Thursday, May 29, 2008

Droning once more

There haven't been a lot of Children of the Drone sessions in 2008, so I was glad to have been at this one - last night at St. Mary Arches church. Tim Coles came along for the first time, and it was good to see Annie Q again. Henry's got into vocal percussion lately which adds a very interesting new layer of sound. Generally a very spacey, exploratory session...quite a lot of incoherent passages, but these allowed for some more-interesting-than-usual stuff to go on between them.

interior of St. Mary Arches
interior of St. Mary Arches, as it once was - image from www.wissensdrang.com/

James T - keyboard, percussion, poetry, xylophone, submerged gong, slide whistle
Annie - flute, saxophone, vocals [+?]
John - acoustic guitar, acoustic bass, mandolin, recorder, vocals [+?]
Vaughan - acoustic guitar, dan bau, vocals [+?]
Keith - electric guitar, acoustic bass, electric mandolin [+?]
Henry - percussion, vocals
Tim - acoustic guitar
me - saz, balalaika, percussion, acoustic bass

Listen Here

Small World

I cycled out along the Pilgrims Way (parts of it now rebranded as the North Downs Way) out to the first of this summer's two Small World festivals, on a farm near Headcorn. Saw some excellent stuff: Herbal Love (roots/dub/ska), Planetman and the Internationalz (reggae/afrobeat/funk), Titan System (dub/rock), Moonshine Moonshine (indescribably wonderful Brighton/London trio - a little bit Spiro-like, but with harp and a banjo and an Italian Beatrice with an otherworldly voice), Kangaroo Moon (Mark Robson having evolved his "Celtic Dreaming" sound in a very nice direction these last years - a seamless set of gentle Gong-ish spacerock, Irish tunes, trancey didg jams - I saw one set with Elliet on fiddle, one without), Tragic Roundabout (the original line-up reformed, very amusing).

Kangaroo Moon at Gong Unconvention '06
Kangaroo Moon at the Gong Unconvention '06, Amsterdam

Moonshine Moonshine were followed by some friends of theirs, The Laish Quartet, also from Brighton, a quintet on this occasion. Scribbled in my notebook I find "charity shop Radiohead...quirky English jangly + melancholy, hard to classify...outsider music...clarinet, drummer doubling on trumpet, bittersweet harmonies - sympathetic to US west coast vibe"...the bass/xylophone player looked like he'd just time-travelled in from the scene, circa 1971, and the singer looked a bit like a younger Pok").

The Mordekkers played a sort-of-headline set on the Saturday night (with Henry having moved from bass to drums and trained his brother Charlie up on bass). I also saw half of Kilnaboy, a very sweet duo with a newborn baby (didn't catch their name) who played a cover of Jolie Holland's "Old Fashioned Morphine" and a singer-songwriter called Jont who is just exceptionally talented...almost walked past him on the ultra-tiny "Soapbox Stage" thinking he was just another singer-songwriter with a vaguely Chris Martin/Thom Yorke kind-of voice, but something made me sit down and listen...an unforgettable performance. As well as heartfelt love songs, there was "Peace is the New World War Three (Rebranding History)" and something called "(It's So Cool When You're an) Ambulance Driver", which at first I thought seemed a bit twisted, but Jont's a highly complex writer, and by the end of the song I was won over.

On the Friday evening I jammed with Stef on mandola in the dark. We got a few people gathering around, so took it to a fire, where we found a London Rastaman called I Jah Mo singing and playing his guitar. We couldn't find a place to sit, so we stood behind him and joined in. After the song ended, he turned around and said "Man, I thought a host of angels and come down to join me!". We jammed a bit with him and some bits of Planetmanz' band, and he invited us to join him for his gig the next day on the Triban stage.

I Jah Mo, some time earlier
I Jah Mo, some time earlier

Stef had to rehearse the Mordekkers set, so it was just me (plus Charlie and Ewan from the Internationalz on trumpet and sax, respectively, Justin on djembe, another percussionist who's name I didn't catch). It was a lovely, floaty festival-y set we played (including I Jah Mo singing his rewrite of a Psalm, and King Solomon's Song of Songs), and I managed to get a recording...

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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Curtis Mayfield - "Keep on Keeping On" (1972)


I've been looking for this clip for years. Banana Tom, my old friend Marcus and I saw it on TV at Marcus's flat in Paignton when I'd just got back from Brittany, having split up with Inge (May 2000), and I drew real strength from it. The album version was always a bit disappointing after that (with the somewhat slick horn arrangements, etc.)...I prefer the simplicity and sincerity of this.

Apparently this was originally broadcast on the Old Grey Whistle Test.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Nightingales recorded

I managed to record some saz and nightingales on Monday and Tuesday night. Unfortunately I missed out on the stillness of earlier nights - wind in the poplar trees, plus the birds being further back from where I was recording (on/near a small bridge over the Sarre Penn) meant I had to turn the record level right up, so the recording is rather hissy (headphones help).

Listen Here

And Googling around for images of nightingales, I managed to track down a story I read about in a Sunday paper back in the late 80's (and never heard about again). I had remembered it as being about an opera singer who used to be joined regularly by a nightingale in her garden in Surrey in the 1920's, and the BBC's attempts to record this...but she was in fact a cellist (Beatrice Harrison), there were multiple nightingales involved, and the BBC not only succeeded in recording it, but managed to broadcast live from her garden annually from 1924 to 1936. Has this ever been released I wonder? Please get in touch if you know of any existing recordings (beyond the couple of snippets here).

Beatrice Harrison

Here's a brief account, and here's a piece from BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour about the broadcasts.

Beatrice Harrison

Beatrice Harrison

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Nightingales

The nightingales are back in the Sarre Penn valley, singing every night. Last year, I just missed them, but I found Puck instead. I've been down a couple of times now, can't believe what I'm hearing (sounded like there were at least five last night, singing in the poplar trees about the abandoned pear orchard). I shall be recording them (with and without my saz playing) soon, and upload some clips to be linked from here.

For now, here's the RSPB page on the nightingale, with a nice audio link.

Friday, May 09, 2008

Billy Childish seen in Margate

I spent most of Bank Holiday Monday down in Margate, of all places (my previous experience of it were wandering around, horrified, with Alan and Inge back in '93 as part of some kind of venture to get the Oort Cloud booked for a couple of gigs in Kent, and hearing the awful song about it by Chas & Dave once on Radio 2!). But this was different. There's a new(ish) festival called "Margate Rocks" - not a rock festival, but a festival of the visual arts. This year it had an ecological theme, and there was some pretty interesting stuff on display in various local galleries and other spaces.

Billy Childish
the legendary Billy Childish

But there was a bit of music, too. They'd booked Kentish legend Billy Childish to play that evening at The Theatre Royal, purportedly England's oldest working theatre. It was billed as an evening of music but ended up being two sets. In the first, Bill read some of his poetry (excellent, as ever), including a powerfully sung rendition of "The Bitter Cup". This was interspersed with chatting with the audience about snooker, various local characters, his hometown of Chatham ("like Margate without the water"), etc.. The second set was just him and his guitar, playing mostly old blues and folk songs, plus a couple of his own. He started off on acoustic slide playing Son House's "Death Letter Blues", something I remember him doing the first time I saw him, at Kent University back in '89. The set also included "Black Girl" ("In the Pines") which he claimed took its melody from an English folk song, and an actual English folk song called "The Rochester Recruiting Sergeant", the melody of which ended up becoming associated with "Waltzing Matilda" according to Mr. Childish (although Wikipedia suggest otherwise). He played a one-chord song (from an album of one-chord songs, apparently), and then a new one called "Thatcher's Children", the chorus of which sort of references "London Calling". The encore was quite a surprise - Bob Dylan's "Ballad of Hollis Brown", played with real fire and passion. I somehow thought he wouldn't have much time for Dylan, but he explained that there'd been a copy of The Times They Are A-Changin' in his household, his father having been through a brief phase of "thinking he was a bohemian".

All-in-all an excellent evening, very relaxed and informal, a nice mix of poetry, music and banter.

A bit earlier in the day, I saw a selection of three excellent, obscure documentaries, all of which had some musical content: Momma Don't Allow, a black-and-white cinematic sketch about a North London working class jazz subculture in 1955; Oss Oss Wee Oss, about the extraordinary Padstow Mayday rites (which I was lucky enough to witness in 1999) with its continual singing of a cryptic (fertility?) song; "The Moon and the Sledgehammer, quite possibly the most wonderfully strange bit of film I've ever seen - about an eccentric family living in the woods rural Sussex in the late 60's. Various family members play a pipe organ and a harmonium - rough interpretations of classical and musical hall stuff - but the musical highlight is daughter Kathy, unselfconsciously playing what sounds positively avant-garde (God knows what it was supposed to be) on a hideously out-of-tune piano which appears to have been rotting outside their house for many years. See this film if you possibly can!!