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Sunday 27 October 2019

London. Only Fools and Alice!

A splendid couple of days spent in London with the Memsahib to celebrate her Birthday. Julian kindly dropped us at the station & off we went on an uneventful, if seemingly long journey. Got to our base for two nights, the Hampton by Hilton in Docklands and chilled for a while before going down to dinner, then off to the Theatre Royal in Haymarket for Only Fool and Horses the Musical.



On the DLR






Theatre Royal's fire curtain
 
and ornate ceiling.
Cut it abit fine getting there to be honest but all was well. The show was absolutely brilliant! Very funny, the characters all sounded, if not looked like their Only Fools characters. You didn't really have to know anything about the programme to find it funny though I think it did help in parts as alot of the gags were from the TV programmes, with the extra special gags ( Del falling through the bar for instance) getting an extra cheer from the audience with other gags hinted at. It was very good and I'd highly recommend it, with ice cream during the interval we'd had a great night! Back to the hotel  passing the extinction rebellion mob taking up space in Trafalgar Square. Don't get me wrong . I agree we must stop buggering up the world we live in, I'm just suspicious of the layabouts who are always available for demonstrations......or did they all just get time off work!?
Up to a good breakfast, plenty of it and on asking gluten free bread and cereal for T so all was good. We'd arranged a tour of Shakespeare's Globe theatre on the South Bank so made our way over there, found ourselves walking past Sumner Street which if my memory serves is where my Grandad worked in a newspaper printers. He got my Dad a job as a reading boy when he left school in those days at 14. Basically a reporter would write his piece then get a reading boy to read it aloud to see if it sounded ok. My Dad was no reader, not at all stupid he did struggle with putting punctuation in the right places and read the same way! It wasn't long before the reporters would pass him over for someone else. My Dad was furious, telling me that his dad didn't have a clue about him get him such an unsuitable job & he made a fuss when my Dad left!
The Globe is only 22 years old  and based on as much evidence as is available on what it would have looked like in Shakespeare's time, the original is nearby but underneath another building which itself is listed so there's no chance of excavating.
Calling it a 'tour' of the Globe is stretching it abit. There's some exhibition bits to see then your guide takes you into the Globe where you sit and he tells you everything there. It's not a tour behind the scenes etc. We were told we could take as many photos as we liked unless there was any actors on stage. There was to be a matinee performance of A Midsummer's Night Dream and a couple of actors bumbled out onto the stage and started these daft warm up noises, then press ups, then  stretches accompanied with afew more noises. What a load of pretentious bloody nonsense!   They may have well announced to everyone, 'Here we are darlings, we are actors!' It was however very interesting  to find out little nuggets like this Globe is the only building in London to be given permission to have a thatched roof since the Great Fire of London  in 1666 due to the fire risk. We were quite keen to see the afternoons performance it sounded pretty reasonable  with  standing tickets at £5 each...but they'd sold out so the only ones available were restricted view seats from £28 each so we left it.
Boxes were the great and the good would seat

The Globe stage

Us with the great metropolis as a backdrop.

We walked on heading towards Borough High Street and passed this:
It's been used as a burial ground for people considered outcasts from medieval society such as prostitutes & paupers. It was used from medieval times closing in 1853 with an estimated 15000 burials therein. Sounds like part of it was rediscovered in the 1990's when the Jubilee Line was extended. The Friends of Crossbones made and tend gardens and added memorials to the people buried there. Go to their website to find out more :  
http://crossbones.org.uk/
Onward then and spotted this towering above us.
Got to The George Inn in Borough High Street. A coaching inn dating back to the 17th century and the last remaining one in London, its owned by the National Trust but run by Greene King Brewery.
Had a very nice pie here (T had Halloumi) and their ale. The George first then Twickenham Redhead.





 After a spiffing lunch and drinks we decided to return to the hotel for bit of a rest before tonights gig.
Got a cab to the 02, found a beer, then our seats and a t shirt for me (£30 I must be mad but I like a gig t shirt!). Our seats were better than I'd hoped for, we were really very near the stage on the right.
MC50 were the first support. Celebrating their 50th anniversary they started quite well but got a bit tedious, with a looney singer (Marcus Durant) who plucked imaginary things from the air and flicked them towards the audience! The Stranglers followed them. They were good when they did songs we knew but their other stuff left me unmoved. There're certainly not a pretty band, there's no eye candy in this lot! I'd seen them about 40 years ago while their then lead singer, Hugh Cornwell was in prison on a drugs rap so the vocals were taken by such luminaries as Ian Drury, X-Ray Specs, actor Phil Daniels and more..it was better than tonights gig! However this paled into insignificance  when Alice took to the stage. Quite brilliant would be the short answer, its more of a show than a gig with Alice Cooper. There's certain theatrical bits to it, no less than monsters running on, college girls getting murdered, Alice being guillotined not to mention a strange zombie type killer bride & nurse! You really have to see it! With a final flourish during the encore of 'School's Out' with giant balloons descending on the audience then Alice spoke to us and introduced the band including an exceptionally good girl guitarist Nita Strauss. There was also a short tribute to Ginger baker who'd just died and Pink Floyd's 'Another brick in the wall.' It was  a bloody good gig! We didn't rush from our seats and ambled back to the station by which time had cleared of crowds (not a sell out, infact the top tiers of the 02 were curtained off) It had been a great, very busy couple of days!






MC50

The Stranglers

Merchandise!
   
a
MC50 setlist.
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Stranglers setlist.
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Alice Cooper setlist.
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Monday 16 September 2019

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Kentish Town

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Kentish Town: Had a terrific day in London going to a gig. I'd won tickets to see The Quireboys who were doing a one off gig at the Kentish Town Foru...

Kentish Town

Had a terrific day in London going to a gig. I'd won tickets to see The Quireboys who were doing a one off gig at the Kentish Town Forum to celebrate the 35th anniversary of their debut studio album 'Abit of what you fancy.' (Though actually the album was released in 1990.)
We decided to make a day of it, got a cab to the station and trained it down to the big smoke. There's a nice pub very near the venue, The Bull & Gate, so we headed there to get some food.
There wasn't many people in at that time, I went to the bar and T said she'd get a seat....She had the whole pub  to choose from and managed to get a seat next to the nutter...…..
OK, I'm being abit unfair as alot of tables were reserved but anyway, we had our dinner and then this lady started talking to us from the next table, she had already 'accosted' T in the Ladies so were already friends (!) Strange to say the least, she ended up singing to Tara! She was obviously lonely and had a few health (mental) issues, in fact she told us this and she named dropped about her parents knowing Johnny Dankworth and Cleo Lane also Dudley Moore and also Peter Cook who chatted up her brothers girlfriend all night at a family party. Was this just a flight of fancy or was there some truth here? I had some idea in  my head that in a week or so we'd be reading a paper and she'd be in it and would turn out to be a famous artist or author or something. Well that wasn't quite the case but her Dad was Sylvester Stein a South African journalist who fought apartheid, knew Nelson Mandela, moved to the UK to escape the oppressive government, turned actor, wrote plays and is a published author. Her Mum, Jenny Stein was director of the Whitechapel Gallery in the 1970's and also an actress. So she was quite an interesting, if troubled person as it turns out.

The gig beckoned and off we went. I said I'd won the tickets but these would have been standing only. On the website that I won the tickets on for a mere £11 each we could upgrade to VIP status, this allowed us up to the balcony where there were  seats and also a meet and greet with the bands. I thought this might be a bit of fun, we've never done this before and for such a little extra to pay it seemed like a good idea. Got in and had our wrist bands put on and made our way up to the balcony. The seats were fine, but unreserved , the meet & greet was a complete joke! Basically you needed to join the very long queue to get into the room where the merchandise was being sold and there you could meet the bands and get your arse or your new t shirt signed or whatever. Hardly a meet & greet! I'd even had a look at the bands on You Tube so I stood some kind of chance of knowing who I was talking to....what a chump!
Bit of an Antipodean theme going with the first support having one Aussie & the second all from Australia.
 First Tequila Mockingbyrd (great name!) a girl band (although tonight there was a male guitarist and bassist for some reason, also they have merged with Amorettes & currently 'sharing' a singer from the Amorettes called Gill Montgomery....who's Scottish!), they were absolutely brilliant! Definitely one to see again & well worth investing in a CD I think.


After a break and a chance to get more drinks on came Massive who are from Melbourne. Another very good band, loud, full of energy and great rock n roll  songs! Another CD coming to my collection soon I think.



Another break....more drinks then the third support came out. I always like to see the support bands but sometimes I think there's maybe too many as of course their sets are reduced accordingly. Pig Iron were on third so got a better go at a set, and are from London. I liked them but compared to the first two acts they were abit pedestrian, abit plodding. Good stuff but whereas I'd go and see the first two again I don't think I'd go to see this lot.


I liked all the guitars lined up at the back, couldn't get a close up though.


    Last  break, last drink then the headliners hit the stage. The Quireboys couldn't give a bad show if they tried, they were quite simply fantastic! Spike is a great showman and frontman for the band, always plenty of chat and banter from him. The album they played was superb and has songs I knew the words to so I could bellow them out. Tara being much better at remembering song lyrics sung all the more! They were a joy from beginning to end.





Quireboys setlist

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Unfortunately the setlists of the other bands haven't become available online for the moment.
There was supposed to be another chance to meet the bands after but we couldn't be bothered to join the inevitable queue again but I did want a t shirt! Nothing about so we left, luckily there was the now all too infrequent bloke outside selling similar t shirts out of a box. For £10 I'm not complaining. Bands go on about merch being the only money they get to themselves and then put T shirts out for £25+! Though to be fair had the merch room been open I'd have paid it!
Fire surround tiles not mended very well in The Assembly Room! The flower on the right has been put on upside down!




Pottered over the road to The Assembly House for a last beer. It was a very ornate pub, very high ceilings, this building dates from 1898 and has always been a pub. The Richard Burton film 'The Villain' made in 1971 shot some scenes in this pub. Well that was our night, a short walk to the station to find the trains rammed! There were quite alot of Union Flag hats, dresses, waistcoats etc as tonight was also last night of the Proms so think we got caught up in their gig as well! Didn't get a seat until Harpenden! This not withstanding , it had been a bloody good day!

Tuesday 10 September 2019

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Ultimate Coldplay

An idiots guide to an Idiot: Ultimate Coldplay: Was who we saw on Friday night in Oxford. We went to the Oxford 02 Academy. Very straightforward journey and bit of a novelty driving to a ...

Ultimate Coldplay

Was who we saw on Friday night in Oxford. We went to the Oxford 02 Academy. Very straightforward journey and bit of a novelty driving to a gig rather than the train. Got parked directly opposite the venue, quite a result! Got to say what a friendly venue it was, all the staff we encountered were very helpful and jolly.
Only a small auditorium, there's a bigger one downstairs but for the proposes of this gig it was upstairs only. Got a drink (nothing of note ….or taste on draught so slummed it on cider) and T had Bacardi & Coke. Mooched about for a while and then the first band came on called by the vocalists name of Rhys Warriner. Took station down the front, it wasn't very crowded yet, they started very well and were quite good though they lost me abit when they went abit funky. They finished and I had a chat to the bloke next to us who, it turns out runs a blog called Market Square Heroes  all about music and tribute bands. He does interviews and generally promotes them, its very good, go to https://www.marketsquareheroes.net/  to find out more. He follows the bands on festivals etc, there are, it appears whole festivals devoted to tribute acts!
Time passed and then the next band came on. 'Port in a Storm' were really good. The vocalist had a brilliant voice and they rattled their way through there (mostly) own penned rocky songs, there're a local band formed in 2008.
Ultimate Coldplay came on about 9.30pm and played an very good hour and an half set from the original Coldplay album 'Live in Buenos Aries.'
They were absolutely brilliant! Really loud and very professional. I think the term 'tribute band' conjures up second rate because they are copying, but this is far from the truth. Any tribute band I've seen (now seen four) are consummate musicians, very proud of what they do and very good at it. Paul from Market Square Heroes told us that Ultimate Coldplay are regarded as one of the best Coldplay tribute acts, indeed they have the seal of approval from Chris Martin himself!
Really enjoyed the gig, bellowed out the words such as I knew and we had a bloody good time, they were definitely as good as the real thing, considerably cheaper & we could get near the front.
Ended all too soon and we were back in the car driving home before you knew it. It was a great night.

The venue

Rhys Warriner


Port in a Storm

Us!


Ultimate Coldplay