Hard News: Friday Music: Bright pastel colours and skew-whiff perspectives
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Oddly enough, I can’t recall much of the gig at the Fulham Greyhoud
I was living in Bristol at the time an a couple of colleagues headed down the M4 with me to London that day. I think they played the same venue a year later - with The Bats in support I recall.
The Clean never came to Bristol in 1988 however the Chills and Sneaky Feelings did make it to the Fleece & Firkin pub where incidentally Ali Farka Toure and band also played a mind-bending set.
Aah those were the days!
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Russell Brown, in reply to
The Clean never came to Bristol in 1988 however the Chills and Sneaky Feelings did make it to the Fleece & Firkin pub where incidentally Ali Farka Toure and band also played a mind-bending set.
I think that was the Chills show in Bristol that I tagged along to. Although I'd probably best not tell that story.
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I fondly remember seeing the Clean for the first time on their reunion tour in the tron, 1990 having thought youse bastards on your OE's would be the only lucky ones - I thought it would be the one and only time I'd ever get to see them... they ruled and continue to and I've many more live memories of them to treasure
https://soundcloud.com/darkstation/the-clean-fish-gurus-waikato
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Lovely evocation of the E Years, Russell.You reminded me of many things. Sometimes I get the feel of things again through a bit of a track and I suddenly remember the dancing, the heat, the smear, and the surges of things. Wouldn't have missed it for the world...
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Russell Brown, in reply to
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Nice piece. I've loved all the coverage of the re-release and was pleased to know that others held this album in as high regard as I did, it's often seemed like the band were mainly remembered for their early 80s work. I was working in an indie record shop at the time of release and had a Vehicle t-shirt, which I'm assuming was a Rough Trade promotional item rather than official merch. It featured the album artwork on a white t-shirt and was much loved for many years but has long since gone the way of all such things. Would be great to get a new one.
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Russell Brown, in reply to
I was working in an indie record shop at the time of release and had a Vehicle t-shirt, which I’m assuming was a Rough Trade promotional item rather than official merch. It featured the album artwork on a white t-shirt and was much loved for many years but has long since gone the way of all such things. Would be great to get a new one.
They were great shirts. The print was really good. I wore mine until it fell to bits.
I have a wonderful memory of being bailed up in the corridor of the film studios in Wroclaw, Poland, where I was doing a story (another tale altogether) by a guy who couldn't speak English but was plainly highly excited about the shirt. I've never been sure whether he was a Clean fan or just liked the design, but he was very pleased to see it.
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Gabor Toth, in reply to
The Clean never came to Bristol in 1988 however the Chills and Sneaky Feelings did make it to the Fleece & Firkin pub where incidentally Ali Farka Toure and band also played a mind-bending set.
Gad! I was at that Chills gig too! I was living in a dump in Filton (ghastly place) on the outskirts of Bristol and had come into town for "a bi't of culcha". Whodathought...
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Day given over to reminiscence now. I think ‘Oncoming Day’ is my favourite Chills song.
And the nerd words:
This is the first of five separate attempts to record the song “Oncoming Day”, the fifth and final version being released on the Submarine Bells album in 1990. This particular version was recorded and filmed at South Dunedin’s Mayfair Theater circa October 1982 by cameraman Peter Janes. At the same time, they also recorded and filmed a version of the song “Dolphins” (an alternate live recording of which finally appeared on Disk One of the Secret Box compilation in 2000), however the said film has never been screened and still resides in the T.V.N.Z. vaults. The second version of Oncoming Day was recorded in March 1985, this particular version was scrapped and is available on Disk Two of Secret Box. The third version was recorded during the “I Love My Leather Jacket” sessions at Point Studios, London in December 1985 (with a different drummer other that Alan Haig to tackle the difficult drum beat), and the fourth was recorded during the June – July 1987 “Brave Words” album sessions, again recorded at Point Studios in London. Like the December 1985 version, this version was scrapped too.
The Chills line up at this point in time was Martin Phillipps (guitars / vocals), Terry Moore (bass / vocals), Rachel Phillipps (keyboards) and Martyn Bull (drums).
And a later version of the band plays the same song at the Windsor Castle in 1985. The sound on the recording’s pretty poor, but you have to love the crowd. It shows how electric The Chills could be:
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
There are a few pictures from The Trip...
I like the sign in the background
- a world where there is a PYMCA...
that'd be the by Village Provos, right? -
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Russell Brown, in reply to
I like the sign in the background
- a world where there is a PYMCA…
that’d be the by Village Provos, right?Ha! It’s actually a watermark put there by the gallery that posted the image to plug an exhibition by a photographer called Dave Swindells.
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Keeping with the Chills....at the Gluepot. Around the time of Cyclone Bola.
One of my favourites of theirs (I remember singing the chorus atop of Angelus ridge in Nelson Lakes, one tramping summer holidays.....)
And isn't the drumming on this just superb???
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well, I wasn't in Bristol but I was at that Windsor Castle gig - that too and fro surge at the front was always a pain in the arse. but I don't recall seeing so many moustaches.
always thought the Chills were a way better live act than anything else. most of their recordings make my toes curl in a not good way.
and damn good to see David Eggleton still doing his thing. he was a fairly regular Windsor support act as I recall.
also Russell, mate, ewww, too much information.
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Goodness. I was at the Chills gig at the Fleece & Firkin in Bristol too. I think that must be about 75% of the crowd accounted for.
I seem to recall Andrew Todd trying to play Summertime at one point when an amp failed.
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Hebe, in reply to
Also folks don’t forget the Free Poetry day event tonight in Chchch.
Here's a new pome from my beloved that he has put out in honour of the day. He's planning "A Hundred Days of Poetude", starting today, because some peoples like Jeffrey Paparoa and me have finally convinced him to start publishing again after near 40 years.
Drums roll, for this is a significant-to-a-few moment:
PACIFIC SKILLS
Takes a certain
shifty skill
this sanguine
seaside shuffle
down by wave
line
inconstant as
the tides
themselves.Took but 50
or so
Pacific summers
to get the hang
of safely shoed
strolls
hard by the
tide.Some of my fellow
skinny sand kicked
pals from muscle beach
shame have gone
to bone/
I've got sons strewn
around and loves
galore/
while others I know
have real
j.o.b.s.
Doing ,like
work
and stuff.Me -
I've always loved
that Greek
philosopherdude
living in a barrel
that global
warlord
Alexander
offered anything
he wanted
in the world
who told the
Lord of the world
“Yeah, move
you're
blocking
my sun.”I don't get
house calls
from Gods
or their reverse
in fact here
by the beach the offers
get rarer
by the wrinkle.But like a
Pacific Prospero/
all undone
by time
and tide
I still hold that
shifty skill/
the high priest
of the seventh wave
I can dance
the tideline
but keep
my feet
dry!
…..............................................................
Greg Jackson / Te Wai Pounamu -
ChrisW, in reply to
Drums roll, for this is a significant-to-a-few moment:
PACIFIC SKILLSI'm doubly impressed. Your post at 2.31pm, cf. Geonet tells us:
Public Id: 2013p613797
NZST: Friday, August 16 2013 at 2:31:05 pm
Intensity: severe
Depth: 8 km
Magnitude: 6.2
Location: 10 km south-east of Seddonand the drum roll of the Pacific Plate is still resonating.
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
And a later version of the band plays the same song at the Windsor Castle in 1985.
Is that Alan Haig on drums?
I see he has a fine photography website these days.
(and nicely constructed by Jay Clarkson's son, Sam, no less) -
Ian Dalziel, in reply to
...is still resonating.
Man, they are getting hammered up there in Seddon
poor buggers, my heart goes out to them... -
ChrisW, in reply to
Man, they are getting hammered up there in Seddon
poor buggers, my heart goes out to them...Indeed. These shallow and centred on land, main shock and many of the aftershocks around the Lake Grassmere (saltworks) not out in the middle of Cook Strait like that and those last month.
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Mike O'Connell, in reply to
Aah yes Filton - at least it had a Concorde!
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Nick Russell, in reply to
There are much worse places in Bristol than Filton. Bedminster or Knowle West for starters.
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Mike O'Connell, in reply to
I may well have been at this one too, about May I recall? With Alpaca Brothers in support? Oncoming Day was always a Chills' crowd fave as was Night of Chill Blue at the time.
BTW no Audioculture posting yet for Alpaca Brothers though a 'link' to Snapper. They were also from Dunedin? Whatever became of them?
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