Almost an all-dayer!
Jonathan Jarrett
jjarrett at CHIARK.GREENEND.ORG.UK
Mon Oct 13 10:16:04 EDT 2008
On Mon, Sep 08, 2008 at 11:06:17AM +0000, Colin Allen typed out:
> The following rather splendid event is being held at the Grosvenor (17
> Sidney Road, Stockwell, London, W9 0TP) on Saturday, 11th October:
>
> 15:00-15:45: Xoo (www.myspace.com/xoospace)
> 16:15-17:00: Peyote Guru (Chris Cambridge & Peyote Lee
> www.myspace.com/peyoteguru)
> 17:30-18:15: Kev and Trev (www.myspace.com/trevandkev)
> 18:45-19:30: Bruise (www.myspace.com/bruiseuk)
> 20:00-20:45: The Red Fishes (www.myspace.com/theredfishes)
> 21:15-23:00: Litmus (www.myspace.com/litmusspacerock)
I made it to this, although later than I'd hoped--apparently
Trev had just stepped off the stage when I finally rolled up, which was
not what I'd meant to manage; sorry, Trev. Anyway, I can tell you about
the rest of it. The Grosvenor is not a bad little venue, an actual
pub out front with real ale albeit not in brilliant condition, and a
biggish and well-separated function room behind. Sound was OK, lights
excellent (though sometimes strangely familiar, Colin?) and it was easy
to have good time. Shame then how few people there were doing so; even
once Litmus were on, there were probably only thirty people in, which is
more than a bit crap; it's not hard to get to and it was good value for
the money. I don't know.
One of the reasons it was good value was because I really liked
Bruise. I've always managed to miss them supporting Hawkwind, and had
lazily assumed they'd be as forgettable as most HW support bands. Of
course, the first time I saw Litmus was supporting HW so I should know
better. Anyway, Bruise are a three-piece, a very deft beard-and-sandals
looking drummer in a straw trilby who also sang loud, a bass-player
about whom no complaint could be made who also harmonised occasionally,
and tall frontwoman who sang very well and also played what I believe is
known as `a mean guitar', running the gamut from semi-acoustic
steel-string-sounding to full-on fuzz wah attack, and all with perfect
rhythm too. Given that there was very little they could do wrong as even
a dull song would have sounded good; as it was the material was also
pretty good, the stage banter endearing and I enjoyed them a great deal.
I may only have started dancing at the semi-acoustic cover of `Silver
Machine' with two-part harmomny vocals, but that I put down to not
having had enough beer-drinking time when they started. Then afterwards,
they sold me both their albums for a tenner, so I can't say fairer than
that really.
Red Fishes need more practice. Or, potentially, to stop. They
took about twenty minutes of faff setting up, I gather they hadn't had a
soundcheck and when they set up the soundman couldn't get the vocals
high enough. They blamed the mics, I privately blamed the fact that they
sang like mice, quieter even than they talked. Once they had got
going, the main singer (and guitarist) wrenched his face into emo
contortions but still missed his high notes and the girl bass-player was
more interesting to listen to but didn't seem at all happy on stage or
with her instrument. Drummer was OK I suppose, and they had the help of
Martin from Litmus on keyboards, but that didn't save them alas. After
the fifth false start turned out to be the actual beginning of the set,
I gave them three numbers then politely went and got more beer and
chatted with Hawkfans out front. They were just not much cop.
Litmus... are back. A five-piece again, which meant that some
songs that really needed the keyboard part, most of all `Sonic Light',
had it back again and sounded all the better for it. The first few
numbers were Litmus at very nearly their best, I thought, and though
they struggled in the middle with weaker songs and a couple of horrible
fumbles, they were back at killing strength by the end. A few people
who'd never seen them before, including one man in a Cathedral shirt
whose efforts to turn the front into a mosh-pit were persistently
thwarted by my being actually dancing in my own private world (I still
ache today), but who along with his girlfriend asked me, "why is there
no-one here? This is excellent! They're gonna be really big!" I doubt
it, but that's surely no fault of the band; they were making converts
this night.
Setlist was, I think:
Intro -> Infinity Drive
Destroy the Mothership -> Tempest
Under the Sign
[one of the new ones, might be called `Something to Say' or `Nothing to
Say', sounded very very Gong tonight possibly because of
ladlefuls of glissando from Simon]
Astronomy Domine
Infinite Space [may not be its real name]
Sonic Light
Evil
Get Back [or so Olly the keyboardist told me; its refrain suggested to
me that it was called `Fly too Far' but I guess they're too
clever to be that predictable...]
*
Right Stuff -> Hero with a Wing
Ejection
I'm afraid I used `Infinite Space' for a beer-break, I think it
should be shorter if done live. `?Thing to Say' is good, but sounds a
lot like `(Theta Wave) Idductor' if you're being cruel. `Get Back' has
been persistently confusing me ever since they started playing it,
because the initial riff makes me think it's `Right Stuff', then there's
a turn-around into the chorus which makes me go, "Wait! That's
Motörhead's `Killed by Death'!" and then they're through into jamming
space and I realise it's that song that confuses me again. It ends with
a marvellous rotating mantra of a chorus though and by the end of the
song I've always decided I love it.
Of the older stuff, they stumbled briefly in `Sonic Light'
(perhaps just surprise at its having its tune back...) and things went
badly wrong during `Evil' when Marek took off on a drum excursion and
Martin followed him leaving Simon without rhythmic support and
floundering within a few bars. Martin recovered it but the ball had
definitely dropped. On the other hand, the `Hero with a Wing' was the
most drama I've ever seen Martin sing, the `Right Stuff' and `Ejection'
were excellent (but the latter missing its answering vocals in the
chorus, `"eight times my weight!" and so on, come on people you've got
three vocalists :-) ) and the first three pieces were monster-standard.
Olly is a good addition, too; he was joining in with the jams,
diluting the sometimes arid three-piece jamming that forms a lot of the
breaks, and had added several new fillips to pieces that had sounded the
same for a while and some quality sonar pinging during `Hero' that made
me think of Carl. So yes. Litmus are back: lock up anything that might
be broken by excessive volume! I look forward to the Standard gig next
month when I imagine they'll be even better and in any case are
supporting Gunslinger, so satisfaction pretty much guaranteed I reckon.
Yours,
Jon
--
"When fortune wanes, of what assistance are quantities of elephants?"
(Juvaini, Afghan Muslim chronicler, c. 1206)
Jon Jarrett, Fitzwilliam Museum, jjarrett at chiark.greenend.org.uk
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