Random Play by Graham Reid

3

Soundtrack of a stay-at-home

Because I am a freelancer I get to stay at home most days. I see things like a change in the weather, empty suburban streets, St Lukes shopping mall before people arrive and the postie.

When I am not gainfully employed on some short-term project (ha!) I listen to music, my music. Right now I am playing a record from about 1968, Bill Deal and the Rhondels whose sole hit as far as I know was I’ve Been Hurt (in which the word “hurt” appears 40 times in 2.10 seconds).

Bill was a white soul shouter, but with his horn-driven band (in frilly-front shirts and bow ties) he also delivers covers of the Doors’ Touch Me, the Beatles’ Hey Bulldog, the MOR cringer Hooked on A Feeling and some sweet soul music.

I’m a sucker for such stuff. I loved I’ve Been Hurt (here) back in the day (until recently I thought he was black, actually) but never had the single so bought the album a month ago, $15 at Slowboat in Wellington.

And on any given day I am listening to cowboy rock by The Unforgiven (one album, some members went on to become Cracker), Ghanaian funk from the Seventies, quiet sounds from Brian Eno if I am concentrating, or something from my growing collection of 10” records that I am buying by cover art rather than by quality or artist. That’s a lottery -- but with better odds than Big Wednesday or the casino.

But mostly I listen to new music -- of all persuasions. This week at Elsewhere I posted over a dozen albums which range from the new Tom Waits live album and alt.country punk-folk from Sweden, to experimental sonics recorded at a festival in Auckland in ‘07, an Ethiopian jazz master and a solo album by Gordon Gano of the Violent Femmes.

And more -- including an essay/article/review on the 40th anniversary edition of the Rolling Stones classic live album Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out! here.

These are all albums I have played repeatedly in the past fortnight or so. I listen to a lot of music, always have (which explains the conversation yesterday with my doctor about tinnitus.)

The point of this being that I have surprised myself about how many albums I have posted at Elsewhere this past year. About 200 at a guess, there are pages of them put up with comment, a sample track, a video clip where I could find one and the cover art reproduced. Now that would be 200 posted. There was other stuff I listened to and didn’t think was much cop or accidentally overlooked -- and guys like Bill Deal and all that other crass or classy vinyl I listen to between times are never going to appear. Some people are well read, I am well listened. And suffering from tinnitus!

By Thursday I am going to have bitten off much more than I can swallow and will have chosen my Best of Elsewhere 2009 list out of this diverse collection of Elsewhere reviews which runs from world music and local oddities to alt.country, nu-folk, esoteric jazz and contemporary classical (only a few of those, don’t be frightened) . . . And other styles which probably don’t have a name yet. I call them Elsewhere.

I’d invite Public Address readers to take time out of their busy day (and is it that busy pre-Christmas? Things kinda stop for me so I have no idea what goes on in Officeworld anymore) and pick your best out of what I have put up for your listening pleasure, enlightenment or confusion.

The albums of ‘09 are the most recent 25 pages of Music From Elsewhere and if that sounds formidable it is actually quite easy to negotiate your way through. Simply scroll down looking at titles and covers and when you hit the bottom click to the next page. Repeat as required.

When you see something along the way that connected to you this year just hit the “more” link or the title and use the Post A Comment at the bottom of the review to offer your opinion.
Of course you are free to Post A Comment on albums you couldn’t have hated more also.

By the way, Bill Deal and the Rhondels’ Vintage Rock album isn’t that great. I should only have paid $10 for it.

Righto, enjoy your trawl -- and while you are at it have a look at this. The worst film ever made? Probably.

Final orders? A new “shipment” of The Idiot Boy Who Flew has just arrived if you are looking for holiday reading. For ordering details and further info see below. A couple of companies have recently come to me asking for copies as gifts for clients. If you are a company wanting to explore that idea of buying multiple copies I am offering “a deal on the bill”.

Hey! Another “Bill Deal“!
What were the odds of that happening?

    
Graham Reid is the author of the book 'The Idiot Boy Who Flew'.

(Click here to find out more)

15

Don’t Fall off The Mountain

Because I have never read the Maurice Gee novel and only have the vaguest recollection of the television adaptation (which my pre-teen kids loved at the time), maybe I would be a reliable witness to talk about the movie of Under the Mountain. I’m not attached to previous versions.

It is inevitable that many will bemoan that it isn’t faithful to the book and/or that it even veers away from the tv treatment (Jeez, they are different media, folks), and it isn’t without its flaws.

We saw it on Saturday night at a preview (the same time that Gee saw it for the first time too apparently) and enjoyed it. Sure there are plot holes and ideas which go undeveloped, some of the dialogue does seem to still belong in the mouths of children younger that the teens who are delivering it in this aged-up version, and the music really does overwhelm sometimes or telegraph how you should feel.

I suppose some don’t want their memories of the book sullied by it being brought into the age of cellphones. In that case they shouldn’t go.

But the Wilberforces are real creepy, there are three or four “in-jokes” for New Zealanders (and specifically Aucklanders) which had people laughing out loud, and my golly haven’t we got a beautiful and brooding city when you see it from the air -- as you do quite often here.

My wife liked it more than me but I liked it well enough, even though it clearly isn’t aimed at me. We do hope that Mr Gee hasn’t had to take to his bed for three days of weeping like that unlucky vintner. I doubt it.

We do know Megan’s niece and her friends -- indeed her demographic at which it is aimed -- will really get off on it. Frankly, that can only be a good thing.

I’m already over vampires, aren’t you? The Wilberforces seem genuinely freaky with no redeeming features like toned abs, eye-liner and emo-cheekbones.

But the loudest objections to Under the Mountain will perhaps rise like a chorus among the PC people in the following weeks, especially given the summer days ahead: at no time does anyone in a kayak or a boat wear a life-jacket.

Watch those Letters to the Editors folks, we could be in for a fun time. You heard it here first. The movie opens Thursday.

Elsewhere: New music at Elsewhere right now includes albums by Rupa and the April Fishes, a pub-rock band named after the late lead singer of Dr Feelgood, Belfast singer-songwriter Bap Kennedy, the legendary Guy Clark, the percussion ensemble Strike, a terrific Paul McCartney live CD/DVD collection (he looks and sings astonishingly well for a man who is 67) and more. Including a wonderful kids album (for adults I think) by Fatcat and Fishface (check the Yoko Ono-like sample track, it is witheringly accurate). All that and more is at Music From Elsewhere with sample tracks and videos in most cases.
I’ve also brought back Lawrence Arabia’s album to the top of the heap for reasons which will become obvious if you . . . read on.

Speaking of the age-defying McCartney, I’ve posted an article about a very interesting and largely lost album by his brother Mike here.

There are now more than 90 Essential Elsewhere albums which roam from deep reggae and jerky post-punk to sweet Mantovani and sour Captain Beefheart. That’s kind of record collection I have, “and I challenge all others to do the same” as they used to say at Telethons.

There’s a whole bunch of cross-linked stuff relating to movies, books and a television series about the Americans in Iraq; gangster and cowboy flicks and much more at Cultural Elsewhere. With relevant video clips.

Just heaps of stuff.

Later today I have tickets to give away to Lawrence Arabia gigs around the country (see here for dates), CDs up for grabs (McCartney, Fatcat and Fishface etc) . . . but only to subscribers.
I’m giving you the chance to join (it is free and the only time I trouble you is a weekly newsletter telling you wazzup at Elsewhere). You can subscribe right now here.

By the way, a new print run of The Idiot Boy Who Flew has just arrived. The first three print runs sold out. It’s holiday reading for all the year round, and the gift that just keeps on giving. Available through Public Address Books (see below).
Oh, and you should buy the new books by David Haywood and Emma Hart too.

Both are excellent, and they didn’t ask me to say that. I just said it.

    
Graham Reid is the author of the book 'The Idiot Boy Who Flew'.

(Click here to find out more)

215

“Thank you, you’ve been a lovely audience”

For my sins — and mostly my pleasure — I have been to more concerts, shows and gigs than I can recall. Literally.

I forgot until recently that I had seen English folkie Vin Garbutt play the auditorium in the Art Gallery, and mad Black Grape in New York.

I’d have to go through yellowed newsprint to remind myself of who I have seen but left little or no impression. Sort of “I’ve forgotten more than I’ll ever know”.

When I was reviewing regularly at the Herald from the late 80s and well into the late 90s I would sometimes see two or three gigs a week, from sitar players to skinhead bands like The Plague. (Not to be confused with The Plague which featured Richard Von Sturmer, Andrew Snoid and Don McGlashan if I recall, one night at the Maidment, must have been the late 70s because they played Nambassa.)

As with any restaurant critic, book or film reviewer, I used to go out in the expectation and hope of having a good time. Sometimes I didn’t want to go but duty called, or I was curious enough to make the effort to get past weariness and enjoying a night in. It was hard work, especially when you had a day job too.

Back then reviewers would go to a show and then straight into the office afterwards where you’d write against the clock (and the sub who wanted to go home) and by 12.30 am you would be putting down a final fullstop. The review would appear in the paper the next morning.

Anyone who thinks that is easy should try it -- and try getting all those jumbled thoughts into a coherent and passably intelligent 350 words while the clock ticks and someone is saying, “just about finished?” And you might have had more than a few drinks.

One night I remember going in and the news editor saying, “So what was the audience like, Graham?” and I stared at him quizzically. He pointed out that in the previous two reviews I had mentioned the audience quite a bit.

Fair call, and I tried to stop. But sometimes the audience is pretty darn interesting. More than the show.

I thought about this after seeing Nick Lowe and Ry Cooder the other night (who were terrific incidentally, but we could have done with another hour).

But when the opening act Juliette Commagere and her band played some people started to shout that it was too loud.

She jokingly observed, “We’re not in Japan now” (where audiences are notoriously polite and silent) and then said, “C’mon folks, it’s rock’n’roll”.

And it was -- but perhaps that wasn’t what some in that older demographic audience wanted to hear. Or be told.

Let me recall some local audiences.

I remember the great folksinger Odetta played the Auckland Town Hall and the few who were there (no more than 50 at a guess, but the usherette wouldn‘t let me move from the mezzanine to the ground floor!) howled down the opening act Marg Layton, a blues singer from Wellington. These folkies had come to see Odetta. And only Odetta.

Country music audiences can be like that too: they want the star to come on at 8 pm (if that’s what it says on the ticket) and they want to be home by 10. No mucking about. They can get nasty, and will shout out things.

People do that, don’t they? Witless things usually.

At Tom Waits in the Auckland Town Hall at the dawn of time someone yelled out drunkenly, “Tooooooom” and he, stopping in his tracks and fiddling in a pocket, said, “Hold on, lemme get a pencil and write that down.”

“We love you” seems to be a common enough thing to yell.

And yelling out for your favourite song? Was it Ryan Adams who said “Well, we actually have a set list worked out so . . .”

And they do, even those who say they don’t. I interviewed the great Irish singer-songwriter Christy Moore in Wellington many years ago and he told me he changed the set list every night to stop himself becoming a machine and going crazy. He was in his hotel room working on that night’s list as we spoke.

I saw him a few night later in Auckland.
Yep, same set list, same jokes, same pauses for effect . . .

The other night at Cooder‘n‘Lowe a guy near me yelled out “Little Village” (Umm, that was a band that Cooder‘n‘Lowe were in, not a song. So he wanted their whole album sung?)

I once wrote a review which asked, “When did we become American?” There was a period when muttheads would do the whole “hoo-hoo-hoo” dog chant for no particular reason. Or when someone on stage said they came from Weehawken, New Jersey there were bound to be a few dozen who would howl at the moon. Who knew there were so many people from Weehawken in Auckland?

We went through a phase here where people wanted to get on stage with the star. I remember a very old John Lee Hooker, deep into some blues song, opening his eyes and seeing a young guy sitting in the chair beside him. The Hook looked terrified.

But for a period people would just get up and amble on stages, smile at the crowd like “Hi Mum, look at me” then wander off. It happened for years. Then seemed to stop.

Fights? I’ve seen a few, but then again, too few to mention . . .

Other amusements? The Cure walking out to applause at Mainstreet (I think, about 1980?) and when Robert Smith got the mike he sniffed derisively and barked, “We haven’t done anything yet.” That shut the punks and new Goths up.

Jeff Tweedy at the Big Day Out neatly making fun of that whole “You guys have got a beautiful country” (Cue applause). In a slow and stoned drawl he said, “We went to . . . Rangitoto today. [Long pause] That’s our anecdote.”

And that person who yelled out at Buddy Guy, “play the blues”? Buddy’s reply with a frown: “I thought that’s what I was doing.”

The woman who shouted incoherently through Linton Kwesi Johnson (she did the same in Wellington too apparently); the person who yelled happy birthday repeatedly at some act (might have also been Guy) when it wasn’t his birthday . . .

But back to Ry and Nick Lowe: when people started to yell that it was too loud (I didn’t think it was, but then again I have seen The Plague, both of them) I realised that maybe a lot of these people hadn’t been to a concert in a wee while.

I used to meet any number of people (at dinner or in the lobby) who would say “We haven’t been to a concert for years, not since . . .” and at that point they’d invariably mention Norah Jones.

My experience is that middle-aged people (my peers!) can be the rudest of audiences: they don’t go to too many shows so when they do they get liquored up and loud, and only want the hits. They want what they want.

I had an e-mail a few years back from a guy who seemed to be bristling with rage that Bob Dylan was scheduled for the Vector Arena. He told me would never go there because he’d heard the sound was bad (huh?) and that he had been a Dylan fan all his life but wouldn’t go and see him "unless he was playing an acoustic set in small club".

I sent an e-mail back stating the obvious: you are one lifelong Dylan fan who will never see him.

When I saw Dylan at the Civic on his last tour the couple next to me were surprised to see the stage set up: they expected just one man and a microphone. I said he played with a rock band and the woman said they hadn’t heard his most recent records but “we do like his folk albums”. They left after three songs.

I’m always surprised by people (in my demographic mostly) who don’t understand that a concert isn’t like the CD at home which you turn down to talk over, and the sound is never going to be as pristine as that shiny disc. (Although I was told frequently the Eagles were “exactly like the record” which might put them in Britneyworld, huh?).

Like it or not, at a concert you are going to be there with other human animals, some of whom — as I have just outlined —will say and do dumb and annoying things. Some will be drunk and obnoxious, some will sit with folded arms.

I’ve long ago given up expecting anyone to be quiet even if it just one person and a guitar trying to command attention in bar. (Like when Robert Fisher of Willard Grant Conspiracy played a solo show and two women, at the K Rd bar and enormously drunk, were braying and crying about their boyfriends at full volume).

These days I expect someone to yell out “we love you” or the name of their favourite song (invariably obscure so it was never going to played, or “the hit” so it was always going to be played), for people to talk and shout through every song but clap after each, and for someone to tell me afterwards “they were better the last time”.

Part of the contract of gig-going I think. Wouldn’t miss it for the world.
Care to share?

New Music at Elsewhere: Lots of new and reissue music again as always, including reviews of the new Norah Jones (in depth) and Topp Twins albums (the latter really good), plus Tom Russell, the Pines, old Leonard Cohen, new White Denim, that excellent Chris Knox tribute album Stroke, a woeful Michael Jackson cash-in remix album and much more. It is all here. Enjoy or endure.

Lots of other things at Elsewhere (cowboy movies! Monty Python!! Gwen Stefani!!!?) and a new Essential Elsewhere album if you are up for a challenge -- and didn‘t think Juliette Commagere was too loud!

    
Graham Reid is the author of the book 'The Idiot Boy Who Flew'.

(Click here to find out more)

12

“And now my life has changed in oh so many ways . . .”

As many of you will know Chris Knox is recovering from a stroke and many of his musical friends -- local and international -- have rallied around, recorded some of his songs, and now a double CD (Stroke: Songs For Chris Knox) is coming out on Monday.

I have been listening to it for a few days and have posted this piece about the versions and Chris‘ music. All proceeds from the album -- and the Kings Arms concert next Friday, November 20 -- go to Chris’ recovery programme.

As you’ll note, I mention why fund-raiding concerts/albums are rarely “reviewed” -- but while Chris might need help he doesn’t need sympathy. So I have reviewed the double album in as much as I have said exactly what I think of it.

And I think very highly of it. (I know how Chris rates it, he’s still a bloody critic!)

Anyway, I simply draw attention to the album and concert because Chris is such a special person and here’s a way that you can not only offer your support to him and his wonderful family, but get something yourself out of it. Sort of enlightened self-interest on your part . . . With a great soundtrack.

At the end there is a link to the blog about the album and the concert details.

You might also note Chris’ album is above (and rated above) that by Yoko Ono at Elsewhere.

I’m guessing he’ll like that.

    
Graham Reid is the author of the book 'The Idiot Boy Who Flew'.

(Click here to find out more)

66

All Apologies

An apology means nothing if you do it on Facebook or You Tube.

Or Twitter or e-mail or txt. Or a talk show.

An apology by an actor who cries probably doesn’t mean much. These people are actors, they are trained to fake sincerity.

An apology by a politician who appears contrite probably doesn’t mean much. These people are politicians, they are trained to fake sincerity.

An apology means nothing if it is made on your behalf by your coach, captain, manager or trainer. It means less than nothing if you aren’t there when it is being made.

An apology means nothing if you are reading it from a script prepared by your coach, captain, manager or trainer. Or PR person, press secretary or media coach. It means less than nothing if it has taken many days of negotiation to prepare.

An apology to your victim’s family means nothing if you have waited 15 months then changed your plea to guilty on the day of the trial.

An apology probably means nothing if your lawyer has to say “my client is genuinely remorseful, your honour”.

An apology means nothing if you are sorry “that people took offence” when you should have said you were sorry you offended people by your offensive behaviour or words.

An apology to investors who have lost their life savings means nothing if you are a declared bankrupt living in a mansion which is in your partner or spouse’s name. And you are still flying first class to a friend’s wedding in Europe.

An apology means nothing if you drag in your wife, husband, partner, family or pets by way of gaining sympathy.

An apology means nothing if, by way of diversion, you use the occasion to point the finger at others who have done something similar. Or use any other diversionary tactic, like making another outrageous or offensive statement or claim to shift attention away from your original action.

An apology made while holding a Bible or any other holy text doesn’t mean anything if you haven’t read the thing.

An apology which includes the words “but most of all I have let myself down” is highly suspect. If you had such high moral standards people are allowed to wonder even more how you managed to “let yourself down”.

An apology means nothing if you are only making it because you got caught out.

An apology because it was a “youthful indiscretion” means nothing if you are over 23.

“Sorry” means nothing if your mum or dad or family make you say it and don’t have any idea why you are apologising. But if you are kid we can forgive you.

The word “sorry” is so debased it is down there with “awesome” so it should be used sparingly. As in, only if you really mean it.

Sorry is . . . actually, it probably isn’t worth much these days. But it is still a great song by the Easybeats.

And speaking of music: New noises now at Music From Elsewhere includes Yoko Ono, Tami Neilson, BLK JKS, Sarah Blasko and many others. At Absolute Elsewhere is an interview with a Decemberist (coming for the Big Day Out) and many, many articles, overviews and interviews; at Essential Elsewhere is another CD/DVD you might need in your collection; and at Cultural Elsewhere are two DVDs pertaining to one of the most volatile regions of the world.
And much more. Feel free to comment, Twitter about it and so on.

Shameless self-promotion, Part the Deux: My new travel book The Idiot Boy Who Flew (see below) received a nice notice in the Herald this week . . . and no, I cannot pull strings there and did not write this myself. In fact I was pleasantly surprised it was reviewed at all.

These are not “selective quotes” because the review was entirely favourable, but this is what was said: "as delightful as you'd expect from such a skilled storyteller . . . trademark anecdotes about fascinating characters . . . the title story about a simple saint whose faith allowed him to fly, demonstrate[s] the treasures to be found as a result of doing a bit of research and exploring off the beaten tourist track . . . marvellously accurate snapshots of people and places from elsewhere; pictures in words which amuse and inspire, entertain and inform".

It also mentioned I drink in bars a lot (that ain’t actually a negative, folks).

My book does not challenge the careers of any literary giants, it is of modest ambition and good humour in places, and I (of course) think would make an excellent Christmas present, ideal holiday reading for the beach or bach or tent. Or the dunny as one friend has said, in a good way!

I make no apologies for it. But if anyone does take offence then . . .

    
Graham Reid is the author of the book 'The Idiot Boy Who Flew'.

(Click here to find out more)