Tuesday 20 June 2017

Sounds of Summer


MUSIC:

When last I wrote about culture, I was compelled to dedicate the piece to my friend Alex Neilson, drummer, polymath and wandering troubadour, who had suffered the tragic loss of his younger brother Alastair. My sympathies are still for the grieving Neilson family, but I would still beg indulgence to write a few words on Alex’s solo debut, Vermillion, released under the name Alex Rex.

This is not the time for false modesty. Vermillion is a work of genius. It is perhaps the best solo album to be released since the Bringing It All Back Home, Highway 61 Revisited, Blonde on Blonde trilogy. Like those three magnum opi, there is a seam of eclectic genius running through the project that Alex and his collaborators (the usual helpers; Alasdair, Lavinia and Mike) mine imaginatively and zealously, but not exhaustively. The subterranean pit of Neilson’s artistry has many shafts of magnificence as yet undiscovered.  With typical insouciance, it begins with Screaming Cathedral; a duet with Lavinia Blackwall that is more Bosch and Dante than Peters and Lee; “it’s horror heaped on horror,” they endlessly chirp like Sonny and Cher jamming with The Third Ear Band on the walls of Bamburgh Castle.  Postcard from a Dream has vocals similar to Visions of Johanna, pushed along by a jolly electric organ and an optimistic spring in its step. Just lovely.

The Perpetually Replenished Cup must be the only song in 2017 that borrows from Wilhelmus van Nassau, the national anthem of the Netherlands (a fact admitted to in a tweet by Alex himself) and turns it into an endearingly shambolic Klezmer pub crawl of a song. Best of all Song for Dora begins with an unaccompanied doo wop surreal poem in the style of Ginsberg, before a tight and dirty Magic Band style romp, with the most effective three note fuzztone guitar figure you’ll hear all year. Then all of a sudden, it’s Song for Athene at last orders in a social club Karaoke. You can’t want more than that. It is the finest album of 2017 so far and only likely to be bettered when Trembling Bells release Dungeness late this year.

The last time I saw Alex was when he was drumming for Shirley Collins at the Sage in March.  Another Glasgow based artist who sought to work with a grande dame of the folk tradition is Aidan Moffat, the engaging , bearded Arab Strap singer and sometime Bill Wells collaborator. Seeking to rewrite traditional Scottish folk songs for the modern world, he contacted the legendary travelling balladeer Sheila Stewart. Their artistic relationship was sometimes spiky, often frosty and bedevilled by distrust; on her part at least. Perhaps her songs were so personal to her and almost living fossils of an extinct age; she was reluctant to let them go. Thankfully, Moffat was not dissuaded.

The documentary and live album Where You’re Meant To Be chronicles the project from the inauspicious start to the triumphant climax at a packed Barrowlands. Sadly Sheila died just before the project was released, but Moffat talks (and writes in the sleevesnotes) of her with enormous fondness. While numbers such as The Ball of Kirriemuir, both in traditional and modern forms, will never be anything more than rugby club singalongs, the achingly poignant beauty in both words and music of the title track and the musical deoch an doris that is The Parting Song could never be beaten. At Barrowlands, Sheila barged on stage to deliver her version of The Parting Song, which can be seen on the documentary, as she emphatically dropped the microphone on Moffat. Sadly, sound quality issues meant the Sheila-less performance at Drumnadroichit makes up the CD and it is great, like all of Moffat’s stuff. Nobody else could deliver the line “another wee ned with another burst nose” and make it sound like poetry.

As a companion and a comparison, I also bought a Sheila Stewart sampler; Songs from the Heart of the Tradition. Now I don’t know if it’s my instinctive bias towards the Irish over the Scots and the English when it comes to the folk tradition, but like Shirley Collins, I find that a small amount of Sheila works well enough; obviously The Parting Song, but also Ewan McColl’s Moving On Song, the standard Blackwaterside and the compelling  Oxford Tragedy are worth the entrance fee alone. However, the rest of it can seem a little too much like Lulu with Jimmy Shand at the White Heather Club to these untrained ears.


2016 was the year of 4 Wedding Present gigs; in comparison 2017 has been a Gedgeless desert. Having made the schoolboy error of assuming there would be Stockton tickets left at the gig itself, I missed out on the March tour. Thankfully, there was the 30th Anniversary George Best farewell tour to look forward to, especially as Newcastle didn’t get a visit on the 20th anniversary tour for some reason (not that we’ve been short of Weddoes gigs recently).  The only that that put me off was the fact it was at the Academy, on whose sticky carpets I’d last trodden in March 2016 for TWP supporting The Wonder Stuff.  Considering recent Weddoes Newcastle gigs have been at Think Tank, The Cluny and Riverside, this showed that they were again on an upward trajectory in terms of audience figures; though that was as much to do with a deeply ingrained sense of nostalgia than anything else I’ll admit.

As is oft the case on these occasions, we had a few other numbers to warm us up. It was a slightly arcane set list, with the instrumentals Scotland and England bookending this section. As I’ve said previously, I adore the instrumentals on Going Going and The Home Internationals, seeing a whole new potential Gedge oeuvre nascently flowering, though I’m not sure the well-behaved crowd really got what this bit was all about. Perhaps that’s why Ben and I could slowly creep forward through a static crowd to the point the Academy’s notoriously muddy PA could be counteracted by the sound of the back line. Meanwhile Broken Bow and Deer Caught in the Headlights were both received deliriously by those who knew them and politely by those who didn’t. The stand-out songs, as opposed to instrumentals, from the opening bit were a truly down and dirty Love Slave and a stunning Click Click which is sounding better now than at any time since Watusi.

And so to George Best; it’s a classic isn’t it? The album that defined the received, though incorrect, popular opinion of TWP as the C86 band it’s acceptable to like. Obviously it’s not their greatest album; Seamonsters, Watusi and possibly Going Going vie for that accolade. It does contain great songs, as well as the bona fide drop dead classics My Favourite Dress, A Million Miles and Give My Love to Kevin, with very little filler. You have to say though, The Wedding Present of 2017 are not the band of 1987 or even of 2007, when that era’s incarnation “reimagined” George Best in Albini’s studio. The CD of that recording (raw, elemental and unpolished) was available exclusively on this tour. Needless to say I got a copy.  The live version of the album on the night was enormous fun; joyous and nostalgic. I’m amazed that Gedge can still play Shatner at his age; the bloke’s still got the kind of dexterity in his wrists similar to David Gower in his pomp. So many of the crowd knew every word; it was a good evening, topped off by an absolutely barnstorming Kennedy. We left for a late one in The Head of Steam with a smile and our ears ringing.

A couple of days later, I listened to the 20th anniversary recording and it’s pretty good. They play them quick, they recorded them live and it hasn’t been produced to death; this is Steve Albini we’re talking about. However, it’s not as good as the original, because the 1987 George Best original was a product of a time, a place, an idea and a vision that subsequently changed. The band changed, they evolved and developed from Bizarro onwards. It seems incredible to think the bloke who wrote Everyone Thinks He Looks Daft could even countenance the thoughts behind the words of Love Slave or Skin Diving, never mind writing the music for them. I mean I’m glad I bought this relic, this memento mori as it tells me Charles Layton is the finest drummer TWP have ever had and that Terri De Castro is the best bassist ever to have worked with Mr Gedge. However, given the choice, I’d rather have the youthful optimism of the 1987 album or the slightly beery bonhomie of the 2017 performance, if you don’t mind.

BOOKS:

Andrew Waterman was my personal tutor when I was an undergraduate at Ulster University between 1983 and1986. At the time he was an erudite and conscientious lecturer whose courses on Fiction 1880-1914, Modernism and British Poetry after World War II were meticulously planned, insightful and stimulating. Away from the classroom, he was a deeply unhappy drunk whose third marriage had just disintegrated, with his wife leaving County Derry for rural Lincolnshire, taking their son Rory with her. Andrew was also a poet of some repute, whose deceptively simple personal narratives were very much in the tradition of The Movement, like a less sardonic and less gifted Larkin. After graduation I kept in touch with Andy for a few years, until his drinking got so bad in the early 90s he entered rehab, successfully.

I met him once more, in November 2005, in the company of Rory in the slightly surreal surrounding of Mark Toney’s on Clayton Street on a late Sunday afternoon. By this time Andy was happily retired, remarried and living in Norwich, while Rory was doing an MA in Modern Literature at Durham. Rory went from that to a PhD to a lecturing job at Nottingham Trent, as well as being a published poet. The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree does it? Rory’s first collection Tonight the Summer’s Over came out in 2015 and I liked it immensely.  It was published by Carcanet, who had previously issued his father’s work. However these days, as perhaps befits the diminishing profile and talent of the father, Andy’s work is published by the disarmingly modest Shoestring Press in Norwich.

While Rory is 36 and seeks to address philosophical and temporal questions of great import, Andrew’s horizons are shrinking at he turns 77; his previous collection By the River Wensum was a consideration of life and ageing in the quietude of Norfolk. Recently, he has issued Bitter Sweet; a cycle of poems meditating on the death of his partner’s mother. This is done with care and compassion, avoiding all histrionics, but one wonders if the highly personal nature of such verse would be better kept private, especially as with his desire to provide support for his wife, Andrew has effectively removed himself from the narrative and reduced his role to chronicling rather than interpreting events.

Perhaps Andrew’s pamphlet could have been better analysed by the wonderful cricket writer David Foot. I’d not come across his work until earlier this year when I chanced upon a dog-eared copy of his biography of Harold Gimblett, Tormented Genius of Cricket. Having sympathetically and compassionately addressed the tatty ruins of the life and legacy of Somerset’s greatest batsman, it seemed natural for Foot to consider the case of neighbouring Gloucestershire’s enigmatic legend, Wally Hammond. Not only was Hammond a prolific run scorer and stylish batsman, he was an insatiable womaniser, despite being almost devoid of any fellow feelings or even personality to any large extent.

Foot’s euphemistic, prim prose deals with indelicate facts with delicacy and disdain. Hammond came from a loveless background in a shotgun armed services marriage. As well as excelling in cricket, football (two years with Bristol Rovers) and drinking (always pints and never appearing to be drunk), he was apparently very good in bed.  This provided little problems when his conquests were showgirls and rural socialites in the West Country, but was a life defining issue when it came to ladies of the night in the Caribbean on the 1928 MCC tour.

Wally returned from the Windies with a dose of gonorrhea; in those pre penicillin days (ironically, his other major health issue was repeated tonsilitis), the established treatment was to administer mercury. Unfortunately, if the dose is wrong, it can cause severe neurological problems. Foot’s contention is the fraught journey back from Jamaica while suffering from the effects of what was called a venereal disease, as well as the treatment with mercury and recuperation from this, in isolation in a nursing home, meant that 1928 shaped Hammond’s personality forever. It’s a compelling argument, sensitively put and a fitting explanation for the demons that affected Hammond’s life that was only a fraction less miserable than Gimblett’s post cricket privations.


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