Vane – A Real Kavoom cassettes – 1983

Wake Me / Glad Again

One Too / Dumb Dumb Dumb / God Likes Us

As some KYPP browsers may know, I was quite a supporter of the band Webcore and witnessed them many times in and around the capital. The two original cassette releases by Webcore on the A Real Kavoom label were already uploaded onto this site several years ago and are well worth listening to.  Please go and search them out.

Three members of Webcore, the bassist, drummer and keyboard player were in a Chelmsford based band previously. The band were called Vane that were active from 1979 to 1982. Vane were named after the vocalist James Vane who had entered the music world in 1976 as lead singer of a cover band called The Void. He later played with unrecorded punk group The Straights and with Powerpop combo The Gents. James Vane managed to get two records released on Island records ‘Judy’s Come Down’ produced by Mike Oldfield no less, and ‘Glamorous Boys’, but alas I do not own these artifacts.

This cassette posthumously released by A Real Kavoom that I do own and which is uploaded tonight is just a snippet of the quality that this band obviously possessed. Five tracks of funky bass backing up flanged guitar lines, trippy keyboards and with vocals reminiscent of Peter Murphy of Bauhaus crossed with David Sylvian of Japan.

Well worth a listen.

The photographs have nothing to do with Vane but I placed them up on this post anyway, Greenham Common buses 1982 courtesy of Janet Henbane and Stonehenge 1983 tee-pee and converted truck courtesy of Mick Lugworm.

The text below is an interview with the Vane and Webcore keyboardist Paul Chousmer on the aural-innovations.com site.

Roughly four or five years ago I was in England for both a vacation and to start collecting stock for a psychedelic mail order that I ran for a while. Most of what I bought was directly from the bands themselves or band members. This was still when you could write to an address off of a tape case or a compact disc insert and some one would respond to you. I don’t really remember how I had got Paul Chousmer’s number and address. But I did contact him before my vacation and he agreed to meet with me. He was even kind enough to drive into London so that I could buy a few items from him. It didn’t really hit me that the person I was going to meet had been there for all of the eighties U.K. Psych/Free Fest scene or that he was moving quite gracefully into the electronic and dance clubs. Musically his style has always been similar to ENO. His ability to create mind bending soundscapes is uncanny. They lift you and take you to places you’ve only dreamed of.

One of the first groups he was with was as big of a major attraction as the Ozric Tentacles. More than often they could be found playing the same gigs. Forming in 1982, Webcore’s music was more progressive then their contemporaries. Though still heavily psychedelic their sound is often mechanical and much more structured.

It was during the Webcore years that Paul developed his soundscapes. He and fellow Webcore member Dan Carpenter formed the chillout group Another Green World. Their title describes their music to a tee. They originally formed to play the early morning chillouts at a regular Ozric/Webcore venue Alice in Wonderland. This led to the all-too-common draw at Club Dog, the Deptford Crypt, and later Whirly-Gig and Return to the Source shows, one of which I attended at the Brixton Academy in 1996.

Shorty after Webcore faded in 1988 Paul focused his attention on Another Green World only taking time out to work with The Thunderdogs (the trippy house band for a traveling circus) and Spannerman (a spin off of the Thunderdogs). Then in 1993 he joined up with Phil Pickering and Mick West of Webcore to form Zuvuya. Mixing tribal and dance rhythms with the textured sound washes of Another Green World they became one of the earlier bands signed to the Delerium label. For these releases they collaborated with the psychedelic guru Terrence McKenna.

Though Paul is no longer with Zuvuya he has continued with Another Green World. He has released various compilation tracks with the Return to the Source group, and on Club Crusty Vol 1, Shamanarchy in the U.K., and the Dubmission label. He also has a full compact disc release on the Magick Eye label. I was lucky enough this last April to be in England when Paul had a gig in Exeter. The show was held at the Phoenix. Once I made it past the metal bird above the entrance that came alive every so often to open its glowing red eyes and spread its wings I witnessed a show that blew me away. Pure electronic psych, dub, dance bliss. Joining him on stage playing guitar, another of my favourite performers, was Russ of the Oroonies (another great festy psych band which spawned Joie of the Ozrics and later Eat Static ).

Paul recently performed as Another Green World for the Return to the Sources New Years Eve celebration at the Rocket.

DS: Can you give me an idea of your history musically?

PC: Webcore has some complicated roots. I’ll try to draw a family tree.

Vane – formed in Chelmsford, Essex 1979. We released two singles on Island.

James Vane – Vox

Phil Pickering – Bass – Webcore/Zuvuya

Clive Roberts – Guitar – later owned Trace Elliot

Colin Woolway – Drums

Paul Chousmer – Keys

Ring of Roses – formed in 1984. Signed to RCA Records for 100,000 Pounds though never released anything.

James Vain – Vox

Richard Havis – Guitar

Chris ??? – drums – later went on to play with Zodiac Mindwarp

??? – Bass

Dan “Spannerman” Carpenter – Sax

Paul Chousmer – Keys – left after four months

Webcore – formed in Cornwall in 1984 and lasted until 1987. Released several self-released cassettes, 2 LP’s and 2 12″s through Jungle Records.

Mick West – Vox

Phil Pickering – Bass

Paul Chousmer – Keys

Clive Goodwin – Guitar – later Ozrics sound engineer

Colin Woolway – Drums

Nick Van Gelder – Drums – had played with the Ozrics earlier-went on to Jamiroquai

Dan Carpenter – Sax occasionally

Mike ??? – left to join a monastery

Jackie Hannah – backing vox

Karen Kay – backing vox

Another Green World also started in 1984 when Dan and I left Ring of Roses. And it just keeps going…

Did you know about the Thunderdogs? The band played with Circus Archaos all over Europe and Scandinavia from 1990 to 1992.

Thunderdogs

Tony “Dog” D’Amico – Vox

Gavin Griffiths – Guitar – previously with the Ozrics and Ullulators

Dan Spannerman – Sax

Jonny Ellwood – Drums

Seaweed – Keys – now with Ozric

Gabrielli – bass

Sound engineer and occasional pianist was me. And Stuart Zehnder and Generator John were along for the ride, sometimes tecking. You can see that these bands were fairly incestuous. Dan and Jackie have a son together, Jackie’s brother is Stuart Zehnder who played bass for Spannerman and then Jamiroquai also.

DS: I’ve never heard either Vane or Ring of Roses before. What was their music like?

PC: Oh it was such a long time ago… Vane was primarily psychedelic, but remember this was the early eighties so we had just come out of the punk revolution here and were fishing about with Goth and New Romantic styles. We were very much into electric sounds and effects. So imagine if you can: we were fronted by James Vain, 6’4″ tall, skinny as a rake, loads of make-up, electric coloured hair (he was influenced a lot by Bowie’s transformations – but dissolute as Lou Reed!), low lights, big bass, electronic noises all over the place – can you picture this? Very much a precursor to what Webcore got up to. A little less danceable, but much better looking! The band got fairly well known around the seedier underground scene in London. Great fun and fond memories.

DS: What about Ring of Roses?

PC: Ring of Roses was James Vane’s attempt to ‘get commercial’ (He had already blown the deal with Island Records after releasing two dreadful singles), so the songs were still vaguely psychedelic/new romantic, but very polished with definite ‘understandable’ lyrics and structures. With the help of a typical low-life manager the band signed to RCA for 100,000 Pounds, then fell to pieces – really RCA were impressed by the band’s appearance more than anything. The A&R man who signed the band left the company shortly after the signing. Always a bad sign. So the money got frittered away and nothing was ever released! What a sad story.

DS: How would you describe Webcore?

PC: Webcore were often described as way ahead of their time (at the time, if you can see what I mean.) I sort of took the roll of manager as nobody else would and we played everywhere. I (and Ed ‘Ozric’ Wynne) took the same view that the best way to publicize ourselves was to play wherever we could. So we often found ourselves at the same dodgy benefit gigs. All sorts of squats, free festivals, you name it. So we got a reputation for playing together all of the time. I’ve always thought our music was completely different. I felt there was a common psychedelic thread and we were always up for a party. Then Club Dog started (by Mike Dog, who later had the Ultimate Record label with groups like Eat Static and Senser) Webcore, the Ozric Tentacles and Another Green World all became regulars. And we grew with it.

DS: I agree that Webcore’s music was ahead of its time at the time. What would you say were the musical influences of the group?

PC: Our influences at the time inevitably included ENO, but also Psychic TV, Siouxsie and the Banshees, it’s difficult to say now from this distance in time. I would say we brought lots of different things together. Mick was a poet not a singer, so that was his approach. Trying to make his words fit. My idea was to create atmospheres behind the songs. Setting the scene. We were all experimenting. Just trying out ideas and if they felt good. It’s funny now that I’m teaching I see loads of young bands coming together. They all seem to want to sound like somebody else. The A&R mentality of copying whatever the last big hit was! We didn’t think that way at all back then!

DS: Webcore’s music also seems quite different from much of the other free fest bands like the Ozrics and Psi. How do you feel that Webcore fit into this scene?

PC: You’d have to ask this one of the audience really. I find it very hard to be objective. I would say that I was always surprised that Webcore’s audience danced a lot. I didn’t think of our music as dance music. This was fairly unusual in the free fest scene. Our music was also quite structured. Not totally, there was some room for improvisation. But there were definite maps to follow. The other bands seemed to be more into long wibble solos etc…

DS: How did Spannerman fit into the fold?

PC: Spannerman came together while we were all in the circus. We were getting bored, so we became the party band. When the circus finished we carried on. We played for a summer in 1992 with an offshoot circus “Matarank” at the Avignon Theater Festival in France. Clive Goodwin came along with his PA and looked after the sound. I left the band shortly after this as I was starting a family. The band then changed with Jonny Ellwood taking over on drums etc… We used to describe Spannerman as “psychedelic-punk-jazz.”

DS: If I remember right you played with the Fields of the Nephilim for a short while.

PC: The Fields of the Nephilim link came through Jungle Records. They had put out a couple of singles through Jungle before signing to Beggars Banquet. And the Field’s manager, Steve Brown, was a partner of Jungle. I was working at London University in 1988 or ’89 when they were looking for a keyboard player. They remembered me from some gigs when Webcore supported the Fields in the early days and tracked me down. That was great fun. I played on six tours in the U.K., Germany and France and also on their live LP. I really enjoyed myself.

DS: What became of Zuvuya? PC: Dunno the answer to this. I broke off contact with these people for reasons I’d rather not discuss. I made some music with them and it was put out through Delerium.

DS: What are your feelings on the festival scene of the eighties?

PC: You have to remember there was a right wing government ruling here at the time, with that bitch Thatcher at the helm. Lots of unemployment, kids on the dole, etc… Punk had run its course. We were all getting politicized. Stonehenge free festival was banned and suppressed by the police with a heavy hand. So free festivals were often a way to protest. We were all squatting, traveling. I have fond memories of that time. People were thinking of the world around them. I look at the kids now. They have no idea about politics. Nothing to protest about I suppose. The legacy of the Thatcher years is that everyone is out for themselves. Make as much money for yourself as you can and screw everyone else. I think that Reagan and his cronies did the same sort of thing over there.

DS: Through your music as Another Green World, you as an individual have moved quite easily from the scene in the eighties right into the club scene of the nineties and on. How do you feel about the club sound and what are you writing these days?

PC: I really like the music I hear in clubs these days. But it only sounds good in the clubs! In that atmosphere and loud. Most of it doesn’t seem to work when I put it on at home. However loud! In that sense I don’t really understand how I fit in. I actively try to make music that transports you from your armchair at home to some other place, without necessarily being really loud. This is important to me. So I keep in contact with these clubs, send them what I am doing. I just do what I do and they book me if they like it. This is probably quite old-fashioned these days. Everything is high sell, throwaway.

DS: Would you mind naming a few of the bands that you have supported or that have supported you in the past?

PC: Webcore supported on occasion:

Psychic TV

Fields of the Nephilim

Doctor and the Medics

Zodiac Mindwarp

Daevid Allen

Ozric Tentacles

Another Green World has played with:

Eat Static

Astralasia

Banco de Gaia

Cheapsuit Oroonies

DS: What are your influences?

PC: I have all sorts of influences. Holger Czukay, Erik Satie, Lee Scratch Perry, Thelonious Sphere Monk. These days I listen to a lot of early Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, Albinoni and Klezmer music. Dub seems to be another common thread. I’ve taken a long time finding the nerve to play dub live. It certainly takes me to some of the places I want to go. I hope it does the same for the audience. Who knows where it will take me next.

DS: What are you teaching at University?

PC: I teach a variety of things musical at the colleges. Music Technology, Keyboard Skills, Music Theory and Music Business. All very time consuming. But it earns a living and is rewarding in other ways. It can also be very frustrating. Under-resourced equipment, unmotivated students etc…

DS: What equipment do you use live as Another Green World?

PC:Roland Jupitar 6

Korg M1

Oberheim Matrix-1000

Roland s-550 sampler

Lexicon Vortex

Yamaha SPX90

Alesis Quadraverb

Soundcraft mixer

DS: What do you feel the future holds for you musically?

PC: I’ll just polish the crystal ball!… I don’t know. I just carry on putting together music that appeals to me. And if other people like it great. I’ve never been terribly ambitious. I’ve always felt Music to be my vocation. I need to do it. And it’s nice when some money comes back from it. I have some vague ideas about getting into producing for other people or making film music. But it is high pressure work. And I prefer to work at my own (snail-like) pace. I have to have time to polish my work. I have been playing real instruments recently in a Klezmer band, with Russ and Jane of the Oroonies, and this is excellent exercise for the brain. In the very long term I suppose I will probably find myself playing piano jazz in my eighties. Though it is bound to be weirder than that!!!

Discography:

Webcore

Cassettes: Cinematography (A Real Kavoom ARK 4) 1984

The Great Unfolding (A Real Kavoom ARK 16) 1986

Consider The River (M.E.L.T. Music) 1987

12″: The Captians Table (Jungle/A Real Kavoom JUNG 30T/ARK23)

Running for the Precident (JUNG 34T/ARK25) Both 1987

Albums: Webcore (FREUD16/ARK27) 1987

WebcoreWebcore (FREUD22/ARK32) 1988

Spannerman

Cassettes: Leave it Mandy! 1992

Zuvuya

12″: Grabbing Nandi by the Horns (Nation NR026T) 1993

Shaman I Am (Delerium DELEC EP 031) 1993

Albums: Dream Matrix Telemetry (DELEC CD 021) 1993

Shamania (DELEC CD 031) 1994

Another Green World

Cassettes: My Dreams in Your Hands (AGW 001) 1984

Boondocks (AGW 002) 1988

Adjusting the Mirror (AGW 003) 1993

Albums: Invisible Landscape (Magick Eye) 1997

Video: Ambiotic State 1994

5 comments
  1. James Vane
    James Vane
    January 5, 2013 at 8:21 pm

    What a fascinating account of what has all become more than a little hazy over the years. Finally I get to hear long lost recordings of Vane. I am in possession of a few others, some live, some demo.
    Vane jammed at Stonehenge in 1982. We were supposed to be on the main stage before Hawkwind but delays and general site mayhem would not allow. Instead we Jammed away, with the aid of a generator, for what seemed like forever, asking if anyone would care to join in. At one point I remember turning to Phil Pickering and pointing out that we had become the audience and the audience, the band. As all of us, one by one, had given up our instruments.
    And so it was to become with Webcore. Phil and myself were sat in a flat we shared in Kentish town, London, above “Nicoles Sauna”. We were doing a lot of experiments with sounds.
    This was summer 1983. Vane as a band had folded, Phil an I had moved to London, and we were looking to put something fresh together.
    We were listening to Captain Beefhearts album “Clear Spot” and there at the end of the last track “Golden Birdies” Beefheart quips “Webcore Webcore”.
    So “Webcore Webcore” became the name for our new project.
    We put a few ideas together and Jammed them about with various other passing musicians. Richard Havis joined us on guitar. We went to book a rehearsal space in Camden Town only to be told that We”d already booked! Well, none of us had so we could only assume there was another Webcore Webcore. We managed to contact them thru the rehearsal studio and somehow they agreed to drop the name.
    After only a couple of rehearsals we got a gig downstairs at the Clarendon Hotel in Hammersmith. (now a bus station.) We got the gig thru some friends of ours mostly linked to the squat scene and the band” Here And Now”. A guy called Twink played spacey keys and Paedro was on percussion. At this gig we had a banner with the bands name, witch I had painted and hung up on the stage. It was a short time later that we decided to call ourselves simply ‘Webcore”. One of the songs Phil and I wrote at this time was “Son Of Man”. later to appear on”Captains table” (I think.) I didn’t get a writing credit on the album but was acknowledged on a later album.
    There were two more gigs as Webcore with myself involved. Both were at the Fulham Greyhound in Hammersmith. Both gigs were played to a Dr. Rhythm drum machine.
    Phil and I somehow drifted apart at the end of that summer.
    Some years later I would catch up with Phil and several changeable Webcore line ups playing live at various venues including an Alice in wonderland mystery trip (God knows where) and again at the U.LU. Goodge st. London ( One of Ricky Gervas’ promotions with his band” Seana Dancing” as support.) There was a song Dan Spanner and I knocked up as a bit of a joke, it was called “California Sunshine.” A kind of jingle to promote varies class A’s

    ” California sunshine
    Red star L.S.D *(or was that ecstasy?)

    Gimme Gimme White lightning
    Well thats alright by me.”

    I was often invited up on stage to perform this song with the band and did so on many occasions.

    Some years later there was a gig somewhere in London where Phil asked me to jam. I can’t remember where or when it was, but it was the third and last time I did a gig with Webcore. I remember a chap named Pat did the sound and also filmed the gig.
    Wonder if it still exists.

    And so for now here endeth my personal addition to the history of Webcore.

    Love and Pieces.

    Jim Vane

  2. Tony Puppy
    Tony Puppy
    January 5, 2013 at 9:07 pm

    Great stuff Mr Vane. Thanks for contributing.

  3. steve elm
    steve elm
    October 14, 2015 at 1:48 am

    It is thrilling to hear this version of James vane’s musical vision. This reminds me of Killing Joke, Banshees; Jim’s voice (one of the few who could actually sing at the time) has shades of Iggy as well as Jim Morrison. I love the vibe I would have been all over this had I been aware of it at the time.

    Ring of Roses – what happened? Though I was part of that scene, I am still unclear as to how and why it didn’t happen. Silent Angel was made for the radio. BTW, the drummer was Chris Renshaw.

    Thanks for posting this. James Vane needs to write a book about those days. We always hear from the ones who found commercial fame; yet, the ones that remain legends to some, and unheard by most, have the truly insightful and gritty stories to tell. Do us a favor, Jim, write a book.

  4. Debbie Rowan
    Debbie Rowan
    November 11, 2022 at 6:19 am

    Fantastic to read the history of Vane and of Paul Chousmer. I was at Vane’s gig at The Marquee in 1979 (?) and I have the single ‘Glamourous Boys’. Priceless!
    What happened to Mick Dabrovski? Did he join Depeche Mode?
    The Marquee is still there with a commemorative plaque on the wall, saying Keith Moon was there (if I remember rightly). I remember Vane had their clothes all over the floor in the terrible corridor which counted as a changing room.
    When we left after the gig, two members of The Jam happened to walk into us, apologised and passed on.
    I was at music college with Alison Moyet in 1980 – what a voice! She was still a punk then.
    Saw Level 42 in their first Essex gig at TOTS, Southend.
    Sadly missed every Dr Feelgood gig in Southend, but remember the annual Christmas posters advertising them.
    Then I was in a band with Gary Numan’s Ced Sharpley in the 1990s. Sadly, dear Ced died in 2012.
    In the 2000s, Gary Numan had a big house at Great Easton with some weird cars!
    And now I see that Suzi Quattro is playing the biggest venue in town in Vienna, where I live, in 2022!

  5. Debbie Rowan
    Debbie Rowan
    November 11, 2022 at 6:32 am

    and I remember Paul Chousmer and Clive Roberts very well from when they were together in a band with Phil Wills on bass in a band playing nice venues in Chelmsford in 1978-79. Colin on guitar? And the drummer whose father managed that band and was terribly proud of him. They lived in Old Moulsham.

    Paul and Clive – I have a photo of you punting in Cambridge in 1979! Yes, met Clive again when he ‘owned’ Trace Elliott, and I went to the factory in Maldon. A very big enterprise. I had bass lessons from a guy in Colchester who knew Len, Suzi Quattro’s first husband. That was in the ’90s when Ced Sharpley chose me for a covers band.

    Clive built a beautiful car which he presented to Gordon Giltrap. He spent months building the guitar and I bought him the machine heads for it at a music shop in Springfiend Road, Chelmsford.
    We were at Gordon’s gig in Basildon one night and Clive went down to meet him. The rest is history. When I met Gordon playing gigs in Sudbury in the 2000s, he said that he and Clive were still good friends.
    And someone told me that Clive used to to fishing with John Entwhistle! Paul, perhaps you can confirm! Greetings to you and Clive.

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