so intimate it could fall apart at<br />

any point. All my friends who were into stuff were really into it. I<br />

didn’t have any idea if it was any good.<br />

GIG<br />

“The intention for my<br />

music was to make it<br />

underthought: straight<br />

from my brain to the<br />

machine. I wanted<br />

to do it in the now”<br />

STUDIO<br />

ELECTROPHONIQUE<br />

La Violette Società @ Studio2 – 20/12<br />

Hushed, attentive tones crafted in the dead of night - James Leesley’s<br />

new solo endeavour captures an honest, moonlit reflection of solitude.<br />

You’re the first artist to release on<br />

Violette Records who’s not Mick<br />

Head. How does that feel?<br />

I was a bit apprehensive because<br />

they hadn’t released anyone else.<br />

But I sent it to them because I<br />

really liked what they stood for,<br />

and obviously I’m a big fan of Mick<br />

Head. I thought, ‘May as well, and<br />

they might like it’. I don’t think they<br />

planned to put it out to be honest,<br />

but they just went, ‘This is alright<br />

and we haven’t really got anything<br />

else coming out,’ and it was doable.<br />

I think I was quite quick and easy to<br />

work with so it wasn’t a matter of<br />

waiting around. It moved really quickly and I think that helped.<br />

Matty [Lockett, Violette Records] said he just wanted to put out<br />

good records that they like.<br />

With High Hazels you’ve already got a decent fan base, but sell<br />

out-shows are no mean feat in Liverpool and you obviously did<br />

really well across the country and Paris. How does this feel?<br />

We couldn’t buy a gig at times, it was really difficult. But with this<br />

I kind of didn’t even plan to play live. The first gigs I did were with<br />

Richard Hawley. My first gig was in Holmfirth supporting him,<br />

and two gigs in London. Both were over a thousand capacity<br />

each. Luckily, I had a bit of live experience but I had to play<br />

quick and learn fast. If it went wrong I’d look the biggest fool in<br />

the world. I think a lot of [the success] has been [down to] the<br />

venues that have been dressed up nice. I wanted to do stuff<br />

that was a little bit different. Luckily the Violette guys sorted the<br />

Scandinavian Church in Liverpool and I managed to sort out the<br />

Lantern Theatre in Sheffield. It took a good couple of months to<br />

even get in touch with them. In the end, I went to this strange<br />

gig on a Thursday night just to see a human who worked there.<br />

I got chatting about Sheffield Utd and he passed me a number<br />

and I eventually got in. Roy, who runs the live side of things for<br />

Violette, played the show with me and did spoken word and<br />

people loved it. It was more of an experience and people loved it<br />

as a night. I think it was a bit of pot luck to be fair.<br />

Paris was daft. They were so nice. There was a massive spread<br />

and a bath of beer. I felt like this is how it should be. !<br />

Words: Matthew Hogarth<br />

Photography: Ryan Lee Turton<br />

violetterecords.com/studio-electrophonique<br />

Buxton Palace Hotel is available now on Violette Records.<br />

Studio Electrophonique plays La Violette Società’s Christmas<br />

Special on Friday 20th <strong>Dec</strong>ember, with Toria Garbutt, Daisy Gill<br />

and Roy.<br />

PREVIEWS<br />

39


PREVIEWS<br />

CLUB<br />

SOLOMUN/<br />

GROOVE ARMADA<br />

Various venues – 21/12 and 31/12<br />

Circus Christmas Special<br />

Circus and Chibuku have your festive party season covered with two heavyweight shows that will give you every<br />

reason to get off the couch and escape the TV repeats.<br />

YOUSEF presents a special Circus Christmas party at Bramley-Moore Dock on 21st <strong>Dec</strong>ember, with house<br />

music superstar SOLOMUN helming what will be a huge show down on the docks. The Bosnian-born DJ has been<br />

a titan of house and techno music for almost a decade, regularly scooping industry awards while running successful labels<br />

(Diynamic, 2DIY4), clubs (Ego) and multiple Ibiza residencies (Pacha, Ushuaïa). Solomun’s emotional take on European house<br />

music is characterised by ultra funky basslines and euphoric melodies, reflective of his love of hip hop, soul and funk.<br />

Circus have re-tooled the vast warehouse space at Bramley-Moore as an ideal venue for raving and partying, and the<br />

location will add a new dimension to their famed Christmas party blowout. Leeds’ globetrotting deep house technician HOT<br />

SINCE 82 brings an element of energy and dram to proceedings. “King Of Space” DJ STEVE LAWLER also joins the party,<br />

hosted by Circus maestro Yousef and also featuring ENZO SIRAGUSA.<br />

And if that wasn’t enough for you, Chibuku come up trumps with a New Year’s Eve party to cap off the year in fine style.<br />

Chart-topping big beat duo GROOVE ARMADA return to Liverpool for the first time in a decade, with a DJ set at Invisible<br />

Wind Factory that dwarfs that 2009 set at Barfly for a Circus Easter special. The global stars have since played Creamfields<br />

on numerous occasions, but their mix of electronic, house and trip hop is equally suited to more intimate clubs.<br />

Having picked up a Grammy nomination (Superstylin’), soundtracked entire advert breaks, worked with artists as diverse<br />

as Neneh Cherry and Richie Havens, and set up the popular Lovebox festival, the duo have very little still to achieve in the<br />

game. Through decks and FX shows and a series of dancefloor EPs, Groove Armada have marked a return to the DIY spirit of<br />

the warehouse turntables where the project first began. Go on, sign off the year in style.<br />

EXHIBITION<br />

THEASTER GATES:<br />

AMALGAM<br />

Tate Liverpool – 13/12/19-03/05/<strong>2020</strong><br />

Chicago-based artist THEASTER GATES is one of the world’s most influential living artists,<br />

working across social and urban issues that speak to the same ethos of community<br />

fracturing that has been highlighted by the work around Granby in Liverpool. Having studied<br />

urban planning – alongside a joint masters in religion, ceramics and city design – Gates’ work<br />

shows how art can transform places and improve the lives of the people who live there. He is best<br />

known for his projects in the South Side of Chicago, where he has redeveloped abandoned buildings<br />

for community use.<br />

Gates also worked as a potter for 15 years, which taught him the power of making something from<br />

only bare materials. “I feel like as a potter you also start to learn how to shape the world,” he commented<br />

in a TED talk he gave, titled How To Revive A Neighbourhood: With Imagination, Beauty and Art.<br />

In Amalgam, Gates explores the complex and interweaving issues of race, territory and inequality in<br />

the United States, from the slightly curious starting point of Malaga. Not that Malaga, however. During the<br />

19th Century, this small island off the coast of Maine, USA, was home to an ethnically mixed community.<br />

In 1912, on the orders of the state governor, Malaga’s inhabitants were forcibly removed to the mainland.<br />

They were offered no housing, jobs or support.<br />

The exhibition uses sculpture, installation, film and dance to highlight this history. A new film, Dance<br />

Of Malaga <strong>2019</strong>, features the choreography of acclaimed American dancer, Kyle Abraham, while Gates’<br />

musical collective, The Black Monks, provide the score. Their blues and gospel-inspired sound can be<br />

heard throughout the exhibition, continuing into an immersive ‘forest’ installation.<br />

Launching at the same time in Tate’s neighbouring Wolfson Gallery, a new exhibition of work by<br />

VIVIAN SUTER provides an immersive installation of tropical landscapes of Guatemala. A maze of Suter’s<br />

large-scale hanging paintings brings to life the organic elements – such as volcanic and botanical matter –<br />

that the Argentinian artist is surrounded by during her everyday life.<br />

Theaster Gates<br />

ticketquarter.co.uk<br />

EVENT DISCOVERY PARTNER<br />

40


GIG<br />

Aldous Harding<br />

Arts Club – 04/12<br />

Aldous Harding<br />

Returning with her third record in April, for many, ALDOUS<br />

HARDING’s Designer is an understated contender for album of<br />

the year. The New Zeland-born, Cardiff-based singer-songwriter<br />

has crafted a varied selection of wonky folk since arriving with her<br />

eponymous debut in 2014, but Designer sees Harding achieve new<br />

levels of eccentricity and panache. From start to finish the record<br />

is assured in its oddness and comfortably blends the abstract<br />

with her winsome songwriting formula. Rather than force its point<br />

home, the record beckons you into its world, one that remains often<br />

indecipherable but aboundingly charming. Taking centre stage at Arts<br />

Club, Harding will offer a hazy, sun-kissed escape from the winter chill.<br />

MUSICAL<br />

Miracle On 34th Street: The Musical<br />

The Playhouse – 07/12/19-04/01/20<br />

Miracle On 34th Street has been spreading festive cheer, in various guises,<br />

since the 1947 feature film that picked up three Oscars. Via a novel,<br />

TV series and the much-celebrated 1994 feature film starring Richard<br />

Attenborough, it has become a Christmas staple. Meredith Wilson’s lyrical<br />

rendering of the story of six-year-old Susan, a Christmas sceptic, and Kris<br />

Kringle, is brought to sparkling life on stage as a musical, which gives<br />

centre stage to the famed seasonal song, It’s Beginning To Look A Lot Like<br />

Christmas. The set of Macy’s is brought to the Playhouse stage, with a<br />

story specially tweaked for a Liverpool audience, which will get Christmas<br />

lovers of all ages in the mood for festive magic.<br />

Miracle On 34th Street<br />

GIG<br />

Judy Collins<br />

Grand Central Hall – 11/01/20<br />

JUDY COLLINS has been an omnipresent force in music for the best part of five decades. In<br />

that time she’s featured on 55 records and inspired millions with her contributions to folk<br />

music and Americana. As well as performing to countless audiences since the 1960s, the<br />

American singer songwriter as drawn in praises from Rufus Wainwright, Shawn Colvin,<br />

Dolly Parton, Joan Baez and Leonard Cohen, who all honoured her legacy by featuring on<br />

the album Born To The Breed: A Tribute To Judy Collins. An artist of such stature deserves<br />

a stage to match, and the opulent backdrop of Grand Central Hall will be the perfect fit<br />

when she arrives in Liverpool for an exhibition of vulnerable songwriting littered with social<br />

activism and determination.<br />

CLUB<br />

Crazy P Soundsystem<br />

Constellations – 31/12<br />

The final New Year’s Eve party at Constellations takes on epic proportions under the<br />

stewardship of Melodic Distraction. No holds will be barred for this grand celebration of the<br />

Greenland Street venue, which will be winding down operations in <strong>2020</strong>. Cosmic disco dons<br />

CRAZY P are charged with piloting this closing party (of sorts) to another dimension, which<br />

will make for the perfect kind of celebration. Shimmering with pop, throbbing with electronica<br />

and slinking with disco, revellers will prepared to blast off into <strong>2020</strong> in the highest of spirits.<br />

The Soundsystem is a club variation on Crazy P’s live setup, and will feature live vocals from<br />

Danielle Moore. Melodic Distraction DJs will be joined by a host of the region’s finest selectors<br />

in getting things primed for this huge signing off party.<br />

THEATRE<br />

Four To The Floor<br />

Invisible Wind Factory – 22/01-25/01/20<br />

Four To The Floor<br />

A history of dance music is rendered in this off-site performance from the Unity Theatre and production company Turntable<br />

Theatre, which is also your invitation to the closing part of the century. Inspired by Earl Young’s 4/4 beat that revolutionised<br />

music for dancing, this immersive theatre show with an electronic heartbeat charts dance music’s progression from the disco<br />

to the underground rave scene, via youth culture, political movements and superstar DJs. The action takes place wherever it<br />

needs to rather than be confined to the stage: the audience is placed at the heart of the narrative, blurring the lines between<br />

theatre and a rave. Real dancefloor stories are told in thrilling fashion, touching on the effects of gentrification, ‘luxury living’<br />

and city growth on rave culture.<br />

GIG<br />

The Flying Luttenbachers<br />

Kazimier Stockroom – 20/12<br />

Weasel Walter’s shape-shifting collective THE FLYING LUTTENBACHERS have been in existence,<br />

in various forms, since 1991. Taking in prog, punk jazz and no waves elements (among many<br />

others), the outfit has deconstructed music and reality via a multitude of seminal releases. Anyone<br />

trying to keep up with Walter and his Luttenbachers – or the constant line-up changes – will attest<br />

to the group’s commitment to exploring extremities in music. The current line-up will see a quartet<br />

of guitar, bass, drums and saxophone, under Walter’s tutelage, engage in the kind of explosive<br />

free jazz improvisations that feature on the group’s recently released album Imminent Death.<br />

Liverpool’s own DIY pop experimenter CLAIRE WELLES offers support, alongside Manchester’s<br />

sonic adventurers YOSSARIANS and no wave goth soundscape artists JEZEBEL. Tickets available<br />

now from TicketQuarter.co.uk.<br />

The Flying Luttenbachers<br />

PREVIEWS<br />

41


REVIEWS<br />

Daughters (Tomas Adam)<br />

“The entire<br />

experience is<br />

anxiety-inducing and<br />

downright unnerving,<br />

like watching a<br />

good horror film”<br />

Daughters<br />

+ Jeromes Dream<br />

Harvest Sun @ Arts Club – 01/11<br />

DAUGHTERS triumphantly returned after an eight-year-long<br />

hiatus with one of the most twisted and harrowing albums of<br />

the past decade, You Won’t Get What You Want. The album is<br />

a surprising and rewarding continuation of their earlier work;<br />

Daughters embrace the sounds of no wave and industrial music,<br />

without sacrificing the hectic noise-rock edge they perfected over<br />

their short, yet lasting, discography.<br />

Tonight’s support, JEROMES DREAM, are something of<br />

hardcore legends in their home state of Connecticut. The shortlived<br />

outfit were together for a mere four years in the late 90s,<br />

releasing two albums, both of which were one of the first to be<br />

recorded by seminal producer Kurt Ballou, essentially the Nile<br />

Rodgers of heavy music. They return after nearly two decades<br />

of silence without skipping a beat. During their original stint, the<br />

band refused to use microphones and even play on the stage,<br />

often setting up on the floor. Rejecting convention, the music is<br />

often angular and inharmonious, favouring screeching guitars<br />

and violent screams. Cuts from their new untitled record like<br />

Drone Before Parlor Violence are more melodic, and hark back to<br />

the nostalgic emo and post-hardcore of the late 90s, yet hardly<br />

sound dated in the slightest. Long droning sections in Half-In<br />

A Bantam Canopy see the band embracing post-rock in a way<br />

they previously haven’t. Everything about them serves as a big<br />

middle finger to the mainstream. Frontman and bassist Jeff Smith<br />

screams into a microphone with his back to the audience and<br />

doesn’t say a single word in between songs. The message is loud<br />

and clear, but he could at least turn around and give the kids who<br />

are to see him a wave?<br />

There is an air of anticipation as Daughters take to the<br />

stage. The music dies out and a familiar tune plays over the<br />

loudspeakers; the beautiful post-punk classic Goodbye Horses<br />

by Q Lazzarus. The walk on reference is two-fold: firstly, as a<br />

nod to Daughters’ embrace of the new wave sounds of the 70s<br />

and 80s; secondly, and more notably, the song’s legacy is forever<br />

intertwined with its iconic use in the classic film The Silence Of<br />

The Lambs. In the spine-chilling scene, serial killer Buffalo Bill<br />

gets all dolled up and films himself singing along to the song with<br />

his penis tucked between his legs. All the while his latest victim<br />

tries to escape becoming a part of his “woman suit”. Sleazy,<br />

depraved and sex-obsessed, Daughters take to the stage.<br />

Given the introspective nature of You Won’t Get What You<br />

Want, one might expect the audience to be awestruck and<br />

inward during their performance. We quickly realise this is not<br />

the case as they begin The Reason They Hate Me. Frontman<br />

Alexis S.F. Marshall assumes control with a bloody forehead and<br />

brings all the energy of The Dillinger Escape Plan to Arts Club.<br />

He stage dives, climbs on top of speakers, wraps the mic cable<br />

around his neck. A man after GG Allin’s heart, he puts his fingers<br />

down his throat, spews an ungodly amount of saliva onto his<br />

hand and wipes is all over his face. The band have clearly not lost<br />

their roots on The Lords Song, which is the closest they sound on<br />

their latest record to their earlier days.<br />

There is a healthy mix of old and new, squeezing in blistering<br />

songs like The Virgin and Our Queens (One Is Many, Many Are<br />

One) from 2010’s self-titled album, with the common thread<br />

being the wild and shrieking guitar sounds that only Daughters<br />

can make. Songs like the crooner Less Sex and Satan In The Wait<br />

are where the band steps into new territory. The beautiful synth<br />

lines in the latter sound like they could be right out of a Peter<br />

Gabriel song, giving the audience a well needed breather before<br />

returning to the punishing, throbbing latter half of the song as<br />

Marshall screams “This world is opening up”.<br />

Marshall’s lyrics transport you right into the twisted mind of<br />

a mad man. There’s something deeply unsettling and apocalyptic<br />

about the poetry of the closer, Ocean Song, the story of a man<br />

overcome with paranoia at the banality of everyday life, who<br />

simply begins to run from his home. “The shadow haunts him<br />

for several yards/The ghosts of what he was, desperate to keep<br />

up until gone”. Seeing the song performed live verges on an<br />

exorcism, for Marshall and for the audience. The entire experience<br />

is anxiety-inducing and downright unnerving, like watching a<br />

good horror film. For those who can stomach them, Daughters<br />

have become one of the most compelling bands in recent<br />

memory. !<br />

Joel Durksen / @joeldurksen<br />

Daughters (Tomas Adam)<br />

42


She Drew The Gun<br />

+ Peaness<br />

+ Mamatung<br />

EVOL @ O2 Academy – 09/11<br />

I’ve been lucky enough to see SHE DREW THE GUN a<br />

few times over the years. From the Buyers Club loft in 2016 to<br />

Glastonbury’s Park Stage in 2017, The John Peel Stage in <strong>2019</strong>,<br />

to a slot on this year’s BBC Radio 6 Music Festival at Liverpool’s<br />

Olympia. Their stages keep getting larger and their audiences<br />

greater. But there is something about a headline hometown gig<br />

in the main room of the O2 that feels bigger than all of these<br />

previous gigs. After all, there’s no place like home. A home crowd<br />

is special. No other city will get to experience this night.<br />

It might feel like She Drew The Gun appeared out of nowhere<br />

and grabbed a headline tour and slots on some of the most<br />

famous stages in the world, but it’s been a long and eventful<br />

road. After winning Glastonbury’s Emerging Talent competition<br />

in 2016, Louisa Roach has been splashed all over the radio,<br />

been to Texas for SXSW and toured around Europe spreading<br />

the message of her revolution. If anyone is going to bring people<br />

together for a cause and a dance it’s these guys.<br />

They’re known for their part gig, part political rallies. Their<br />

music aids their message with a beat, not relentless shouting<br />

like we’re used to seeing on the TV. If you’ve listened before, you<br />

know this is what to expect at these shows. Roach encourages<br />

sisters and brothers of the audience and her revolution to come<br />

together in Sweet Harmony – as one of their songs suggest. It<br />

works. We’re pretty used to coming together here in Liverpool.<br />

This tour is to support She Drew The Gun’s second<br />

album, Revolution Of Mind. It’s an album of the times we<br />

are living in; a critique of the systems we are living in. Roach<br />

comments on everything from<br />

personal relationships, capitalism,<br />

depression, global war, politics,<br />

feminism. The list goes on. But she<br />

doesn’t preach, she raises current,<br />

everyday issues for us to think about<br />

and act upon – politically charged<br />

track Poem reminds us of this.<br />

It’s a wet and windy Saturday<br />

night but that doesn’t stop people<br />

turning up for tonight’s show.<br />

Psychedelic trio MAMATUNG fill the<br />

stage with a range of instruments<br />

to kick off the festivities, with vocals<br />

and tracks reminiscent of Kate Bush<br />

and Haim. It’s fitting for tonight’s allfemale<br />

line-up.<br />

Chester’s PEANESS fit right into the second support slot with<br />

their sun-soaked indie-pop that once again touches on politics,<br />

Brexit and breakfast. The room is near full to bursting for their set<br />

and it’s nice to see people turning up to support the support. The<br />

contagiously charming trio are a joy to watch.<br />

By the time the lights dim for She Drew The Gun, fists<br />

are already in the air, deep bass rumbles through the floor, a<br />

shredding guitar cuts through the anticipation and they delve<br />

“Roach encourages<br />

sisters and brothers<br />

of the audience<br />

and her revolution<br />

to come together<br />

in Sweet Harmony”<br />

right into Resister, the first track off Revolution Of Mind. It’s one<br />

of their most recognised songs and a perfect crowd-pleaser<br />

to kick off the evening. Carrying on with Something For The<br />

Pain and Wolf And Bird, each song carries a different theme<br />

and style. From the ethereal chillness of Since You Were Not<br />

Mine to the grungy bass of Paradise,<br />

the setlist tells a story of Roach’s<br />

thoughts and feelings about all<br />

aspects of the world today. Some<br />

tracks like Arm Yourself, which<br />

Roach claims we should do against<br />

the Tory government, inspire fists<br />

of solidarity in the air, while others,<br />

like Pit Pony, just encourage a bit<br />

of a dance. There’s spoken word,<br />

rapping, singing and moments<br />

where the music speaks for itself.<br />

It’s a show that keeps on giving.<br />

Roach ends with a list of thank<br />

yous. She thanks her mum, friends<br />

and the audience for spending a<br />

rainy Saturday night with them with<br />

closer Thank You. It’s an ode to all the great female musicians<br />

who have come before her, from Aretha Franklin to Joni Mitchell,<br />

PJ Harvey and Tracy Chapman. If She Drew The Gun keep<br />

performing like they did tonight, it won’t be long until we can add<br />

Louisa Roach to aforementioned group of influential women. !<br />

Sophie Shields<br />

She Drew The Gun (Keith Ainsworth / arkimages.co.uk)<br />

FEET<br />

+ Courting<br />

I Love Live Events @ Sound – 03/11<br />

COURTING’s sound is the future. A very near future, but<br />

a future nonetheless. Whether you like their staggered drum<br />

patterns or harsh vocals, it doesn’t matter. They conspire to drag<br />

you into their own vision of the 21st Century. Following similar<br />

sonic patterns as <strong>2019</strong> breakouts Black Midi, as well as sharing<br />

anthemic choruses with Shame, debut single Not Yr Man is as<br />

punk as it is rock. Tonight they’re sharing a stage with band who<br />

are similar but more mature. FEET, with their leather jacket look<br />

and determined presence on stage, are brutally honest in the<br />

type of music they produce. They’ve chopped between band<br />

members before finally settling on a group they feel most capable<br />

of producing their debut album – something they successfully did<br />

at the beginning of October, just a few weeks before they take<br />

centre stage here in Liverpool.<br />

Courting strike first, hurling blankets of riffs across the<br />

cold concrete walls in the Sound basement. Tonight they are<br />

without a bass player, yet they still manage to create a bespoke<br />

atmosphere of “meandering sonic mess”. This self-prescribed<br />

genre tag is printed on their first batch of merchandise and they<br />

seem to deliver an ironic sensibility to the sentiment; the music<br />

is tight and they are captivating to watch. Courting catch their<br />

best moments when they feel visceral rather than cerebral; the<br />

panting and screaming on unreleased tracks leave breadcrumbs<br />

of multiple genres and it is up to the crowd tonight to follow them<br />

on their march. Luckily, they’re there every step of the way.<br />

Four songs in and lead singer Sean Murphy-O’Neill has<br />

stepped into the crowd, (something he looks to have flirted with<br />

for a while, but finally plucked up the courage to do). He parades<br />

a cowbell and proceeds to hand it out to spectators as they try<br />

to keep the rhythm of the song intact. Coincidentally, it is in the<br />

fleeting manner that Courting attain the most telling moments of<br />

melodic cohesion. Equally, it is these moments that most resonate<br />

through with listeners.<br />

Key to this connection is their stroke of lyrical humour: “I<br />

kinda wanna take the lads on tour and go to Pontins” Murphy-<br />

O’Neill chants. It is in these brief instances where he has the<br />

crowd in the palm of his hand, and the cowbell in the other.<br />

Feet are here tonight in support of their new debut album<br />

What’s Inside Is More Than Just Ham. Despite the comical title,<br />

there is a dramatic sense of seriousness about this band; they<br />

sing with purpose. Each drum beat wraps around the stage and<br />

demands total involvement as they sway on the stand-out Good<br />

Richard’s Crash Landing. Even before they manage to whisper<br />

the first lyric, the crowd are primed to jump the gun and are<br />

hanging on every word.<br />

There is plenty to admire here. Almost romantic red lights<br />

shine across the room, and it’s hard to tell whether they convey a<br />

feeling of love and lust, or resentment and anger. Perhaps both.<br />

Feet are a band that reside in the empowered juxtaposition. It’s<br />

their ability to dance effortlessly between a plethora of emotions<br />

makes their live shows so in demand, so enthralling.<br />

Feet are definitely building momentum. Even for a handful of<br />

people gathered on a freezing Sunday night, it’s easy to see why.<br />

For now, it is their best kept secret.<br />

Daniel Ponzini / @daniel_ponzini<br />

REVIEWS 43


REVIEWS<br />

Black Lips (Stuart Moulding / @Oohshootstu)<br />

Black Lips<br />

+ Yammerer<br />

+ Ohmns<br />

EVOL @ Arts Club – 13/11<br />

With a status as revered and prolific as Atlantan garage punks BLACK<br />

LIPS, they’re a band you have to see to believe. Rewind eight years and<br />

they were well known (or extremely notorious) at venues around the<br />

world. Gigs would descend into urinating and nudity on stage, just a<br />

small sample of their reputation. In the years that followed, they became<br />

somewhat controversial figures within the punk scene.<br />

It’s <strong>2019</strong> now. Have Black Lips mellowed with age? Has craziness<br />

stirred through the years? With a full supporting cast of Liverpool’s own<br />

punks in tow, the scene is set to see if the notoriety still rings true.<br />

As has been said a thousand times before – even by myself – but no<br />

less true: OHMNS know how to put on a show. They smash out classics<br />

from 2015 EP The Rice Tape. But what’s noticeable, particularly with the<br />

seven-minute version of Keshi Heads dedicated to Craig Charles, is how<br />

Ohmns elongate their riffs and a punk classic transforms into a sludgy jam<br />

that you can’t take your eyes off.<br />

Next on stage are Chester’s YAMMERER. With a lead singer who is<br />

wrapping himself in his microphone lead and has sunglasses on the back<br />

Snapped Ankles<br />

Harvest Sun @ Invisible Wind Factory Substation – 25/10<br />

of his head, Yammerer feel more like a performance art piece rather than<br />

a punk band. You don’t have to know which songs are which, which is<br />

probably a good thing. You can’t take home a coherent sentence from the<br />

microphone. But it matters little. You want to participate in the madness<br />

yourself. The entire set fluctuates between simmering anticipation to full<br />

blown pandemonium. What’s more punk than that?<br />

Black Lips immediately go for the jugular as they hit the stage, with<br />

only an hour until curfew. They start off with Arabia Mountain classic<br />

Family Tree. The crowd, which is hitherto relatively tame, splits into<br />

madness and fear of madness. People begin to spin and bump into each<br />

other, and some are courageous enough to crowd surf. You’re holding<br />

someone up by their boot, but it’s definitely all part of the fun of being in a<br />

crowd that energetic.<br />

They play a varied selection of songs, including tracks from 2015’s<br />

seminal album Let It Bloom and of course, their biggest hit O Katrina! The<br />

songs begin to mellow as they turn towards their album Sing In A World<br />

That’s Falling Apart, their forthcoming country-infused record.<br />

For the more hardcore garage punk fans, this might not be what<br />

they’ve come for, but it’s still captivating to witness a band’s sound<br />

evolving in this way. Line-up changes aside, Black Lips appear to have<br />

finally gelled together for the long term. They’ve matured and found<br />

comfort in the country, but they haven’t completely forgotten to give fans<br />

what they want.<br />

Georgia Turnbull / @GeorgiaRTbull<br />

Snapped Ankles (Mook Loxley / @MookLoxley)<br />

Or:la<br />

The Wonder Pot @ 24 Kitchen<br />

Street – 16/11<br />

24 Kitchen Street has remained a bastion<br />

in Liverpool’s underground electronic music<br />

scene over the years. It’s become a citadel for<br />

electronic music culture to grow and expand,<br />

break new ground and test its audience. It’s<br />

been six years since its inception, but it didn’t<br />

take long for it to emerge as one of Liverpool’s<br />

leading mixed-use independent music<br />

venues and arts spaces. Hosting regular club<br />

nights, performance art events and various<br />

workshops, it’s now renowned among the<br />

city’s creative community. Notably, Kitchen<br />

Street has allowed the electronic scene to grow<br />

at an unprecedented level, hosting hard-hitting<br />

DJs from Berlin to Detroit. But it hasn’t been a<br />

solo effort. Kitchen Street is the centre point<br />

of collaboration, working with innovative<br />

promoters such as The Wonderpot, Watt Hz??<br />

and Meine Nacht to introduce Liverpool to<br />

some of the most electrifying nights the city<br />

has witnessed in recent memory.<br />

To celebrate their sixth birthday, who<br />

better to take the reins than the Derryborn<br />

OR:LA. Starting her musical journey<br />

in Liverpool and a much-loved frequenter<br />

of Kitchen Street, Or:la has constantly been<br />

progressing since the start of her career.<br />

Originally DJing with Liverpool based nights<br />

such as Meine Nacht, she has moved onto<br />

become a resident at Manchester club monolith<br />

The Warehouse Project, as well as producing<br />

her own tracks for Hotflush, Deep Sea<br />

Frequencies and, more recently, her own label<br />

Céad.<br />

Walking into Kitchen Street, there is an<br />

immediate sense of warmth and a feeling of<br />

elevated spirits. A gathering of party people<br />

and electronic enthusiasts, creating the sort<br />

of vibe a birthday truly deserves. Immediately,<br />

as Or:la jumps behind the decks, she brings in<br />

her kaleidoscopic mix of genres, which varies<br />

from bass, breaks, techno and everything in<br />

between; ready to sway the people of Kitchen<br />

Street whichever direction she pleases.<br />

Through her guidance, the wide array of<br />

sounds fit snugly under one umbrella held aloft<br />

high above the decks, moving the crowd in a<br />

way that most DJs can’t achieve.<br />

A birthday occasion requires energy, and<br />

there is little shortage with the Kitchen Street<br />

native at the helm.<br />

Rhys Thomas<br />

44


Matisse: Drawing With Scissors<br />

Lady Lever Art Gallery – until March <strong>2020</strong><br />

Henri Matisse’s famous cut-out images can be found on<br />

postcards, fridge magnets and bookmarks worldwide. They’re as<br />

ubiquitous as they are well-loved, so it’s pleasing to see the Lady<br />

Lever Art Gallery host this touring exhibition from the Southbank<br />

Centre in London.<br />

This exhibition consists of 35 colourful lithographic<br />

reproductions made posthumously for the French art magazine<br />

Verve in 1958, based on the original cut-outs produced in the<br />

later years of Matisse’s life. As the viewer goes through the<br />

Nu bleu II (Blue Nude II), 1952 (lithographic reproduction, 1958). © Succession H. Matisse/ DACS <strong>2019</strong><br />

galleries, they are enticed into worlds of<br />

mermaids and dancing figures.<br />

The cut-outs, which include the<br />

renowned L’Escargot and Nu Bleu (I-IV),<br />

were produced between 1951 to 1953 by<br />

Matisse when he was rendered immobile<br />

as a result of chronic illness. Each work was<br />

completed with the aid of assistants, but<br />

very much under the watchful eye of Matisse,<br />

who was such a perfectionist that one of the<br />

assistants was near to physical exhaustion<br />

by the end of her time with him. His eye for<br />

perfection means that the works are beautiful<br />

and the figures fluid: the vivid pictures jump<br />

out at you across the room. There’s<br />

a sense of movement and vitality<br />

to the figures and the places they<br />

depict, referencing dance and<br />

Matisse’s travels to Tahiti, which he<br />

had visited in 1930.<br />

One of the astounding things<br />

about the originals is their size –<br />

L’Escargot is nearly three metres<br />

by three metres. The only clue<br />

to the scale of the originals is a<br />

small black and white photograph<br />

of Matisse directing an assistant<br />

from his wheelchair, pointing<br />

imperiously with a cane with the<br />

massive parakeet from 1952’s La<br />

Perruche et la Sirène looming large<br />

in the background. You can only imagine the effect<br />

these originals would have had – a charming detail<br />

is that Matisse’s doctor advised that he wear dark<br />

glasses to protect him from the visual assault – as even<br />

the smaller reproductions brighten up the galleries.<br />

It almost goes without saying that the prints are<br />

beautiful, and the trajectory through the exhibition,<br />

whichever direction you come in from, makes sense.<br />

The lighting levels mean the exhibition mercifully lacks<br />

the glare on the glass which hinders viewing other<br />

works in some galleries in the Lady Lever.<br />

Pieces have been metaphorically reframed for<br />

<strong>2019</strong>. The curation is caught between letting the art<br />

speak for itself and intervening and placing them in<br />

their cultural context and explaining, quite heavyhandedly<br />

at points, how and why the cultural context<br />

has changed.<br />

Undoubtedly, it’s good to reappraise art in light<br />

of new and welcomed cultural and societal norms<br />

L’Escargot (The Snail) 1952-53 (lithographic reproduction, 1958). © Succession H. Matisse/ DACS <strong>2019</strong>)<br />

and use pieces as a vehicle to discuss values and raise issues of<br />

inequality. At points, however, it seems unsure whether this is an<br />

exhibition where emphasis is on the art or whether the pieces are<br />

used as a vehicle to discuss society. This was particularly evident<br />

from the picture of Danseuse Créole where the accompanying<br />

description gives biographical information about the dancer<br />

Katherine Dunham on whom the picture was based. A 1963<br />

quotation from the dancer Josephine Baker, another of Matisse’s<br />

muses, about the horrendous effects of segregation, is painted<br />

across one of the galleries and could potentially have been better<br />

used or linked.<br />

The ‘pay what you think’ scheme for admission means the<br />

works will hopefully be seen by people whose purses don’t<br />

quite stretch to the £10-plus admission fees of the blockbuster<br />

exhibitions – which, let’s be honest, are most people in the<br />

current climate. It’s definitely worth a visit and will lift your spirits<br />

through the dark winter months.<br />

Jennie Macaulay<br />

To celebrate our first year in The Baltic, Liverpool,<br />

Dallas Prints is running a charity art auction with<br />

all proceeds going to Alder Hey Children’s Hospital<br />

and Great Ormond Street Hospital.<br />

We have 4 exclusive framed giclee prints up for<br />

grabs - all signed by the artists and limited to an<br />

edition of ONE.<br />

Artwork is provided kindly by world renowned<br />

artists The Singh Twins, Carne Griffiths<br />

(@carnegriff), Jason Hollis (@jsn_hollis) and<br />

Mike Badger (@mikebadgerart)<br />

The prints will feature<br />

Hahnemuhle’s new Natural<br />

Line of fine art papers<br />

which use unique raw<br />

materials: Bamboo,<br />

Hemp and Agave. The 4<br />

framed works will also be<br />

on display at The Tusk Bar<br />

until the auction’s closing<br />

date of 30 <strong>Dec</strong>ember <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

REVIEWS 45


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PLAYLIST<br />

Scientist<br />

+ Kiko Bun<br />

+ DJ Oxman and MC Magoo<br />

Positive Vibration @ District – 02/11<br />

Despite taking a year out from their annual festival offering,<br />

the Positive Vibration crew have certainly not been resting<br />

on their laurels. A series of high profile shows throughout the<br />

year, including Horseman, King Yellowman and Mad Professor,<br />

have kept the reggae chalice blazing in Liverpool and tonight<br />

is arguably the jewel in the crown as acclaimed dub pioneer<br />

SCIENTIST brings his seminal 1981 album Scientist Rids The<br />

World Of The Evil Curse Of The Vampires to the ever welcoming<br />

environs of District (not for the first time a District first-timer<br />

comments on its inclusive coolness).<br />

District is pretty packed from the off and the crowd are soon<br />

dancing to DJ OXMAN, aided and abetted by MC MAGOO, whose<br />

selection of rarities and classics is pure quality and leads us<br />

skanking into KIKO BUN’s support set. The versatile Bun, a member<br />

of the current South London scene that includes collaborators Loyle<br />

Carner and Tom Misch, seems equally at home delivering a lovers<br />

rock vibrato or a dancehall flow and mixes songs from his relatively<br />

modest recorded output, such as the bouncy Sticky Situation, with<br />

new material from his forthcoming debut album which sounds<br />

very promising indeed. The UPPER CUT BAND take no time at<br />

all to hit their stride, the rhythm section of Bob Pearce (drums)<br />

and Ross Erlam (bass) are immediately locked into the tightest of<br />

irresistible grooves, offbeat cymbal crashes sending the crowd<br />

dipping in unison. Marcin Bobkowski’s choppy guitar riffs and Cyrus<br />

Richards’s swirling keys blend exquisitely with the punchy horn riffs<br />

of Adam Webb (sax) and Jake Jacas (trombone).<br />

Frankly, if the crowd had just come for the Oxman DJ set and to<br />

see Kiko Bun and the Upper Cut Band they would have gone home<br />

handsomely rewarded. But yet, the main event is still to come; it is<br />

approaching Day Of The Dead midnight when Scientist appears<br />

at the mixing desk as quietly as one of the ghouls he is about to<br />

vanquish.<br />

Visible Women<br />

Liverpool Irish Festival @ Philharmonic<br />

Music Room – 23/10<br />

“What do they call me? My name is sweet thing,” sings LISA<br />

O’NEILL with a biting intensity. The County Cavan songwriter<br />

admits she’d been unsure whether it would be appropriate to<br />

cover Nina Simone’s Four Women for tonight’s Liverpool Irish<br />

Festival showcase; none of the song’s narrators are white, and<br />

they’re either subjects of slavery or live in its cruel wake.<br />

However, its themes of oppression, inequality and resilience<br />

will surely have a universal resonance for many listeners tonight.<br />

Her voice peaking, she drives down her heels one final time and<br />

lets out a chilling bawl of “Peaches!”. A battle cry signalling the<br />

strength found in sisterhood, it’s an incredible note to finish the<br />

evening on. Yet, O’Neill is only one of the four performers that<br />

make the Visible Women showcase so memorable this evening.<br />

Bilingual spoken-word artist CIARA NÍ É hosts. Having been<br />

assured that Liverpudlians are famously “a great craic”, her blend<br />

of Irish Gaelic with fierce, proudly feminist poetry immediately<br />

appeals. The rattle of Iggy Pop’s Lust For Life backdrops her spin<br />

on Irvine Welsh’s “choose life” Trainspotting monologue. It’s a<br />

powerful take, pitching provocative humour against hard-hitting<br />

naked truths.<br />

Captivating English songwriter MAZ O’CONNOR is the<br />

first singer to take centre stage. Drawing from her fourth album<br />

Chosen Daughter, which was influenced by the trials and<br />

torments of various female relatives, her timely and evocative<br />

set is steered by her pristine, delicately nuanced voice. Mary’s<br />

lyrics linger long after she takes her leave, whereas the direct<br />

thrust of Loved Me Better hears O’Connor take aim at dominant<br />

patriarchy. Limerick’s LAURA DUFF then follows, her sultry pop<br />

DJ Oxman (Glyn Akroyd / @glyn_akroyd)<br />

Scientist Rids The World Of The Evil Curse Of The Vampires is<br />

an epic and playful comic book title for an album that is generally<br />

regarded as a dub classic, taking previously released (and, in 1981,<br />

contemporary rather than established) material from the likes of<br />

Michael Prophet and The Wailing Souls, adding judicious twists of<br />

echo and reverb but never draining the originals of their integrity.<br />

The sound quality, which has been superb all night, is<br />

somehow taken up a notch. A fuller, brighter sound drawn out by<br />

Scientist’s sleight of hand (promoter Rory Taylor later comments,<br />

“We’ve used that PA thousands of times but I’ve never heard it<br />

sound like that before”).<br />

No self-indulgence here, or 20-minute dub outs – just the<br />

songs delivered in relatively concise form. The performance<br />

takes not much longer than the original album, the unassuming<br />

controller hunkered down behind the decks – situated off-stage to<br />

the right of the dancefloor – are all that separates Scientist from<br />

an audience who are facing away from him towards the stage. As<br />

the performance progresses more and more people are sneaking<br />

a wondering look over their right shoulders to try to get a clue as<br />

to how Scientist is conjuring up this sound. Who knows? He is a<br />

picture of unadulterated concentration, probably the only person in<br />

the building not dancing.<br />

Prophet’s Love And Unity becomes Your Teeth In My Neck;<br />

Wailing Souls’ Fire House Rock morphs into The Mummy’s Shroud,<br />

its memorable horn motif echoing long into night. Bun strides<br />

across the stage, arms aloft as the crowd sing every word of Blood<br />

On His Lips (Wayne Jarrett’s Love In My Heart). The Upper Cut<br />

Band prove equally adept at soloing as they do nailing down a<br />

groove: horns, guitar, and keys all stepping out of the shadows to<br />

be transformed by Scientist’s sound-shifting searchlight.<br />

From the sea of bobbing heads audience members shout<br />

out their praise – “Thank you, thank you, massive tune that was”,<br />

“Sick album, fucking wicked man” – smiling faces and cheers<br />

signalling universal agreement until Scientist, his exorcism<br />

complete, smiles at last and disappears.<br />

It has been a night of understated brilliance, a mixture of<br />

science, alchemy and magic to rid us of our demons.<br />

Glyn Akroyd / @glynakroyd<br />

Lisa O’Neill (Tomas Adam)<br />

inflections bringing more groove to proceedings. Humbled, she<br />

talks about how empowered she feels to be part of this bill.<br />

Still reeling from the last time we caught her, it’s a joy to<br />

see O’Neill make her grand return to Liverpool. A powerhouse,<br />

like Simone, Björk and Karen Dalton rolled into one, she’s a<br />

storyteller and songwriter of remarkable depth. Opener What<br />

A Voice says it all. Backdropped by the Liver bird, tales of<br />

cormorants, wrens and blackbirds circle overhead. “It’s good<br />

to shine a little light on madness, it’s in us all,” she grins before<br />

Violet Gibson; its daring chorus, “I moved in silence, for the love<br />

o’ truth, not violence” feeling particularly apt as we look back<br />

over the showcase.<br />

David Weir / @Betweenseeds<br />

ADD TO PLAYLIST is the monthly<br />

column brought to you by MELODIC<br />

DISTRACTION RADIO, delving into the<br />

fold of the newest releases on the dance<br />

music spectrum. If you’re into 808s,<br />

sample pads, DJ tools and everything in<br />

between, then you’re in good company.<br />

V/A<br />

NH Vol. 3<br />

Nervous Horizon<br />

Nervous Horizon have swiftly<br />

established themselves as<br />

one of the most potent labels<br />

in the game. Nominated for<br />

Best Breakthrough Label in the DJ Mag awards this very<br />

year, they’ve become synonymous with experimental yet<br />

club-ready sounds and the new, percussion-driven London<br />

style. Drawing on a global palette of reggaeton, taraxxo,<br />

gqom and dabke, as well as techno and bass, old favourites<br />

DJ Plead and label co-head TSVI join newcomers Tzusing,<br />

Object Blue and hard drum prodigy, Ehua, who plays in<br />

Liverpool on the 6th <strong>Dec</strong>ember.<br />

Bella Boo<br />

Once Upon<br />

A Passion<br />

Studio Barnhus<br />

Studio Barnhus’ latest<br />

release features LA producer<br />

Bella Boo with a debut full-length. Following on from a<br />

smattering of EP releases and guest appearances, the LP<br />

oozes with signature Barnhus pop sensibility. Born out of<br />

a desire to capture the fullness of a creative era following<br />

the news that her studio building would be repossessed,<br />

Bella Boo craftily dives between melodic house, Balearic,<br />

post-dubstep and ambient while even finding the time to<br />

squeeze in a sultry R&B jam. Head to She’s Back for the<br />

standout track.<br />

Jabes<br />

Klunk001<br />

Klunk<br />

The boys’ club of UK bass<br />

’n’ breaks ’n’ techno is in a<br />

healthy place, and a number<br />

of the month’s releases have<br />

been stellar (shout out to Facta, Desert Sound Colony, Yak<br />

and 96 Back). However, in the interest of platforming only<br />

one white man per month, the crown’s gotta go to Jabes.<br />

Quietly perfecting his hyperactive melodies over the last<br />

few years, he’s becoming one of the tightest producers of<br />

the neonate scene. More importantly, you get a fetching<br />

yellow techwear cap if you buy the record.<br />

Words: Nina Franklin and James Zaremba<br />

Melodic Distraction Radio is an independent internet radio<br />

station based in the Baltic Triangle, Liverpool, platforming<br />

artists, DJs and producers from across the North West.<br />

Head to melodicdistraction.com to listen in.<br />

REVIEWS<br />

47


LIVERPOOL - 17/19 BOLD STREET (1st Floor) · L1 4DN


PIZZA, TEQUILA, COCKTAILS<br />

25 Parr St, Liverpool L1 4JN<br />

WWW.CRAZYPEDROS.CO.UK


table theatre<br />

presents<br />

four to the floor<br />

A history of house<br />

22-25 JANUARY<br />

AT THE INVISIBLE WIND FACTORY<br />

BOX OFFICE - UNITYTHEATRELIVERPOOL.CO.UK<br />

0151 709 4988<br />

Beans on Toast<br />

FRIDAY 20th <strong>Dec</strong>ember<br />

Phase One, Liverpool<br />

The Local Honeys<br />

Wednesday 22nd <strong>Jan</strong>uary<br />

Gulliver, Manchester<br />

King Creosote<br />

Performing a live accompaniment to the film<br />

From Scotland with Love<br />

Monday 16th March<br />

Bridgewater Hall, Manchester<br />

Peggy Seeger<br />

Monday 18th May<br />

Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool<br />

@Ceremonyconcert / facebook.com/ceremonyconcerts<br />

ceremonyconcerts@gmail.com / seetickets.com


ARTISTIC<br />

LICENCE<br />

This month’s selection of poetry is taken from Matthew Thomas Smith’s<br />

debut book, Songs - a collection of tales pulled from the most surreal<br />

colours of the day to day.<br />

When and where did you start writing poetry?<br />

1994. Bootle, Merseyside. (They started out as nursery rhymes/<br />

lullabies but I could not get the hang of the guitar.)<br />

To what extent have local surroundings shaped your poetic<br />

voice and written vernacular?<br />

I do feel rooted in Bootle and Liverpool but through that same<br />

language I also feel like a citizen of the earth.<br />

The atmosphere and visual landscape of the poems featured<br />

in Songs ranges from the desperately real to the sarcastic and<br />

abstract. What is it that draws you to the themes featured<br />

throughout the collection?<br />

All of the poems are part autobiographical. I have lived these<br />

poems. The poems are me and the world around me.<br />

Would regard your poetry as a product of political upheaval, or<br />

an answer to it? Can poetry be a vessel for change?<br />

Both. It can, and I hope these poems can help to show that.<br />

The day I went to the Job Centre<br />

Out of place next to the well-used under<br />

threat library<br />

and not 300 yards from the block of flats<br />

where some middle-aged fella threw<br />

himself off<br />

perhaps in response to the bedroom tax<br />

or a recent smack drought<br />

part-time vacancy notices still hang<br />

next to the always-open automatic doors<br />

they promise flexible hours and competitive<br />

rates<br />

it seems that nobody wants to be a<br />

window-cleaner’s apprentice<br />

or a courier for an ‘ever-expanding’ criminal<br />

law firm<br />

I shuffle from one foot to the other in the<br />

falling queue<br />

conscious of empty desks and out of use<br />

signs on printers<br />

You won’t find anything here son<br />

jibes the well-dressed woman to my left<br />

this is more of a ‘keeping up appearances’<br />

set-up<br />

If this collection of poetry is, as your press release states, to be<br />

the last you will ever write, what statement do you wish the<br />

collection to convey?<br />

Nifty Records approached me to release a Poetry Collection. I had<br />

never planned to. Songs feels likes a natural ending – 30 years of<br />

me within one object. I feel I need to move on. I need to see what<br />

else there is. I am not a messenger, as such. Not really. Ultimately,<br />

I would like it if more people started to engage with poetry. That<br />

has always been the aim.<br />

Words: Matthew Thomas Smith / @mtsmith2605<br />

Photography: John Johnson / @John.Johno<br />

niftyrecords.com/shop/songs<br />

Songs is available to pre-order now via Nifty Records and is<br />

officially released on Friday 6 th <strong>Dec</strong>ember at The Royal Standard.<br />

Idea for a British film that would probably<br />

win an Academy Award<br />

A rich fella with a plummy voice<br />

has a cob on because<br />

his mother just won’t die<br />

and he can’t bear his wife<br />

countless infidelities later<br />

his mother dies<br />

and he inherits a fortune<br />

but he still isn’t happy<br />

For the Mountaineers<br />

climb the shale and slate<br />

while it is still able<br />

to take the burden<br />

the daytripper-favouring path<br />

only goes so far<br />

leave the camera in the house<br />

not everything is photo-worthy<br />

use your eyes<br />

kneel down<br />

get closer<br />

don’t take a tent<br />

fold your flag into your pocket<br />

be mindful of the summit<br />

look out for kestrels or a search-party<br />

headed by a bloodhound or a helicopter<br />

and beware of robin redbreasts<br />

rarer<br />

knowing<br />

tuned-in<br />

52


BIDO LITO! AND LIQUIDATION PRESENT<br />

THE REAL QUIZ<br />

TUESDAY 10TH DECEMBER - DOORS 7PM, CONSTELLATIONS<br />

ALL PROCEEDS DONATED TO MIND AND THE WHITECHAPEL CENTRE


THE FINAL<br />

SAY<br />

Writer and artist in residence at Chester Literature Festival,<br />

Imtiaz Dharker, looks to the connective power of words and subtly<br />

poetic voices as an antidote to the ‘bullies of language’<br />

“Words are there<br />

to be used with<br />

pleasure, not to<br />

be squandered; to<br />

remind us what it is<br />

to be human”<br />

These are strident times and it is too easy for subtleties<br />

and nuances to be lost in the noise of devalued words.<br />

When we stop and really listen to each other’s voices,<br />

we make a still space in the world, and that is a space<br />

for poetry, where each word is carefully weighed. I think it is<br />

needed now more than ever. Poetry may whisper or rage, but it<br />

can say things the heart knows before the world has a chance to<br />

catch up.<br />

When I was asked to be artist in residence at Storyhouse, I<br />

knew I wanted to fill it with words and images that would make<br />

it a living book for the whole community, for all the<br />

people who step through its doors into its<br />

welcoming spaces.<br />

All the time I was writing the poem<br />

Storyhouse, I was thinking about the<br />

weight and power of the words we<br />

say to each other, how we greet a<br />

stranger, how we draw a map of the<br />

heart in the language we use and<br />

how poetry can travel without a<br />

passport.<br />

A while ago I wrote a poem<br />

called The Right Word. In it there<br />

are words like ‘terrorist’ but it is<br />

not about terrorism. It is more<br />

to do with how a single image<br />

can be dressed in new words<br />

to make it mean something<br />

quite different, how words<br />

can be used to stir fear<br />

and suspicion. I work with<br />

film, too, and I know I can<br />

take the same shots and<br />

edit them to make totally<br />

contradictory stories. But<br />

that is what is happening<br />

around us all the time: so<br />

many channels, so many<br />

people’s versions of the<br />

truth depending on the<br />

agenda of the person who<br />

tells it.<br />

I had intended to stop<br />

with the revelation that the<br />

person at the door is a child,<br />

but sometimes a poem takes<br />

on a life of its own and this is<br />

what happened at the end. The<br />

‘I’ in the poem opens the door and<br />

offers unexpected hospitality. The<br />

child takes off his shoes. After all the<br />

terrible loaded words and suspicion, the two<br />

acts of courtesy are a kind of healing.<br />

Perhaps because of its ability to say the<br />

unsayable, more and more people are turning to poetry now, but<br />

it has always been there, under the world’s skin, working away<br />

to say things that needed to be said. It is part of everyday life<br />

and speech, in every language, in Urdu or Farsi or in English. We<br />

speak Shakespeare’s poetry without even realising it, in phrases<br />

that are used every day. It is in the language of ancient songs, of<br />

anonymous women working in the fields, in the words spoken<br />

between lovers, between parents and children, in holy books<br />

and unholy curses from 2,000 years ago to two minutes ago.<br />

I eavesdrop shamelessly on conversations in cafes, stations,<br />

on trains, on the street. I see it as part of my job as a poet to<br />

listen to the words around me, in everyday life, not just what<br />

people say, but how they say it, the spaces between the words,<br />

the hesitations, the accent and odd usage. For me it’s like mining<br />

treasure and some of it finds its way into poems.<br />

There’s eavesdropping at all kinds of levels: listening to<br />

human voices of course, but also listening in on the world,<br />

nature, social shifts, the heart’s secrets. I suppose<br />

there is a furtive element to it. It does mean being<br />

undetected, having an ear to a keyhole, lying<br />

in wait for things people don’t even know<br />

they are hiding or aren’t ready to tell.<br />

So I don’t think of poetry as some<br />

rarefied thing. I see it as being<br />

involved with the world, not afraid<br />

to get its hands dirty, because<br />

it has always been about<br />

making sense of the everyday,<br />

examining the soiled<br />

underside of things, the mess<br />

of life, seeing, understanding<br />

it at an odd angle and<br />

putting words to it all.<br />

In a chaotic world,<br />

where language is brutalised<br />

daily, it is needed more than<br />

ever. With the explosion of<br />

media, there are platforms<br />

for all kinds of poetry and<br />

whole continents of new<br />

listeners. That is something<br />

to celebrate, because it is a<br />

wide and generous space<br />

and can accommodate all<br />

kinds of voices.<br />

Most of all, words<br />

are there to be used<br />

with pleasure, not to be<br />

squandered, but to be<br />

savoured; to remind us<br />

what it is to be human,<br />

with this great gift of<br />

language.<br />

It is the way to<br />

answer back and stand up<br />

to the bullies of language, an<br />

act of subversion, and is far<br />

too powerful to be controlled<br />

or contained. !<br />

Words: Imtiaz Dharker<br />

Illustration: Nick Daly / @nickdalyart<br />

Imtiaz Dharker is artist in residence at Chester Literature<br />

Festival, which takes place across Storyhouse until Saturday<br />

30th November. Imtiaz Dharker’s work will remain in situ at<br />

Storyhouse throughout <strong>2020</strong>.<br />

The Right Word<br />

Outside the door,<br />

lurking in the shadows,<br />

is a terrorist.<br />

Is that the wrong description?<br />

Outside that door,<br />

taking shelter in the shadows,<br />

is a freedom fighter.<br />

I haven’t got this right.<br />

Outside, waiting in the shadows,<br />

is a hostile militant.<br />

Are words no more<br />

than waving, wavering flags?<br />

Outside your door,<br />

watchful in the shadows,<br />

is a guerrilla warrior.<br />

God help me.<br />

Outside, defying every shadow,<br />

stands a martyr.<br />

I saw his face.<br />

No words can help me now.<br />

Just outside the door,<br />

lost in shadows,<br />

is a child who looks like mine.<br />

One word for you.<br />

Outside my door,<br />

his hand too steady,<br />

his eyes too hard<br />

is a boy who looks like your son, too.<br />

I open the door.<br />

Come in, I say.<br />

Come in and eat with us.<br />

The child steps in<br />

and carefully, at my door,<br />

takes off his shoes.<br />

54


Blow 3.0<br />

Tin Men and The<br />

Telephone<br />

Tony Kofi Quartet<br />

Cykada<br />

Sarathy Korwar<br />

Martin Archer’s<br />

Anthropology Band<br />

Moonmot<br />

Hippo<br />

Beyond Albedo<br />

Blind Monk Theory?<br />

Yaatri<br />

Liverpool<br />

Saxophone<br />

Day <strong>2020</strong><br />

27 Feb - 1 Mar <strong>2020</strong><br />

Festival tickets and tickets<br />

to individual events available<br />

For full details and box office please visit:<br />

www.thecapstonetheatre.com/jazzfestival/


YOUSEF PRESENTS...<br />

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL<br />

SAT 21ST DECEMBER<br />

BRAMLEY MOORE DOCK. LIVERPOOL. 2PM - 11PM<br />

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STEVE LAWLER<br />

YOUSEF<br />

ENZO SIRAGUSA<br />

LEWIS BOARDMAN<br />

TICKETS ONLINE: SKIDDLE.COM

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