Sunday 3 August 2008

Tom Waits at the Ratcellar - Glitter & Doom

Oh! My! God! What a stomping gig! Tom Waits played the Ratcellar in the Phoenix Park on Thursday night (31st July). Just a bit of background: The Ratcellar, a.k.a. the Marquee (well, if not the actual one, for all intents and purposes), was set up in the Phoenix Park for the run of the trio of gigs ending the European leg of his Glitter and Doom tour. The gig was due to start at 8pm but the very relaxed crowd was still wandering in and around well after deadline. Hats (pork pies mostly – I think) were in proliferation among the men, as were suits. A very sartorially elegant bunch, high on the arty-barometer. Age ranged from in and around my age, mmphf, to sixties plus. The occasional young ones in their early twenties were being ferried mini bottles of wine by doting papas, cheerful staff were helping good-looking young men with their overloaded drinks order by fishing their tickets out of their back pockets and kindly replacing them after being checked, no messing or overt drunkenness was evident – people were even eating ice cream as they were waiting - and I’m pretty sure I spotted that pop pixie, Duke Special, heading for the front. Music which sounded like it came from a ‘40s ticket-a-dance hall was on in the background, lending a kind of sad and slightly sleazy air. By half eight, I figured that that was the perfect time to pop out to the loos – just about a minute later I heard a roar go up from inside the tent (the band arriving) followed by one even louder (the arrival of Mr Waits) but it did result in my having the wonderful sight of aged, sorry, distinguished men legging it from the portaloos to get back to their seats. You don’t see something like that every day. Have I mentioned that the staff were superb? Well, they were. I don’t know where the order came from – Mr Waits or the general gig management - but there was a hold on people just wandering in during a number and all were held back from entering the main arena of the tent while Mr Waits was performing. Brilliant! No-one minded and it kept the disruption down. They also gave every appearance of being in thoroughly good humour, especially when one punter tried to take a photograph while standing next to one of them. That was actually rather funny. By the time I did get back to my seat, Mr Waits was just finished the first number, which I’d seen from the sidelines. He was bathed in an orange/red light, standing on a raised podium, lit round the edge with coloured bulbs, covered in grit, which raised in great dusty clouds when he stomped his feet (which was a lot, by the way). Looking like a modern shaman, on a stage cluttered with equipment and instruments, decorated with a overgrown hat tree of tannoy speakers, wearing his dusty old three-piece black suit, black shirt and black bowler hat (yes, bowler, not trilby or pork pie), raising his hands in fists, grimacing at the music. Surrounded by the band, he belted out tracks like ‘the thing about human kind is there’s nothing kind about humans’ (I’m very bad with names) before moving to the piano for some quieter numbers. A note on the band – there was percussion, keyboard, upright bass, guitar, sax and clarinet. His sons, Casey and Sullivan Waits were on stage (I wonder what it’s like working with dear ol’ dad?), on percussion and clarinet. The whole lot of them were superb but the saxophonist, Vincent Henry, took the biscuit – every time you looked over, he was playing two saxes at once. Aagh! You can just picture the rehearsal where that was decided…”Hey, lads, look at this! I worked it out in the pub last night!” “Brilliant! Do it on stage!” “Oh, bloodyhell…” The section where he sat at the piano with the upright bass behind him was gorgeous. I don’t know whether it was the PMT in me but when the crowd sang along to ‘innocent when you dream’ like they were at the Grand Ol’ Opry, it brought tears to my eyes. In a good way. Yes, Mr Waits, I agree, it was beautiful. By the bye, Mr Waits is the King of Cheese. I had no idea. But he was forever telling us ‘one last thing’ – bits of trivia, nonsense and very, very bad jokes. He got more chatty as the night went on. He also appreciated our abilities as an audience, I must tell you. After the singing, came the clapping. Lads, we were brilliant. We were rhythmic, together, we sensed the way the music was going (mostly) and gave him dynamics, fade ins & outs and handled any complexity he threw at us (though there wasn’t much of that, now I think of it). I think he liked it. He certainly had us clapping a lot. Now his voice is not gravely. Not any more. He has gone beyond the gravely description, so far beyond it, it doesn’t do the roiling incoherency of it any justice. The closest geological description (to continue a theme) was as if he were singing from beneath a rubbly, muddy stream bed. Not the best description, I’ll grant you, but at least it’s not ‘gravely’. There was so much in this gig, I have pages of notes, but I’d be here all night and you’d be asleep. There was the sudden downpour, which made an unexpected entrance in the tent over the rows behind us, forcing several people to abandon ship for elsewhere in the tent. There was the over two hours of sheer and unparalleled woompf on stage from Mr Waits and his merry band before taking a break. There was the over five (five!) minutes (minutes!) he made us wait before he came back out for the encore. There was the astonishing and medicine man-like outpouring of ‘Hoist That Rag’ (and our best clapping moment) which resulted in a oh-so-totally-deserved standing ovation. The be-glittered ‘Make it rain’. The stomp-operated school-house bell. The multi-talented, multi-instrumented band. The strutting, posing joy that was Mr Waits. It’s a pity there’s only one of him. It must be fun, being Tom Waits.

Saturday 2 August 2008

Nicole Maguire

Nicole Maguire Cyprus Avenue, Cork August 1st, 2008 Picture it, a floating mass of dark spiral curls, a girl and a guitar, centre stage with a small spare collection of the bare essentials – bass, electric guitar, percussion. The audience is small but appreciative. It is tough getting an audience in Cork sometimes – talking to those in the gigging business, there’s either too much on any one evening or it’s holiday season and everyone’s at the big summer festivals/gigs. Still, a small group of dedicated, interested fans makes for a better night all round than a large number of half-interested, half-chatting punters out for a drink and some background music (though I’m not sure that those who are relying on the bar take would agree). The personable Ms Maguire was relaxed and chatty, thanking the audience for coming along and wondering that they weren’t somewhere getting a tan instead of staying here in the rain. Dangerous question, really – you might get the audience agreeing. The sound produced by this small band was rich, layered and full and Ms Maguire’s vocals strong and clear. Well, it was as long as the band wasn’t full force around her. From where I was standing, back a bit and centre stage, whenever the band joined in in toto, the vocals were kind of to almost lost, which was disappointing. This doesn’t appear to be the case with her studio recordings so I can only put it down to the night in hand. However, the sound was good and, with the ever versatile Mr Chris Percival rocking out stage left, it left you with a very good taste in you mouth. Ms Maguire is a gentle girl with a powerful voice which did not get the outing it deserved last night. It is unforced and easy on the ear. According to Chris Percival (guitar), she has the voice to go with the songs and the songs to go with the voice. In other words, she’s a mean songwriter and one heck of a singer. And I have to admit, I agree. The sound overall brings to mind for me a more rocked up version of All About Eve. You may not agree. For aficionados of Ms Maguire, the well-stocked set list for the gig included ‘It’s a little strange’, ‘Lipstick Girl’, ‘I’m gonna be’ and ‘When the coast is clear’ (to which you can listen for yourself on her myspace (nicolemaguireireland) or .com sites.) She has also got dates lined up for the next two and a half months up and don the country so you can catch her live as and when. The Nicole Maguire Band: Nicole Maguire(vocals, electric & acoustic guitar)/Ciaran Manning (percussion)/Chris Percival (electric & acoustic guitar)/Jason Brown (Bass)

Monday 21 July 2008

Samual James at the Crane Lane

Samuel James sings the blues. We don’t often get blues singers in this neck of the woods. It’s not really our metier. So, when one comes along the calibre of Mr James, we should be counting our blessings. Not yet out of his twenties, he’s making a name for himself Stateside, being compared favourably with blues artists like Keb’ Mo’ and legends such as Son House and Mississippi John Hurt. No mean feat. He recently completed a mini tour of Ireland, taking in a few gigs in Cork, Dublin & Clonakilty). The night I caught was a free midnight gig in the Crane Lane (Cork) on Wednesday 16th last, following Alabama3’s earlier session. He was, understandably, nervous; not least due to their (totally) justified reputation. But there is nothing to do in a situation like that but get up on that stage and start making some noise and, hopefully, an audience for yourself. When I arrived, the crowd was still milling around, buzzing from the Alabama 3, and only just beginning to focus on the new arrival (SJ), who was up on stage with just himself and a guitar and a whole lot of foot-stomping. By a couple of songs in, the crowd was being very much won over, helped by a couple of musos literally hauling people forward to the stage to bridge the gap between Mr James and his burgeoning audience. This helped no end, as he looked less isolated to the crowd at large and more and more were being hooked in all the time. As an audience, we were definitely more interested in the very fast and the very complicated, which was good as Mr James is very good at both. He is a superb guitarist. And he spears to get totally lost in what he’s doing, to the extent that at times you were not sure whether he had not forgotten the audience entirely, until he speeded up again and the crowd started whooping. [If you’re trying to get a picture of the sound/feel for what he was producing, my mind kept thinking Cohen Bros films, esp. their most recent. Does that help? Maybe not. You can check out his myspace anyway (see below).] At one point, there was a rather entertaining pass where a member of the crowd started doing what can only be described as interpretative line dancing, while Mr James slowly rotated the guitar upside-down and around, while not missing a beat (but making life a little difficult for his happy helper who had to spend some time hanging on the edge of the stage trying to make sure he was still mic’d up for the duration. Well, we know this much: he knows his instrument backwards! Boom Boom! OK, I apologise for that one. Bad me. Blues, at least the kind sung by Mr James, originated in the Baptist Church, as Mr James explained, before taking us on a roaring encore of Q&A called “John the Revelator”, with the audience hollering (only word for it) the responses to Mr James’ on-stage who was playing at prosletysing. Bloody good stuff! I found out later that apparently, after Mr James had finished his gig and left the stage, Harpo Strangelove, (the harmonica player from Alabama3) and himself returned to the stage to do a number together. And I missed it because I was being good and getting to bed before half one on a school night. Curses! P.S. Now as the Irish leg of his mini-tour this side of the Atlantic was organised by my flatmate, I met Mr James a number of times, like when he was getting over jet lag by having a doze on the couch or stopping off en route to a sound check. And, ladies, he is as lovely in person as he looks on stage. Just in case you’re curious. You may not be. But you might. (www.myspace/sugarsmallhouse)

Friday 27 June 2008

Morrissey at the Marquee

The first time I came across the New York Dolls was a few years ago as a mention in a biography of Vivienne Westwood. The next time was on Thursday afternoon as the Boy was hyperventilating down the phone on being told that I’d gotten late tickets to the Morrissey gig in the Marquee with the NYD playing support. (He got very excited about the New York Dolls.) Now, this is probably nothing you don’t know already but Morrissey quite possibly had the same reaction when the NYD (actually…am I allowed abbreviate? Oh, damn it all to heck – I live on the edge!) agreed to reform at his behest for a one-off gig at the Meltdown Festival in 2004. I have to say that I’m tickled pink by the idea of someone of the stature of Morrissey being a die-hard fan - it’s kind of like trying to picture him in short trousers. Mind you, he probably had the same hair-do… Ok, so what has all this got to do with the gig in the Marquee on Thursday? Well, for the ones down the back, it’s because the Dolls played support to Morrissey in the Marquee on Thursday. Do try and keep up. Kudos to Aiken Promotions! OK – so the New York Dolls! Generally thought of as the fathers of punk, one-time clients of Malcolm Maclaren, starting in 1971, stoping in 1977, reforming in 2004 and now playing in little old Cork in a tent. I think you’ll have guessed by now that I’m a Dolls virgin so I am not going to upset dyed-in-the-wool fans by commenting on or even trying to name any of the songs. Having said that, I do remember one in specific – the easy-to-remember, easy-to-pronounce-and-sing-along-to “Pills”. The Boy did liken them physically to the Village People – don’t shout – it’s more that they’re five very different-looking people on stage (there was a definite ACDC vibe going on with Sylvain Sylvain’s wardrobe) but they put me more in mind of the Stones, not least because of the striking similarities in looks and swagger between Johansen and Jagger. But I suspect that Johansen may not take himself as seriously as Jagger (working on the assumption that Jagger does, mind you). Speaking of wardrobes, when are men going to realise that the wearing of pink, stretch, spangly tops will actually enhance their level of attractiveness? Make-up, dresses, pink spangly – try it out! It worked for that dude out of Babylon Zoo, it works for Eddie Izzard and it worked for David Johansen on Thursday. Look it – women have been cross-dressing for decades – trouser suits, short hair – why not men? I miss the New Romantics… Sorry – wandered - back to the gig! It seemed to me that the crowd took a little while to warm up to the Dolls and really get into it but by the time Mr Johansen was introducing us to the local boy on stage we were happy, happy people. I love their stuff – it’s original, unpretentious, good old rock’n’roll punk and, most importantly, great fun. I would love to see them again, hint hint. A total change of scene and mood, Morrissey took to the stage after a LOT of flashing strobes, as a picture of sartorial elegance. Immaculate hair. We were asked for our compliments/comments. The grey really does make a man look distinguished. Opening with “All you need is me” (wonderful lyrics) and following with “Ask” (my personal favourite – it should be printed on cards and handed out in schools and health centres), he made efforts to gel with his audience and show his fluffy side by speaking Irish at us (phonetically from a card, but how many of us can do much better?) and even tried a bit of a Cork (sorry, Cark) accent. It was quite sweet, really. I wandered out for a bit in the middle, when he wandered into his more modern, solo stuff. There was a feeling of detachment around, which I thought was me disengaging from the music but have heard it since from others so perhaps it was emanating from the stage, or perhaps I happened to talk to the only people in the place who felt it, who knows? In any case, I was back inside just in time to miss his cover of the Buzzcocks’ “You say you don’t love me” (apparently superb) but in very good time for “How soon is now?” and the totally excellent encore “Irish Blood, English Heart”. And let me tell you, you haven’t heard that song until you’ve heard it being bellowed by a tent full of Morrissey fans – sends shivers down the spine, especially the bit about Cromwell. Now I want to know about those pictures used as the backdrop. I’ve been wandering around the web to see if anyone has info on them, but no joy. Now the one on the left was a face-on mugshot, taken on the 26th June 1940 and just before he launched into “How Soon is Now?”, his keyboard played a slow and strange rendition of “Happy Birthday”. Hmm…bit of a mystery. Any enlightenment? Is it a really obvious connection? (Aside from the dates coinciding, of course.) It was a definite themed set – what with the mugshot triptych and the smaller image on the front with a snippet of accompanying information, which was saying basically that the guy in the picture was arrested for stealing a watch but claimed that the owner had given it to him. Both were drunk, apparently. Hmm…yes…and the mystery thickens. P.S. Apologies to the first support band as I did not hear them and cannot find where I wrote their name and arrived at the gig with only just enough time to have a quick beer before the Dolls … em … well … anyway … I’m only human!

Tuesday 3 June 2008

The Brigadier - The Rise and Fall of Responsibility

And if the formatting goes on this entry too, I will be very put out. The Brigadier “The Rise and Fall of Responsibility” All songs written, performed & produced by Matt Williams · Growing up is hard to do (part 1) · When will I be with you? · The language of love · Envy · Une Soiree · Under the influenza · Hot Toddy · The melancholy days · This, is why… · What can’t be fixed · The box in the back of my mind · Growing up is hard to do (part 2) · Façade What can I say? I love this album. It’s odd, feel-good, has hints (only hints, mind you) of burlesque, Julian Lennon ( know, I know, but work with me here), The Feeling…but none of it is overwhelming. He’s pretty damn unique in my hearing. And now I have to wax lyrical about it for 300 words. Oh hell, sod that, just go buy it and go for a drive. In the sun.

Celeste Lear

“Looking up from underwater” Björk, Moloko, Goldfrapp…they all spring to mind with the opening bars of Ms Lear’s CD, “Looking Up From Underwater”. In fact, a lot of things spring to mind as the cd wears on. For example: · Track 2 – weak lyrics · Track 3 – early-90s drum&bass feel summer · Tracks 4 & 5 – more early 90s reminiscence · Track 6 - moving on – feels like the sound track to Romeo & Juliet. · Track 7 - Siobhán Donaghy soundalike · Track 8 – All About Eve · Track 9 – celtic Moloko · More 90s, more Björk derivation… And so on and so on. Ms Lear has a grand strong voice and can write a tune but my problem with this album is that it all seems to sound like someone/something else. There appears to be a great effort at originality here but it ends up being someone else’s sound. Pity.

Monday 2 June 2008

Heliopause

Heliopause EP Recorded & Mixed at Soggy Cabin Studios, Cork · paprapo · who ate the cabin boy · middle distance · maybe later · caught rotten It’s a brave band that goes purely instrumental. Charlie Don’t Surf are one Cork crowd who pretty well know what they’re doing and can pull it off with just the music alone. It remains to be seen whether Heliopause can get to the same point, without requiring the ‘lively antics of their bass player’ on stage. According to their press release, they’ve been together since 2005, meeting as students. In other words, they’re young and inexperienced. They’re learning. The laid back “maybe later” shows promise. It shows restrain and control which is not so evident in the earlier tracks. And “caught rotten” has depth to it that is refreshing. The opener “pamrapo” could do with an overhaul of the drum line as this could be a show piece for some tight, rhythmic percussion, which unfortunately at the moment is merely filler behind some not-that-interesting guitars. What’s needed here, I think, is some intensive study on behalf of the band in rhythmic and tonal intricacy. If you are dropping the lyric entirely, then the rest simply has to be wholly engaging. And, I’m sorry to say, aside from sparks in the last two tracks and the very beginning (and I mean VERY beginning) of “who ate the cabin boy”, this wasn’t. Having a great live show is good and is a rather excellent start but, unless you plan on selling solely on the basis of live DVDS, then the music has to carry without the visuals. There is promise here but Heliopause have chosen a difficult road. Music sans lyrics is a difficult market to corner as the audiences tend to be more demanding and the instruments must do so much more work. All I can suggest is that you get hold of some modern minimalist (e.g. Steve Reich) or African music (e.g. our own Niwel Tsumbu), and listen to the swirling kaleidoscope of sound and rhythm which is possible, listen to the glorious complexity of it all and, well, listen good. Heliopause: Brian Dunlea (Bass) Sean Daly (Guitar/Synth) Damien O’Leary (Guitar) Jamie O’Donoghue (Drums) www.myspace.com/heliopausecork