PDF - Volcano Publishing
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PDF - Volcano Publishing
HAPPENING NO.7 • JUNE 2011 • FREE BLACK ANGELS LITTLE BARRIE NEWS • REVIEWS • STYLE WIN 2 A FUNK SOUL BROTHER LIVE Dennis Coffey, the Detroit guitarist, is best known as part of the Motown record label house band The Funk Brothers. Try counting the hits he has played and you’ll be up half the night. He also hit solo payday with the instrumental ‘Scorpio’ from 1971 that sold a staggering one million plus copies. Fast-forward to today and his self-titled studio album is one fuzzy psychedelic soul experience and rightly receiving critical plaudits the world over. So The Barbican in East London has got him over on June 27th for a one-off night of R&B, funk and northern soul anthems. The show will also feature Alice Russell, Mayer Hawthorne and more special guests still to be announced. Tickets are £12.50-25 so book now to see the man strut his funky stuff! GOING FOR GOLD STEVE WORRAL returns from Sweden after witnessing THE SOUNDTRACK OF OUR LIVES blaze through their first two landmark albums in their entirety. VETIVER TOUR OUR SHORES Their beautifully summery new album The Errant Charm is out this month on Bella Union, and California’s finest Vetiver are in the UK to promote it. Andy Cabic and his cohorts have produced a janglesome affair on this their fifth outing, so they should provide some suitable sunshine pop moments for you to saviour. The tour starts in Brighton at the Komedia on the 28th, then hits London’s XOYO (29th), Reading, South Street Arts Centre (30th), Liverpool, Mojo (July 1st), Leeds’ Brudenell Social Club (3rd), Manchester, Band On The Wall (5th), and wrap things up at Nottingham Glee Club on the 6th. Tickets from the usual outlets. Swedish psychedelic rockers, The Soundtrack of Our Lives, have finally released their first ‘Best Of...’ compilation entitled Golden Greats No. 1, out now on Akashic Records. Hopefully there is a clue in the title, as, although it does feature their best-known singles such as ‘Sister Surround’ and ‘Bigtime’, they will need a Volume 2 to tie up the glaring omissions of classics like ‘Mantra Slider’ and ‘Black Star’. Narrowing down a single disc track-list from a back catalogue so packed full of quality songs was always going to be difficult. I caught the band in May playing two stunning shows at the beautiful Slussens Pensionat on the island of Orust in Sweden on May 20th and 21st, where they played their debut album Welcome To The Infant Freebase and then the second Extended Revelation in their entirety to an ecstatic audience. They’ll return to the Pensionat on July 6th and 7th when they will play breakthrough album Behind The Music and then Origin Vol. 1. Although their profile has been relatively low-key in the UK SOOL do make the occasional appearance here, such as at the recent Record Store Day Event where they played at Rough Trade East in London followed by a short set at nearby club 93 Feet East. Hopefully it won’t be too long until the band returns to our shores and treat us to their awe inspiring live shows. In the meantime, if you are curious about their music then pick up a copy of Golden Greats No.1 as a taster. However, while you’re in the record store I’d grab the rest of their albums too because as good as the compilation is, you are sure to be desperate to hear more. 3 SPREADING THE GOSPEL... Following the release of Phosphene Dream the Texan psychedelic flag wavers THE BLACK ANGELS are a name on everyone’s lips. PHIL ISTINE caught up with singer Alex Maas to talk over Zombies, hauntings and Bin Laden. Happening: Phosphene Dream has been rapturously received by critics here in Europe. Why do you think this album, your third, has hit harder than those first two? Alex Maas: Well we are evolving as people 4 and as a band. It would be ideal for our music to have the biggest reach possible. We worked with a producer this time around who helped us be all we could be without joining the army. H: Dave Sardy is such a great producer. What did he teach you about approaching music in those recording sessions? AM: He took us to Napal for a month and we studied the sound of the local peoples and culture. H: Were your influences different for this record than the first two? AM: Yes, some of the same but also different. Our influences are in the 100s of thousands. Where should I start? Zombies, Kool Keith, Willie Nelson, Troggs, Bjm, Beefhart, Oliver Sacks...etc H: Tell me the story behind ‘Haunting At 1300 McKinley’. AM: Murders had taken place in our old home before we moved in, unbeknowest to us. Some people in the band saw and heard strange things. I never did, but just wrote the lyrics based on the personal accounts that took place while we lived there. The song has taken on new societal meanings and many new interpretations. H: Any more plans to back up Roky at shows? AM: It is up to him, we are here for him but at the moment we don’t plan on having any plans to back him up. H: Why did you start your own psychedelic festival? AM: We wanted to bring all the amazing artists we meet while touring and all the amazing artists we had been turned on to together to throw a festival in our home town. The city of Austin needs to know what is going on in the psychedelic music community. No one else was doing it, so we decided to. H: What’s next for the band? AM: Make more music, go to Japan, go to Australia. We are currently writing a new record, and plan on releasing it when we see proof of Bin Laden’s body. The single ‘Haunting At 1300 McKinley’ and Phosgene Nightmare (limited edition Bsides collection on white 10” vinyl) are both out now on Blue Horizon. The Black Angels play their first Australian dates at the end of June and are back in the UK to play The End Of The Road Festival in September. NB: Bin Laden’s body has been found! 5 LITTLE BIG MAN A return to the bosom of their musical Godfather Edwyn Collins sparked a creative resurgence in London garageblues-soul trio LITTLE BARRIE. PHIL ISTINE met the trio at The 100 Club to discover how they came back from the abyss and to get the lowdown on their triumphant new album King Of The Waves Happening: So what’s going down with the new record? Barrie Cadogen: We started it quite a while ago, thanks to the generosity of Edywn Collins and his wife Grace and Seb the engineer. We were just recording around their schedule really. We started recording in early 2010 and did a few days, then there were quite a lot of gaps: maybe Edwin was doing his own stuff or producing other people or on tour. But we really wanted to work there. Five or six of the tracks were mixed by Shaun Lee, who does stuff with The Ping Pong Orchestra. This is a guy who Virgil had worked with before, he’s an artist and a producer. Virgil Howe: A singer-songwriter as well. I knew he’d be good for mixing the rest of the album. We were stuck at the end waiting, and the plan b turned out to be a really good idea. He was just perfect really. So we’ll definitely be working with him in the future. H: Were you going to get Edwyn to do it? BC: He mixed half of it but then he ran out of time because he was busy with his own album coming out. We could have hung on, but we thought we needed to get it out now, so Virgil got in touch with Shaun. He was really sympathetic to the way we did it at Edwyn’s. He had the right equipment to make it sound like a cohesive record and brought it all together. H: What prompted the return to Edwyn? BC: I think we had such a good time doing the first album there, and it was such a good studio. In a way we were spoilt straight away because the first time we went into a proper studio it was a studio as good as Edwyn’s. You get into a false sense of security, you think all studios are gonna be that good and the environment’s going to be the same – and it just wasn’t. I think we liked the way they break the rules and don’t do things too conventionally. They have a lot of interesting gear and the right microphones and the right desk to get the sounds that we want. The working atmosphere in there is really good, and to have it on your doorstep in London was perfect. H: The album is so well-produced, really thought about. BC: We had been using a rehearsal space up in Wood Green that Virgil has a share in. He has some experience at engineering and recording anyway. We can make better quality demos where we could explain a bit more about what we were after as well. We had thrown around arrangement ideas around amongst ourselves whilst we were doing that, so when we went in we didn’t really have to change any of that stuff. H: So what were the songs that were influencing you while writing the album, what was the vibe you were going for? BC: I think it’s the combination of all the things we are into really. I was going back to some records I hadn’t listened to for a long time. I was digging out a lot of records that I got when I first got into playing the guitar: bands like Spacemen 3 and some of the groups from that time that were in my sister’s record collection. Also, there was the more explosive guitar instrumental sound, things like Link Wray, and from Louis things like The Cramps and The Greenhornes. The 13th Floor Elevators, Dion... a lot of stuff. VH: There was definitely that Dick Dale heavy surf thing that influenced the single. When I first joined we were jamming in their old studio and coming up with loads of ideas. I remember ‘Money And Paper’, just working on that. It’s been quite a big process writing these songs. The initial riffs are there straight away but refining the arrangements has been fun. Along the way we’ve pulled different influences, like ‘Tip It Over’ definitely had a Can influence that we all wanted. Then if Lewis says, “This has got to be a bit more glam-y”, we do it. LW: There are good things about certain kinds of music. PI: You’re all quite keen collectors of music, aren’t you? You DJ... VH: I do in Camden every Friday and Saturday night. I should be employed by the Camden council as an entertainer and subsidised! I’m always searching for music. King Of The Waves is out now on Bumpman 7 David Preston decided to design authentic ’60s Chelsea boots after he and many of his musician friends (David is a musician too) were finding it incredibly hard to acquire the right footwear – shoddy boots can be found online and the high street, but they’re either too pointy, poor quality or just wrong all round. As a result of this David has designed and manufactured three different styles in six finishes of the finest leather and suede. Happy customers have described them as “the perfect Chelsea boot”. The subtly pointed toe is not too winkle picker and gives the whole design a classy look like the footwear our musical heroes and icons wore in the mid-late ’60s. Despite only being in business a few months, David can count James Williamson, guitarist for Iggy & The Stooges, Steve Cradock and members of Primal Scream, Little Barrie and Wolf People among his customers. 8 A CUBAN KICK win a pair of david preston boots To win a gorgeous pair of David Preston black boots, just answer this simple question: “Which member of the Stooges wears David’s boots?” Send your answer to: win@shindig-magazine.com Write PRESTON in the subject line. Closing date 30 June 2011 davidprestonshoes.blogspot.com SAT 25 june LONDON Timebox (back to the future) 8pm-2am Strongroom, 120-124 Curtain road, London. EC2A 3SQ Dj’s Dr Robert + guests spin sublime psych/soul/funk/rock/garage & rnb blasts down the groovy cellar club! www.newuntouchables.com FRIDAY 17 MONDAY 27 LONDON The Moons launch party. The Borderline, 16 Manette Street W1D 4AR. 7pm, £10 LONDON Dennis Coffey with Alice Russell, Mayer Hawthorne and more special guests Barbican Hall 19.30 £12.50 SATURDAY 18 LONDON The Chemistry Set first UK show in 20 years by neo-psych legends. The Garage, Highbury Corner N5 1RD. £12/15 LONDON A Little Mixed Up Alldayer Organised by Mod fanzine Double Breasted. Modus, The Laynes, Aunt Nelly, The Mynd Set, RT3 and The Nite Tones Fiddlers Elbow, Camden. LONDON Mousetrap R&B Allnighter Orleans 259 Seven Sisters Rd, Finsbury Park, London N4 2DD. Quality 60s Club Soul, Ska, Motown, R&B, Blues and Boogaloo july SAT 9 LONDON Mousetrap Allnighter Orleans 259 Seven Sisters Rd, Finsbury Park, London N4 2DD Primest Garage/Freakbeat and Psych on the planet! DJ’s Dr Robert & guests £8 b4 midnight/£10 after WED 27 LONDON Stax! feat Steve Cropper, Duck Dunn (Blues Brothers/Booker T & The MG’s) & Vocalist Eddie Floyd perform Stax hit records! @ 229 the Venue, 229 Great Portland Street, London W1W 5PN Tickets www.229thevenue.co.uk THUR 28-SUN 31 EDINBURGH The Big Stramash The Poets, The Higher State, The Wildebeests, The Masonics. www.thebigstramash.org August 4/5/6/7 GIJON, SPAIN 17th Euro Yeye Mod/60’s Festival Live bands, International DJ’s, Allnighters, Scooter Runs, Vintage Market www.newuntouchables.com SAT 13 NOTTINGHAM The Fabulous HOOCHIE COOCHIE CLUB Jack Rabbit Slim live on stage, with DJs spinnin’ authentic Rhythm & Blues, Rockabilly, Mambo Bop and Shakin’ Sleaze. Spanky Van Dykes Funhouse & Eatery, 17 Goldsmith Street, Nottingham, NG1 5JT 9pm - 3am, £10 26/27/28 BRIGHTON Brighton Mod Weekender Live bands, DJs, Scooter Run, Vintage market. All eve events @ Komedia, Gardiner St. Free Lunchtime events @ The Volks (opp Brighton Pier) www.newuntouchables.com september FRI 16 - SUN 18 NOTTINGHAM The Blast Off! Festival www.blastoff-festival.co.uk october FRI 7 - SUN 9 GLASGOW Double Sight Festival Hidden Masters, Les Bof facebook.com/doublesightweekender 21/22/23 BIRMINGHAM Supersonic Festival Electric Wizard, ZU93, Zombi, Fire!, Secret Chiefs 3, Eternal Tapestry, Antilles http://www.supersonicfestival.com Shindig! Happening! is published monthly by Volcano Publishing. Editorial team: Jon ‘Mojo’ Mills, Phil Istine, Richard S Jones, Slim Smith. Contributors: Grahame Bent, Alan Brown, Lenny Helsing, Kris Needs, Darius Drewe Shimon, Gary von Tersch, Adrian Whittaker, Steve Worral. Design: Slim Smith. Subscribe at www.happening-magazine.com Subscribe to Shindig! at www.shindig-magazine.com Subscriptions queries: subs@volcanopublishing.co.uk 9 Edited by Richard S Jones THE WICKED WHISPERS The Dark Delights Of The Wicked Whispers Electone Records On the evidence of this wonderful debut, Liverpool group The Wicked Whispers can be deemed one of Great Britain’s most overtly psychedelicsounding and exciting new pop groups to have emerged in many a pink moon. A quartet of songs all composed by Michael Murphy, who also contributes charmingly affected vocals, and is partly responsible for the group’s strident guitar chime. Lead off track ‘Amanda Lavender’ has been getting lots of online hits due to a sumptuous, slightly surreal video shot in a garden maze in Snowdonia, Wales. The Dark Delights Of… hits all the right spots and should have you in aural ecstasy in under a minute flat. Tremendously rich organ notes penetrate through everything else in the mix so as to be clear as a bell, yet thankfully, and surprisingly so, this is not to the detriment of any other instrument being played. ‘Flying Round In Circles’ and ‘Odyssey Mile’ are at once playful, but seriously cool too. The group’s many strengths are fully utilised here; the melodious-harmonious axis and the slightly odd, out there adjunct befitting of a group unashamed of their psychedelic fancies. As such these cuts give the clearest indication of the group’s intentions, and potential, and can perhaps give listeners the most value for their money, psychedelically speaking. Lenny Helsing COLIN STETSON beyond anything resembling the conventional range of the instrument on what is effectively a virtuoso solo showcase that sits comfortably alongside the wilder explorations of Sun Ra’s horn section, Albert Ayler or even the fluid six string explorations of Jimi Hendrix. Featuring guest vocal appearances from Laurie Anderson and Shara Worden and recorded in single takes with no overdubs or tape loops – just 20 mics positioned throughout the studio, the signals from which were later mixed by experimental ambient composer Ben Frost – the end result is an astounding tour de force that really does feel like it inhabits a universe all of its own. Grahame Bent THE CUTE LEPERS Adventure Time Damaged Goods The Cute Lepers were formed in 2007 by Steve E. Nix of The Briefs, starting with independent 45s before unleashing 2008’s Can’t Stand Modern Music, then ’09’s Smart Accessories. The Seattle power-punk band seem to have found their feet on this third album, flaming on with an energy rarely encountered these days, possibly fired up by their most assured bunch of songs yet. Another of the most immediately noticeable elements is the group’s understanding of the importance of backing vocals, an integral part of accentuating the aural torrents of anyone from the Stones to The Buzzcocks, whose blistering, guitar-based attack echoes throughout. They’re also not afraid to use brass, piano or organ to further bolster their essential melodic edge. Many current bands seem to mistake histrionic squeaking for energy, but The Cute Lepers go hell for leather throughout, whipping up an often glorious punk-rock racket, making their upcoming UK tour a highly-attractive prospect. Kris Needs New History Warfare Vol 2: Judges Constellation THE CYNICS So comprehensively radical is Colin Stetson’s idiosyncratic approach to the saxophone that it virtually redefines the term “experimental”. Key to all this is the mind-scrambling range of sounds and textures Stetson succeeds in coaxing from his horn as he travels light years Spinning Wheel Motel 10 have had in their armoury since they blasted off back in the mid-80s. Jangle-spangle Byrd-like guitars, vocals alternating betwixt sneery and pleading and a few splenetic riffs and fuzztone roars, all speed home the message that this is an act fixated with ’60s garage-band cool. Some attributes favoured by many later, heavier post-psych era noisemakers have also been deployed across numerous and varied LP excursions through the years. Opener ‘I Need More’ and closer ‘Junk’ make for pretty good examples of their garagerock/punk stance, yet all too often unhealthy alt-rock and REM-style moves are added to the brew. The vocals especially are overly bombastic but I was glad that the country swagger of the title track and reflective ‘Gehenna’ were on hand to help save the day. Lenny Helsing DENNIS HOPPER CHOPPERS Be Ready DWink When last heard from, Ben Nicholls was riding down that lonesome highway, ’60s Vox Continental bass pedal-to-themetal, as one-manband Dennis Hopper Choppers. That was 2008 and his self-released debut LP Chop, with its rough-hewn rockabilly-meetsspaghetti-western vistas, was receiving substantial airplay on 6music. Three years later, DHC has swollen to an eight-piece studio ensemble that includes permanent players Nat Woodcock on Vox organ and mandolinist John Greswell, along with guests, Acoustic Ladyland’s Pete Wareham on sax and members of The Bach Choir. Recorded live in two days, follow-up Be Ready tones down the rockabilly and instead builds an overall gentler, more expansive gothic-country soundscape, reminiscent of The Willard Grant Conspiracy, as Nicholls’ velvet smooth baritone rises over reverbed guitar and eerily haunting organ on standouts like opener ‘Good To Me’, ‘Girl Walked Out Of Town’ and ‘Long Trip Home’. Alan Brown Get Hip A few key things strike me upon first couple of listens to The Cynics’ latest offering. There are different components that work quite well in most songs, tried and tested approaches the group FIRE! WITH JIM O’ROURKE Unreleased? Rune Grammofon Lurking in the no man’s land of Krautrock and free jazz this first time collaboration between experimental Swedish jazz three piece Fire! and tireless audio adventurer Jim O’Rourke (Gastr Del Sol, Sonic Youth) makes for uncompromising though ultimately highly rewarding listening. Comprising four cryptically titled tracks (ponder the possible significance of the following if you will – ‘Are You Both Still Unreleased?’, ‘...Please, I Am Released’ and ‘By Whom And Why Am I Previously Released?’) whose playing time stretches from a little over three minutes to a mammoth 17 minutes, the album was recorded over two clearly eventful days in Tokyo in September 2010. With the exception of the considerably briefer and rather more impressionistic third track these recordings are characterised by the gradual and sustained building of power and tension thanks to the winning combination of sluggish grooves, an appetite for psychdrenched turmoil and a near relentless cacophony of primal saxophonitis. Grahame Bent Screamadelica extravaganza, along with being in demand for sessions by the likes of Weller and Morrissey, Barrie Cadogan has still found time since late 1999 to record and tour with his own band, cooking up livewire shots of garage-rock, R&B and funk-infused soul on singles such as ‘Shrug Off Love’ and three albums – 2005’s We Are Little Barrie, ’06’s Stand Your Ground and now this latest set. Rockers such as first single ‘Surf Hell’ bristle with chops and vitality, venturing into smoky blues on ‘Now We Are Nowhere’. In effect, it’s a continuation of the age-old tradition of ace session musicians venting their own creative urges out of someone else’s shadow, although these other projects inevitably feed into the creation; with Barrie’s pedigree the results can only be solid and reliable. Kris Needs THE LAST HURRAH!! MARC CARROLL Spiritual Non-Believers In Silence Rune Grammofon One Little Indian The Last Hurrah!! arrives as the latest addition to the already extensive CV of Bergen’s prolific resident musical activist HP Gundersen. Curiously the raison d’etre behind The Last Hurrah!! project apparently came about when HP chanced upon Stephen Stills’ “secret” guitar tuning as used on Crosby Stills & Nash’s ‘Suite: Judy Blue Eyes’. Partnered by fellow Bergen native singer Heidi Goodbye and with the duo backed by a pool of supplementary musicians the three track Spiritual Non Believers opens with a reworking of Norwegian outfit Oriental Sunshine’s breezy 1970 opus ‘Mother Nature’ only for things to take a considerably darker twist on the epic 30 minute ‘The Ballad Of Billy And Lilly’ before finally coming full circle on ‘Melodi Grand Prix 63’ which is intriguingly described as “an unlikely but sweet mix of bossa nova, surf music and Steve Reich”. File under the vibrant sub genre that currently is West Coast Norwegian folk psych. Grahame Bent With a brand new album project in the works for One Little Indian as well as having his prolific back catalogue readied for reissue, this 12 track career retrospective will not only please long-time fans but serve as an exemplary entry point for those unfamiliar with the legendary Irishman’s arresting amalgam of rock, punk, country and blues along with occasional doses of super-charged harmony pop. His shaman-like, emotionally fraught vocals (often recalling either Dylan or Donovan), scrappy folk-rock guitar work (check out a vigorous, Richard Thompson-influenced recall of the traditional ‘Matty Groves’) and enormous talent as a songwriter really makes one wonder about his lack of commercial breakthrough. Favourites range from the philosophical ‘Press On’, a lushly arranged prayer titled ‘Against My Will’, the stately yet shimmering and transcendent ‘In Agreement With Reality’ and the pair of wistful, dream-like instrumentals that bookend affairs. Gary von Tersch LITTLE BARRIE SEBASTIAN ROACHFORD/ PAMELIA KURSTIN King Of The Waves Ouch Evil Slow Hop Non Deluxe/Bumpman Currently playing guitar on Primal Scream’s Slowfoot Records Now for a head to head with a difference. In the red corner behind the traps Sebastian Roachford of Polar Bear and Acoustic Ladyland fame and in the blue corner on Theremin Pamelia Kurstin famed for her work with David Byrne, John Zorn and Foetus and reckoned by none other than Bob Moog as the woman who has done most to take the Theremin into new unexplored territory. Setting out to explore the outer limits of the known audio/groove spectrum almost inevitably the sound of the Theremin in full flight brings to mind echoes of the iconic ’50s sci-fi film soundtracks where the instrument was so memorably showcased but there’s also a fair amount of Delia Derbyshire & The BBC Radiophonic Workshop style, other worldliness and Krautock inspired free form risk-taking about the Roachford/ Kurstin tag team that makes their partnership so mesmerising and compelling. Set the controls for the heart of the freak out… Grahame Bent THE TRAVELLING BAND Screaming Is Something Cooking Vinyl After impressing us back in 2008 with their debut Under The Pavement, Manchester’s The Travelling Band, through their finely tuned understanding of CSNY fashioned harmonies would have had to turn in a shockingly poor follow-up to halve our interests. Unsurprisingly, Screaming Is Something equals, if not betters its exceptional predecessor. The exquisitely warm melody of ‘Sundial’ puts them firmly in league with The Fleet Foxes by way of sunshine and affecting folk pop swells of solidarity. A singalong number (the most instant of many here) that should ring absolutely true for festival-goers this summer. Interestingly too, underneath all their authentic folk and country ways, there’s a clear approval for their Manchurian indie heritage, which runs seamlessly alongside genuine and delightful songs and studiously explored forays into the mountains of America (‘One Dime Blues’) and states of the West (‘Screaming Is Something’). Powered by the sort of instruments and positive outlooks we know and love you’d have to be missing a heartbeat not to care. Richard S Jones 11 Fleet Foxes PRIMAVERA SOUND 2011, BARCELONA If our big brother Shindig! serves to document an appreciation of those that have gone before then let it be noted right here, right now that Happening is geared toward the ambitions of those on the horizon. It’s no secret that Primavera Sound, Barcelona’s most happening festival has in recent years provided festival-goers with some inspired – nay, legendary – performances from artists old and new, but this year set the bar for everyone else to reach. Over three days, every single soul in attendance will single out their own personal victors, and will no doubt have more than 10 stories to tell. For us, witnessing Happening favourites Moon Duo and Wolf People revel in shooting the indie elite with a lysergic injection of 1971 will remain an unforgettable high in our mind’s eye. Of the former, Ripley Johnson and partner Sanae Yamada turned in a solid performance on the Ray-Ban stage peddling sounds anyone with (or indeed without) a Spacemen 3 record could appreciate. The first time this writer had seen them live in light of new record Mazes, together they retained the dense vibes of old only this 12 time around, programmed a new, userfriendliness that the crowd undoubtedly got on tracks like ‘Mazes’ and set stealer ‘Fallout’. The latter of which saw Yamada channelling Silver Apples through her guttural organ play and Johnson losing himself in danceable Neu! grooves. British hopefuls Wolf People stole the Saturday night, leaving an indelible mark in the Catalonian dust. As dusk began to close in the crowd were treated to a set, which included an extended version of ‘Cotton Strands’, ‘One By One From Dorney Reach’ and an outstanding outing of ‘Tiny Circles’ over the howls of locals in the crowd who had clearly done their homework. Jack Sharp and his band of merrymakers owned every second in what must have been by all accounts, something of an unreal situation for them. So much so they even attempted a 20-minute version of ‘Banks Of Sweet Dundee’, a track only ever played inside the safety of four venue walls yet here, heralding a triumphant stroke of confidence. In stark contrast to the thrilling dirt and the sweat of Moon Duo and Wolf People, Fleet Foxes and Phosphorescent provided ample West Coast folk-rock sounds to audiences seeking a sunny soundtrack to match the skies above. Fleet Foxes first ever visit to Spain reaped an astounding reception, rewarded with choral crowd singalongs on ‘White Winter Hymnal’, and faithful renditions of ‘Montezuma’ and ‘Battery Kinzie’ off new record Helplessness Blues. Only Matthew Houck (AKA Phosphorescent) turned in a better, more authentic performance of this sort of ilk, with ‘The Mermaid Parade’ lingering as one of the weekend’s most noteworthy “you had to be there” moments. Happening also returned with a memo, carved in stone about the state of new progressive-rock in Spain. Truly alive and well, on the Pitchfork Stage, hailing from Madrid, Toundra turned in a heavy instrumental set as much indebted to the stoner-rock riffage of Kyuss as the forward thinking soundscapes of Mogwai and Isis. A performance matched on a much smaller scale by the experimental duo Les Aurs who fed the crowd one Can-ism after another. Who like most of the new bands that played, saw no problem in wearing their appreciations, the influence of those that had gone before on their sleeves for all to see. An all conquering weekend, to one day be repeated? We’ll just have to look to the horizon. Richard S Jones MIKE HERON / TREMBLING BELLS Queen Elizabeth Hall, May 30th Poor pre-publicity saw Mike take the stage to a barely quarter-full auditorium. He and his band battled gamely on, overcoming both the sterility of the venue and an appalling front-of-house sound with a trio of 5,000 Spirits compositions (‘Chinese White’, ‘Painting Box’ and ‘Hedgehog Song’). His daughter and keyboard player, Georgia Seddon, is growing in confidence as a performer, bringing her own “Paths” to the set. New member Nick Pym fleshed out the sound with some considered electric violin lines, and T. Bell Mike Hastings added some neat whistleplaying as well as acoustic guitar. The set lurched up a gear with a joyful arrangement of ‘Douglas Traherne Harding’ and the obligatory ‘Log Cabin Home In The Sky’, after which the rest of the T. Bells joined them for a glorious, a capella ‘Sleepers Awaken’ in which Lavinia Blackwall, in particular, sparkled. Alex Neilson added suitably eclectic percussion for ‘Spirit Beautiful’, and the joint set ended with a complete version of ‘Cellular Song’, by the end of which Mike was waving the mike-stand about in true Rod Stewart fashion (well, almost). The Trembling Bells have developed their own very clear identity since I last saw them at The Barbican’s ‘Cellular Songs’ event a couple of years back; Lavinia in particular has worked out how to pitch her classically trained vocals so they blend into a strong ensemble sound. As you may have guessed, Mike appeared at the end to sing a full-throated ‘Feast Of Stephen’ (the Bells’ Christmas single last year) with the entire band and brass section. Despite the unprepossessing start, a wonderful gig. Adrian Whittaker ‘Porpoise Song’ was unforgettable. From where we sat it was impossible to really note the grey hair, wrinkles or thinning hair of our protagonists. But the backdrop served as far more than a mask or distraction, it was there to remind us who we were witnessing. It also mirrored how the lads changed from precocious auditioned scamps into bona fide counter culture heads – hipsters who hung with Nicholson, Buckley, Harrison, Zappa and co. Stoned eyes, wild hair, beards and hippy threads! So how was the music? It was nigh on incredible, so much better than it should have been. The songs (carefully selected by Davy Jones of all people) featured golden oldies, album highlights and obscurities (including the Head material, which came across so very well). Micky’s years in musicals have perhaps added a certain degree of theatricality to his voice – occasionally more West End London theatre than West Coast US – yet it was still a thing of beauty: honed, powerful and even now so much in the vein of that distinctive tenor of ’68. The only singer to match Tim Buckley! His vocals on ‘Porpoise Song’ were mesmerising. ‘Circle Sky’ lacked Nesmith, and if anyone was not quite on par vocally it was Peter Tork. He at least managed to sing all of Nesmith’s material with a certain air of grace. ‘Do I Have To Do This All Over Again?’ shone with group support and the talented backing band got suitably psychedelic, as they did on ‘Can You Dig it?’– in which a belly dancer also appeared on the stage. The highlight for me was oddly enough Davy’s music hall number, ‘Daddy’s Song’, in which he donned tails and performed a similarly choreographed dance routine to the one in Head which was screened behind him – this time with a girl young enough to be his granddaughter!) The supporting players were superb throughout, only getting out of hand on a rocked-up ‘Stepping Stone’ in which the guitarist foolishly committed some OTT Vai-like noodling. Otherwise they did for The Monkees what The Wondermints have done, or perhaps once did, for Brian Wilson. Rickenbackers duelled with state of the art keyboards, additional reeds, horns and harmonies ably recreated the sounds of the records. The two 39 song career-spanning sets served The Monkees as “greats” rather than the puppets they will eternally be perceived as. It was awe-inspiring. Even ‘I Wanna Be Free’, where Davy gave a rehearsed speech about it being so suited to these awful times, was impressive. The odd comic interlude and Davy’s cabaret routines did little to dampen the music and the all ages crowd went wild. Deservedly so. Maya, my seven-year-old daughter? She absolutely loved it. Jon ‘Mojo’ Mills THE MONKEES’ 45TH ANNIVERSARY TOUR The Royal Albert Hall, London, May 19th. Before the gig, my seven-year-old daughter asked me if the girls in the audience would be screaming (à la 1967). “I think not, sweetheart. They’re all old now,” I explained. Yet on entering the Albert Hall we were greeted by 20something music heads and slightly older retro groovers, small children (so Maya wasn’t the only one) and yes, dewy eyed baby boomers. A few old girls even screamed for Davy too! But what of the two and a half hour event? First of all, hats off to Shindig! scribe Rachel Lichtman (who of course penned our Head epic last year) for the dazzling visual backdrop she directed. This consisted of meticulously chosen TV footage, stills and paraphernalia synched to suit what the guys were playing. 13 JULY Lexington, London, May 7th Bloody hell, the throng is assembled in here tonight to watch a band who never had a hit single, never sold many albums during their initial career, and most of whom never set foot onstage again after they split, perform onstage together for the first time since 1970. Not that this is the first time this has happened, of course – The Sonics, Stooges, MC5, Velvets and Dolls never sold any records in the UK the first time round either, and in the last few years, every cult band of the past, in particular the likes of Leaf Hound, Comus, Heron and most recently Incredible Hog, seems to have risen rather spectacularly from the grave, along with a glut of solo artists from the same period (Vashti Bunyan, Nick Garrie, Mark Fry). But even by those standards, this is special. Mega special. As July take the stage in a swelter of dry ice, flanked by a dancer dressed as a perfect simulation of the monster from the cover of their classic ’69 album, their floral jackets glinting in the distance, it’s almost like watching potholers who disappeared underground decades ago emerge glinting into the spotlight, and they are applauded accordingly. Sure they’re rusty, sure they’re a little nervous, and sure the line-up’s slightly different – alongside original frontman Tom 14 Newman, guitarist Alan James, drummer Chris Jackson and guitarist Pete Cook (who wrote most of their album, but left before getting the chance to play on it) we now have Tom’s son Chris on lead guitar, replacing the late Tony Duhig, and the incredibly young Charlie Salvidge on keyboards and percussion in place of the errant Jon Field – but you wouldn’t want them to sound perfect, would you? British psych, no matter how lushly orchestrated or beautifully harmonised, was never about that – and all the better for it. The occasional flat note or missed beat just makes it more authentic, as that’s probably what they sounded like when they started: the same can also be said of the vocal phasing that defined much of their early sound, still in evidence tonight on the opening ‘My Clown’ and put to similar groundbreaking use on ‘A Bird Lived’ and ‘You Missed It All’. Thus, although this is very much a “now” event, and not a nostalgia fest, the overall impression is of seeing a brand new band, almost like watching this music develop in front of your eyes for the first time. Perhaps, even though Newman himself followed a solo career through the’ 70s and the ’80s into folkier, proggier waters, the youthful invention the individual members had in ’69, along with a strident optimism, never left and simply stored itself up over four ensuing decades, waiting to be unleashed once more. ‘Jolly Mary’, ‘Hello To Me’ and ‘Friendly Man’, all preceded by wry anecdotes that join the future to the past, would seem to confirm this, and the added surprise is that the new numbers – in particular ‘Don’t Wake Me’ and ‘Linear Thinking’ retain those qualities. If they did lean in any way towards the ’80s, then it’s the ’80s of New Model Army, Husker Du or The Church rather than anything cheeserock based. Both the UberMods and the Dalston fashionista facisti are less than impressed, but you’d expect that anyway. But it couldn’t end, of course, without that song- and true to form, ‘Dandelion Seeds’ is the lysergic, triple-headed monster we all dreamed of. They play it twice in a row – the second an extended, freakout, improvised freeform jamming version – because, again, that’s exactly what they would have done back then. Jackson and James, who know both when and how to swirl and when to return to the groove, twist and turn the song into myriad rhythmic patterns – a mini rebirth of prog, and the ubermods are loving it. Salvidge batters at his keys and congas like the crazed lovechild of Keith Emerson and Micky Finn, as the whole room exploded in a flurry of colour. The good news is there’s going to be more of this. The even better news is that they’re halfway through a new studio album, which several labels have expressed interest in. Darius Drewe Shimon DONOVAN Royal Albert Hall, June 3rd Even the sublime can sometimes be imperfect, and such an adjective could definitely apply to the first half of Mr Leitch’s eagerly awaited set tonight. The usual Albert Hall sound problems – wrong shape for decent acoustics – are evident from halfway into opener ‘Catch The Wind’, performed, as on the record, solo: as Danny Thompson appears on double bass for ‘Colours’, and the number of musicians steadily grows, so do the difficulties. Things aren’t helped by the fact that Don seems not only a little nervous (don’t be scared of us, duckie, we love you already!) but in a hurry, singing ‘Wear Your Love Like Heaven’ far too high, and delivering parts of an otherwise beautiful ‘Sunny Goodge Street’ (with full orchestral backing) and ‘Epistle To Dippy’ about two bars ahead of what everyone else, including conductor John Cameron, seems to be playing. This could also be because, thanks to the perpetually poor venue sound, what he’s hearing in his monitors is two bars ahead, or it could be because he’s in a hurry to get to the second half – which is kind of why we’re all here – but it would take more than mere glitches to destroy the splendour of genre-defining classics like ‘Mellow Yellow’, ‘Barabajagal’ and a thruddingly fuzz-heavy ‘Hurdy Gurdy Man’, all of which, though seen as lightweight at the time, are now revered for the genre-defining cuts they are, literal audio distillations of all aspects of “swinging” counterculture. But before them all came Sunshine Superman – which, released in mid- 1966, predates every other seminal work in the Brit psych canon – The 500 Spirits, Sgt Pepper, Piper At The Gates Of Dawn, Satanic Majesties – by at least a year. Put simply, this magazine, and our entire lifestyles, would be very different without it. And, after a half-hour real ale refuelling interlude, we are finally able to view it in full (or at least the original 10 track US release, which is chronologically definitive). Pointing out highlights of such a transcendent, monumental performance is an unenviable task: everything, from Jimmy Page’s appearance ’pon the title track, through the “magic carpet” where Don, sitarist Shawn Phillips (a major architect of all this) and Candy John sit cross legged and meditational for ‘The Fat Angel’ and ‘Ferris Wheel’ , to the cocksure strut of ‘The Trip’ unto the use of REAL LIVE HARPSICHORDS on ‘Legend Of A Girl Child Linda’ and the grand finale ‘Celeste’, both of which moved me to tears and almost had me searching for my own princess, was perfect. And talking of princesses, there she finally was – Linda herself, the mystic muse of the last 46 years of the minstrel’s life, resplendent as ever in full hippy finery, with son Donovan Leitch ( I shouted for Nancy Boy’s ‘Johnny Chrome And Silver’) and his own decidedly “phwoarrr” half-sister (also narrating Don’s life story ‘twixt songs) also present . This particular family, however, extends beyond the stage, and as ‘Atlantis’, which rivals Bowie’s ‘Memory Of A Free Festival’ as the all-time wave-your-arms-inthe-air psych anthem, exploded into climactic frenzy. I really felt, for the first time in my misanthropic existence, like linking arms with everyone simultaneously – but merely to be here, and thus imbued with such magic, was enough, reducing the pointless encore reprises of ‘Sunshine’ and ‘Mellow’ (ruling out the chance of anything from Cosmic Wheels or 7 Tease). After a false start, the “Glasgow Herald” as he calls himself, redeemed himself beyond expectations: Dylan, bain of all lazy journalistic comparisons and misnomers, may have been the father of all poets but he never sounded like this. Andy Partridge once said in these very pages that US psych is Vietnam, riots and bad acid comedowns, whereas the UK strain is gardens, tea, jelly and daffodils, and if this is so, then Donovan is the real deal, with an added side order of woods, castles and ethereal pools, ever unchanging. After all the years of naysaying and rhetoric, people have finally, and without the benefit of any trend or bandwagon, woken up to the genius that is Donovan. Quite rightly. Darius Drewe Shimon 15 SQ2-cover6.indd 1 08/05/2011 16:29 DONOVAN • THE ELECTRIC PRUNES THE LOVIN’ SPOONFUL • much more SHINDIG! QUARTERLY NO.2 From Amazon, book & record shops and www.shindig-magazine.com