Saturday, December 30, 2006

WHO SAID THIS…?

“We believe in constitutional action in normal times; we believe in revolutionary action in exceptional times. These are exceptional times.” And when? Just a little thought on the time of the third man down in the James Gerald and Saddam reaper hatrick, Christmas 2006. Write the rules in the sky An ask your leaders, Why? Yeah I know Arthur Lee, said that, Before he also became a real gone cat in the Two oh oh six.
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Wednesday, December 27, 2006

JAMES BROWN - A SUPERBAD TESTIMONY

When did JB turn up in your town? Superbad brought him into my life a 30p cut out import in Smyths record shop adjacent to the former Belfast Savings Bank, at the top of main Street, just around the corner from Hamilton Road, in Bangor Northern ireland in the nineteen seventy eight. I knew of James a visitor from another planet glimpsed a little here or there before that. But Superbad with its frenetic live work out of the title song was a manifesto, a rallying call to all God’s children. My first of many full length JB I swear for 2 weeks and maybe more, often times after that I ran on the spot, elated, calisthetic ised and transformed, emotionally enriched, surging with fervour and righteousness and an energy so right so powerful that you knew it came from god or the good or whatever you wanted to call it. The ecstasy in the scream the sheer humming blasting snapping back and propulsion oif the music. James made the call and who couldn’t hear or try to answer? I remember workin in the chip shop in town, Ken’s. Pealing the spuds and doing the prep every week it was the custom of the local police cheif to come in for a free burger. ken was on hand to discuss matters of political import around the world. At that time there was negotiations of a sort occuring between Bishop Desmond Tuttu and whatver racist scumbag held power in South Africa. One day ken said to the Cop, as he drooled into a mega burger burger, that talks were happening South Africa. “Ken I don’t care what you say - you cannot talk to a monkey,” came the greasy fat fuck’s reply. That’s what the scumbag thought a pig like whooly ignorant man. The sort of fucker who were and are keeping us down, man. While up there up in my room James was preaching the gospel of transcendence. God don’t let that die, that force, that will power, that - you can build a planet in my or in your own or some otherworldly image - glory. Don’t let it die with the Godfather. Keep James alive, keep James alive, keep James alive…
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Tuesday, December 26, 2006

waking james

A full 24 hours after James expired a “James Brown is dead” google search finds references only to the song of that title sampling a mistaken 1992 news broadcast claiming the Godfather was dead already. James is dead Bono is knighted. I am…Bewildered….. Where is the cyber fire? The incandescent fury and livid realisation. A full scale worldwide reckoning that one of the greatest of us all has gone….
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Monday, December 25, 2006

A WAKE FOR JAMES

> The day I woke up and found out the Godfather was dead I had > contracted my first ever back pain. My wife said it was like the one she had , felt like someone had kicked her in the diagphram > I had later cooked a meal that would taste great but looked all wrong. > For Christmas dinner in 2006. > James Brown - the slide you down the table till you wake up and smell the cofffee entrance. > Always so right on time . > On the money > Make your mark. > James, always looked and sounded so right so now and then 40 years ago. > That shot of simplistic black and mecurial light white dancing on the > cathode ray TAMI show tube, > that impossible poetry in motion. > That JjjjjJayyyyyymes Brown. > The great inevitable > What a challenge he still represents. > Caliban as high art. > The destitute man who forged a life cult. > In actual relaity. bad enough power to humble the Luftwaffe to ki;ll the racist. > James was a sorcherer who understood our hidden power and secret desire. > James was as modern as fuck and tied down deep in the belly and womb > and crotch of earth’s aged bones as God and Satan. > James made me beleive > And for small town boys suffering small town joys the sound of James > sung high and wild and free. > Al around the world. > From Banjul to bangor. > I have had this conversation in Gambia with kids five years younger than me. > James Brown’s sacred message, the real gift of Elvis to the world, the > loosening of the chains on a young man’s back. It was real It Is real. > Fuck sake James could a ended up in the electric chair. > A frieed nobody like so mnay other mothers and brothers mothers in the > hereto and theretofore. > But no. James endured James survived. > James was the wonder of the human spirit multiuplied by all the hairs > on your head, Bonos head and everybody’s head in the fuigging world. > And James was   all the most fantastic mind charging bliss creating > heaven right here right now ecstasy cry in the face aof all manner of > fuckery that you ever heard. > A wake for James. > A wake for James and all the possibilities and wonder and magick he > created for every boy and goirl and every ounce of joy all around this > world…. > Rise up rise up because his this was not limited in the secular or > spiritual or the you cant come in and join the party boy blues sense. > His was then and now and forever.
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Sunday, December 17, 2006

DYLAN - WHO WATCHES THE WATCHTOWER ?

So this is it folks, what happens when 60 (or is it 600?) thousand odd Dylan (and I DO mean odd) “friends” turn up on the master’s - could we guess at record company run? - myspace space. Interestingly the artist never known as Robert Zimmerman claims Bob Dylan was (re?) born in New York. Weren’t we all, duckie. http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendID=35755282 Sly & The Family Stone View All of Bob Dylan ’s Friends Bob Dylan’s Friends Comments Displaying 50 of 8230 comments ( View All | Add Comment ) Trish 16 Dec 2006 18:50 Well, it’s that time again.. lol Time for me to make my monthly swing through and say hello to all my friends, take a listen, check out your space.. and say how much I love having you in my little family of friends! Love Love Love you for long long time! :-) Hope your holiday season is full of joy and merriment.. Keep smiling! It’s all good.. What a wonderful time of year! Peace to you and yours, and God bless.. ♥Trish O’Brien Family Band 16 Dec 2006 18:36 Hey Bob. Hope you have an awsome holiday season. keep rockin! Kyle O’Brien from the O’Brien Family Band James Grant 16 Dec 2006 18:20 be on the lookout for “Old River” by James Grant in 2007.. Sam and Wanda 16 Dec 2006 18:17 Have a very Merry Christmas! …Sam and Wanda Carrie 16 Dec 2006 18:02 Merry Christmas Bob! :) Carrie Baggs 16 Dec 2006 17:59 Thanks for the lyrical inspiration. You are truly a great lyricist. Jonneine Zapata 16 Dec 2006 17:16 god bless our troops Loretta 16 Dec 2006 16:52 Check out my Debut EP available now at http://cdbaby.com/cd/mobettaloretta. Peace and Love, Mobetta Loretta David Low 16 Dec 2006 16:33 Mr Dylan, you got me playing the harmonica !! Rogers Market 16 Dec 2006 16:03 Bob Dylan HAPPY HOLIDAYS & SEASONS GREETINGS michael 16 Dec 2006 15:16 thanks bobby! Much love Russ Aimz 16 Dec 2006 15:01 Merry Christmas Bob ********************** RUSS AIMZ singer ********************** “Cruze” debut album available now @ iTunes including the Fleetwood Mac cover of ‘Gypsy’ Copy n paste code below into yr web browser http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?playListId=199892734 ******************************** Awsome 16 Dec 2006 14:44 My version of blowin in the wind..listen if you want to… U.Awsome Awsome 16 Dec 2006 14:44 My version of blowin in the wind..listen if you want to… U.Awsome Awsome 16 Dec 2006 14:44 My version of blowin in the wind..listen if you want to… U.Awsome Awsome 16 Dec 2006 14:44 My version of blowin in the wind..listen if you want to… U.Awsome Awsome 16 Dec 2006 14:44 My version of blowin in the wind..listen if you want to… U.Awsome Awsome 16 Dec 2006 14:44 My version of blowin in the wind..listen if you want to… U.Awsome Awsome 16 Dec 2006 14:44 My version of blowin in the wind..listen if you want to… U.Awsome Awsome 16 Dec 2006 14:44 My version of blowin in the wind..listen if you want to… U.Awsome Awsome 16 Dec 2006 14:44 My version of blowin in the wind..listen if you want to… U.Awsome Joel EWWWman 16 Dec 2006 14:36 Thank you for suing Factory Girl. That movie looks so awful. Starship Albatross 16 Dec 2006 14:33 “Modern Times” thats a beautiful album Mr Dylan !! BlackTop Vinyl 16 Dec 2006 14:10 IF YOU DIG BOB DYLAN, COME AND CHECK US OUT AND LISTEN TO TRACKS FROM OUR NEW CD, “THE JESTER”! -TO BOB DYLAN, YOU GUYS ROCK! BlackTop Vinyl 16 Dec 2006 14:10 IF YOU DIG BOB DYLAN, COME AND CHECK US OUT AND LISTEN TO TRACKS FROM OUR NEW CD, “THE JESTER”! -TO BOB DYLAN, YOU GUYS ROCK! BlackTop Vinyl 16 Dec 2006 14:10 IF YOU DIG BOB DYLAN, COME AND CHECK US OUT AND LISTEN TO TRACKS FROM OUR NEW CD, “THE JESTER”! -TO BOB DYLAN, YOU GUYS ROCK! Mars Arizona 16 Dec 2006 13:50 Thanks for the great new album. Wishing you many more. missFlag 16 Dec 2006 13:28 we love your music, you ROCK! ;) Come check out our new songs! Cheers Matter Of Taste 16 Dec 2006 13:07 THANX Tyler 16 Dec 2006 12:21 your my Woody Guthrie Maisha 16 Dec 2006 11:40 Hey Thanks for the add! Peace, Maisha Joe 16 Dec 2006 11:27 Best Artist ever!!! Your’e on art form! Ðeη 16 Dec 2006 11:06 Hi ! Gjeffrey 16 Dec 2006 11:05 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A GREAT NEW YEAR! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Williams and Williams 16 Dec 2006 10:40 Thanks for the memories. Laurie Laney Murphy 16 Dec 2006 10:37 Hi Bob,I hope you have a wonderful weekend xxxxx Cakehole Presley ;-) 16 Dec 2006 10:02 ;-)Have a kaleidoscope of happyness this weekend;-)Keep Smiling;-)PeAcE+LoVe~CP The County Boys 16 Dec 2006 9:54 Hey Bob, Just wondering if you want to do a show with us in Peterborough, Ontario. Perhaps in January at the Montreal House. DAN C 16 Dec 2006 9:19 MORNING BOB, YOUR STILL MY TOP FRIEND, HAVE A SUPER WEEKEND AND HAPPY HOLIDAYS, MUSICIANS, AND ARTIST, ADD ME TO YOUR LIST OR I WILL PAINT YOU! DAN C FOLK ART ! B.Sanders 16 Dec 2006 8:58 Bob maken it happen since before time… Kristen 16 Dec 2006 8:38 Thanks for the add! I have adored your music since i turned 15, and have been listening ever since. I know I will be a lifelong fan:) XENITIA 16 Dec 2006 8:19 Hi mighty Bob! Thanks for the add! Rod BARTHET 16 Dec 2006 8:19 Thanks for the add merci pour l’ajout http://www.rodbarthet.com Kelly 16 Dec 2006 8:02 Happy Holidays Mr. Dylan! Theo Hoffman 16 Dec 2006 7:23 you are amazing…look at my myspace i did a cover Kiddo 16 Dec 2006 6:38 The coolest guy in the business… see you in Amsterdam! Penmen 16 Dec 2006 6:30 The Pen is Mightier than the Sword penmen.com Miel 16 Dec 2006 5:39 I wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. I hope to see your concert again soon in Japan! Chele Willow 16 Dec 2006 5:18 Stopping by to wish you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! Love and Hugs, =Chele Willow= Silly Alan 16 Dec 2006 4:39 Alright Bob! What a year. Best album of the year for me. Just wanted to wish you a very silly christmas and that when it comes. Remember, don’t drink and smoke. Stay warm. Lots of love, Al x
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Thursday, December 14, 2006

TOM YORKE AND RADIOHEADS SHAMEFUL WAR ON CREATIVITY

Ben Drew is a fucking national resource and Thom Yorke and his Oxbridge-bred, chin-stroking, edifice-building, up-their-own-arses, banda Radioheads come ANgst Rock Godheads ought to be ashamed of themselves. IN their imperious position as the Lords Of The Rock Manor Radiohead - through their officious and priestly money fuelled legal team - have said “get orf my land” to Drew. They have drawn the artistic drawbridge of Prog pomp rock state and with it painted a stark picture of the lack of artistic unity in UK Music today. A distaff that is, I’d suggest, social and ecnomic and, oh dear, spiritual, even Maybe I’m blowing a gasket over something unnecessary here but what the fuck? The grand old Duke Of York has set himself up for this one and well I was always more likely to get invited to Elton’s annual flip your wig fest than get an interview with him, so what is there to lose?. Ben certainly isnt gonna get as annoyed about it as I am. Christ the guy has got a whole raft a great songs (that Thom could certainly do with sampling to liven his dreary ole shit up) that soak up his fan fuckingtastic swear filled musically rich raps. And, whats more, Drew has felt Radiohead much more deeply than I ever did and can’t bring himself to slag them for not stepping in when legal eagles weighed in and got him offa their Pyramid Song. Ben’s an open minded guy. He fucking had to be. The smartest kid in his class, I’ll bet, he was put in a holding pen for difficult kids in his teens.  Sometime later Benny boy saw his single mum take up with a crack addict who stole from her and fucked another woman, in the family home, in front of him and his ma. Anyhow that’s not what made Ben – who cast himself Plan B a few years ago and released the  hard edged musically adventurous, socially incendiary Who Needs Actions When You Got Words under that soubriquet this year – openminded. It was Michael Jackson. Can you dig that? Michael fucking Jackson! The man who was called King OF Pop because ….because have you ever heard of something as fucking stupid as a BLACK man being called The King Of ROCK ? Anyway where was I? Yes - Ben and Michael Jackson! Oh to be alive in those glorious 80s and early 90s to see him El Jacko Ecstato in his shining hour. The last great creation of the Mega Popstar era. and if you dont know why it was so great to see and feel and be there when Michael did his thing… if you dont know why…you were probably a CREEP, a fucking loser. You certainly  weren’t Ben (little Ben, black Ben ?, white Ben ?) who’s daddy went and left to become a slap happy Christian cultist and who was all lit up by the fluid majesty, the shape changing strangeness, the racial elusiveness, the all encompassing wonder that shone from MJ. And 8 year old there he was Ben Drew r&b song man trying to be a superman singing and a dancing and doing the do with Michael Jackson and his mates. In the front room there in Forest Gate, East london Michael then was a real pop star of shining wonder so different to the cloistered internalising of Yorkie Bar and co. Why? What was it about Michael Jackson? “Anybody who needs to ask that question…” Ben spluttered when I asked him on the phone the other day, “…because he was a fucking superstar, mate.” During the chat Ben was impressing me with both his understanding of where the furious brilliant Who Needs Actions When You Got Words fits into the censored British radio gameplan. He was impressing me too in the way he has remade himself once. And will do again. With r without Thom Yorke’s help. What exactly is the problem with Plan B Ben Drew sampling a bit of the fucking Pyramid song on a mixtape? What is the purpose of Radiohead’s vile protectionist snoot baggery? What does Thom fear, up there in his Rock Aristocrat’s gated community? That Ben’s gonna come in and storm the ramparts, like some ‘orrible little man from Oikville? Christ, he already recreated himself once what’s he gonna do next - move in with the hoodrats tanks on the Oxfordshire lawn ? Get a lazy eye and a degree in louche and haughty chattering class Eggheaddom, add a monocle for the full Lord Snooty effect? I wouldnt fucking think so, Tommyboy. Y’see when you come out of your cocoon and come down from your Ivory Tower well then you might see how it is in the world of ideas and creativity. In the world YOUR FUCKING REAL FANS, you foool, “I was addicted to Radiohead. They had a real sorrowful take on life, and that’s how I felt at the time,”* Drew has said, recounting his sonic cure for the teenage blues. Ben found for whatever reason something real and precious and good and kinda balm like kinda healing and he wanted to pass it on. “I did a mix tape of rock records with me rapping recently. We told everyone to keep it quiet that we’d re-recorded a sample that was cut up to fuck from Pyramid Song, but Jo Whiley let it slip on the radio and they got their lawyers involved. I’m a bit bitter about that. I can’t stay angry at them though - I fucking love them.”** *The Independent 23/06/06 page 12 **NME July 1st 2006 page 32 Y’see on a fundamental level, forget the death of the industry through downloads.( Do get off it you whingers, don’t you realise that Ben probably fits the demographic of artists whose sales may have doubled if you factor in all the shared sounds around of his shit? Who will prolly be dropped next time round because censorious broadcasters didn’t give him the The Killers blanket airplay treatment?). This is whats fucking wrong with musical arts these days - they’ve become a fucking clearing house for fucking lawyers to fucking make money. And look I’ve got nothing against lawyers. Some of them or real nice blokes but let them go and do something worthwhile - get some compensation off a corrupt city council, perhaps - but let them not get tangled in the crotchets and the quavers. Musicians sharing and caring for each other passing forth ideas and rhytthms made this world. Not lawyers. Wouldn’t is CRIMINAL (a crime against the laws of art in nature) to allow them to hold sway now. To allow that legal buuuulshit to become the conversation. I mean what’s real here. Are you gonna take “I present here Milord the ongoing tragedy of Whiter Shade A Pale possibly the most jaw droppingly beautiful heartcry for the 60s sweetdeath created in a British studio presented as courtrorom farce?” Or would you prefer someone crying their heart getting down to what is really real. Doing it through the sweet strange or strong sound of music? Thom (does he really need the fucking h? I’d need some, if I was ever forced  to listen to his fucking band again) may gesture airly at all the other bands of times gone bt. Rock is a business and this is just the way things are done. Bollocks, Yorkie, bollocks. There are other ways of doing business ways of insuring your fans are not left out in the cold, involve themselves in your work that you are not some omniscient diety from on high that…oh fuck YOU KNOW what I mean. The Grateful Dead and David Byrne have shown ways it can be done. Oh I know, I know every fucker on the planet loves the ‘head. Then can do wrong can they. But I’m not surprised by this attitude they show toward Drew. Go back to when they was on the up, round the Bend not yet buggering on about the Computer. It was 1991 in San Francisco at the Phoenix, right? The fucker with my key, coming back from the cow palace gig that neil Young had just played with Sonic Youth, was held up. I needed a pee we got talking to these Oxbridge Cambridge cunts and I asked if it were possible to use their loo. What did they think I was going to do? Jizz over the dolphin porn behind the cistern. Jack up? Smear shit on the walls like I was one of them H Block Paddies. I dont know - all I know is that when I asked to answer nature’s call in a Radiohead bathroom the look of horror on the collective face of The Radiohead massive it was like someone had told them there was going to be no more cucumber sandwiches, ever. A few years later  after I’ve had to one night listen to Rebecca tell me that The Bends was one of the greatest album ever (sorry? have we got a bad connection? I mean The Bends? The greatest album ever? Yeah and I’m Andrew Lloyd Webbers houseboy I saw this fucking RADiohead show in Brixton and right there I knew EXACTLY what Charlie Murray felt when he said , in NME 1975 that 10cc’s Original Soundtrack “Is brilliant and I hate it”. Faced with the reverence reserved for visiting religious emissaries at some Scriptural conference of sound Radhiohead created their shiny edifice, gleaming spires all that architectural accuracy, majoring in that soulless look at us-ness. That keep a looking but you dont come in-ness. Stand back and watch our glory. Did we really fight the punk rock years ago to have this sort of crabby interaction tween stars and their fans. Go on Thom, its Christmas show brother Ben a little love, other than that which leaked into your Pyramid in the first place . Y’see Thom the Xmas message worth cherishing is the one that says “peace on earth and good will to ALL men”. Not just Bono and Michael Stipe! Peace !
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Wednesday, December 13, 2006

a christmas message from wolfgang Von Goethe

Historically Stuarts have always gifted me with life changing stuff. So thanks to Mister B for passing on this precious knowledge… Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always ineffectiveness, concerning all acts of initiative (and creation). There is one elementary truth the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves too, all sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occured. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one’s favour all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance which no man could have dreamed would have come his way. Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it. Begin it now. Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Wolfgang_von_Goethe
Posted by GAVIN at 19:31:28 | Permalink | Comments (3)

ALBUMS OF THE YEAR

A random mail out elicited the following from a rough cross section of the nearest and dearest…. Sent: 08 December 2006 17:15 Subject: albums of the year ? Any titles spring to mind?  I need refreshing, researching…or is it cribbing? - Gavin Martin  to Roger  More options   Dec 9 (4 days ago) good point, I better find what year it is….. - Show quoted text - On 12/8/06, Roger Armstrong wrote: > Which year ~ I quite enjoyed a few in the mid 60s. > > roger > d.edwards@mgn.co.uk  to Gavin  More options   Dec 11 (2 days ago) Hey Gav, Long time no see. You heard anything about a Christmas lunch for us columnists? My album of the year is Dylan’s Modern Times, which I’m listening to now. On a different note, did you ever get sent a copy of Mike Nesmith’s new album, Rays? I’m dying to learn what it’s like…. Cathal Coughlan  to Gavin  More options   Dec 11 (2 days ago) Hail, I think: Joan As Policewoman - Real Life Grizzly Bear - Yellow House Scott Walker - The Drift James Yorkston - Year Of The Leopard Luke Haines - Off My Rocker At The Art School Bop Bob Dylan - Modern Times or something C max bell  to Gavin  More options   Dec 11 (2 days ago) on 8/12/06 17:15, Gavin Martin at gavinmartin@btinternet.com wrote: > Any titles spring to mind? > I need refreshing, researching…or is it cribbing? Only the Essex Green darling. Can you get any tickets for the Kings of Leon in Febwuawy? I will pay top dollar. Or a blow job. Sweetness And light MB x gerard kelly  to Gavin  More options   9:54 pm (4 hours ago) Right off the top of my head…”Modern Times” by Bob Dylan, “Black Cadillac” by Roseanne Cash, and The Guillemots ’ major label debut.  Don’t have too much time right now to think about more.  VERY exciting to be mentioned in your blog. Jerry - Show quoted text - > Hey Gav, > > Long time no see. You heard anything about a Christmas lunch for us > columnists? > > My album of the year is Dylan’s Modern Times, which I’m listening to now. > > On a different note, did you ever get sent a copy of Mike Nesmith’s new > album, Rays? I’m dying to learn what it’s like…. > >  David Edwards
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Sunday, December 10, 2006

WILKO JOHNSON 30 YEARS LATER

Wilko was the twisted angel demon. The speed king Avatar with them mad, intense, white and staring, pinhead pupils on black eyeballs. Looking out with them peepers over the eternal end of the urban night Wilko looked like some zealous radon emitter. That was the image of Wilko Johnson (Born John Wilkinson Canvey Island, Essex on July 12th,1947) that I saw on a postcard flyer giveaway, a series by an evidently gifted and perceptive graphic artist, given out free at the Spitz in the early December 2006. The Spitz is in the midst of the Jack The Ripper tourist trail in Spitalfields Market, a groovy London alt rock and interesting music venue, just yards from my mansion! I picked the postcard image up at an excellent Spitz show by The Last Town Chorus 2 days earlier. It sure took me back, back some 30 years - and a coupla months - to October 19th 1976 Belfast Northern Ireland. Should I say “the grim October of 1976”? - A cold night on the streets outside the Whitla Hall, Queens University Belfast, Northern Ireland. There outside, where my father slept in the car awaiting my 15 year old self breaking my ‘join the church of rock n roll’ cherry, the city was slowly carving itself up. But inside, aah inside, the soul was warmed because there was Wilko Wilko the speed king demon and with him there was, oh yes, Doctor Feelgood nestling atop the chart with the Gawdlike live album Stupidity. There was a moment there, right near the start of the show when I felt Wilko, like a Shaman Instigator, a thing of such forcefulness and wonder, transmitting pure electric energy. Energy expressed through though not just produced by his electric guitar. Energy that came from his soul itself, a vibrating ball of energy, a sacred power of the universe, right there – coming to us like a purifying cauterizing fireball. Washing clean our sins, lifting us up, up to a new realm. Beyond the eternal end of the urban night. It was like in a single instance that Wilko, with the chicken neck strut, the exaggerated staring, the eyes on stalks, the groin thrusted slide and fanning buncha finger fired guitar, was beseeching us, raising our hearts. Who said – and of what - that it gave them an erection of the heart? Well, I think that then and there Wilko gave me an erection - of the imagination. My brain burst on the edge of his city of endless night. There was something there, something magic in that look of shock and fear and ecstasy writ on his face. Even captured in the pictures that were to be seen in the UK music press, the NME specifically, it was a striking look. Now with The Feelgoods in Belfast 1976 show (such an affirmation coming after the grisly Miami Showband murders that had practically marked a pre punk end to rock n roll in Belfast) the sound together with that look - the impossibly suspended in mid air split leg athleticism of a fucking mad eyed speed fuelled freak with his exhilaratingly choppy guitar lines! –became something else. Something beyond the time and reason of a city slipping into war. Something, man, something so damn fine looking and sounding. Man. Yeah, something else. Wilko, even the name was like another Marx Brother, presented and machine-gunned his Axe of love spewing forth like a fire hydrant. A shot of the mystic sea, just rolling over us, rock n roll insurgent priest, the Starman that Bowie had promised, come to life. I couldn’t even see him make that first mad run. I was small and at the back of the crowd and it was the most exciting night of my life so far. Goodness – there was people smoking weed at the back of the hall! They were drinking and smiling and it was an open church. There was no asking where you came from, what football team you supported. We were bonded together by a higher power. I didn’t know that sort of thing could happen there, in Belfast, back then in 1976. All I knew was that I felt damned lucky not to have been brought up there, blessed that my parents had escaped the dead lines of East Belfast for the coastline of Bangor. But I could feel him, feel Wilko, take the already excited crowd further, elevated as they gathered there in Belfast on a cold night in October 1976 when nobody went out, when the city of Belfast was dying. When the killers were on the move Mad men secreting explosives, gelignite in cars, soldiers young as you could think of, on the streets, fear - and the ever burning question -what happens next? - the constant dynamic. But suddenly – and none of them political men in the press or what passed for a Parliament realized it, because they weren’t THERE - there was a man musician clown and psychic avatar embodying the pain and the heat and the madness of the city in a single flying firepower string strum chord. 3 minutes into the show, maybe more, maybe less and Wilko goes into one of his clockwork amphetamine chicken runs. Awwch I couldn’t see a thing but, Christ, you could feel the elevation in the audience, the breaking through to the other side and we rose, we all rose higher than the feet on which we were standing allowed and … Well, we left the ground, actually. And there in an instance you could feel Wilko and his genius. And the genius of whatever it was he had felt in the music, the feeling he had, with every power his soul allowed, communicated so fully to us. So, of course, of course, I had to go there to the Spitz. I had to, 30 years and coupla months later on December 8th 2006 go and see Wilko. Find if that light burned for real in his soul, if the connection back beyond Belfast back to something timeless and burning and real and good at the centre of the universe, still held. Wilko, I knew, had or had had “drug problems”. In the 30 years since that night when he, by his very vitality and rapacious zeal, had inducted me into the Sacred Church of Rock N Roll I had seen him but once. There he was going gray now, looking wasted on the street on a notorious hard drug run hang out in London’s West End - sometime in the 80s. Or was it the 90s. So what, man? We all had drug problems - be the drug a chick, or a fag, or a spliff, or a drink or a horse, or caffeine… or whatever. The thing was, Wilko was not among the fallen he was still here and seemingly wild as an old warhorse and ready to fucking rock. Again. And the first thing I notice, or the first thing I am drawn to when I push up to the front of the crowd (a maneuver impossible back in Belfast in 1976) the first thing I notice in Wilko’s combustible trio is Norman Watt Roy. The great Indian born Blockhead, Brit bassist extraordinaire, like Free’s Andy Frazer (half Guyanan was he) Watt Roy has a singular, gloriously emblematic style. This guy, like Wilko, is a true one off, someone whose very being is expressed through the music, through the elasticity of facial muscles which move in concert with his need to uwrap the groove within, revealing them gleaming teeth like a rapacious predator of da boogie. And what boogie is to be found in his pulverisingly sexual and pugnaciously joyful style. There was a tune early on where the drummer took the 3 piece’s groove down to gothic bubbling reggae funk. Kneeing up the sound, with a gentle humping loving forcefulness from their crotches, these guys, these ageless minstrels, exerted a spell of sorts, a deep and lasting energy that sort of filled that space, killed the dead air in The Spitz. And that was the way Wilko filled the air that night in The Whitla in 1976. The ways that, even from the back of the hall, you could see him flying like the angel of death in a fiery rage. Wilko and his guitar - like the madman fondling his luger on the backstreet, exorcised. The bad and the beautiful all embodied in one – and turned to the love of electric geetar God gold. What does Wilko look like now, actually? How does he differ from the 1976 psycho with the pudding bowl, mentally ill haircut and the chords that cut through glass and steel? He is pale, sleek suited, black shirted - progressively sweat basted as the evening progresses and unfolded. I know because I am – oh joy – right there up close and personal, right at the front beside the living flame of Wilko. Now completely shaven and dome headed he is nonetheless a stick insect, not gone to chubby seed, at 59 he still has the default sullen pose. A pose that but so readily in an instant turns to outrage and the deadeye mystic power of the ageless blues marauder. Like Robert Johnson reborn in the Canvey effluvial, perhaps. Wilko is still an extraordinary thing this rock n roll vampire has been a lifelong harbinger of mercy and outrage, clemency and complete retribution. Does Wilko know or feel what he did there, back there those 30 years and two months ago in Belfast? Does he know how he changed that city, that night, in that one instant? Hell it was probably a routine he did every night about that time. 3 minutes in and in many instances after, as he repeatedly ignited the collective heart and lifted us, en masse, a single body electrified in the current of rock’s very own holy blessing. That Belfast back then I only ever knew the city from a distance. It would be a full year before the clearing act off punk freed the city for personal exploration and adventure. We’d cross the town, stuffed in the back of a petrol leaking family car, a family up from down the coast-visiting relatives beyond the capital. There was Lisburn and Muckamore Abbey to see my, in those days they called him mentally handicapped, brother Paul. There was always a chill up there at the house on the hill, frost rimming the rose bushes, up there in Muckamore. To get there to see Paul we’d pass through sundry Belfast road blocks manned by the police, by the army or the paramilitary organization representatives. Belfast was full of pregnant silences that held secrets and divisions; the city was being divided up on pseudo ethnic, pseudo religious lines. It seemed, from my vantage point that there was always explosions, kidnappings, bullets or talk of the same. Ever since that night in August 1969 when my father, a World War 2 veteran, had arrived in the kitchen of the family home, real fear in his eyes, having seen the arrival of British Army tanks on the streets of the city, it had seemed to be bad – and getting worse. Talk of a country slipping into civil war, something terrible coming to fill those silences was not uncommon. Then of course came punk – the something we were waiting on to answer them sectarian, sins of the father, visited on the son, and the sons of the son, blues. “All crimes are paid,” screamed Johnny Rotten on NO Future. That was the deliverance of punk, sacred words and a quasi-religious thought, combined to antagonize and inflame the status quo of the No Future Ulster heading toward the abyss. But before punk there was Wilko - then and now still the same - a hellhound and a firebrand a real lightning conductor. I mean Wilko now, please check out the pictures, a living testament to the ever-shining glory of a soulful vampire. Listen – Wilko sucked us into his world and he’s still that same avatar, 30 years on with the white out complexion and the shrunken skull and those mad blazing eyes, burning deep into the soul. And the music is not some same old variation on dem ole electric blues. No - its not old, its wild and wirey and always new, so real, so livid, so now and created out there on the road down over 30 years. Aside from that cartoon image there’s so much flesh on Wilko’s blues bones. One way his really deep and lasting link to the deeper meaning and meter of the blues is in constant references to Dylan’s electric tropes. Back in 76, a few weeks before the Belfast show Wilko collapsed, an excess of speed, apparently, the cause of his exhaustion. The eyes on stalks had spun like cartwheels coming off the cart and he got carried away, lost his balance. But he kept on keeping on and tonight it seems he has never stopped being his natural self - a generous performer full of showman physicality and mercurial music. And he is not just burning candles at both ends - he has learned to pace himself. Don’t, please, talk to me about the record industry as being in any way or any day the same as the death of music. Music IS NOT dependent on what men in suits do to prevent technology working its wonders of replication. Music lives here in the direct communion between Musician magician and the gathering, a ritual as old as courting. It is something precious that must not be lost and doesn’t depend on playbacks or watermark CD or the future welfare of Mister Warner, Sony BmG EMI or what ever. Wilko lives beyond the record industry now, he’s done his part of the corporate whoring. You can stick all the rock and pop machine conveyor belt products in a blender, beat em til they form a souffle - there still aint nothing - no how no way – that can substitute for the magick of the live art. A rock roll art, not to be practiced by the weak the lame or the (un)insane . Really, Paul, its still something to melt the snow round the rose bushes. Something to wake the city from its death throes. Something to make you feel the world beyond and the myriad possibilities inherent in the grand totality of existence. The day before Wilko tore up the Spitz there was a crack in the ozone above London and there came a tornado knocking over houses, a real whirlwind. We are reaping the whirlwind now in so many ways. Psychos, rather than the good and honest and true men of the 70s, in power in Belfast. Internationally we are facing the payback for ancient and modern crusades, there’s the small matter of the planet hurtling toward a ecological dark age. No wonder Wilko’s shock and awe sound and look still appears so real and feels so vital. We have Wilko the weatherman to help us know and feel what way the wind blows. Long as he and his kind are there to bear witness we are, all of us, blessed and alive. Tuned into the vital power at the heart of the universe. Made whole. Pilgrims in the mystic church. Oh, my soul…..
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