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Sunday, 17 June 2018

Elvis Costello gig.

You see Tara does have a choice as well, I don't always just drag the Memsahib to all the old headbangers I like. Tara had found the Elvis Costello was doing one night at Blenheim Palace no less, in Oxfordshire. Abit pricy at £80 each though it was an xmas presie from Oliver which he kindly bought us.
Any hoo, dropped Ida with Ella & Julian for the night and set off for Woodstock mid afternoon. Got there about 4pm, you can't take in your own food & drink because the organisers would far rather rip you off with their food & drink! Just bite the bullet Mark, just bite the bullet! £11 later for a small can of craft beer & a Gin & Orange we looked for food, which wasn't over priced to be honest. Plenty to choose from including a veggie/vegan stall which was good to see though we both plumped for a paella, the Memsahib's being veggie & mine chorizo & chicken. It was very nice indeed eaten on the grass in the beautiful  landscaped grandeur of   Blenheim Palace, birth place of Winston Churchill & ancestral home to the Dukes of Marlborough all of whom have helped write Britain's history.
Replete, we wandered around some more and eventually joined the throngs to our seats. The stage was set in the courtyard of the palace with seating all on one level.
I was particularly looking forward to seeing the first support act, Nick Lowe. I remembered him of old & also recalled he was stablemates with the legendary guitarist Dave Edmunds with the band Rockpile, so I was disappointed when this old bloke with an acoustic guitar wandered out onto the middle of the stage! Of course I'd over egged it. The programme clearly stated Nick Lowe, nothing about Rockpile.....bugger!
After about  his third song, all of which had been about heartbreak, death, getting old & taxes (I think!) Tara turned to me & said 'Thank god I haven't got anything sharp on me!'  However he did get better. He played his one hit, 'Cruel to be kind' which is a great song and a Dave Edmunds penned track 'I knew the bride when she used to rock n roll.' He seemed like a jolly likeable fellow & his easy banter with us mugs was nice. He is a great guitarist in his own right ( I thought he only played bass!) and his diction in his songs was very clear. He described himself as the 'Hors d'oeuvre' before the  main meal, the 'small bowl of peanuts before the luxury meals' before he started laughing. A good bloke I think.  I always thought he looked like my old mate Pete Tomsett, much to his disgust! (Pete's that is!).
After an interlude the second support hit the stage who were The Waterboys, having already seen them at the Cropredy festival a couple of years ago we knew they were very good & they did not disappoint. They describe themselves as a rock band which they certainly are, but the added fiddle player  on some tracks leans them alittle towards the folk genre. Mike Scott the singer, lead guitar and mouthpiece of the band looks to us like the love child of Mick Jagger & Janet Street-Porter, a stranger mix I defy you to find.  They played a great set with a few singalong numbers as well, great stuff!
Well it is only mid June so you can't really expect any hot summer weather, he says with all the sarcasm he could muster. Once the sun went so the temperature plummeted so our sole goal during this interval was to find a hot drink as we were now huddled up in our winter coats. I thought, as I was wearing shorts that my short fat hairy legs would keep me warm. They didn't. Back to our seats & we were ready for the main event!
Rather strange when Elvis hit the stage as the crowd seemed to have thinned out abit, bearing in mind this was a numbered seat gig, surely there wasn't more people interested in seeing The Waterboys rather then Elvis Costello!?
There was something horribly wrong with the sound for the first couple of tracks, it just seemed out of sync. Faces pulled by Elvis & also his bass player, Elvis then changed guitar and we were off again. It seemed Ok after that.
What can I say about Elvis Costello? His banter with the audience was great, the songs? I think the Memsahib hit the nail on the head with the comment that he appeared to be playing the songs for himself rather than us. Old barnstormers that you knew & hoped he'd play were on the set list but most changed slightly, indeed  the setlist on 'setlist.com' quoted here has the word 'cover' after alot of the tracks. My greatest disappointment was the song 'Olivers Army.'  A great  track I was looking forward to as it has particular resonance with Number Three Son, Oliver,but Elvis! You buggered this song up completely by slowing it down & giving it an almost reggae vibe! No Costello, no! If I want reggae I'll go and see a reggae band, not an old punk like you!  Just where was that old punk? Long gone I fear.
 Got to then end and Elvis had indeed left the building, rather quickly as it happens as there was no encore. Cue  boos from the crowd. Not unjustified I feel.
I'm making it sound like I didn't enjoy it which would be wrong as I did. It was a great day and we'd listened to some great music  but Elvis let the side down abit I think. I'd certainly go and see a band at Blenheim Palace again, it's a terrific setting but I wouldn't go and see Elvis again.
 Getting around  7000 people out of an estate that was made for horse and carriage rather than car was never going to be easy so we got back to our car and had a few nibbles I'd taken and took our time. Eventually got away and home about 1.30am. It had been a great day.








   










The set lists:

Nick Lowe.
  1. Play Video
  2. People Change
  3. Play Video
  4. Play Video
  5. Play Video
  6. Play Video
  7. Play Video
  8. Play Video
  9. (Dionne Warwick cover)
    Play Video
  10. Play Video
  11. (Rockpile song)
    Play Video
  12. Play Video
  13. (Rockpile song)
    Play Video
  14. Play Video
The Waterboys.
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Wednesday, 13 June 2018

An idiots guide to an Idiot: New music to bang my head to.

An idiots guide to an Idiot: New music to bang my head to.: Being an old headbanger I find myself going back to the bands I've listened to and seen from years ago. Filling the CD back catalogue i...

New music to bang my head to.

Being an old headbanger I find myself going back to the bands I've listened to and seen from years ago. Filling the CD back catalogue is a gaol of mine & in alot of cases I still enjoy seeing them live as well, but of course they aren't getting any younger. More and more have sadly, but inevitably fallen off the perch and some are retiring. (Phil Mogg of UFO turned 70 earlier & hangs up his mic next year, Bernie Torme starts his last tour soon)  of course I mean proper retirement not like The Quo! So unless I start to listen to more modern music I'll have no one to go and see let alone listen to!
I'm not averse to new music, far from it, but I just find myself going back to all the old barnstormers from years ago, but years ago they were new to me so it's all abit confusing. Generally speaking alot of the support acts are younger newer bands & many are very good indeed. I first heard the German band Beyond the Black when they supported Saxon a couple of years ago and they are just fantastic. They have a definite European sound that I like & they've just announced a pre-order for their fourth album.
Vega supported Magnum on tour though of the three of us who saw them only I really liked them. Bad Touch were an excellent find. We first saw them supporting The Quireboys , then they popped up unexpectedly at the Hard Rock Hell Festival when another band couldn't make it, now Planet Rock are behind them as well I think they could go far, then there's Cats in Space who caught my eye (or should that be ear?)  when they were one of the supports for Deep Purple, and those old boys needed all the support they could get! Having not liked the much played version of 'The Sound of Silence' by Disturbed initially it's part of a great album.
I've also taken bit of a flyer on new bands reviewed in magazines like Classic Rock and the newer Planet Rock mag. I've brought CD's from a band called The Amorettes who sound alot like the superb Girlschool so they certainly passed muster. Abit into female vocalists I suppose as I've also brought Rews debut album and one from the incredibly bluesy Joanne Shaw Taylor (another  one who Planet Rock appear to be pushing who I was lucky enough to get tickets to see awhile back free from Planet Rock) plus The Pretty Reckless from New York that are a good listen. Going back to European bands Volbeat from Denmark are well worth hearing as are Epica from Holland. They are I suppose symphonic rock and rather different from my usual taste, Sabaton from Sweden are good as well, they are quite Germanic in their songs, alot being about war. Then there's Massive Wagons, I first heard them when they brought out a tribute song for the sadly departed Rick Parfitt of Quo & I like what I've heard from them since.
So that's an idea of the newer bands I've been listening to and only goes to show that you can't stay stuck in the past, it's all an evolution.



Saturday, 9 June 2018

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Local stuff

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Local stuff: Had our friends from Kent up to stay recently, it's always great fun and we manage to pack quite a bit in. BBQ was bit of a mistake as ...

Local stuff

Had our friends from Kent up to stay recently, it's always great fun and we manage to pack quite a bit in. BBQ was bit of a mistake as the day wasn't very hot so we ended up eating inside!
Popped into The Victoria on Saturday, you'll see from the attached photo the Andy has a Harley Davidson which we went out to admire, hence the photo!
Kate came over a few days later and we took her to Houghton Hall park, which was new to me too. It's enclosed fields and some woodland so fine to let dogs off the lead. Had a nice walk round and found a kitchen garden which must have been part of the main house (now offices) years ago. It also has a very nice café so we finished with a coffee there.






  

Monday, 28 May 2018

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Shillington Dig

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Shillington Dig: Great to get back to digging again and this weekend the sun shone for us. Derek got us a good gig in a 16th century cottage garden. The onl...

Shillington Dig

Great to get back to digging again and this weekend the sun shone for us. Derek got us a good gig in a 16th century cottage garden. The only frustration being that all the garden had been built up so down to about 0.5m all the archaeology was mixed up , so not telling us anything.
No Ivor this weekend  but as well as myself, Kevin, Derek & Nigel we had with us Lucy , Alison & Catherine & Dave. Too many for one test pit really but  not all were there the whole weekend.
Got cracking and were soon down to 10cm, cleaned up and recorded. As I say a nice selection of finds, pottery & clay pipe but all very mixed. Alot of Victorian blue & white and some Medieval green glazed sherds. Got down to 0.7m and calamity! Uncovered a drainage pipe. Bugger, bugger, bugger!
The owner did know there was a drain there & marked it for us but his mark was out abit!
Cleaned up and adjourned to the Musgrave Arms  for post dig analysis. The guest beer was called Jeffery Hudson, very light and citrusy, and very refreshing it was.
 Day two saw us extend the pit away from the pipe to give us more space to work. Got that extra bit down to 0.7m as well and went down another context which didn't reveal very much. Time Team always had three days to excavate, we only have two, so it was time to back fill, which I hate!
Last post dig analysis at The Musgrave and that was it. Frustrating though it was  it was a cracking weekend.

















Friday, 18 May 2018

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Palestine Campaign

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Palestine Campaign: Another excellent lecture over at the University of Hertfordshire put on by the Herts At War project. Tonight was Stuart Hadaway talking a...

Palestine Campaign

Another excellent lecture over at the University of Hertfordshire put on by the Herts At War project.
Tonight was Stuart Hadaway talking about the campaign in Palestine.
He told us he was a revisionist in as much as the generals of WW1 weren't all donkey's, though he says for the Palestine campaign he'll make an exception, as some basic mistakes were made. When the British pushed the Turks back from the Suez Canal area they fought  a very good rear guard action. That's is to say a some force of Turks stayed put until the last minute to hold up the British as much as possible ( I say British but there were many Indian troops involved in this campaign as well) then they fell back to other positions, the British high command interpreted  this as give Johnny Turk a good push & he'll run away. The British were to find this was not the case when attacking Gaza where the ground they attacked over was billiard table flat.
It was a very interesting talk though Stuarts delivery wasn't as good as some. He most certainly knew his stuff  & fielded the many questions he took with ease.
Please follow this link to fond out more about the Herts At War project.www.hertsatwar.co.uk/


Sunday, 13 May 2018

An idiots guide to an Idiot: The joy of .......Eurovision.

An idiots guide to an Idiot: The joy of .......Eurovision.: As naff as it usually is I think Eurovision is great! Tara & I have watched most, if not all of them since 1980. It's always been a...

An idiots guide to an Idiot: The joy of .......Eurovision.

An idiots guide to an Idiot: The joy of .......Eurovision.: As naff as it usually is I think Eurovision is great! Tara & I have watched most, if not all of them since 1980. It's always been a...

An idiots guide to an Idiot: The joy of .......Eurovision.

An idiots guide to an Idiot: The joy of .......Eurovision.: As naff as it usually is I think Eurovision is great! Tara & I have watched most, if not all of them since 1980. It's always been a...

The joy of .......Eurovision.

As naff as it usually is I think Eurovision is great! Tara & I have watched most, if not all of them since 1980. It's always been an alternative night in & can be great fun. Afew years ago we had a Eurovision party & got a good number of people, instead of bring a bottle we asked everyone to bring a food of one of the counties taking part. Some of our friends had better imaginations than others, Alan brought baked beans as a traditional English thing, but David excelled himself & seem to bring something from at least half the counties taking part! Anyway we all had a great night........no idea who won though!
Tried to do it again just a couple of years ago & got such a poor response we didn't bother!
Got to say we both thought this years was quite good, there didn't seem quite as much voting for the neighbours & more about voting for the songs. On Taras suggestion  we tried to pick the top three who would win so not necessarily our favourites, the total points that our choices scored in the competition determined which one of us won, the prize being a small gift bought by the loser. My top three were Spain, Denmark & Albania , their points came to 471. Not bad I thought. Taras choices were Germany, Italy & Austria who's points came to 990!So it's me to find a small gift!
However neither of us predicted the real winner in Israel. A complete load of old cobblers if ever there was & very typically Eurovision. Not a bearded lady this time but a short fat bird called Netta making weird noises & dressed as part Japanese Geisha part Christ knows what. Graham Norton added the odd quip and the three & half hours seemed to fly by. Most of a bottle of red wine probably helped, it was a great evening of having a laugh together, can't wait till next year!

Monday, 7 May 2018

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Bank Holidays

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Bank Holidays: Sitting here after a really nice Bank Holiday weekend.Had another doggie guest over night Saturday /Sunday, a 5 month old German Shepherd p...

Bank Holidays

Sitting here after a really nice Bank Holiday weekend.Had another doggie guest over night Saturday /Sunday, a 5 month old German Shepherd pup, a lovely dog but huge! Bigger than Ida already, he was just doing what puppies do and couldn't really have been better but we were both knackered by the time he went home!
Julians birthday on Sunday so we took him the Victoria's Beer Festival which was great fun. 10 ales and two ciders on offer, a nice mix of darker as well as lighter beers as well which is a welcome change, as so many places now seem to go for lighter ales only. Just trying them in half pints, we sat in glorious sunshine in the pub garden (the 'we' being self, Tara & Julian).Tring Beers 'Coley Dog' was one of my faves, quite pokey at 5.2% & of course you know me and my refreshing golden ales and 3 Brewers 'Golden English Ale' fitted the bill perfectly & at 3.8% a good quaffing beer.
Joined for a while by Big Man, always a pleasure to see him, we've known him since  before he was called Big Man and that's a long time! Alittle later Olly joined us as well. Now Oliver likes his cider and partook of the two offerings here, though the cider that was supposed to be apple & elderflower was changed to apple & rhubarb. This one was just nectar, really easy to drink and a great flavour, even if you don't like rhubarb, which Tara as it happens doesn't, but she did like this cider. Ambled  (staggered!?)  back to Ella & Julians & brought kebabs on the way. A great day.
Impromptu BBQ on Monday, not many bods available so just us, Olly & Laura & Ella & Julian.  The usual BBQ type fare, all cooked in the traditional way of burnt to buggery on the outside & raw in the middle. Assorted salads & odds & sods to accompany and pud was, what else but strawberries & cream. Managed to get a couple of  IPA's down my neck as well, perfect for another hot day. A glorious weekend, first of many this summer I trust.









Tuesday, 1 May 2018

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Dance up the Sun!

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Dance up the Sun!: Stayed with our dear friends in Kent again and was out at 4.30am this morning  to witness the age old tradition of 'Dancing up the Sun&...