In some ways Friday 9th
September 2016 is a day that can never be matched in terms of its significance
to my life. For a start, it was my partner Laura’s 50th birthday and
all our neighbours threw a wonderful, celebratory, surprise party that made
Laura realise just how loved and appreciated she is by everyone. Unfortunately,
I was unable to attend this gathering as, neither of us being birthday people,
I had already committed to attending The Wedding Present’s audio visual tour at
the Sage, whereby they would be playing their new album Going, Going in its entirety. You can imagine just how awful this
made me feel, but Laura was fine with it.
Also released on Friday 9th
was Teenage Fanclub’s new album Here,
which made this not so much a red letter day as seminal rite of passage in my
cultural progress through early middle age. The two bands I’ve followed for the
longest (more than a quarter of a century in each case) were releasing product
at the same time; alright so the Weddoes came out a week earlier, but you get
my drift.
Finishing work on Friday, I
cycled home and tore open the cardboard package from Monorail Records that
contained Here. Having already heard
the opening two songs I’m in Love,
perhaps the only lyric in history that utilises the word “trajectory” and Thin Air, there was already an element
of comforting familiarity about the autographed, clear vinyl album I held in my
hands. Reassuringly, the album was rigorously assembled with the trademark
democracy integral to the band’s ethos; Gerry, Norman and Raymond, as ever,
contribute 4 songs each. This is one of the facets of Teenage Fanclub I love
the most; what band other than the Fannies, and I include The Beatles in this,
can boast 3 distinctive songwriters whose work is all of comparable quality.
Norman with the positive, upbeat, rockier numbers, Gerry with the glorious
shimmering, gentle pop sensibility and Raymond with the more cerebral,
quirkier, road less travelled songs that reward the careful listener, in
contrast to the effervescent immediacy of the other two’s work. It is no
surprise that the band sought to make public a Norman and then a Gerry song;
more than anything else it reassures and pacifies an anxious Fanclub fanbase.
As the late John Peel said of The Fall (when they were good), this is a band
who are “always different; always the same.” However, and this is where things really do
take an unexpected gear shift.
Without doubt, the positivity
enshrined in Live in the Moment could
be seen as the keynote message of the album. We’re all getting older, though
some of us are getting better. Norman
and Gerry have come up with the goods as ever, in terms of crowd pleasing
singalongs, even if Darkest Part of the
Night has an almost sombre undercurrent rarely present in a Blake
composition, and slices of dappled beauty, whereby I Have Nothing More To Say is glittery electro pop with a solo that
could be a cousin of Eno’s Here Come the
Warm Jets. The beautifully cluttered It’s
a Sign shows a seamless link with Gerry’s Lightships work, while Norman’s
songs have little in common with his side projects; both approaches are fine by
me.
But let me tell you something; the
Raymond numbers are the ones that beguile and fascinate me the most at this
point. Hold On is unexpectedly jaunty in tone, music and words, while I Was Beautiful When I Was Alive is an
awesome contemplation on the impermanence of existence with an almost
confrontationally rocky coda. At this point, the best track for me is Steady State, which is Alka Selzer for
the hangover on the morning after the 60s. It’s reminiscent of Tomorrow Never Knows, but we could
equally be in 1972; a swooning, transcendent, proggy, psych anthem that is
probably the finest thing he has ever written. I love it.
TFC album explored, I headed out
to see The Wedding Present with my pal Ginger Dave. At the Sage, the venue was
approximately 80% full and Mr Gedge was doing his usual gladhanding at the
merch stall; I love this about him. He’s genuinely honest and engaging with the
people who go to see him. I suppose that’s exactly the same with TFC, or
specifically Norman as the others can seem a bit shy. I bought a CD of Going, Going for £10 and had it signed
by the auteur himself. Not only did it contain 20 tracks, comprising an
impressive 73 minutes of music, but it was accompanied by a DVD of all the
promo films the band would be playing along in front of. Now don’t get me
wrong, some of the images were quite affecting and intriguing in a quiet way,
but when the band really hit form, as they did for most of the night, you
simply forgot about the back projection and watched them absolutely tear the
place up. The energy David Gedge expends during live shows is something to marvel
at.
In total contrast to the Fannies,
The Wedding Present are not a democracy, but an absolute monarchy. I’m not
saying the man in black is a dictator or an autocrat, but this is his band and
he calls the shots. Perhaps this is why he is transmogrifying into a disturbing
hologram of Sam Allardyce and Nigel Farage. I’ve long speculated that he may be
on the OCD spectrum as so much of the activity related to the band is always
rigorously addressed in exactly the same manner, regardless of year or personnel:
they don’t do encores (we know that), the bassist is always female, the
inflexible insistence on playing the back catalogue in a particular order, the
fact Gedge always wears a black shirt and black trousers, his unnerving habit
of staring intently at his fretboard. Yet this is not a problem as, rather like
the reassuringly familiar nature of Gerry, Norman and Raymond’s style of songs,
this provides security and comfort for the listener. We are in our constantly
evolving and expanding comfort zone, being guided gently to new horizons by TFC
and belligerently shoved on our way by The Wedding Present.
The one way in which TWP really
shook things up at the Sage was in not playing the album in the exact order it
appears on record. Indeed, they took the stage to a backing track of a poetry
recital. The last time I heard something similar, The Manic Street Preachers
came on stage to Allen Ginsberg’s Howl
and proceeded to sound like a pale imitation of The Lurkers. This time, it was
my favourite English poet, the one on whom I wrote my dissertation, Philip
Larkin reading his 1974 poem Going, Going;
a rather vicious, nostalgic barbed attack on big business and the destruction
of the English countryside. This was followed by the 4 incredible instrumentals
that introduce the album; Kittery and
Greenland out-Mogwai Mogwai in terms
of the quiet to loud, slow to fast explosions of aural abuse layering over
pastoral beauty. Sprague utilises
female crooning in a way that makes it achingly reminiscent of a Manga theme tune,
Studio Ghibli style.
Don’t ever get the idea these
four instrumentals are fillers or self-indulgent b-sides promoted unfairly;
they are essential, integral parts of the album that lead delightfully into the
songs for singing. Some of the numbers we know already; Two Bridges, an elegant West Coast rock stomp, came out on 7” back
in 2013, Fifty Six, which I believe
to be Gedge’s age at the start of the recording process has been around on
earlier tours and Rachel is simply
gorgeous; a mature slice of summer love pop with nary a hint of the sardonic
side to which we’ve become accustomed. There are sonic terror assaults like Bear and Birds Nest, weird wigouts like Wales
and an efficient pastiche of 78 NYC punk thrash on Secretary. All in all, I’m getting the vibe it’s their best album
since the reformation and it simply wipes the floor with 2012’s Valentina that sounds tame and timid in
comparison. Is it as good as Seamonsters?
We’re getting close.
Live, the Sage was the perfect
environment for the new album; the excellence of the sound quality and comfort
of being sat down helped with the whole recital ambience. I sincerely doubt
that a traditional Weddoes gig would have worked with the seats in, but this
did. So far in 2016, I’ve seen The Wedding Present in 3 venues, play 3
completely different sets and make each one a triumph; how I look forward my
final glimpse of them in sunderland on Friday 2nd December, Ginger
Dave’s birthday. Although, before that, there’s the beguiling prospect of
Teenage Fanclub at Whitley Bay Playhouse on Wednesday 16th November,
and before that Vic Godard with the Band of Holy Joy at the Cumberland on
Friday 14th October. Incidentally, if you ask me to make a choice
between Here and Going, Going then the answer is BOTH!!
Finally, on a musical theme,
Fledg’ling Records are to be commended for tracking down the incredibly rare 1966
BBC session Anne Briggs recorded for Robin Hall and Jimmy McGregor’s Folk Cellar series. The programmes were
recorded in the basement studio at Cecil Sharp House, London. Anne Briggs sang
three songs during the launch episode broadcast on Saturday 13th August 1966
and these rare, simple, unadorned and intimate performances, aching with
poignancy, make their first appearance on record, fifty years after recording
and capture Anne Briggs singing at the very apex of her powers. Polly Vaughan and The Recruited Collier are as powerful a pair of unaccompanied
ballads as one could imagine; they will provoke you to tears. My Bonny Boy is a more jaunty and
optimistic number. Finally, the fourth track, The Verdant Braes of Skreen, recorded live in a Nottingham folk
club and rescued from a long, presumed lost, reel to reel tape completes the
set. This 4 Songs EP makes a
wonderful companion piece to the Fledg’ling re-release of English Songs by Shirley Collins that appeared back in April.
Meanwhile, my reading habits have
extended as far as another 2 books. The first of these is The Blade Artist by Irvine Welsh. As ever, the characters and
plotting in his best work are never far removed from the Leith of his youth,
which is the case with the updating of Francis Begbie’s life story, whereby the
implausible success the eponymous anti-hero has enjoyed as a sculptor is made
to seem plausible. Rather like Juice Terry Lawson in A Decent Ride, there is the hint that Welsh’s deification of
violent, heterosexual men from the underclass is a way of cocking a snook at
the rarefied American literary demi-monde in which he now finds himself. That
said, this is Welsh’s most taut and compelling prose excursion since Crime in 2008. He doesn’t play it for
laughs; it’s a tense, affecting tale of death and revenge, with appropriate
levels of thuggery and gore to make this revenge procedural a success. I
enjoyed it tremendously and hope that Welsh can maintain this level of output
in the future, as well as steering away from crass, populist excess such as the
execrable Sex Lives of the Siamese Twins.
Having finished The Blade Artist, I found myself in
Ireland bereft of holiday reading matter, so took a browse through the always
intriguing, always reduced stock in Dalkey News, where I picked up a copy of
Patrick McGinley’s curious Bogmail.
Set out in the wilds are Inishowen, the book was condemned on its publication
by no less of an august publication as The
Donegal Democrat as “a disgraceful insult to the fine people of our county.”
It isn’t really that; it’s more a kind of Samuel Beckett meets Gabriel Garcia
Marquez on the road to Ballyshannon, with an unmistakeable slice of Flann
O’Brien’s surreal take on rural Irish life on every page. This is above all, a
novel of character; the central protagonists, both present and missing, have
their stories told in loving, quirky detail and the intricate relations between
the various sub-plots on love, money, revenge and morality, all tie up in an
ever so neat ending. McGinley wrote the novel when living in England and the
exile’s emotional and physical distance from the hills, bogs and fields he
called home make it all the more effective.
I also finally managed to read
the 125th Anniversary book published by The Northern League, Northern Conquest; a long form diary
meets potted biography of the major figures involved in the local game in the
north east. A thoroughly enjoyable read, where the human interest levels are
always higher than the slavish attention to statistical detail, making it all
the better for those who regard football as far more than 22 blokes kicking a
bag of air about.
Hey Ian, great article as usual....I missed the Wedding Present at the Sage but will see you at the Fannie's gig in Whitley Bay no doubt. Really looking forward to hearing both of these albums. I caught Mr Gedge and his band on Marc Riley last week and thought that the song "Santa Monica" sounded great, a real return to form. Although Sea-Monsters is the band's opus (no surprise given who produced the work) I always thought Bizzaro was underrated. As for the Fannys well, I hope they play "everything flows" - a great song with a great outro! Carl
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