Archive for June, 2008

Happy Summer Solstice 2008

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

Before Beanfield…

…after the battle of the Beanfield 1985.

June 1st 23 years ago.

Tony McPhee – Oh Death

Photos: Top – Lucille Pine / Rest of – Alan ‘Tash’ Lodge

Name: Alan Lodge
Date: 1 June 1985
Place: Wiltshire
Facts: Photographer and ambulanceman Alan Lodge was in a convoy of travellers heading for Stonehenge when 1,600 policemen violently tried to arrest them all. Dubbed the ‘Battle of the Beanfield’ in the media, it fragmented the travelling community. Although he subsequently gained a degree, Lodge has since struggled to find work

People don’t like travellers – we lower their house prices – but we hadn’t shown any violence. The police had previous, but the Stonehenge ambush was caught on camera and Dixon of Dock Green don’t do this kind of thing, so there were articles as far away as the Tehran Times.

The first free festival I went to was in the Queen’s back garden at Windsor in 1972. Basically, you’re hanging out with your mates and everyone’s smiling. That carried on until 1974, when 600 Thames Valley police waded in. I was sat round the fire with a cup of tea and suddenly – whoop! A truncheon round the head. We got the message, we were scared stiff, so the People’s Free Festival moved to Stonehenge.

I could see the way the wind was changing so I became an ambulanceman and got involved with an organisation set up to help youngsters who had got in trouble with the law. First in tents and teepees, and then on buses and trucks, people were now permanently meandering around the country. I had a cottage in Wales with my wife and two kids, and we were out and about for roughly nine months of the year.

By the 1984 festival there were 30,000 or 40,000 people at Stonehenge living in tents. Everything you look for in human exchange was there: lack of greed, co-operation, looking out for each other, breaking down mental barriers. Bartering was important. People were grateful for me being an ambulanceman: ‘Can I do your shopping? Can I look after your kids?’ Everything you think about being in a better society was there in the Anarchists’ Free State of Albion at Stonehenge.

On our way there the next year we were given papers by the police outside Salisbury stating that we’d be arrested if we went to Stonehenge because of an injunction they had taken out. We were used to this – the existence of the travelling life is an offence – but we didn’t know this meant they’d assembled 1,600 policemen on our route. The convoy stopped adjacent to the famous beanfield, well outside the five-mile radius of the court order, so I hopped out of the cab to take some pictures. Suddenly I saw this black cloud coming down the line, a load of coppers with riot shields. They went up to the motors, many with kids in, and were whacking them with their sticks. Two pregnant ladies were dragged out of the broken windscreens by their hair. The screams are with me now.

Rather than let them come our way we turned and drove through the hedge into the field by the road. For the next five hours there was a stand-off, skirmishes continued with people trying to get out of the field. I tried to liaise with senior policemen but their attitude was, ‘We’re going to arrest you all.’ I’m bandaging bleeding heads, but then there’s truncheon wounds where you can see the skull and I’m getting nervous of people dying. So we get them out on a Wiltshire ambulance.

At seven in the evening all the coppers boiled on to the field, smashing up the vehicles and arresting everyone. ITN were there and took footage of the level of violence. The operation wasn’t just about arresting people, but also part of a ‘decommissioning exercise’, hitting people so hard and ruining their homes so they’ll think twice about leading this lifestyle. Overall, 520 were arrested and spread around police stations up and down the country for three days, the biggest single number since the Second World War. Children were put temporarily in care. The charge was ‘obstruction of police’, which is one up from a parking ticket. The government was cheering on from the sidelines. Douglas Hurd said we resembled a bunch of medieval brigands.

I thought, ‘I’m a British citizen whose tribe’s been treated badly, we can go through the courts.’ We got 24 together to take an action against the police. Five years later, the jury awarded us £25,000 damages but the judge said we’ll split the £7m cost of the case in half, so our damages went towards that. Two of the jury burst into tears.

In 1986 parliament passed an act which criminalised 12 vehicles gathering on common land to reside. So we’d gather, stay up all night and have a rave instead. In 1994 Michael Howard’s act made this impossible, and then this last lot pass a law that means a traveller parked on the edge of a housing estate is involved in antisocial behaviour. So now a lot of people are shoved into the city where the community splits up, they can’t support each other and the kids have chips on their shoulders. The return to the cities hastened the use of serious drugs.

Music Downloads…

Saturday, June 14th, 2008

All the music downloads on the site have been deleted by persons unknown from the server.

They CAN be uploaded again, but firstly Tony Puppy will have to get to the bottom of why this has happened.

It could be that the host site have done something incredibly unethical and pulled the plug for some reason. The hosting site has not sent any emails to Tony concerning any problems or maintenace with the KYPP site over this weekend.

If the hosting company deny any knowledge then it could be a disgruntled hacker deliberately wiping of all the downloads.

Either way all my personal mp3 files ARE SAFE, just need to be reloaded, which would take some time but is do-able at least.

I am not going to reload until I know that the hosting site will not take them down, if they were responsible for the deletions in the first place.

Tony and Gerard will keep me updated with news on this matter, and I will proceed with reinserting all the mp3 files when I get told to do so.

This could take several days to get to the bottom of, so keep checking back.

Bunch of arse…

Lack Of Knowledge – Southern Studios Session – 1984

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Danger To Life / State Of Being / Tank Trap / Last Victory / Flame Thrower

The Bunker / Disaster Level / Crash Barrier / Weapons Range

Born Leader

Presenting the ‘rough’ mixes of the LP ‘The Sirens Are Back’ which was recorded at Southern Studios and released on Corpus Christi Records in the latter part of 1984. These tracks are the studio recordings mixed down but without the overdubs that appeared on the finalised released product.

Alma Road’s finest, the pride of Ponders End, a built up industrial wasteland in the Lea Valley between Edmonton and Chingford, an area brilliantly photographed by B.A. Nana of nearby neighbours Crass, residing in North Weald (a much more pleasant oasis of calm, compared to the grim Ponders End). The photos are featured all over the foldout sleeve of the Crass Records 7″ single, fittingly entitled ‘Grey’.

Lack Of Knowledge were a breath of fresh air in the early 1980′s Crass clone bands of the day. This single on Crass Records is one of the most sought after by Crass label enthusiasts I am led to believe.

Always more Joy Division than Conflict, the band shared many gigs with the ‘Anarcho’ bands of the day, and played in all the major venues that the great swarms of ‘pogoing men in black’ would converge and throw insults at the band! Venues such as Wapping Autonomy Center, Centro Iberico and the band also performed at the  squatted Zig Zag Club all dayer in December 1982.

Some history already written out on the SOUTHERN.NET site:

In early ’79, Bert left to join a real band called The Position. Real, to the extent that they actually had a singer. Bert immediately embarked upon the mission of writing their songs for them, and penned some absolute classics. If they’d put out any records at the time they’d be on everyones ‘wants’ lists today. Tony joined the band as rhythm guitarist in time to cut six tracks at ‘Front Room Studios’ in September ’79. He was promptly sacked two months later for not showing up to a rehearsal, choosing instead to let off fireworks in the streets as it was ‘Guy Fawkes Night’. Tony and Paul got back together and then spent the next six months changing the groups name and members every other week. ‘Assorted Tools’- one gig supporting The Position. ‘Lack Of Knowledge’- one gig without a drummer but with a singer called Frank Hodgson, and another gig as a five-piece this time with John ‘Einstien’ on drums and Danny Boyce on guitar. (Danny was to tragically die within a couple of years of an accidental heroin overdose). Tony and Paul then decided to record a couple of songs to send in to the Crass label for inclusion on volume two of the compilation series, ‘Bullshit Detector’. Rather than use the LOK name, they came up with (or possibly Bernard again) the immortal ‘Trio Of Testicles’. The tracks, somehow, were over-looked.

By now, Headache had split and Dan was now looking to start a new band. He offered his vocal talents to the wandering minstrels, who nearly collapsed with shock. After all Dan was someone who’d actually made a record. It was as if Roger Daltrey had asked them to ‘maybe, get together and, you know, try out a few ideas’. The new group practised in ‘Bedsit’ studios every Saturday and wrote stacks of material straight away. Christened ‘English Assasin’ after one of the songs, they played their first gig, (inevitably, with Bert back in the drum stool), at a party in someones house. With parents away, it was obviously a great idea to get a full band to play in the front room. At least until the neighbours called the police, anyway. Still unable to find a drummer, they had to take the only sensible option left open. Simply walk up to a complete stranger and ask them if they’d be the drummer. ‘Chief’ (real name Jason Powell, although I’ve never heard anyone ever use it) was on his way to school, in traditional school uniform of blazer, tie and black bondage trousers, when asked if he could play drums. “No”. Well, what about if we a) buy a drum kit and b) you learn to play them while rehearsing with us. Easy. After managing to obtain a room at the Ponders End Youth Club, which was immediately painted entirely in white, a measly collection of equipment was installed and rehearsals took place every night, and at weekends, until Chief had learnt how to play. It took about two months. He’d gone from never having sat at a kit, to playing whole songs, properly, within a matter of weeks. A name change back to Lack Of Knowledge was decided upon, all new stuff written, and in March ’81 they travelled miles and did their first recordings in a ‘real’ studio.

We wanted to put out a record but didn’t really like the results, so, re-recorded some of it in a place called ‘Octave Electronics’. We’d played our first gig with a stage and PA system in another youth club, and ‘Octave’ was the PA Company. They told us they had a studio in Edmonton, so it worked out great. It was also cheaper. We decided to put out a 7″ ourselves. We took a bus to the pressing plant, then three weeks later went back and brought home 500 singles on the bus. We put every single one of those bastards in the sleeves we’d had printed and then took them ’round to all the independent stores and distributors that we could find. God only knows how they sold them. We waited outside the BBC’s ‘Broadcasting House’ to give a copy to John Peel, who played it on his show. Not thinking that he’d actually really play it, we missed it. We took a copy to give to Crass at their house in the wilds of Epping Forest, and amazingly, Penny Rimbaud offered to put out our next record on the label. It took another year to get round to recording, but it was well worth the wait. By the time we did get around to the recording, Chief had left the band (he may have been sacked!), to be replaced by Philip Barker. Philip was a fan of LOK and drummer of another local band Klee; who had blagged a gig or two with us. Furious rehearsals at our new luxury complex, ‘Waller Studios’ (Dannys’ dads’ garage), and off we trooped to Southern Studios in London N22.

Paul and Tony, especially, were fans of Crass from around ’78, when they’d heard their demo tape at Small Wonder records. Instantly hooked, they bought everything the band released, went to as many shows as they could and became friendly with them, a friendship which still lasts today. LOK only ever got to play one show with Crass, at a huge all-day squat gig on 18 December 1982 at the ‘Zig-Zag’ club in West London (after which we went and played another show that night!). The record was to be an EP, like all Crass releases, called ‘Grey’. Penny Rimbaud produced it, Andy Palmer, Crass’ guitarist, took sleeve photos, and Gee did all the artwork. We were like one of those ‘Crass Bands’. Except all the Anarcho ‘fab-erati’ at the ‘Anarchy Centre’ hated us, as we didn’t conform to what their stupid idea of ‘Anarcho-Punk’ was about. To us, it was a real record on a real label and it got in the real independent charts, and after more gigs, it was time to start thinking about ‘The Album’. In ’82, Crass had started another offshoot label called ‘Corpus Christi’, on which bands that had made singles could release albums, and they duly offered us the chance to do one. Paul decided to leave the band during the rehearsals for this record, but said he’d stay on until after it was released. Recording again took place at Southern, this time with the band co-producing with the engineer; Mel Jefferson. Farce was descended into when Mel kept referring to bits of the songs as ‘middle eights’ and the like. Stubborn ’til the last, we refused to acknowledge these types of expressions and also pretended that we didn’t know what ‘cans’ were; ‘headphones’ was the correct un-rockist term. Mel also claimed that we were “competing with U2 and Simple Minds”. “What utter fucking drivel” was our response. By the time we’d finished, poor old Mel had had enough of us, for the time being at least. By the time ‘Sirens Are Back’ came out in 1984, we’d already been rehearsing with a new bassist, Karen; Tony’s girlfriend. She’d obviously, true to LOK form, never touched a bass guitar in her life, but nonetheless, was told to ‘fucking hurry up and learn it’. She managed to pass the initiation to LOK by not complaining after playing her first ever gig three weeks after having a baby. We also had a change of rehearsal space, this time to an annex of a disused, burnt out multi-storey car park. Crucially, it was only twenty yards from Karen’s house, and; we were able to store our equipment in her mum’s shed. Transporting it to the room was made easier by the assistance of some of the many discarded shopping carts left strewn around the estate. It wasn’t all sweetness and light, as we had to pay for the first time ever. Four quid a night.

For a complete retrospective of the ‘overdubbed’ Corpus Christi and Crass recorded works of Lack Of Knowledge get the CD entitled ‘Grey’ from Southern or Amazon.

For a listen to Lack Of Knowledge cracking debut 7″ release on the band’s own label, use the search function, and enter the band’s name.

For my dodgy Zig Zag day crowd recording of the days bands use the search function and enter Zig Zag Club Squat.

Current 93 – L.A.Y.L.A.H Records – 1984

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Christus Christus (The Shells Have Cracked) / Falling In The Fields Of Rape

From Broken Cross, Locusts / Raio No Terrasu (Jesus Wept) / St Peter’s Keys All Bloody 

The brain child of David Tibet, one time music biz hack**, and Psychic TV member, Current 93 (along with Steven Stapleton’s Nurse With Wound) really pushed forward the barriers for moody industrial music.

Stapleton from Nurse With Wound has been a constant member of Tibet’s Current 93 from the origins of the Current 93 collective taking shape. Other notable members include Steve Ignorant of Crass featured here on the track ‘Falling In The Fields Of Rape’, Dougie Pearce of Death In June, Rose McDowell of Strawberry Switchblade, Nick Cave, Michael Cashmore, Marc Almond and even Bjork from K.U.K.L.

This was the second vinyl LP, the first LP ‘Nature Unveiled’ released on the same label will be uploaded at some other time in the future.

The tracks on this LP are magnificent, but slightly jarring in places, deliberately of course. Also like most early Current 93 the lyrics / poetry seem to be slightly on the Anti-Christ vibe.

David Tibet is now (strangely enough) a born again Catholic, and his record label, Durtro Records has released the two finest pieces of vinyl in my opinion for 2006 and 2007 respectively, in the majestic double LP’s ‘Black Ships Ate The Sky’ and ‘The Inmost Light’.

Both these vinyl records (or CD’s if you are younger than me) are available from the Southern Studios or Amazon websites and are totally recommended. 

** A little known fact is David Tibet coined the phrase (now a world wide genre) ‘Anarcho Punk’ in a review of a Flux Of Pink Indians and K.U.K.L gig in 1984 for the old weekly music paper, Sounds.

Bad Brains – Elite Club, Fillmore West, San Francisco – 05/03/82

Monday, June 9th, 2008

Pay To Cum / Attitude / Supertouch / Shitfit / I /  I and I Survive

Banned In D.C / Big Takeover / Rally Round Jah Throne / Right Brigade / Riot Squad

Fearless Vampire Killers / The Meek Shall Inherit The Earth / At The Movies / ? / ? 

A decent audience recording of this gig on the west coast of America at the old Fillmore building at this point in time called the Elite Club, and run by ‘Rat Music For Rat People’ LP person Paul Rat… Bad Brains were always a massively awesome live experience if you were lucky to catch them in the early to mid 1980′s. The quality of this tape is not as good as the previous C.B.G.B’s recorded Bad Brains post I uploaded on this site several months ago (use search function), but this is still a great sounding gig. 

Public Image Limited – The Ritz, New York – 15/05/81

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

Lisa Yapp Introduction + U.S DIRT Interview / Four Enclosed Walls / There’s A Hole In My Heart

Go Back (introductions and Keith Levine getting lippy with the crowd) / Happiness

A night of driving in limos to New York’s premier nightspot, to be fair P.I.L were doing the venue a favour by replacing Bow Wow Wow who were booked to play that night, but cancelled a few days previous to the gig date.

Keith Levene thought Ed Caraballo’s idea of using the venues huge video screen with P.I.L playing over footage was a great one, and ensured that the venue knew of this idea, so they could pass it on to any audience members buying tickets.

The Ritz did not pass this ‘performance art’ show off to the customers, with an obvious reaction brewing up to the hapless punters on the night.

First on was some pants folk / performance art band, then Lisa Yapp a presenter for DIRT a U.S. cable ‘yoof’ program introduced P.I.L and  then part of the incredibly embarrassing Lisa Yapp’s DIRT interview with P.I.L was played out on the screen. Lisa Yapp is now high up in the C.N.N network supposedly.

With the help of a blues-man the band found in a bar a few days previously on drums (Sam Ulano), Jeanette Lee on percussion, Keith and Johnny Lydon all playing behind this large screen, the audience, assuming the band were taking the piss, took direct action and decided to drag the offending piece of technology down to get a view of the band. This they did and the performing members of P.I.L. for the night of the 15th May run off with a large wedge of dollars!

And that was that. A little under 20 minutes for $12 (a fair amount in 1981).

Ever got the feeling you’ve been cheated?

Text below from the review in Sounds music weekly magazine kindly borrowed from fodderstompf.com

Any way you look at it, rock is theatre, because it doesn’t usually make that crossover into real life, real threats, and influencing and directing real actions.

We have grown accustomed to seeing great bands on a stage, within a frame, within a setting; and they can be great within this frame and setting; they can be threatening and energetic and violent and even terrifying within that setting, but that ends where the frame ends, where the box of their stage ends.

On Friday May 15th, Public Image Ltd. performed at The Ritz nightclub in New York City and obliterated those boundaries between theater and real life, between the mock violence and the implied threat of the Dead Kennedys or the Sex Pistols and the real desire of an audience to destroy a band and everything they stood for, and the encouragement of the band for them to do so.

It’s the first time I’ve ever seen a performance leave the stage/frame and the control of the performer (and the controlled reactions of the audience) and enter the gut; by doing what they were doing, in front of who they were doing it in front of, PIL knowingly created a performance/theatre that reached into that spot right below the chest and just above the stomach, that spot where you feel fear and terror before you feel it anywhere else.

It is also the first time that PIL has actually done what they’ve always said they were going to do, actually lived up to and acted on everything they claim to stand for and have stated that they wanted to achieve. In this sense, May 15′s show (about the tenth time PIL have performed in public and the first in a mostly non-musical format) was really the first true Public Image Ltd. performance. It just so happened that PIL chose to debut in the wrong place at the wrong time.

The events leading up to the May 15 show were swift, and above all, surprising. On Wednesday, May 13, Bow Wow Wow suddenly pulled out of a long-hyped and anticipated weekend two-night stand at The Ritz; according to some sources, McLaren and Bow Wow Wow never had any intention of coming over to the States to tour in the first place, and the whole thing was just another big publicity stunt – but that’s unconfirmed to say the least.

In any event, this left The Ritz in a lot of hot water. On such short notice, they would have a great deal of trouble finding an act that could top or equal Bow Wow Wow, and moreover, in any case they would have barely a day to promote the gig, and it would be too late to get any ads in the papers or stick any posters up.

That anything came together at all was the mastermind of Michael Alago, a slight, pretty and effeminate man who books The Ritz. In the hectic offices of the cavernous, gaudy art-deco ballroom-turned-rock-club, Alago explained the chain of events that led to PIL’s appearance, this conversation taking place a few hours before the doors opened for the show.

“I found out through the grapevine that Keith (Levene) was in town,” Alago states over a cup of fruit salad which he seems only too happy to offer to me, “and I said ‘you have to bail me out’. Within forty minutes he was down here, and the band arrived the next day.” (Thursday) By way of explanation of what was going to go on later that night, Alago simply said: “Yes, a lot of people are going to be surprised, but it’s art, and it’s sound and vision.”

By ‘band’ Alago means Keith, thin and wiry, hair newly cropped to a short and spiky crewcut and restored to its original brown colour (in fact he looks almost exactly as he did when he formed The Clash five years ago), John Lydon (complete with flaming red hair), and Jeanette Lee, who does anything and everything and is definitely to be taken seriously as the third member of the band/corporation. They would also be helped out by a 60 year old white and overweight jazz drummer named Sammy whom they had found playing in a New York City park the day of the show, and Eddy Caraballo, an American friend of the band who would coordinate the video part of the performance from The Ritz’s high-tech state-of-the-art video booth.

Obviously this line up wasn’t going to get on stage and run through ‘Careering’ or ‘Low life’ or ‘Death Disco’, etc. For one, in effect there would only be two people on stage – John and Keith – who knew the songs or were conceivably prepared to play them. And what were they to do – would John sing while Keith played drums, or would John play drums and sing while Keith played guitar and synths, or would Keith play bass and John play drums…? So obviously there was no intention or even the means for PIL to get on stage and ‘play a gig’.

“I hope no one’s been misled – no one said it was a gig”, states Jeanette Lee, curled up and cross-legged on the floor of The Ritz’s video booth. It’s about 8pm, two hours away from the door opening and about five away from the show itself. Lee is, in a word, adorable; small, big brown eyes, a wonderful yellow party dress, she could quite literally pass for 8 or 9. She’s also a joy to talk to and wants to be as helpful and as informative as possible.

Lee continues: “It wasn’t supposed to be advertised as playing – there are instruments up there, and we will be up there, but there will be no playing. If you had told us a week ago that we would be here doing this, we wouldn’t have believed you. We weren’t even positive that we were actually going to go through with this until 9 o’clock this morning, and we still don’t know what we’re going to do when we get up there. Everything is actually going to be done live, there’s no preparation. The band will be live, the video will be live, it’s all spontaneous. It happened so quickly, and I’m too interested in what we can do in a day – that’s the exciting part. The whole thing about this corporation is spontaneity, and that wasn’t the story on the last tour. We did that really because we wanted to come to America.”

She makes a broad gesture that includes the video booth and all of its equipment, the hall and the stage, which is obscured entirely by a gigantic video screen, behind which Lydon is pounding out the ‘Flowers of Romance’ drum riff, accompanied by Keith’s synthesizer blurbs and belches. “This was a perfect opportunity to use a visual thing with video and noise added. I hope no one’s been misled.”

But what if they are?

“People should know what to expect, or what not to expect, out of this corporation. They should know that we’re not going to get up there and play songs. We’ve said that in so many interviews and it bores me to death to say it again. This is so much more interesting than going to a gig and hearing what you’ve already got on record. This has so much more to offer.” John’s line of reply to the same queries is far less explanatory and far more blunt. “Haven’t you sussed it out yet?” he says, speaking from a near pitch-dark corner of the ballroom. “Why don’t you just hang out and wait for it all to happen, baby?”

Okay, a little about what PIL intend to do, and what they intend to do it on: John, Keith, Jeanette and Sammy are going to be up on stage, but they plan to spend the show completely behind a twenty-foot by twenty-foot video screen, which covers the entire stage except for half-a-foot at the bottom and about five feet at the sides. Behind that screen the set up almost looks normal – sparse, modern, but almost normal. There’s a drum kit, a synthesizer bank, a few guitars and basses, two video cameras and a record player.

A massive array of light of lights and spots situated behind PIL will throw their silhouettes onto the screen – the closer PIL are to the screen, the more defined the silhouette. The video cameras will project whatever it is PIL is going to be doing back there onto the huge screen and over the silhouettes. And finally, pre-recorded videos of PIL will be shown on the screen and over the shadows, presumably mixed in with a live relay of what PIL will be doing behind that screen, which still remains a complete mystery. They could play records, play white noise, make shadow puppets, tell jokes, even, for all we know, play a set – but the key thing seems to be that from no vantage point out front will anyone be able to see any of PIL in the flesh.

Near the front of a large line outside of The Ritz a blond-haired teen punk, complete with dog collar and Sex Pistols t-shirt, tells me that PIL is his fave band, he’s excited about seeing them in a smaller place, he saw them last time and he thought they were great, and no, he wasn’t going to come back on Saturday night, but he did have tickets to see The Jam later in the month. He and about 500 others have been waiting in a line outside of The Ritz that started forming at about 12 o’clock in the afternoon. By about seven it’s begun to pour and it’ll continue to rain very hard all night.

When the doors open at about ten in the evening, these people – and about 1500 others – will have paid twelve dollars and waited in abominable weather for hours and hours to see and hear Public Image Ltd., the band. Nearly all of the expect a show pretty much along the lines of what PIL gave them last time at NYC’s Palladium; that amounts to a more or less straightforward traditional rock show, perhaps a bit more spontaneous and unpredictable (this is PIL) and a bit more intimate (this being The Ritz, an unseated ballroom). No one has given them any reason to believe that neither will they be seeing PIL in the flesh nor hearing familiar PIL material. Do you sense a conflict of interests?

The doors open at ten without real incident. Strangely, it takes a while before the place really fills up. The people who’ve been waiting outside all day are excited and very wet – the spiked hair becomes more spiked, the thrift shop clothing (or the expensive duds made to look like thrift shop clothing) has become a few shades darker and has occasionally fallen to pieces. But the mood amongst those who’ve waited for this and now crowd to the front of the stage is very high. In fact, the whole place seems to be electrified by PIL and the suddenness of it all. The entire staff of The Ritz is totally wired and galvanized, it’s as if each and everyone of them was going on stage that night. So much seems to be at stake, so much could happen, this thing has been pulled together so quickly and so tightly, it’s very nearly as if The Ritz and all of its staff have become part of the corporation.

A Ritz employee: “Definitely, it’s a performance for us too. Everything could be blown, everything could go perfectly. John summed up our role better than anyone: ‘If anything gets busted up, if everything gets broken, we can just catch the first plane out tomorrow’.”

The waiting starts, the ballroom fills up, the liggers mill around and the crowd on the floor and at the front gets packed tighter and tighter. An opening act, a Suicide-like two piece, come and go with relatively little incident and abuse. More waiting, more crowding. An announcement that “Public Image will appear at one”. At 1am, with the ballroom lights still up, the stage and screen still dark and UB40 blaring over the PA, the well-known and immediately recognizable bass riff of ‘Public image’ (the song) comes booming out from behind the screen. There’s no vocal, but the drums kick in pretty cohesive, and a complete drum-and-bass version of the tune is run through about three times in the next ten minutes. There’s a lot of confusion – is this performance or not? Finally, about 1:20, the lights seemingly go down in earnest. Immediately, before anything has even happened, things had become scary – you knew that a threat was there, and whether it was going to be acted on or not was the question.

Oddly the first part of the program was a video of Shox Lumania, a NY based theatrical rock/costume troupe somewhat along the lines of Shock, and nearly as miserable. This was followed by a silly but almost informative sketch-on video of Keith, bound and gagged, being interviewed by a woman in a trashy dress sitting in a garbage can. This went on a bit too long, about 10 or 15 minutes, and the technical and artistic quality (though not necessarily the intent) of the video was terrible and much of it was inaudible, but some interesting things were said: basically Keith and his bizarre interviewer kept on reiterating that this wasn’t going to be a concert, you weren’t to expect the normal, and don’t be surprised when you weren’t going to get it. But it was hard to hear and no one really seemed to be paying all that much attention.

After a short but ominous silence PIL were introduced by the same woman in the same garbage can, only this time in person and holding the top of the garbage can as a shield against the onslaught of bottles. “I told you they were weird!” she shrugged and squawked. “Ladies and gentlemen, here they are – Public Image Limited!”

What followed was pretty much as those who had been warned expected. Four distinct and pretty identifiable shadows against the screen, videos over it, audience confusion and derision. Keith then walked over to the side of the stage (this part I could actually see from my vantage point), flipped a lit cigarette into the audience and put a copy of PIL’s ‘Flowers of romance’ onto the turntable, which PIL then lip-synched their way through. The audience seemed to quite like this, actually.

When that was done, things stopped being even vaguely musical and became a sort of a pantomime absurdity, accompanied by the live video, which took on the character of embarrassing but amusing home movies. They danced, they mugged, they laughed, they chatted, they made various noises, but they remained firmly unmusical and definitely out of the sight ranges of most of the crowd. The audience was getting a bit restless, an occasional beer bottle would sail through the air and hit the screen, but at this point it was still more or less amusing. Entertainment.

At about 1:40, much to our surprise, PIL gave us an actual song of about two-thirds of ‘Four enclosed walls’ from the new album, Keith having temporarily relieved Sammy on drums, and John singing. But that over with, the experimental stuff continued, and some of it was pretty good though they never quite got the audio/sound part of it together. Visually it became quite curious, and often well-done and alluring.

It was at about 1:40 (25 minutes into the performance) that the bottles and the catcalls started in earnest, the first sign of real and dangerous hostility, the first realization by the audience that PIL had no intention of raising the screen and playing a normal set. Keith and John responded by hanging together over a mike and taunting the audience with “Oh, booo, booo, hiss, booo, they’re cheating us, oh, booo, hiss, we’re being cheated!” This of course was akin to teasing a soon-to-be rabid dog. Things became a bit more frightening and John monotoned into the mike “It’s so nice to be here in your wonderful city.”

For whatever motive, Keith then sat down at the drums again and he and John ran through a fairly straightforward verse of ‘Banging the door’, followed by John’s “Did you like that? Is that what you want?” and the resumption of the chaos. This is when things really began to fall to pieces. The show degenerated into Keith and John teasing and baiting the audience from behind the safety of the screen, and the audience responding in kind.

“Aren’t you getting your money’s worth?” John taunted. “Isn’t this what rock’n'roll is all about, maaan?” At this point there was no turning back. A fuse had been lit, and it was only a matter of time before it blew, and John and Keith’s behaviour certainly wasn’t helping things. There was now a steady stream of bottles flailing against the screen, many missing and zonking people in the front, the rest just bouncing off the screen and smashing in the faces of the people in the first rows. Keith was also starting to get genuinely angry, though John’s grin and sarcasm held into the end.

“If you destroy that screen, you’re going to be destroyed”, Keith grimly deadpanned without a trace of humour. “We have the power to destroy you – all of you!”

“You’re not throwing enough bottles!” John shouted over Keith’s shoulder. “Throw more bottles!” At 1:50 a chair was heaved from the balcony, hitting the screen dead center and smashing down on the stage. This was the signal for the true riot to begin. Suddenly Keith darted out from behind the screen, a truly possessed and angry look on his face. Who knows why he decided to appear – he looked set to kill. He made it about ten feet out from the wings, when a bottle swiped him on the forehead and a bouncer grabbed Levene and tossed him back behind the screen, quite literally saving his life.

The audience – now a mob – surged towards the stage, lunging for the screen and the white tarp that all the equipment and lights sat on. In one swift and terrifying motion all of PIL’s lights and equipment went sliding into the audience, bouncers risking their lives to save what they could, the battered screen flew up, apparently a move directed from the video booth, and everyone and everything went quite insanely and horrifyingly berserk…

All the while Lydon’s taunting continues, he sings “New York, New York, a helluva town…”, and when he sees the video screen going up, his floor sliding out from under him and he realizes he’s seconds away from certain injury, he quickly barks “This is the end of the show” into the mike and dashes off up the stairs and into the dressing room, where Jeanette and Keith have already fled.

From then it’s a blurred two-minute flurry of fighting, bouncers attacking and being attacked, the mob grabbing for anything and everything they could, and that pervasive feeling of danger and threat becoming real. For about two-and-a-half minutes when things really went wild, you weren’t sure if you were going to get out alive, if PIL had gotten out alive, if 30 or 40 people were going to die… it’s the sort of feeling you get when you think the elevator is going to fall, when you realize that you’re likely to get the shit beaten out of you with nowhere to run. This was terror, pure terror, brought and nurtured knowingly by PIL, and even when the smoke cleared and it looked like everything was going to be alright and there hadn’t been too many serious injuries, that didn’t really make it any better, it could’ve just as easily gone the other way.

Up in the dressing room, John and Keith snorted coke and chatted with the injured who had been brought up there. They had performed, they had gotten a reaction, whether this was the reaction that was desired or expected is known only to them.

The show the next night was cancelled. PIL had wanted to do it, but The Ritz just couldn’t take the risk.

At the risk of sounding scholarly, there are certain things about the show that really should be recapped and restated:

1. There truly were some moments when the combination of sound, video, shadow and chance was very effective.

2. Beyond a certain point the riot became a certainty, and PIL did nothing to forestall or divert this, and indeed they went out of their way to encourage it.

3. After a certain point, if John, Keith or Jeanette had shown their faces in front of the screen, they – without exaggeration – would’ve been seriously injured, perhaps killed. This was scary, particularly the image of frail little Jeanette being ripped to pieces by the angry mob.

4. The fact that no one was killed or seriously injured, or the fact that the riot didn’t really blow, was pure luck. It just as easily could’ve gone the other way.

5. There was no excuse for PIL or The Ritz to have not gone out of their way to warn the audience that this was not going to be a gig but a video and noise presentation. That this was not done was a major show of gross negligence on The Ritz’s part and gross arrogance on PIL’s part.

The Ritz Riot 1981 © Marcia ResnickRock had stopped being theatre, had become a real threat on our lives and the performers’ lives. And not unintentionally, this was part of the performance. It’s like the finale of Nathanael West’s ‘The Day of the Locust’, when Hollywood goes berserk and all the anger pent up from living and watching a fantasy explodes into real anger and violence. The act becomes real. In a way, it achieved what the Sex Pistols always said they wanted to achieve – the destruction of rock’n'roll, the rape of rock’n'roll.

I’ll never be able to see another show without being aware of it being fantasy and theatre – the reality and genuine threat of the PIL show spoiled that game for me.

Near the front of the mob, just as things started getting out of control, some kid said quite seriously: “I wish I hadda gun. I’d just blow him (Lydon) away, Bang Bang, and I’d be famous just like those other guys. Bang Bang!” This time no one had a gun.

Tim Somner

Sounds, 30th May 1981

 

Huntingdon Street squat, London, N1 – 1979 (Cini-film)

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

Thanks to Stewart (Jellyfish – shown above) for getting this amazing video together.

Please be aware that Ginny the lady who filmed it lived in Balls Pond Road near Dalston at the time.

Some outside footage is included in Stewarts edit of Balls Pond Road along side the edited footage set inside of the Huntingdon Street squat, which is along Caledonian Road near Kings Cross.

So two areas of London filmed and edited to one short film.

The editing is so good that I thought I should clear this up from the start in case you feel it is ‘set’ only in Ball Pond Road, Dalston, as the street signs would suggest!

Huntingdon Street squat 1979.

Witness this wonderful super eight footage by clicking on the link above

‘The Joys Of Work’ – Excerpts of the book by Jake Heretic

Friday, June 6th, 2008

Author’s history:
Baron Von Zubb A.K.A Rich Kid A.K.A Jake Heretic’s parents hailed from Stepney but by the time he was born they’d left that all behind and joined the ranks of northwest London’s middle classes. Nice, this rather bored our Baron so after being expelled from school, squatting, punk rock anarchism, heroin and general delinquency as chronicled in the book, Baron went to Asia for several years. There he worked as a small time smuggler, a tailors tout, a film extra and drug dealer.
He has traveled overland to Asia 3 times, smoking opium and drinking alcohol in the Ayatollahs Iran, visited the closed area in Pakistan that is now home to enemy number one Mr. Bin Laden and spent 3 months at The King of Thailand’s pleasure in Klong Prem jail.
He’s lived for months under trees on beaches and swam in the planets cleanest jungle streams in India and Malaysia
His long suffering partner Kay and him organized and actualized a small relief project in the immediate aftermath of Sri Lankas tsunami.
They now live in
Brighton, have two nieces and a nephew to keep them sane, are trying to be middle aged and eat masalla dosa weekly.
They visit Asia every winter.

Synopsis
Here’s some extracts from the unpublished novel ‘The Joys of Work’, by Baron Von Zubb; the story of one kids journey from a nullifying suburban background to the revolutionary barricades of post Thatcherite Britain.
Via getting expelled from school, punk rock, squatting drugs, crime, autonomist politics, and the 1981 summer uprisings in Britain’s inner cities, the book chronicles an alternate history of the times.
Written as I traveled in Asia in the mid 1980′s, it was intended to be the first in a trilogy of books, the following two postulating alternate futures, ironically thanks to global warming, based on environmental and societal collapse.
My nomadic lifestyle meant that too many copies just got lost on the way so along with the rejections of ‘The Joys of Work’.

I called it a day.

Thanks to Mickey Penguin and all The K.Y.P.P. crew for putting this up.

Selected excerpts from the unpublished book:

pages 57 – 73 start here This link will drop you on page 57, just use the ‘next’ function to ‘turn’ the pages.

pages 157  – 172 start here This link will drop you on page 157, just use the ‘next’ function to ‘turn’ the pages.

pages 208 – 216 start here etc etc etc.

Please leave comments if you enjoy the excerpts> If you know of any publishers that may be interested in this kind of material, please get in touch

The following books are published, recommended and available:

A.K.A. Martin Wright: Anti Fascist Action street fights in London and elsewhere during the 1970′s > ISBN 094898435X

A.K.A Daniel Wright: Thieving, drug taking, homelessness in London, true account of Martin Wrights (above) deceased brother > ISBN 1871593212

A.K.A. Bob Blood And Roses: Early punk days in Australia, thieving, drug taking, homelessness in London, true account by Bob Short (not deceased, surprising if you read it!) > ISBN 9780975825846

A.K.A. Nick from Rudimentary Peni: Semi autobiography, shyness and fragile ego, punk, depression > ISBN 0952574403

A.K.A. Sian from The Lost Cherries / Blyth Power: Squatting in Brixton, gigs, crusties, lost loves, Tinsel and even Mickey Penguin is mentioned in this book > ISBN 1412026814

A genuine KYPP success story. Exactly six months after uploading excerpts of this manuscript for you to read and comment on, Jake finally gets these writings into print form. Go get it from lulu.com or alternative bookshops > ISBN 9781409245964

The Apostles / The Mob – London Musicians Collective, London, NW1 – 22/01/83

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

The Apostles – Erics Detachables / Skin Deep / Fucking Queer / Proletarian Autonomy / Pigs For Slaughter / Alienation

The Mob – Cry Of The Morning / Gates Of Hell / Raised In A Prison / Dance On You Fool / Our Life Our World / Witch Hunt / Slayed

Originally this material was released on cassette by Larry Peterson’s Cause For Concern label in 1983. Larry decided to put this cassette onto a vinyl format in a very small quantity in 1985.

Featuring The Apostles and The Mob, this audience quality recording is pretty good. The sets by the bands are performed quite well. 

The gig itself was infamous for the sound guy on the night J.C. from Brougham Road Co-Op / squats, turning down Andy Martin, from The Apostles, vocal microphone during the song ‘Pigs For Slaughter’, a song dedicated to Ian Slaughter on the night, and a tribute to Ian’s fanzine at the time of the same name. J.C. claimed he did not want (what he considered) the ‘violent’ lyrics to this track going through his ‘Pacifist P.A’. The microphone was kept low in the live mix for the remainder of The Apostles set.

The Apostles on the night did not perform their full set, cutting a couple of tracks out of the set list, due to (what Andy Martin considered) ‘the hall being filled with an unappreciative audience and pacifist hippie tramps’. This incident was recorded via the artwork on the debut 7″ single by The Apostles released later on in 1983.

The Mob’s set was performed without incident.

The Apostles Official Site

The Mob Official Site

Adam And The Antz – Do It Records – 1979

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Zerox

Whip In My Valise

Adam and his Antz second 7″ single, recorded by the second Antz line up comprising the musicians that recorded the ‘Dirk Wears White Socks’ LP.

In 1980 this line up also infamously, had Malcolm McClaren (the then manager of the band) get the adorable and dreamy (I am allowed to say that cos I was a year younger than her at 13/14 in 1980) 15 year old Annabella Lwin to join up on vocals to become Bow Wow Wow, leaving Adam on his Jack Jones.

Quite a coup, still Adam got the last laugh becoming a huge world wide star with a completely different band.

Both the new Adam And The Ants (note different spelling now) and Bow Wow Wow had a very similar sound, performed in similar venues, and on similar TV and Radio sessions, and I am still quite amazed to this day that Bow Wow Wow did not overshadow the new Adam And The Ants in world wide popularity in 1980-1981. 

Adam and his new Ants released the ‘Kings Of The Wild Frontier’ LP, which is a mighty fine listen. Bow Wow Wow released their first LP/EP release on cassette only format. That format did not qualify as a single in the charts, nor ironically an LP, the fact that there was no LP format meant a lot less sales. Bow Wow Wow lost ground on Adam And The Ants from that point on and were lapped several times before Bow Wow Wow released a proper vinyl LP (plus cassette version) in 1981. 

Maybe I should not be so amazed…McClaren and E.M.I. bodging it up again. 

Loads more Antz material uploaded, use the search function.


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