
This wasn't the posting I was planning for today....I had intended to put out a TVV appeal, but the launch of that will need to wait 24 hours as I just have to share my views and thoughts on a quite extraordinary gig a couple of days back.
I wrote about Butcher Boy last November (click here for a reminder) and not only someone from the record company leave behind a nice comment, but at least one reader rushed out and ordered the album I was raving about. Well if you're reading this David, I hope you'll be persuaded to shell out some more of your hard-earned cash in a few minutes time...
Rather than try to wax lyrically about the band and how they came to be, I'll direct to this place, which is info you can find on the webpage of their record label.
The thing is, the band don't play live all that often, so when I heard about a gig in the clubhouse of a bowling club some 25 minutes walk from Villain Towers, I made sure I'd be there. It was a show quite like no other...
First of all, you had to get your name on a list beforehand (which I did thanks to Comrade Colin) and on arrival you paid as much or as little as you liked as an entry fee. I threw £5 into the Tupperware Box.
There was no warm-up act. Instead an incredibly eclectic mix of music was played through the speakers at a volume that was just enough for you to enjoy yet still hold conversations with the folk you were sitting at your table with. Then at just after 9.30, we got to see a old edition of Top Of The Pops in its entirety....one introduced by David Jensen and John Peel.
Sad man that I am, I've since checked which particular edition it was (I could find out from the fact that the #1 single - Is There Something I Should Know by Duran Duran was a new entry) - and it turned out was the one that featured the chart for the week ending 26th March 1983). The reason this particular edition being shown pre-gig was this:-
I wrote about Butcher Boy last November (click here for a reminder) and not only someone from the record company leave behind a nice comment, but at least one reader rushed out and ordered the album I was raving about. Well if you're reading this David, I hope you'll be persuaded to shell out some more of your hard-earned cash in a few minutes time...
Rather than try to wax lyrically about the band and how they came to be, I'll direct to this place, which is info you can find on the webpage of their record label.
The thing is, the band don't play live all that often, so when I heard about a gig in the clubhouse of a bowling club some 25 minutes walk from Villain Towers, I made sure I'd be there. It was a show quite like no other...
First of all, you had to get your name on a list beforehand (which I did thanks to Comrade Colin) and on arrival you paid as much or as little as you liked as an entry fee. I threw £5 into the Tupperware Box.
There was no warm-up act. Instead an incredibly eclectic mix of music was played through the speakers at a volume that was just enough for you to enjoy yet still hold conversations with the folk you were sitting at your table with. Then at just after 9.30, we got to see a old edition of Top Of The Pops in its entirety....one introduced by David Jensen and John Peel.
Sad man that I am, I've since checked which particular edition it was (I could find out from the fact that the #1 single - Is There Something I Should Know by Duran Duran was a new entry) - and it turned out was the one that featured the chart for the week ending 26th March 1983). The reason this particular edition being shown pre-gig was this:-
Orange Juice performed Rip It Up (#9 in the chart that week up from #10)
Big Country performed Fields Of Fire (#31 up from #34)
and......oh be still my beating heart........
Altered Images performed Don't Talk To Me About Love (#12 up from #36).
Clare rarely looked more gorgeous than she did that night.....as you can see for yourself.
But back to what I really want to write about....
When Butcher Boy took to the stage (well....stood in a space in front of us with just the drummer on a very small stage), the first thing I noticed was just many of them there are. Eight performers in total, including a cellist and someone on viola as well as the drums/lead guitar/rhythm guitar/bass/keyboards (oh and during the night other instruments such as a mellotron would be utilised). I thought it was going to be an unholy racket.
I couldnt have been more wrong.
Over the next 45 minutes or so, these eight supremely talented musicians had my total attention as they delivered an outstanding and very distinctive 14-song set.
Much of my love for the band centres around the vocal delivery of John Blain Hunt - there's hints of Bryan Ferry, Lloyd Cole, Stuart Staples and even the great Paul Quinn in his singing. He didn't disappoint, but it was the way that the others performed that brought out just how good a voice he actually has.
Everyone played at the perfect volume so that the instruments you were supposed to hear at a particular point in time were the ones that your ears picked up. Nobody ever indulged in any solos, preferring instead to create a blend of melodies and harmonies that left this particular listener in awe of being in the presence of such aural beauty.
I didn't know more than half of the songs as they were taken from forthcoming LP React Or Die which hits the shops in April, but that didn't stop me deciding on first listen that they were instant classics. Of the songs that I did know from debut LP Profit In Your Poetry, I was left astonished that they sounded better live than they did on record....something I thought would have been a near impossibility.
It was all over just too soon. No encores, but as John himself told me afterwards (yup, I couldn't help but make a beeline for him right at the end to say thank you), it was a show that was going so well that the two songs they had in reserve were incorporated into the main set. I also learned that the rehearsal for the show was the first time Butcher Boy had played outside of a studio environment in 16 months, and I thought to myself just how mind-blowing their shows would be if they were full-time musicians doing this for a living....and then I realised it was probably the fact that they do perform so rarely together that makes the performances so special....and fresh-sounding.
It was a night when the folk performing seemed to have as much fun, pleasure and enjoyment as the 120 or so folk lucky enough to have been in the audience.
Afterwards, a DJ played a great set of tunes - mostly indie, but not exclusively, and mostly drawn from the 80s, but again not exclusively. Myself and Comrade Colin and many others danced and danced and danced and danced again, only pausing to take in liquid to stem the sweat and only stopping when the house lights came on at 12.15am.
Than I walked home happy in the knowledge that I had again been so lucky to have been part of something so special and also realising that if I had never taking up this blogging lark, I'd have missed out on it.
Now here's a couple of snippets.
I mentioned that the new LP hits the shops in April. Technically that's true, but the record label is already making it available via mail order for just £10. Click here and buy it.
Oh and if you live in the London area, the band are coming your way next month. On Saturday 14th March they are playing at a venue called Jamm. More details can be found at the Butcher Boy myspace site, where you'll also find some songs to listen to, including these:-
mp3 : Butcher Boy - Profit In Your Poetry
mp3 : Butcher Boy - Carve A Pattern
Happy Listening.
PS : Thanks to Colin for the pic...
14 comments:
Thanks to proselytizing from you and Colin I've become something of a Butcher Boy geek lately. Finally got a proper copy of Profit in Your Poetry, made friends with them on myspace and all that. So cheers. "I Know Who You Could Be" gets me right here, he writes, alluding to the heart.
JC,you're a hell of a lucky guy to have caught Butcher boy live in such a small venue.
I've had their new CD 'React or Die'for a couple of weeks and it's already a contender for album of the year.
Keep these great posts coming!
Phil
Tel Aviv
I was supposed to attend this but had to e-mail them and ask them to put someone else on the list as I had to work. Even more gutted now after reading your review. It was a mere ten minutes walk from Kingpark to the venue, too.
From Erik:-
That sounds like an ideal night out!
Claire Grogan charmed me from the first time I saw her dancing on the ground in Gregory's Girl, and she does look lovely in that TOTP performance. Thanks for sharing.
Back to Butcher Boy: "React or Die" arrived in the mail earlier this week and after four or five listens I'm thinking it's going to be hard to beat this one as my favorite album of 2009.
"You're Only Crying For Yourself" should be a hit single, and "A Better Ghost" is two of the best minutes of music I've heard this year.
OK, so I've gone ahead and ordered it.
Queens Park Bowling club and then you walked home/ My sister lived for nearly 30 years in Shawlands (Deanston Drive) that must be fairly near you...
Regards/
Thanks for dropping by Mona.
I know Deanston Drive...Shawlands is a place where I've been known to eat and drink.
I'm a Pollokshields kind of bloke though...
That's where my sister has moved to. Is Colin MacNeal(?) x-backstabbers/lone wolves still in the area? There used to be a second hand record shop further down the Ayr Rd into the city that I used to work in back in the 70's, tho I mostly worked for them at the Barras at the weekends.
Tho I left Glasgow back in 77 and have been in Melbourne for the last 23 years via London & Amsterdam!;Don't suppose you have any lone Wolves stuff and there was a great 12" I used to have that had I think 4 bands on, one of which was Positive Noise, tho one of the other bands were better and I used to see them live down in a wee bar in Shawlands on my jaunts back home. wish I could remember their name.
regards/
Regards/
I couldnt tell you if anyone from the music scene was still in the area...I'm just a bloke who listens and collects without ever getting too close to those with the talent.
Second hand shop has long gone...I think its a bike shop nowadays.
I've featured James King before at TVV:-
http://thevinylvillain.blogspot.com/2008/07/i-wont-say-no-how-could-i-2.html
I do remember Positive Noise, but dont have any of their stuff. Had a look at the book 'The Great Scots Musicography' by Martin C Strong (my bible!!), and while it lists the various Positive Noise singles and LPs, it doesnt give any details of the EP you refer to.
Don't know I reckon which (good) record to choose to play is quite a talent, sober i will say that there is only 2 sorts of music. music i like & music I don't!!!That's sober mind!
Is there any chance of a re-up of that Lone Wolves single? Understand if you can't.
regards/
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