Archive for the Music General Category

10 days in the life of a top Scottish referee

Posted in Music General on May 19, 2009 by John Williamson

In a move that shows as much sensitivity to public perception as Sir Douglas Hogg, leading Scottish referee, Stuart Dougal, has retired a week early after sterling efforts to ensure that the Old Firm retain their competitive advantage over their rivals to take up a new career in the Masonic Lodges of Lanarkshire.

Last Tuesday, he was accused of  arrogance by Craig Levein for his handling of red cardable foul that he didn’t see in the Celtic v Dundee United game: see here

To make up for missing that, he oversaw the sending off of Charlie Mulgrew in Saturday’s Rangers v Aberdeen game, albeit mitigated by a laughable piece of play acting by Kyle Lafferty.

So what next? Yes, at stand-up after dinner speech at the Lodge St Thomas Larkhall No.3 - (check the midi sounds!) this Friday. With Craig Brown. And a comedian.

It has started already

Posted in Music General on March 23, 2009 by John Williamson

By my reckoning, only 444 days to go . . .

World Cup 2010

Michael Jackson

Posted in Music General on March 5, 2009 by John Williamson
twitter

twitter

interesting juxtaposition of incoming tweets during today’s Michael Jackson charade. Anyone convinced it was actually him? And shouldn’t the NME be the ones pouring scorn on such an event rather than typing breathlessly on their iPhones?

From the Archives: Steak and Kidney

Posted in Music General on March 5, 2009 by John Williamson

sydney1

© The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Licensor www.scran.ac.uk.

Sydney Devine promotes his 1974 World Cup single, Our Wee Willie, in what looks like India Street in Glasgow. Any further comment would really be superfluous. Click to reveal the full horror.

Glasgow. . .

Posted in Music General on February 4, 2009 by John Williamson

by Kevin McKenna in the Observer. . particularly liked this part:

In the one-party state that is Glasgow, there are townships in the east and north where wage slips are only seen in the local museum. In these areas, cabals of wee Tony Sopranos drive the economy with their security firms and their taxi companies. Around them only the public sector shows relentless year-on-year growth. Enlightened and inspired schemes to combat the root causes of poverty there have been none. But elaborate diktats and pronouncements tell the punters that singing rude songs about the Queen and the Pope is bad for them. So the question has to be asked: does Scotland now have the most politically correct poor people in the world?

the truth about sound recording copyright extension

Posted in Music General with tags on January 16, 2009 by John Williamson

Seth Lakeman

Posted in Music General with tags , , on December 8, 2008 by John Williamson

Here’s a feature about folk musician, Seth Lakeman, which appeared in The Herald recently:

seth lakeman

seth lakeman

When Seth Lakeman’s fourth solo album, ‘Poor Man’s Heaven,’ was released earlier this year it came with the added fanfare of a TV advertising campaign.

Traditionally reserved for only the biggest selling acts or those into which record companies have invested colossal sums of money, its incongruity served only to highlight just how far the thirty-one year old songwriter has come in the fourteen years since he made his recorded debut (as one third of the Lakeman Brothers). More importantly, it worked, with the album debuting at number 8 in the album charts.

While the brothers made three albums together, and Seth also worked with British folk luminaries, Kate Rusby and Cara Dillon (his sister in law), it was only really with his second solo album, ‘Kitty Jay’ (released in 2005) that Lakeman’s music started to enter a wider consciousness.

Recorded at home in Devon and released on the tiny label, iScream, which he had formed with his brother Sean, it was not only a more cohesive and adventurous record than its predecessor, ‘The Punch Bowl,’ but one which came as a distillation of his previous work and influences.

“I started playing very young. I had picked up a fiddle by the age of six and was playing clubs by the age of 12, partly because my father ran a folk club in Plymouth,” he recalls, “but it wasn’t really until my early twenties that I decided to take it more seriously and do something with it. It was then that that I started working on more song based structures and trying to incorporate stories into them.”

If the style and technique changed, it was still easy to contextualise it within the work of not only his previous collaborators but also his favourite fiddlers (Tom McConville and Stephane Grappelli) and songwriters (Richard Thompson and Randy Newman). Like many great records, it was also driven by an element of desperation.

“When I started out on ‘Kitty Jay’ it was like a clean sheet of paper,” he recalls. “I was signing on at the time, and it was a bit like entering a lottery and finding that the golden ticket fell out.”

“I did the album in two weeks at home and all I really had in mind was to do something that was based on fiddle and vocals and to be song based. In many ways the style and sound had a lot to do with my own naivety at the time, but when I came upon something that was very rhythmic and riff driven, I knew that it was the sound I had been looking for.”

However, it was not so much the record’s release, but its subsequent appearance on the 2005 Mercury Music Prize shortlist that seemed to alert a wider public to the previously insular world of Lakeman’s music.

“Until then, I was making no money and it didn’t seem to be going anywhere,” he says, “but that was what gave me the opportunity to go out and find an audience or for an audience to go out and find me. I think there is also a type of confidence that develop out of that type of recognition.”

While ‘Kitty Jay’ was in many ways the token folk album on the list and was never realistically likely to pick up the award, it did propel Lakeman towards larger venues with his live show and expedited the release of another album, ‘Freedom Fields,’ which was subsequently picked up by EMI, under the guise of their Relentless imprint.

Historically the attempts of artists coming from the folk scene to crossover to a more mainstream audience have failed, alienating their former fans and failing to find new ones. However, in Lakeman’s case, the timing seems to have worked out well.

“I’m quite fortunate that it seems to have grown at a comfortable, natural pace. EMI bought into the business and that took away a lot of the administrative and organisational burdens that we had, and also they managed to squeeze a few singles out from the albums.”

“Of course, it is hard to let go of something that you feel is your baby – but once you reach a certain level it becomes too big to physically retain control every aspect of what you do. So the compromise, if there was any, that I made was to make sure I retained complete control over the music while in most other areas I am kind of flowing as I go. “

By Lakeman’s account there are a number of reasons for this – what he describes as the ‘stylistically protected’ nature of his music, his ambiguous definition of his genre and the generally sympathetic nature of the record company.

“What I do is quite unique,” he says, “which makes it quite difficult for people to interfere. The songs are based on what I know, stories from this part of the world, while the music is always going to be centred on the fiddle and foot stomping rhythms.”

“While, I think I have always felt part of a British folk tradition, even if I was flying the flag for this part of the world, I have never really claimed to be one thing or the other. I have kind of paved my own way from here. I have never felt any kind of backlash from the purists, or, at least, they have always been really nice to my face!”

However he readily admits, that with the injection of capital, comes a upping of expectations.

“The bigger the record company, the bigger these will be, and it will always be a bit of a battle,” he says. “I am sure there is part of the record company sees me in the same bracket as people like Damien Rice or James Blunt, but while that is an element of what I do, I am never really going to be a radio artist. Universal lyrics are not really what I am about, and the music is always going to have a rhythmic, quirky element which is always a bit alien to being massively popular.”

Following his current tour (and accompanying single “Solomon Browne”) it is time to commence work on album number five for Lakeman. Listening to him describe his music and its direction highlights the crossroads at which his career stands. On the one hand he has successfully defined a sound that he is happy to continue to work within, on the other, he talks of expanding the scope of it by engaging a third party producer (his previous albums have been largely produced primarily by his brother, Sean).

“I don’t see it changing that much,” he says with regards the future. “While it is too early to tell song wise, I know that the vocals are not really going to change, when I started singing, I was basically trying to mimic the sound of the violin.”

“There will be a long batch of writing after the tour, and I think it will be next Spring before we are back out. There is stuff to do in Australia next March and I also have a lot of songs left over from the ‘Poor Man’s Heaven‘ sessions that I would like to go back to.”

There are contradictions too: at various points he suggests both that he would like to go back to the naïve approach of ‘Kitty Jay,’ at others he suggests that album number five may be the time to engage a producer of some reputation.

“I’d love to work with someone like Tchad Blake or Brad Jones, maybe even someone like John Leckie, who would probably strip everything right back. It would be great to work with a real guru like that at some stage. I think so far the records have moved from a very naïve sound to one that is much closer to the live sound, maybe there is another step to take.”

Where it leads may be open to speculation and interpretation, but with a growing reputation as a recording artist, and with nearly twenty years of honing himself as a live performer, now may well be the time to see Lakeman at his peak.

By his own admission, the shows are a ‘high energy, ninety minute combination of the three most recent records,’ and that is a rich reservoir to call upon. (John Williamson)

The World’s Worst Banker

Posted in Music General on December 8, 2008 by John Williamson

Stand up and take a bow, Sir Fred Goodwin!

Always a good line on the CV when out looking for some consultancy work and directorships.

‘Hello America, You Sexy Bitch’

Posted in Music General with tags , on July 12, 2008 by John Williamson

The Vaselines make it to New York – for the first time:

Jimmy Cliff

Posted in Journalism, Music General, Old Reviews / Features with tags on May 14, 2008 by John Williamson

Jimmy CliffVintage (as in age, rather than quality) feature on Jimmy Cliff ahead of his Triptych appearance in 2002 – or thereabouts). The forty minute phone call to Jamaica cost a small fortune.


Few music films provide anything more than the most ephemeral of entertainment, yet there are a handful that serve as important pieces of social documentary as well. D.A. Pennebaker’s “Don’t Look Back,” Don Letts’ “Punk Rock: The Movie” and the early eighties’ hip-hop movie, “Style Wars” all captured a sense of the social and political climate of the time as well a s featuring some great music. 1973’s “The Harder They Come” performed exactly the same function for reggae music, and in doing so brought what had been, until that point an indigenous Jamaican music scene to the attention of the world.

Its star, Jimmy Cliff, makes his first ever visit to Scotland in a musical career that has spanned thirty eight years to introduce and talk about the film as part of the impending Trip Tych festival, and remains enthusiastic about this piece of his past.

“I look back on it and think that it does capture the spirit and feeling of the people in Jamaica at the time,” he says, “and I think that was why it was a success at the time and an important document now. The character I played was kind of a rebel on the wrong side of the law who was seeking independence and freedom, which I think was the same as a lot of the people at the time. The Rastafarian movement had a lot of the same values and was becoming increasingly important, and the music was another fresh and vibrant part of the whole Jamaican culture. So the film, I think covered musical, social, political and cultural matters.”

At the time of its release Cliff had already established himself as a successful international artist and lived in London during the later part of the sixties when he was signed to Chris Blackwell’s Island Records, and enjoying his first international hit in Brazil in 1968 with “Wonderful World, Beautiful People.” Even so, he had no idea of the film’s initial impact. Its opening in Kingston attracted 30 000 people trying to get a ticket and a glimpse of its star, while similar events took place around the world.

“I guess when we were making the film, we were aware of the interest in it,” he recalls, “but I thought that a lot of that was down to the fact the character was a kind of historical Jamaican figure and that not many films were made in Jamaica at that time. When it came out it was totally amazing. It did a lot to take the music (the soundtrack includes songs by The Maytals, Desmond Dekker and Scotty as well as Cliff’s title track and one of his most renowned songs, “Many Rivers to Cross”) of Jamaica to the rest of the world, and I remember the opening of the film in London and Hollywood as well. The opening in Notting Hill Gate was mad, but it seemed to attract people from all over, not just the West Indian community and that was a great feeling.”

It could have been the start of a career in acting for Cliff, but a combination of his music career, which was at its peak around this time, and the lack of suitable roles has limited his subsequent output. A concert/ documentary, “Bongo Man” came out in 1980, and Channel 5 viewers may have recently caught sight of the rather inglorious appearance of Cliff with Peter O’Toole and Robin Williams in 1986’s “Club Paradise.” It did, however, re-ignite some interest in Cliff’s music in America.

“I had always loved acting,” he says, “and at school I was probably more interested in acting than I was in music, but I guess it is just the way things work out. I got noticed doing ‘The Harder They Come’ and was offered other roles, but I didn’t think that they were right. They all seemed to be like less interesting versions of the character I had already played.”

Tellingly, Cliff’s increasingly infrequent appearances in Britain (he has not played for nearly ten years) do not mean that he has stopped working. This is the first year that he has not spent the majority of his time on the road, as he has started work on a sequel to “The Harder They Come.” His global appeal is reflected in both his touring venues and the fact that, as well as London, he has lived at various times in Brazil and Senegal, before returning to Jamaica.

“I have tended to go where I have been most excited by the music and there has been a market for what I do,” he says. “Every year I tour in the States for about three months, but I also go regularly to Brazil and Argentina, the Far East and Africa.”

“The period I stayed in Brazil was very exciting because I made a few records that tried to fuse what I do with Brazilian music, and it was much the same when I was in Africa. I was really blown away by the music I was hearing young people in Senegal and Mali make. People like Youssou N’Dour: the whole scene was very young and aspiring and there was a freshness about it. I sang with a lot of these people in clubs, and felt that they were doing similar things for African music that we had been doing for the music of Jamaica twenty years before.”

Looking back on his career, Cliff is reluctant to pick out particular highlights, preferring to talk of the diversity of places, people and situations that he has encountered in the period.

“I’m at a stage now when I am never going to be able or want to do anything else apart from my music,” he says, “but when I look back on it I have enjoyed all the periods of my career for different reasons. The early period in Jamaica was a bit of a hardship, but the experience of recording for the first time and being paid a shilling for the song was something that I really appreciated. Then, coming to Britain was another challenge, because I was touring with British musicians that didn’t really know ska or rocksteady music and had to adapt to a whole new musical culture.

“The period around the film and going back to Jamaica when I had several big hits was great, but over the years perhaps the strong impact I have had in Africa is the most rewarding thing.”

With “The Harder They Come” the sequel ready to begin filming later this year, he hopes that it will have the same “grittiness” of the original and will have a similar impact on his own musical activities. It would be another remarkable twist in a pioneering life.